DeepShadow, I am assuming that you are still addressing my post from a week ago and the post which you quoted in your OP, and not my most recent post. I say this because you haven't responded to the questions I raised that that post. I hope (and assume) that you'll eventually get around to addressing them, because it's not like you to simply ignore them.
Your comparison of WoW violations with homosexual intimacy has me thinking about what the actual excommunicable behavior is, though, which brings me back to the first line of your original quote:
With deepest respect, I think the part in the parentheses is in error, and I think it's throwing you off. If the excommunication of homosexual couples is because of their sexual behavior, then the comparison to WoW violations makes sense. But it's not because of their sexual behavior. On the contrary, the union itself is grounds for excommunication, because--through the auspices of the State--the couple has solemnized a family arrangement that is contrary to the way God has ordained for families. They have formed themselves into a square peg and are forcing it into a round hole. By doing so, they are at least denying what modern prophets have said about what marriage is. This cannot be understated. This is not about a set of habitual or repeated transgressions, like in the case of the Word of Wisdom. This is about continuously breaking a commandment by being married at all.
While I personally wish the Church would welcome all sinners into the body of believers, I am reconciled to the fact that this simply isn't how it's ever going to work. Please don't tell me that LGBT couples are welcome to attend meetings, just not to partake of the sacrament, pray in public, teach classes, etc. I know all of that. I've accepted it. Any adult same-sex couple who has any knowledge of LDS doctrine knows full well what the consequences for their choices are going to be. At least they do have a choice in the matter. My concern is only about 5% for them. It's about 95% for their children, and this is the issue I hope we can focus on.
I'd been married nearly a decade when the priesthood ban was lifted. All throughout high school, I'd wanted to ask my seminary teachers why God would punish men for their own sins and not for Adam's transgression, but was, in effect, punishing all men of African heritage for the sins of Cain. I never got around to it, probably because I really didn't expect to get an answer that I could find satisfactory. I am now asking myself the same question about the children of same-sex couples? Why, if they will not be held accountable for anyone's sins but there own, can we not allow them the same blessings given to the children of heterosexual couples? I try to imagine Jesus saying, "Suffer the little children to come unto me... except for this one and this one and this one." It just doesn't work for me.
There is a precedent, though. Polygamous families also meet all the same description: a solemnized family arrangement that is contrary to the way that God has ordained for families. And like the children of homosexual couples, the children of polygamists must wait until they are 18 to be baptized. It's been that way for decades. Not baptizing children until they are 18 is not condemning them. On the contrary, the church's policy on unbaptized children is that they are covered by the mercy of Christ--they bear no condemnation for their wrongdoing. This statement is saying that we, as an earthly church, cannot rightly judge the children of a same-sex union. We must leave that to God. Once they turn 18, they may deliberately put themselves within the judgement of the church, just as any adult convert, but until then, only God can judge them.
Not baptizing them until they are 18 may not be condemning them, but it certainly is marginalizing them in the eyes of their peers. And seriously, do you really think that an 8-year old kid who wanted to be baptized would buy into that? If he'd learned anything at all about the gospel, he'd have every right to say, "But under the terms of the baptismal covenant, couldn't I still be forgiven of my future sins if I were truly sorry for them and repented?" I don't see that withholding baptism, and particularly the gift of the Holy Ghost can be seen as any kind of a blessing. Besides, if it really is a blessing to just "be covered by the mercy of Christ," why don't we allow all children -- the children of hetersexual parents as well as the children of homosexual parents -- the same blessing?
Lastly, I really wonder how well this ruling can ever be enforced. Consider this hypothetical scenario: Living together as a married couple, two non-LDS gay men living in Boston are raising a little boy. He is now five years old. The three of them never go to church, but they teach him a great many Christian values, values such as honesty, charity, compassion and forgiveness. He loves both of his fathers a lot and is very close to them. Their (i.e. his parents') sexual relationship isn't exactly something the three of them discuss. (I know I never discussed my parents' sexual relationship with them.) Fifteen years go by. This boy, now age 20, leaves home and goes off to college. While at college, his roommate in the dorm in an LDS man, a returned missionary. The two hit it off. Throughout the school year, they find themselves more and more often discussing religion. The boy becomes interested in the Church, meets with the missionaries and decides he wants to join the Church. He understands the importance of chastity and fidelity in a marriage. He is hetersexual himself, so there have never been any temptations to engage in gay sex. He goes in for his baptismal interview and is asked all of the usual questions. He answers all of them to the satisfaction of the bishop or mission president or zone leader (I don't even know who it is who would be conducting the interview
), and is approved for baptism.
Now, since the child of same-sex parents can be baptized at the age of 18, provided that child disavows his or her parents' marriage, the only way the bishop (or whoever conducts the interview) could conceivably know whether that young man they just approved for baptism was raised by gay parents would be to come right out and ask him? After all, he mentions to the bishop that he is dating a nice LDS girl. They presume, and rightly so, that he is heterosexual, and he has already told them that he is morally clean. Do you seriously think that a new question (or two) is going to be added to the baptismal interview? Are prospective converts going to be asked, "Were you raised by same-sex parents?" And if the answer is, "Yes, I was," is the next question going to be, "Are you willing to disavow your parents' marriage?" That's simply not going to happen. The only time this issue will ever be a part of the baptismal interview is if the child, now of age, was raised in a family with two parents of the same sex -- as might be the case for a child growing up in a Utah neighborhood right under the bishop's nose. I just see a whole can of worms being opened up if this policy is ever to be enforced consistently, church-wide. Of course, I don't think it will be, but what on earth would be fair about enforcing it some of the time and not all of the time?
I'm looking forward to your reply.