To: Olog-hai
Birth control is not a religious issue. It’s a moral issue. Most Protestants use birth control.
19 posted on
12/29/2012 7:24:15 PM PST by
AppyPappy
(You never see a masscre at a gun show.)
To: AppyPappy
Most Protestants do not oppose birth control.
22 posted on
12/29/2012 7:25:40 PM PST by
AppyPappy
(You never see a masscre at a gun show.)
To: AppyPappy
No, it’s a religious issue when you have Christians that don’t want to be forced to sell it being forced to do so, when it goes against what they believe as a religion. And that’s aside from the state getting into any of this anyhow.
39 posted on
12/29/2012 7:41:11 PM PST by
Olog-hai
To: AppyPappy
It’s not about what most people do. If you are a person of faith, you should not be forced by government to participate in that which compromises your faith and conscience, especially when it comes to issues like abortion.
104 posted on
12/30/2012 7:49:21 AM PST by
CityCenter
(Compromise is the welcome mat to deception.)
To: AppyPappy
If you are Catholic, Specific forms of birth control are forbidden by your faith. That makes this a religious issue. If you aren't, you have to decide whether Ru-486 (the morning after pill) and other after conception forms of "birth control" are murder or not. Most of us accept that abortion is murder, regardless of what trimester is involved.
If you are Christian, how do you fund murder and remain faithful?
"Suffer the children to come unto me."
It IS a religious issue, not a question of buying condoms.
108 posted on
12/30/2012 9:07:33 AM PST by
Smokin' Joe
(How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing)
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