Friday, July 01, 2011

"If anything is marriage, nothing is marriage"

While I have addressed the specifics of the teaching of Christ and His Church on same-sex marriage, it is important to give a general sense of what is going on. Same-sex marriage is just part of the general movement of liberalism or relativism which basically says that anything goes because there is no truth. I was in college when I first became aware of this movement and have been majorly turned off by it ever since. The movement uses contraception, abortion, divorce, and homosexuality to advance its radical agenda. It hates Christ and the Church or any authority which threatens to stand in its way. Its relentless attacks on life and family, the two most precious things in our world, reveals its agenda which is evil by nature. I have known good people who have joined the movement, not because they see its evil nature, but because they think it is good. That’s one of the things about evil: it appears to be good. When we see evil for what it is, we don’t pursue it. But, evil presents itself as good and attractive. The movement uses good and attractive themes such as “freedom”, “choice”, “safety”, and “tolerance”. When these things come about through good means, they are good. But, when they are through evil means as in the ways I listed above, then they are not good. They only appear to be good. Philosophers call evil an “apparent good”. So, I would insert the word “apparent” in front of each theme.


Last point before I turn it over to the Archdiocese of Washington’s blog which gives an overview of the whole issue and corroborates my first paragraph. Pope Benedict XVI referred to the “dictatorship of relativism” just before he became pope. This is the movement I’ve been describing. Its tenets are that every belief is true and every act is allowed. It labels anyone who denounces an act as immoral or wrong a “bigot”. This is what “apparent tolerance” looks like; it tolerates everything (including sin) except opposition.


On Ignoring the “Canary in the Mine.” Why The Demise of Marriage Matters
By: Msgr. Charles Pope

New York State’s redefinition of marriage is the latest domino to fall in the trend sweeping the nation of legally recognizing so-called “gay marriage.” Many people, especially younger people, are prone to shrug and wonder what the big deal is about all this. Many, too, of all ages, have bought into the notion that this is all about fairness, and being unbigoted.

Perhaps part of the reason for this is that we in the Church, and other defenders of traditional marriage, have allowed this to become a discussion about gay “marriage” only, rather than about the overall and devastating effects of the sexual revolution, and the sexual liberationist movement in general.

Gay “marriage” is only the latest battleground. It was preceded by the no-fault divorce wave that swept the country, beginning in 1969. The battleground is also about the explosion in divorce rates. It is about rampant promiscuity and shacking-up (or more politely “co-habitation”). And gay “marriage” is now the latest coffin nail, as secular culture buries traditional marriage.

Sadly too, in many of the other “nails” mentioned in the previous paragraph, even Christians have long engaged in these practices and the Church has been too silent in the last forty years and lacked the prophetic voice we are only lately (too late?) rediscovering.

To those who are dismissive or minimizing of concerns related to the State defining marriage out of existence, we must re-articulate, in a credible way, that traditional marriage does matter, and that its demise is not only lamentable, but devastating for the future of Western culture as we have known it.

Consider the following quote from Robert P. George, a Professor at Princeton University and interview in National Review. He is answering the question, “Why should people care” :

Well, people should care because the whole edifice of sexual-liberationist ideology is built on damaging and dehumanizing falsehoods. It has already done enormous harm — harm that falls on everybody, but disproportionately on those in the poorest and most vulnerable sectors of our society. If you doubt that, have a look at Myron Magnet’s great book The Dream and the Nightmare: The Sixties’ Legacy to the Underclass, or some of the writings of Kay Hymowitz and other serious people who have examined the social consequences for the poor of the embrace of sexual liberalism by celebrities and other cultural elites. Marriage is a profound human and social good; its weakening and loss is a tragedy from which affluent people can be distracted (and protected) by their affluence for only so long. The institution of marriage has already been deeply wounded by divorce at nearly plague levels, widespread non-marital sexual cohabitation, and other damaging factors. To redefine it out of existence in law is to make it much more difficult to restore a sound understanding of marriage on which a healthy marriage culture can be rebuilt for the good of all. It is to sacrifice the needs of the poor, who are hurt the most when a sound public understanding of marriage and sexual morality collapses. It is to give up on the truth that children need both a father and mother, and benefit from the security of their love for each other. [1]

I have personally experienced what he is describing about the poor being the first to be hit with the effects. Having lived, as I did, in the one of the poorest sections of Washington DC, the breakdown of marriage and its effects were very clear. In that neighborhood, 80% of the homes were headed by single mothers. It was not unusual for women in their late 20s to be grandmothers already. The effects on the children of having no father, of children having children, and living in dysfunctional situations plagued, with many layers of promiscuity and confusion was very clear. 60% of the children in that neighborhood never graduated high school. Of those that did, 40% of them, were functionally illiterate. Over 70% of the young men had police records by age 15 and the teenage pregnancy rates hovered near 65% for girls by their 15th birthday. STDs are quite high and the District of Columbia has the highest AIDs rate in the nation.

Some want to blame all this merely on poverty. But prior to 1965, when poverty rates were worse in the Black community, more than 80% of children lived with two parents, graduation rates were much higher, teen pregnancy rates were quite a bit lower along with STD rates. The sexual revolution is a huge factor in the devastation of the poor, and it is rightly said, from a statistical point of view, that single motherhood has the highest correlation to poverty of any other factor.

And the fact is, this breakdown is reaching the suburbs where gang violence, youth crime rates, promiscuity, STD rates, teen pregancy, abortion rates, and many other deleterious effects have been on the rise for decades. And sure enough, all of this is happening at a time when the numbers of suburban children who no longer with both both parents is approaching 50%.

We who live and work in the “inner city” like to say, “We’re the canary in the mine.” This image goes back to coal mining days when the miners brought a canary down in a cage. If gas levels rose, the canary died first, signaling trouble, and sounding an alert that it was time to get out. So for years as the wider US population either shook its finger at the inner city, or pitied those living there, the fact is they were ignoring the canary in the mine. The gas has now reached the suburbs, and the effects are spreading. And the main ingredient of the gas is the breakdown of marriage and the traditional family.

We ought to care that traditional marriage is in crisis. It is clear that children thrive best under the care of a mother and a father, and that removing this fixture from our culture is devastating to children and to our culture. The canary is not lying. If we do not fix marriage and family, we are doomed.

As professor George states above, legislators defining marriage out of existence is going to make any restoration of it quite difficult. Some may argue that the phrase “defining marriage out of existence” is too strong, and that judges and legislators are merely widening its scope. But at some point, if anything is marriage, nothing is marriage.

This juggernaut will not stop. The polygamists are next (just google polygamy and see that the steam is building). After them come the incest crowd and other odd combinations. And there will be little legal basis to resist them. And in a secular culture that has lost any basis to morally reason, or determine right from wrong, who among the secularists will be able to say “nay?” Yes, in the end, if anything is marriage, nothing is marriage. Marriage, as a culturally recognizable institution seems doomed, it is being legally defined out of existence.

Tomorrow on the blog I want to revisit a notion I raised more than a year ago, when I wondered if we need to find a new word for what we mean by Christian Marriage. For it would seem that the word is losing any meaning with each year that goes by in the secular world. More on that tomorrow.

For now, we have every reason to be very alarmed at the demise of marriage in modern times. Those who want dismiss or minimize the effects of the loss of traditional marriage ought to think again. Try visiting my prior inner city neighborhood, look at the devastation. Heck, try visiting my old high school in the suburbs where the drafting lab, where I learned mechanical drawing, is now a nursery for all the single high school “moms” to park their kids while they try to finish high school. What was once unthinkable is now the “new normal.” And as traditional marriage and family continue to take a beating we are foolish to think that we are headed anywhere but into serious trouble and ultimate ruin.





11 comments:

Christina said...

I've seen this point made in other places, though before polygamy gains much ground (still being taboo) I think we'll see polyamorous groups pushing to have marriage applied to their relationships.

Anonymous said...

I realize that you screen your comments because curious liberals like me seem to be trying to impose evil on everyone with everything that we stand for and believe in. This can be for your eyes only (which I know it will be) but someone in the Catholic faith needs to hear it.

Besides the fact that you are preaching exclusionary love from God and how freedom, equality, and tolerance are only apparent, and seem to be mainly focused on gay marriage (something you will not be participating in so unlike the passage you quote, it truly DOES NOT affect you) you are down right ignorant to the expanses of God's love. I see NO WHERE in the Bible that God does not love everyone equally and I do not believe that He would have created a large population of people with -- as you call it -- a "homosexual defect" in order for them to be tortured by people who have the same ways of thinking as you. Try telling teenagers struggling with their sexuality that God does not love them or condone of who they love. Try sitting on the other end of bullying and beatings because of the person you held hands with in the hallway. You are not a preacher of God's loving word but an encouraging voice to those that spew hate and ignorance aroudn this country.

As a proud member of this liberal movement, if the powers I am fighting are those of ignorance and hate that focuses only on those things that prove you right, I am proud to call myself evil. I am spreading tolerance, love, equality for ALL people and if that makes me evil in the eyes of the Catholic church, I have never been so proud to call myself a Luteran.

Andrew said...

Anonymous, It's clear to see that you or someone you know has been gravely hurt by hateful or immature people. Your pain and outrage are justified because God loves everyone: the teenagers struggling with their sexuality, those who have been tormented by too many in our society, and you too.
In fact Christ's condemnation of unchastity (in any form, not homosexuality in particular) is rooted in his infinite love. It is because he cares so deeply about us that he wants us to live with the same happiness that he knew. It is because he loves us that he calls us to turn away from the fallen nature with which we were all born (which varies with each person and does not come from God), and live for him, because Christ is what truly makes us happy.
This in no way validates the hatred and intolerance of homosexual people, but in fact condemns it all the more. To take it a step further, Christ condemns the hatred and intolerance of homosexual people, but still loves the people who take part in it. With those people, hatred and condemnation are one, but with Christ and his authentic followers such as Fr. Greg, hatred and condemnation are polar opposites. If we equate the Church's condemnation of homosexuality with anything, let us equate it with love.

Anonymous said...

I am a confirmed Catholic so I do not mean this to sound like some kind of partisan clash. How do you or anyone in the Church really know how God feels about any of this? Less than 100 years ago the Church would not provide a funeral for a victim of suicide because of its "sinful" nature. Then came the understanding of mental illness. I AM NOT comparing homosexuality to a mental disorder, rather I'm trying to point out that the Church has in the past changed its policies as new understanding was reached. In an age where many are questioning the relevance of marriage and where marriages fail constantly I don't understand why the Church or God (and they certainly are separate because man is flawed) would deny the marriage of a couple that loves each other and has enough faith in the institution of marriage to enter into such a relationship? Perhaps the gay movement is so strong now because heterosexual individuals have failed to live up to His plan for marriage.

Christina said...

Anonymous, while it is true that the Church used to deny burial on sacred ground to victims of suicide, that was never as pivotal a teaching of either Christ or the Church as those on human sexuality. Certainly the Church can change her teachings if mitigating factors come to light, as with mental illness in suicide, but the Church cannot change Christ's teachings on human sexuality. Though He did not speak particularly on same-sex attraction or marriage, He did teach on how marriage ought to be. For this, I will refer you to Fr. Greg's blog post from yesterday, which will explain better than i could the information which I think you are seeking.

AMDG said...

Beautifully said Andrew. When I think of God's love for us, I tend to keep my thinking really simple. God teaches us to love the sinner, not the sin.

Annon2 said...

Disclaimer: it will be made clear that I have disagreements with this post, so I write this out of respect for the other side, but to also let these thoughts be known.

So, just a few flaws in this argument. Msgr. Pope says that if gay marriage becomes legal and you were to ask a girl "which prince or princess do you want to marry" it is assumed that people choose to be gay. Independent scientific studies have shown time and time again that people don't choose their sexuality. Do you honestly believe someone would choose to be gay, to choose to be attracted to something they don't normally want to be attracted to, to be labeled as part of a group that is actively discriminated against and bullied on the school yards? Secondly, it is estimated that roughly 4-10% of the population is gay. Taking the "conservative" number of 10%, that means that 90% of the population is straight. Look at what 90% of the population did to marriage and the family. When your ship is sinking, don't look for a scapegoat about a future sinking. Fix the sinking ship you're already in! Third, the idea that all "liberals" or "gay marriage supporters" want to destroy the family or hate God (whether you meant this statement or not I'm not sure) but it's ridiculous. Look at the number of atheists. Most are straight. Look at the number of families that don't go to Church. Fourth, comparing gay marriage to poverty just makes no sense at all.

Anonymous said...

I agree that the issue of suicide is not as pivotal as sexuality but I don't agree that Christ's teachings on marriage really negate the idea of same-sex marriage. I think people are taking the literal wording of the Bible a bit too seriously and I'm sorry if that opinion is somehow blasphemous. Just because the Bible uses the words "man" and "woman" does not mean that two men or two women cannot have the same kind of relationship, it's simply a way of wording marriage that will generally cover the majority. And even still, the current publications of the Bible were translated by modern individuals, centuries removed from the original writing of the Bible. It's insane to assume that Earthly bias has not made its way into the Bible. Anyone who has spent considerable time with a committed gay couple would testify to the fact that the relationship is almost the exact same as a traditional marriage (if not better because the gay community doesn't take marriage for granted). I realize you might have some defensive response about how you have gay friends, etc. but I've yet to meet an anti-gay Catholic who has had a close, friendly relationship with a gay individual.

This turned into a bit of a rant but my bottom line is this: Why do so many people claim that they know what God feels? Everyone alive is close to 2000 years removed from Jesus and it seems naive to assume that what the Church currently understands as God's plan for sexuality is the final truth. Perhaps we shouldn't legislate based on something so debatable and focus on the truly remarkable thing, that marriage has survived the casual sex of the sexual revolution and that it is still an important institution to both straight couples and gay couples alike.

Anonymous 5 said...

While I disagree with many of the things said in this serious of blog posts on marriage equality (namely the conflation of civil marriage and religious marriage that permeates our culture), I will restrain my comments to this:

Perhaps it would be more productive, in terms of reaching people without scaring/inflaming them, for Fr. Greg and the Catholic Church to focus on promiscuity -- in both the straight and gay communities -- rather than just singling out gays. As college students, we all know what kinds of things go on in today's "hookup culture," especially at a party school like GW.

I'll add that while I do think the church has a legitimate interest in encouraging moral sexual behavior, we need to put some of the old teachings in better context. Take for example the teachings in Corinthians about homosexuality -- the Helenistic community in Corinth was very sexually liberal (even by today's standards), and older, married men would often force young boys to be their sexual slaves. But one likely wouldn't understand this context unless you've studied the New Testament beyond church (as with many other passages). I believe this promiscuity and sexual abuse is the sort of thing that the New Testament teaches against -- not gay people having the same consensual, mature, and frankly often boring and sexless marriages that straight people are civilly entitled to.

Anonymous said...

somewhat off-topic, but I thought you'd be interested in this book review that was in this morning's Washington Post:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/mara-hvistendahls-unnatural-selection-about-a-world-with-too-many-men/2011/06/15/AGYB7AuH_story.html

Phil said...

Marriage is a civil issue in the United States. Whether or not you agree with the legality of same-sex marriage, it is an institution that is governed by the Constitution and Bill of Rights, specifically the First (establishment clause) and Fourteenth (due process, equal protection clauses), and therefore ideally is not influenced by religion. In a better world all people would be entitled to a civil union recognised by states and the federal government irrespective of the sexes of those being married, with marriage an extra step that has no bearing on the government. To fight, however, to stop same-sex marriage is a fight against not only religious freedom (or freedom from religion) but also free expression, both principle tenets of American culture, identity, and law. It's sad to see some so angered about an issue that doesn't actually affect them.