Yeah, how dare people let their beliefs influence their actions? Belief and political action ought to be completely separate!
Separation of Church and State.
Just because someone believes that killing animals is a horrible evil equivalent to murder doesn't mean they should bother me or try to have it passed into law. It's just their beliefs that are influencing their actions, and really, unless I believe it too, it has no place in law making or politics.
I'm not going to pick apart that one example, and I'm just going to comment on the point you're making.
Law is supposed to be neutral, not colored by any particular moral standard. I'll say it again. Separation of Church and State. Everyone in America has their own particular moral standard, but laws are meant to be universal. It simply
doesn't work, if the laws start being tuned by one particular group above the others. Something as universal as laws should be completely neutral.
Laws are meant to protect life, rights, and property. Not to enforce a particular moral standard.
It makes perfect sense for a religion to say 'no gay marriage', but it makes no sense for a law to say the same. Because gays marrying doesn't kill anyone, or destroy any cultural foundations or cause theft and denial of rights or anything remotely harmful to society.
Be honest though, if Prop 8 was about disallowing something mundane, like using endangered species as exhibits in a zoo, and it was based and put forward by a Jewish or other religious group, then you wouldn't care half as much. It's totally because it's disallowing homosexual marriage, and maybe the fact that it was put forward by a religious group is supplementary to that..
Regardless of the reason, I would still be ticked that a law was passed due to religion. As stated earlier, laws are universal and therefore shouldn't be colored by any religion or moral set.
But it's because of faith we take it that it's God's words through that preacher. You can't really argue about faith considering it's just a part of someone. >_>
when a preacher quotes something that God actually said (for the sake of argument I'll allow that some direct quotes exist)* then yes, he is speaking God's word. But when he reads sections of the bible that were written entirely by man (direct quotes from God constitute sections written at lest in part by God)*, or gives his homily, he is -not- speaking God's word.
*I'm not aware of any particular direct quotes from said God, and am not stating that they exist or do not, simply allowing for the possibility for the sake of discussion.
why does it matter so much to you what other people do with their private lives? Why won't you just leave them alone? Why do you want to force them to have to live according to your beliefs?
I think that this is the question that really needs to be answered.