Originally posted by Mongoose
The Church does not persecute homosexuals; it teaches tolerance for them. The Church condemns homosexual activities, not homosexuals themselves. That's a difference that many people seem to ignore.
I don't ignore it out of ignorance, I ignore it out of choice. The Church is basically saying "We like you if you're gay, just as long as you're not, you know...gay."
An analogy: Let's say you love to fly helicoptors. You love flying them so much, you want to do it every day. In fact, you bought your own. So you like to fly your helicoptor every day, but then one day, a big wig from the FAA comes down and says you can't fly your helicopter anymore, because he says that planes are better than helicopters. Now, he's a nice guy, so he won't punish you or anything, but you can no longer fly your helicoptor anymore. You can own it, you can look at it, you can wash it, you can tell it you love it, but no matter what you do, thanks to him, it's wrong to actually use it.
Make any sense?
As for other religions, do you know nothing of John Paul II? He did more to foster better relations with other religions groups than perhaps any of his predecessors.
So? That doesn't mean much when the basic precedents have remained unchanged.
I've always been taught that as long as you live an ethical life Jesus will accept you (granted, that's still kinda hiding behind "our way is right..."). But I'd like to think that if I'm wrong about being Catholic, God/whoever judges me (if there is such a thing) will recognize that I've tried my best.
Exactly. Why don't you apply that same rule to others? My religion generally believes that here is one destination, but many different paths to it. So that means we're all trying to get to heaven, but you might choose Christianity to get there. I personally choose Wicca, but in the end, we're all going to meet up and kick back and eat some pretzels while watching the game.