Let me
begin by stealing an analogy from Princeton scholar Robert P. George’s The Clash of Orthodoxies.
“Academic legend has it that there
was once an A+ student in a moral philosophy class who passionately argued term paper was titled “There Is No Such Thing as
Justice.” Without penning a single remark on the paper, the professor gave a
failing grade. Stunned, the student went to see the professor. “Professor,” the
student began, “I worked extremely hard on that paper. I thought it was quite
good.” “Quite so,” the professor interrupted. “In fact,” he continued, “it was
perhaps the best term paper I have read in thirty years of teaching this class.
Your arguments were lucid. Your writing was brilliant. And your withering
attack on all legal, moral and religious orthodoxies concerning justice was
profound. In fact, you persuaded me that ‘There’s no such thing as justice,’ so
don’t complain!”
As this student learned, fidgeting with
long established truths, in many instances, can be self-defeating and
dangerous. Many of the moral, legal and religious truths that societies have long
held can seem difficult to defend when faced with the liberal, progressive
agenda of the day. The reason they are so hard to defend in once sense speaks
to their correctness. One has never before had to generate arguments for things
that societies have seen as self evident—almost a priori true. Of course we
should not kill children. Of course there is an intrinsic difference between
males and females. Of course marriage is an institution for one male and one
female. Well, as the moral fabric of society continues to decay, those things
which for centuries were simply and instinctually known to be true, now require
rationalization. So, let me provide a brief, non-bigoted, rationalization for
the preservation of marriage as a state ordained institution that can and must
be between one man and one woman.
So what is marriage? Marriage has always been, and must remain, a
bodily, emotional, and spiritual union of one man and one woman, ordered
towards the generating, nurturing, and educating
of children, marked by exclusivity and permanence, and consummated and
actualized by acts that are reproductive in type, even if not in every case, in
fact.
What is the secular definition of marriage? “Marriage is a legal
convention whose goal is to support a merely emotional union—which may or may
not, depending on the subjective preferences of the partners, be marked by
commitments or exclusivity and permanence.”
I have no registered political partisanship.
I tend to be a libertarian on most issues. I want the government involved in my
life as little as possible. I feel that when most people are pressed, they
share these beliefs to a certain degree. We want to be left alone to live our
own lives without perpetual interference. Yet, even the most strident
libertarian, the one who wants no public education, and no governmental laws prohibiting
the ingestion of foreign substances, does not fight for the government to stop
enforcing traffic laws. Why is this? Because, in this instance, the libertarian
understands that the government can secure the “good” for the people in a
better and safer way than if it were left to the individual inclinations and
proclivities of each individual motorist. Imagine driving in LA or NYC or on
the LIE where every driver decided for himself what the rules of driving were.
To avoid mass chaos, and secure a better world for its citizens, the government
overrules the individual wishes of the masses and establishes laws that are in
the best interest of the citizens. They establish laws that might seem annoying
and bothersome and not what we want at the particular time, but they secure
safety for all.
Now ask yourself a question, would
you like the government to be involved in each and every one of your
friendships? When you meet someone at school, church, the park, would you want
to have to get the state involved before you could officially become friends?
Would you want to fill out and sign paperwork to begin your new relationship?
What happens if you get in a fight and you no longer want to be friends? Would
you want to pay lawyers to decide how to redistribute your belongings?
This clearly would be absurd. But
for some reason the state is and has been involved in marriages in this way.
That is because, much to the chagrin of the secularists, marriage is not just
any relationship. It is not even just one’s deepest or most intimate
relationship. The state has always gotten involved in marriage because it
recognizes that marriage is the most fundamental way to secure the “good” for
society. The state has regulated marriages because just like the traffic
analogy, if marriage was simply an emotional bond, then chaos would ensue.
So what is it that makes marriage
so important in the eyes of the state? If the state does not regulate our day
to day relationships, why does it do so with marriage? The state is in the
business of not only functioning and surviving for this particular moment, but
also for the future. And how do we secure the future? We must have well
adjusted children.
Now no sociologist worth the paper
that their degree is printed on will deny the fact that children who are raised
in households with both a father and a mother are far more likely to be highly
functioning, productive members of society, than those who are raised without a
parent (we see this particularly when no father is around to raise the child).
Simply look at our prisons; they are flooded with men who were raised in
fatherless homes (Dr. Paul Vitz, Professor at NYU has a fantastic book, ‘Faith
of the Fatherless,’ detailing that race has little to do with crime rates—children
of all races, who are raised without fathers, are equally likely to commit
crimes).
Men and women clearly have different
attributes that they would pass on to a child, and that child would be best
suited if he or she had both influences in his or her life. But even if we succumb
to postmodern gender politics and claim that there is no difference between a
man and a woman (Think about how absurd such a statement is: “There is no
difference between a man and a woman.” This statement is only rendered
logically coherent because there is a difference. One is saying that there is
no difference between X (those things) and Y (those DIFFERENT things) there is
a deeply specific way that only traditional marriage secures the “good” for
society.
Children are better off if their
parents are together. But if marriage is purely and emotional bond, and is not
predicated on exclusivity and permanence, then what we have is a society that
views marriage as something that can be ended as quickly and seamlessly as a high
school friendship. Marriage, on the traditional view is predicated on a love
that lasts forever, because it is a love that continues through the birth of a
child (see my Valentine’s Day post). The secular conception of marriage is
something that streamlines the ability to end the relationship. As the state grows
to accept these non-traditional marriages,
the process and protocol for ending marriages will be streamlined for Gays and
non-Gays alike. The repercussions of this will fall like an anvil on the coming
generations of children.
I have tried to avoid anything that
might be construed as “fear mongering,” but it is clear that opening the door
to gay marriage is a slippery slope. If marriage is simply one’s deepest
relationship what stops one from allowing polyamorus relationships? What about
five frat brothers (who do not have a sexual relationship with each other) who
decided that they all want the rights and privileges of marriage? What if I am
a loner by nature, but I grow to have a deep, intimate and loving relationship
with myself? Can I then marry myself?
This all might sound absurd, and it
should, because it is absurd. Gay marriage is beyond oxymoronic. It is not a
thing. It is gibberish. To allow “gay marriage” is to deny marriage as a thing.
No comments:
Post a Comment