Apparently we are not the right kind of Christians, and I love that mere mortals determine who are and are not Christians.
Nail on head statement. All I can add is Amen.
Apparently we are not the right kind of Christians, and I love that mere mortals determine who are and are not Christians.
Apparently we are not the right kind of Christians, and I love that mere mortals determine who are and are not Christians.
Well then sir its not my place to say that, My question is what Bible do you read from, must not be the same bible I read from. The question isnt whose right and whos wrong, I really dont care about that. Its a matter that it is very CLEAR in the Bible on how one is to live. If you want to make up your own rules to go by then fine. But you shouldnt be dragging others down with you. I am on here as a Christian who prays for this country hours on end, and studies my Bible, and understands CLEARLY GODS position on gay marriage becasuse once again its noted throughout the Bible. But you sir only take the parts that appeal to you and continue to live as you do and I will be sad for you and pray for you. That is all I can do.
Well then sir its not my place to say that, My question is what Bible do you read from, must not be the same bible I read from.
Love it or hate it, most Florida voters have made up their minds about a ballot amendment to ban same-sex marriage.
And they?re more likely to enshrine the definition of marriage in the state?s formative document, while two others intended to protect conservation lands and give tax breaks to waterfront businesses also have a fighting chance.
A new poll commissioned for the Orlando Sentinel found Amendment 2, which seeks to enshrine a definition of marriage, held 56 percent support among voters less than two weeks out from the election, while 37 percent opposed it.
That leaves the remaining 7 percent of undecided voters to determine if it reaches the 60-percent threshold for amending Florida?s Constitution.
History suggests it will pass -- because undecided voters have tended to break in favor of gay-marriage bans in other states, according to Brad Coker, polling director for Mason-Dixon Polling and Research. The firm surveyed 625 registered voters Monday and Tuesday, and has a 4 percent margin for error.