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Posted: Wed Feb 18, 2009 4:06 pm
[.L.O.S.E.R.] Well, last I checked Catholics and Protestants are Christians who follow the Bible, which has already been quoted as saying it's a bad idea to marry outside the faith. So I'm still confused how your examples supported your arguement. The best I can figure, your arguement only applies to people like Voldemort point two described, Christians who pick and choose which rules they want to follow. However, any Biblical Christian will tell you that though we should love nonbelievers, to marry them only brings us down. It's because they haven't let their religious DIFFERENCES get inbetween them. If you let any and all differences get inbetween you then it's going to fail. Remember in love, opposites attract. If you have two definite polar opposites like north and south, etc then they're going to stick together and it'll be hard to separate the two.
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Posted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 2:26 pm
Opposites don't always attract.
I have a friend who's my complete opposite, in attitude, faith, everything... neither of us appeal to the other. I don't appeal to him cuz I'm a Christian with a strong moral center, and he doesn't appeal to me cuz he has no respect for my faith whatsoever...
Just a small example.
If two people who are complete opposites get together, there are a lot of arguments and then relationship just falls from there... unless they both like arguing, but then they would have something in common and not be polar opposites.
By having similar goals and interests (I'm not saying all of them or some of them being exactly the same, just a few and just similar) friends, couples, etc. can connect in other ways and enjoy eachother's company doing the thing they like to do, and there's no confusion (goal wise) on where they're headed in the future... though things can alwasy change.
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