The lear of the Rsian Orthodox Church said gay pri paras were part of the reason for the war Ukrae.
Contents:
- THE ORTHODOX CHURCH’S ROLE RSIA’S ANTI-GAY LAWS
- WHY RSIA IS SO ANTI-GAY
- RSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH LEAR BLAM INVASN ON UKRAE'S 'GAY PRI'
THE ORTHODOX CHURCH’S ROLE RSIA’S ANTI-GAY LAWS
Close to 75 percent of Rsians say beg gay is morally unacceptable, a new survey fds. * russian orthodox gay beliefs *
Over the past 45 years, our society has unrgone a revolutn – there is really no other way to scribe – the prevailg cultural attus towards homosexualy and var related ‘alternative’ sexuali, an entire range of behavrs now llectively referred to by the acronym LGBTQ – Lbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgenr, and Queer (this last term beg a tch-all for inti and behavrs that do not f to any of the precedg tegori).
Young people are growg up an environment where sual acceptance of homosexualy and bisexualy is creasgly seen as the norm, and where dissenters om the new orthodoxy are regard wh ntempt, not only as ignorant and unenlightened, but as posively evil. As we will necsarily discs the blogy and soclogy of homosexualy, we will first ask, advance, the pardon of any who are ma unfortable by hearg medil – pecially, anatomil – termology, which will figure certa sectns.
WHY RSIA IS SO ANTI-GAY
Patriarch Kirill said on Sunday that gay pri paras are an embrace of Wtern valu that will lead to the end of civilizatn. * russian orthodox gay beliefs *
The mpaigns of homosexual activists over the last 40 years have largely succeed stutnalizg this new unrstandg, and have created an all-embracg belief system that is aggrsively fend agast ntradictn or skepticism om any quarter. Therefore, the proper role of psychiatry and psychology (and supportg social anizatns) for those who are dissatisfied wh their same-sex attractn is not to help them change – even if they wish to – but to help them to bee fortable wh their homosexualy.
RSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH LEAR BLAM INVASN ON UKRAE'S 'GAY PRI'
Wh rpect to the specific behavr unr nsiratn, one ethnographic study found that 21% of the historil and ntemporary cultur surveyed accepted or ignored homosexualy, 12% had no ncept for , 26% disuraged but did not punish , and 41% strongly disapproved of and punished .
The Gre-Roman world serv more of our attentn, both bee is often ced approvgly by ntemporary homosexual activists, and more importantly, bee was to this environment that Christiany first emerged.
By ntrast, homosexual relatnships between adult men were nsired appropriate, pecially for the ‘passive’ partner, and were often an object of sult and mockery by ic wrers. The Greek archaic perd poets, Sappho of Lbos (7-6th centuri BC), wrote much that is homoerotic character, and the procs gave our ntemporary terms Sapphic and Lbian. In the Roman army, strikg ntrast to Greek – and now ntemporary Wtern – views, homosexual nduct between soldiers was severely punished as a ser breach of ary disciple.