I think that's the whole point. To my understanding AP was talking about the Bible specifically rather than "The Bible as interpreted by the present LDS church." I know that I was responding to the assertion that the Bible unequivocally condemns homosexual behavior.
I've pushed you on this before but you don't seem to be willing to go there: Modern revelation is changeable. Later revelation overrides prior revelation.
Yes, I certainly wasn't talking about LDS Bible interpretation... frankly I don't know enough. I've made one pilgrimage to Utah to see a Stockton-Malone era Jazz home game, and I toured temple square and all, but that's about all the LDS exposure I've gotten. On the other hand, I was raised Catholic and had 13 years of Jesuit schooling. So when I'm making arguments like these, I have the Catholic view in mind, not the LDS view. They
do seem pretty similar in their views on homosexuality anyway, at least from what I can tell.
As to the point about modern revelation... this is why I personally cannot subscribe to any religion that has a huge corpus of "revealed truths" and dogmatic assertions. The Bible describes a large number of ethical rules and standards that we now find appalling: subjugation of women, selling of women and children into slavery, killing your enemies with impunity, capital punishment for minor crimes. But people who identify themselves as believers in all of the Bible's revealed truths don't seem to have a problem ignoring these aforementioned troubling ethical guidelines. Once people all agree that such obviously unethical ideas are wrong, then those passages are simply ignored or written off as ancient cultural remnants. It just goes to show that nothing can ever really be written in stone. Even
if it could be demonstrated that the Bible really strongly and definitively condemns homosexuality, it seems likely that, given enough time, it will likely become another of those things that gets written off as the ignorance of an ancient culture, much like the idea that men are fundamentally superior to women.
So while I find such Bible talk interesting and entertaining on some level, I really think it's quite irrelevant. Ethical outlooks are going to develop and change... and what exactly is wrong with that? Nothing at all. If you want to start with a holy book like the Bible as a baseline, then fine, but the reality is that there are many such holy books and faiths with competing claims. In a pluralistic world, you need criteria external to such different faiths in order to distinguish which one is right. So why bother carrying around the ancient cultural baggage in the first place? I'd rather stay religiously neutral, listen to all sides of any given religious issue as best I can, and then decide for myself.
I spoke of criteria external to religious faiths to evaluate moral questions. For people who claim homosexuality is wrong, I have one basic and fundamental question that must be answered: exactly
why and
how are homosexual sex and homosexual relationships harmful to other individuals or to society? If there is no answer to this basic question, no actual criteria posed as to how gays are harmful, then there can be no debate at all, because there can be no common ground. It simply becomes Person A quoting his scriptures and Person B quoting her (different) scriptures. "Because God says so" or "because the Bible says so" isn't an argument, just a dogmatic assertion that shuts the door on further discussion.