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Toward
the Precipice of Same-Sex Marriage
Court
decisions from Vermont to Alaska are granting the
benefits and protections of marriage to same-sex couples.
On March 6, the issue will come to a head in California.
Is marriage as we've always known itthe union of
a man and a womanworth preserving? A leader
of American Lutheranism says it is.
This commentary
by the Rev. Dr. A.L. Barry, president of the 2.6 million-member
Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, focuses on three themes:
(1) Same-sex marriage destroys the meaning of marriage
by obliterating the line between marriage and other
coupling relationships; (2) Same-sex marriage distorts
our traditional understanding of civil rights by expanding
those rights to include protections not just for a
person's innate traits but also for his actions and
behaviors; and (3) Same-sex marriage, in households
with children, deprives children of the distinct yet
complementary male/female role models in their upbringing.
ST. LOUIS,
February 25, 2000Despite developments in Hawaii and
Alaska, and more recently in Vermont and Connecticut,
most Americans would be surprised to learn that our
nation is moving ever closer to legalizing marriage
between two people of the same sex.
We will
know more about this trend in early March, when voters
in California decide whether to preserve marriage
in its traditional senseas a union between a man
and a womanor expand the meaning of marriage to include
same-sex unions and other coupling arrangements.
Whatever the outcome in California, citizens of other
states will soon be faced with the same question:
Should our time-honored understanding of marriage
as the sacred union of a man and a woman be kept intact?
One
flesh
As a Christian church body that sees the Bible as
the sole source, norm and guide for living, The Lutheran
ChurchMissouri Synod must consider even the thought
of same-sex marriage as being totally contrary to
God's will. This is a truth the church must
proclaim to society loud and clear.
Marriage
as a God-ordained institution joining a woman to a
man as "bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh" is
as old as Adam and Eve (Genesis 2:23-24). By
divine design, marriage has always meant the union
of husband and wife (terms which, like "bride" and
"groom," are by no accident gender-specific).
In our own culture, this fundamental understanding
of marriage as a complementary, male-female arrangement
is reflected not just in God's Word, the Bible, but
in centuries of ecclesiastical and canon law, English
common law, and the civil laws and customs of our
nation and separate states.
In the
unique dynamic of marriage, a man and woman enter
into a physical, emotional and legal union whereby
each sacrifices a portion of his or her independence
for something greater. This surrender of personal
independence for the greater good makes marriage the
basic building block of human society. It creates
families, extended families and communities.
It is this willing sacrifice of self-interest for
the greater good that distinguishes marriage from
other coupling arrangements.
Legal
sleight-of-hand
Proponents of legalizing same-sex marriage claim the
issue does not turn on our timeless understanding
of marriage, on the religious or moral debate over
intimate same-sex relationships, or on marriage's
foundational role in society. Rather, they say
it is purely a civil-rights matter. Neither
of these assertions is true.
Civil rights
are rooted in the recognition that all people are
equal under the law. Civil-rights laws protect
against discrimination based on immutable physical
characteristics like race, sex and national origin.
But homosexual behavior is not an immutable physical
characteristic; it is a course of action. Civil
rights do not protect behaviors and actions.
Laws prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex
ensure that the law treats males and females equally.
They do not guarantee a right to engage in homosexual
behavior any more than they guarantee a right to engage
in any other specific sexual activity.
Using the
language of civil rights to argue for a right to same-sex
marriage is a form of legal sleight-of-hand that shifts
our concept of civil rights from protecting people
to protecting behaviors. It is one thing for
homosexuals to ask the law to tolerate what individuals
do behind the closed doors of their bedrooms.
It is quite another to demand that society approve
of this, and even bless it, by granting it the status
of marriage.
A blueprint
for families
Since the creation of humankind, the core purpose
of marriage has been procreationthe biological ability
of married couples to "be fruitful," to conceive and
nurture children, thus assuring the survival of the
human race. Homosexual couples, obviously unable
to fulfill this underlying purpose of marriage, have
thus never qualified (for this and other reasons)
as marital partners. But, as recent court-decisions
have pointed out, advances in third-party, assisted-reproductive
technology now enable same-sex couples to have children,
thus removing the final barrieror at least what some
courts consider the final barrierto same-sex marriage.
This thinking,
however, like that which suggests that same-sex marriage
is not a moral but a civil-rights issue, is flawed.
Children need to be raised in a setting that provides
both male and female role models. This blueprint,
more than being God's plan for families, is simply
common sense. (The fact that marriages fail,
or that spouses die, leaving single parents to raise
their children bravely on their own, does not diminish
this divine ideal.)
The differences
between men and womenbiological, cultural, psychological,
geneticare profound and enduring. Yet, through
the workings of marriage, this universe of gender
differences is marvelously and uniquely integrated,
producing a whole far greater than the sum of its
parts.
It is God's
intention, and therefore it should be our intention,
that a child see and experience these complementary
processes at work in his mother and father's common
endeavor of raising him. To deny a child this,
to place him in a household to be raised by two homosexual
"fathers" or "mothers," is to deny him something of
incalculable value: the wholeness and completeness
he instinctually yearns for, and receives, through
the distinct yet harmonious contributions of a loving
mother and father. To contend that opposite-sex
and same-sex couples are essentially the same in regard
to the raising of children is an affront to the human
nature our Creator gave us.
Granting
the status of marriage to same-sex unions thus requires
three things of us: (1) that we sacrifice the sacred
meaning of marriage on the altar of sexual freedom;
(2) that we transform our concept of civil rights;
and (3) that we deny many children their right to
a natural, balanced, fully integrated upbringing.
This is
the choice the voters of California and the courts
of our land are being asked to make. It is the
choice that all of us, eventually, will have to make.
I pray we think about what is at stake before stepping
off the precipice toward same-sex marriage.
The
Rev. Dr. A.L. Barry, President
The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod
February 25, 2000
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