>> с точки зрения иудаизма это вообще почти не проступок.
Да, конечно. Я и не думал это отрицать.
>>Вы же не будете утверждать что эта цитата из Павла - и есть основа негативного отношения к лесбиякам?
Буду.
Посмотрите статью.
In extending the death penalty for sodomy to women, St. Paul's condemnation in Romans was, undoubtedly, of paramount importance. Though modern scholars have commented on the ambiguity of his language, which might conceivably refer to women who engaged in heterosexual sodomy, a study of Paul's early commentators shows that they did, indeed, regard the women who "changed the natural use" as lesbians. ..... Aquinas set his seal on the received interpretation of Paul and placed lesbianism unequivocally in the same moral category with male relations. Canon law and Catholic moral theology had a very considerable influence in shaping medieval secular law. Some Carolingian kings actually promulgated the canons of various church councils as laws of the realm .... Thus, throughout the continent, lawyers trained in Roman law and imbued with Levitical-Pauline principles were encouraged to write provisions for the killing of lesbians into the civic, regional, and imperial codes they drafted during the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
no subject
Да, конечно. Я и не думал это отрицать.
>>Вы же не будете утверждать что эта цитата из Павла - и есть основа негативного отношения к лесбиякам?
Буду.
Посмотрите статью.
In extending the death penalty for sodomy to
women, St. Paul's condemnation in Romans was, undoubtedly, of
paramount importance. Though modern scholars have commented on
the ambiguity of his language, which might conceivably refer to women
who engaged in heterosexual sodomy, a study of Paul's early
commentators shows that they did, indeed, regard the women who
"changed the natural use" as lesbians.
.....
Aquinas set his seal on the received interpretation of Paul and placed lesbianism
unequivocally in the same moral category with male relations. Canon
law and Catholic moral theology had a very considerable influence in
shaping medieval secular law. Some Carolingian kings actually promulgated
the canons of various church councils as laws of the realm
....
Thus, throughout the continent, lawyers trained in Roman law and imbued with Levitical-Pauline
principles were encouraged to write provisions for the killing of
lesbians into the civic, regional, and imperial codes they drafted during
the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance.