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In our culture today, morality has become whatever is right in our own eyes.
One example of where we see this shift to relative morality is the current attitude toward marriage. The reasoning goes, “If two people love each other, why shouldn’t they be allowed to get married?”
Well, think about this: What about three people who love each other or someone who loves an animal or a child? Without the foundation of God’s Word, these things are only wrong because of a lack of acceptance by the culture.
But when we start with God’s Word, we have a foundation for defining marriage and saying all these things are wrong.
By Ken Ham and Mark Looy4.6
374374 ratings
In our culture today, morality has become whatever is right in our own eyes.
One example of where we see this shift to relative morality is the current attitude toward marriage. The reasoning goes, “If two people love each other, why shouldn’t they be allowed to get married?”
Well, think about this: What about three people who love each other or someone who loves an animal or a child? Without the foundation of God’s Word, these things are only wrong because of a lack of acceptance by the culture.
But when we start with God’s Word, we have a foundation for defining marriage and saying all these things are wrong.

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