Posted on 06/30/2008 3:46:03 AM PDT by Caleb1411
This is a brave woman.
Victim mentality. “You owe us because we are victimized by your biased attitude towards us since we are *different*”
Words matter!
And the homosexual lobby is doing everything they can to erase such words as “mother” and “father” “husband” and “wife” etc. Just having the mainstream of America to accept the phrase “gay marriage” is a victory for their lobby.
Consider: the pro-abortion lobby has never conceded that “partial-birth abortion” is an acceptable phrase. They Always prefix “so-called”. We should do the same regarding their attempts to say that a marriage can exist between two similar bodies, by saying “so-called gay marriage.” They are a ‘couple” — a couple of men, or a couple of women. But it takes one of each to make a marriage.
Here’s an earlier thread on apostacy and the St. Joan of Arc parish. I grew up in this parish so I know a few things about the background.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/2037942/posts
Catholic Ping
Please freepmail me if you want on/off this list
Isn’t this also the Archbishop that had some priceless items stolen from his home recently?
Exactly. No matter how much we back up, compromise, change for their sake, etc., we will never be able to ERASE THEIR GUILT. They know it. It scares them.
Nienstedt is recently installed. The previous "archbishop" was the swishy Harry Flynn, who was great for looking the other way when the queers wanted to smear a veneer of "religion" over their perversity.
Thank you!
From now on I will refer to so-called gay marriage only.
Actually, I will refer to it as so-called homosexual marriage. That explains it all!
That word gay has been distorted into something disgusting and immoral and it was a perfectly fine word at one time!
You are right. ‘Gay’ means something bad to children, so they are forbidden to say it ‘in company.’ It was a perfectly good word, until certain people adopted it.
I think of the evolution of words that we cannot say. Words that become pejorative, because they are called hurtful, when what is hurtful is the thing that the word describes.
When I was a child there was such a thing as the Crippled Childrens’ Society. Then we could not say ‘crippled.’ So we said ‘handicapped.’ That became painful, and we now say ‘challenged.’ Soon ‘challenged’ will be ‘mean’ to say. Altering the language does not alter the underlying problem that the person is experiencing.
Crippled means propped up.
My mother-in-law spent her lifetime being called crippled, because she had severe scoliosis and one leg shorter than the other. It did not ‘handicap’ her in doing whatever she wanted to do. Perhaps her bad body form shaped her character. She was a very strong person and personality.
I suppose we are not “allowed” to say “lame” any more either. No matter what descriptive word we use, the fact of her twisted body remained the same.
Their message and its inspiration is all too plainly clear.
To paraphrase the Rolling Stones, it’s a case of “I know I got demons hanging on me but I like it”.
“They know it. It scares them.”
It SHOULD scare them. It has to do with....infinity.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.