Author Topic: Is marriage in violation of the separation of church and state?  (Read 1705 times)

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Zant Law

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Is marriage in violation of the separation of church and state?
« on: December 08, 2012, 12:34:38 am »
It's Christmas time again and we are reminded by all the stories of forbidden nativity scenes, Christmas trees and other signs of what Christmas actually stands for, under the guise of separation of church and state.
This year simultaneously we have stories of government interfering with a solely religious function of marriage. The government originally got into the marriage business by issuing a license for the purpose of stopping interracial marriages. The history of marriage traditionally has never been a function of the state. Marriage was first performed by God himself when he gave Eve to Adam. Why is it that our courts of today cannot see that marriage is the most obvious violation of what they call the separation of church and state?
Wouldn't it be easier if the government just got out the marriage business and returned it all to the church? Different religions have different rules and regulations about marriage, and those with no religion have their own ideas of what marriage should be.

macuser

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Re: Is marriage in violation of the separation of church and state?
« Reply #1 on: December 08, 2012, 12:27:16 pm »
The courts have turned the First Amendment around, concerning religion, to exactly the opposite of what it was meant to be. The Constitution is designed to keep the government out of religion not religion out of the government. Nowhere in the Constitution does it give the government the power to define a religious sacrament.