Do you not recognize the legal and personal difficulties facing same sex partners? Or do you want them to be penalized for sharing their lives?
Do you not recognize the legal and personal difficulties throuples face? Or do you want them to be penalized for sharing their lives?
See what I did there? I strenuously objection to your framing (again). Not granting same-sex marriage or civil unions is not penalizing them for sharing their lives. In a free society (one that thankfully no longer criminalizes adult consensual sex), they are free to do whatever they want.
Of course, the way
Obergfell has been decided by the courts has obscured the actual history of why traditional marriage exists (and predates government): procreation. Ignoring that, one can never obtain a reasonable answer.
Having said that, I disagree with Pastor Speckhard's premise here as well. I think there was a legitimate legal reason for many jurisdictions to be required by the courts to offer civil unions for same-sex partners...which of course was subsequently demolished by
Obergfell, because dignity or something incoherent. But that's the lesson of
Griswold v Connecticut, where the Supreme Court found a right of privacy meant married couples (only married couples) could not be forbidden to use contraception, and then subsequently extended that protection outside of marriage for no principled reason (even as I think government has no business regulating that in the first place, as a general legal matter).
I don't see anything wrong with civil unions, too bad it didn't stop there. Emphasis on civil, as I don't believe it legitimate for government to conform to religious ideals, because the question inevitably devolves to which one? Just ask the Mormons. (Why the U.S. Constitution forbids a religous test for office holders...because the Founders couldn't agree on which Christian denomination to require.)