Ok so explain this to me.
If a country has a state religion, and that religion like Christianity prohibits homosexuality, where are they supposed to go from there?
Leave their beliefs to align with the modern world ? Do you understand how deeply routed the belief is in god for some people?
They should just for the sake of not being labeled homophobic just forgo all their beliefs ?
Similar to some priests in Sweden who agree to wed homosexual couples in the church…
Believe me I don’t want to keep any homosexuals from the wonders of marriage, but what kind of priest are you if you wed homosexual couples inside the church ?
Do you even understand the religion you claim to believe in / represent ?
Is everything up for debate now ? There are no set principles anymore ?
This is exactly why States should be secular. Having an official religion doesn't require the country to enshrine the teachings in law. The two things shouldn't be at odds. Qatar is non-secular. The UK's 'official' religion is Christianity, but we're a largely secular state.
It is wrong for Qatar to limit peoples freedoms in this manner solely because their religion says so. I'll be blunt - I don't think religion has any place in modern society at all. But the freedom to practice a religion (within secular laws) is as important as peoples freedom to be in a same sex relationship.
Accepting that religious interference in state law is wrong, it's a far better question how people rationalise it for themselves, or within the religious institutions, if they are believers and adherents.
A priest should absolutely have the right to decline to marry a same sex couple if it goes against the religion they represent. However, a non-religious marriage should be recognised at exactly the same level as a religious ones with no legal or statutory differences. If the adherent of that religion finds themselves being refused a religious ceremony because that ceremony goes against that religion - then really that person should be asking deeper questions about their belief.
Law defines peoples freedoms and liberties, religion should only offer guidance that a person can totally ignore.
Dude, all I said that was that the Infographics video implied that Qatar is a homophobic country, don't get mad at me. Get mad at the producers of that video. Go on and hit that dislike button on their video on Youtube.
Huh? Qatar may actually execute someone for having same sex intercourse, how the actual f#ck is that not homophobic?