Morgan wrote:And that, I'm afraid, is the real answer.
You don't think it's right. That's all there is to it. You don't think I should have the right to do what you consider to be wrong... on the basis of your religious beliefs. Any concern you might have for "religious freedom" extends to your religion, and no further. So you just "vote what you believe to be right."
Foolish of me, to expect otherwise. Foolish of me to need to hear that a dozen times over before I heard it... before I stopped looking for some deeper, better reason. I just didn't want to think that was the logic behind the majority viewpoint. I don't like the implications.
Would you vote against people's participation in non-Christian religions, if you could? Surely that's at least as wrong as homosexual marriage. "Thou shalt have no other gods before me..." Don't you have to oppose that, too?
I would do what the Lord led me to do.