The
best place to access the views, questions, prejudices and challenges of the
World is, I believe, the office water-cooler.
The next best places would be the Huffington
Post and (for Canadians), the CBC.
The water-cooler however retains its pride of place as the site more
often visited by the common man who, if he retains his common sense, tends to
avoid the Huffington Post and the
CBC. Anyway, it was at the office
water-cooler that the common man (in this case, a woman) was expressing the
common view on gay marriage, and asking with some anger, “If two guys love each
other, why can’t they get married?” The
anger accompanying the question indicated that the speaker thought that the traditional
prohibition of gay marriage was morally abhorrent (my phrase, not hers), and she
was reacting angrily, I suspect, because she discerned in the opposition to gay
marriage just one more wretched example of how those wretched Christians are
wretchedly imposing their narrow, irrational, bigoted and wretched views on the
rest of us. In the old days, we wretched
Christians were blamed for incestuous orgies (what else would all that secret
talk about “the Kiss” and “brothers and sisters” mean?), and for cannibalism
(“eating the Body and the Blood”? Eh
what?) Now we wretched Christians are
blamed for the sin—rapidly becoming the hate crime—of “homophobia”, which is apparently
defined as any dissent from the secular view that homosexual orientation and
life-style are equally on par with heterosexual orientation and
life-style. The Secular Inquisition has
made its ruling; such dissent is no longer allowed in polite society. Enthusiasm for Gay Rights is required, and
marching in the Gay Pride Parade is acceptable as sufficient evidence of such enthusiasm
for those aspiring to political office.
So,
what is wrong with gay marriage? It’s a reasonable question for water-cooler
philosophers: if two guys love each
other, why can’t they get married? The
question strikes us as reasonable only because we are modern. Ancient people (that is, earlier than 1960),
be they Christian, Jewish, Muslim or pagan, would have regarded the phrase
“homosexual marriage” as essentially oxymoronic, a contradiction in terms. Yes, pagans too. Pagans such as those living in the Roman Empire in the time of Christ generally had no
problem with homosexuality (word had it that even Socrates could swing both
ways), but they separated it entirely from marriage. Pagans, in other words, though not the
slightest bit illiberal, could at least think.
They had no problem with a man fornicating (or “hooking up” as we call
it today) with any number of women, or with any number of men, or any number of
boys. But all this sexual activity
had nothing to do with marriage.
Marriage, as ancient pagan, Jew, Christian, and Zoroastrian knew,
involved man and woman, and resultant babies whose legitimacy was rooted in the
legal obligations the biological parents owed to each other. Accordingly a pagan man might have a wife and
legal heirs, as well as other women (and men or boys) on the side. Presumably he had the sense to keep them a
reasonable distance from each other. (We
think of the toast: “To our wives and
sweet-hearts—may they never meet.”) For
the ancients, marriage was the institution in which babies were produced and
family happened.
It
is therefore difficult to answer the question, “what’s wrong with gay marriage”
because we have forgotten what marriage is, and we have forgotten this because
we live in a culture of contraception, one which has pretty much sundered
sexual activity from its usual result, which is procreation. For us moderns, love is a feeling, and
marriage is simply one way of celebrating this feeling. Why shouldn’t gay men who have the feeling
also be allowed to have its celebration? Marriage has nothing necessarily to do with
children, but rather with this feeling of love.
Children are not necessarily a part of the package. They are considered optional, and not a part
of marriage’s essence.
Do
not misunderstand the use of the phrase “culture of contraception”. Like Fr. John Meyendorff (in his book Marriage: an Orthodox Perspective) and
other contemporary Orthodox ethicists like him, I accept that artificial
contraception can be used responsibly by devout Orthodox Christians. I do not agree with Pope Paul VI’s encyclical
Humanae Vitae which famously outlawed
artificial birth control for Roman Catholics, nor do I agree with his view that
each sexual act must be open to the possibility of procreation. (I do not even think that this view is
self-consistent, since it allows for Natural Family Planning, which precisely
aims at allowing a sexual act without the possibility of procreation. It uses calendars more than rubber, but the
goal is the same.) My problem is not
with contraception as a practice, but
as a culture. We now no longer assume that sex and babies
go together, and if sex (or “hooking up”) results in pregnancy, we are
shocked. Our reigning culture, through
countless movies, novels and popular songs, teaches us to expect that sexual
activity is always: 1) free from
emotional complexities; 2) expected of all adolescents and adults, so that a
“Forty Year Old Virgin” is lamentable and a fit subject for a comedy, and 3)
not likely ever to result in pregnancy.
When any of these taught expectations are not fulfilled, we are
surprised. You’re pregnant? What’s wrong with you? I wanted us to keep having sex. Who said anything about babies?
The
ancients stood outside this culture of contraception (partly perhaps because
they lacked the technology for such a culture).
For them, marriage, defined as the union and partnership between man and
woman, had as one of its main goals the production and rearing of
children. That is, marriage (or
“family”, to give it its other name) was the factory wherein the human race was
manufactured. It was in the family that
a child had the safety to grow and learn what it was to be a man or a woman,
and how men and women were expected to behave, and to treat one another. Books were not often produced to teach that,
nor were they really required. Children
learned by watching. They watched Daddy and
learned what it was to be a man, and a father, and how men should treat women,
children, and other men. They watched
Mommy and learned what it was to be a woman and a mother, and how women should
treat men, and be treated by them. Just
as according to Hilary Clinton, “it takes a village to raise a child”, so
according to the witness of human history, it takes both a dad and a mom to
effectively transmit gender roles. A
single gender alone cannot do the job, because gender roles are not concepts to
be learned, but realities to be absorbed, and one needs to observe the
complementarity of both genders interacting to absorb the differences properly.
Gender
is basic to human nature, and its lessons, learned by watching, usually
reinforced the basic way they were created.
Thus nature and nurture alike contributed to their healthy adult
functioning as men and women. That is
how society replenished itself, and maintained stability and equilibrium
throughout the centuries. (It is also
why the State has a stake in the institution of marriage.) Sometimes nature slips up (though I suspect
when one cuts through the barrage of propaganda one finds that instances of
true sexual inversion are comparatively rare).
Sometimes nurture slips up, the Daddy and/or Mommy do a supremely bad
job of imaging healthy gender roles and of raising emotionally healthy
children. But the general theory, which
holds that both nature and nurture have a role to play, seems to have worked
out in practice and produced generation after generation of stable and healthy
children. If the theory were
fundamentally unsound, the race would have lost its stability long ago, and we
would not be here. Family as factory for
the manufacture of the human being, I suggest, has been doing okay. And the transmission of gender roles is a
major cog in the machine producing healthy men and women.
It
is just here that the concept of gay marriage becomes problematic. The problem is not only that nature decrees
that two gay men cannot reproduce and that their sexuality can never result in
children. Our culture of contraception
finds no problem with that, since it has already separated sex from
procreation. Two gay men can have
children by adoption (see note below). But though nature can be side-stepped like this, nurture cannot. Two gay men
cannot image or transmit by example to the adopted children what it means to be
a man or a father, because they do not know or experience it themselves. Two gay women cannot image or transmit by
example what it means to be a woman or a mother for the same reason. To be sure, they can transmit many other
worthy things—things like compassion, courage, a good sense of humour, and
social conscience. But the crucial
ingredient of gender role remains beyond them, and that lack makes it
impossible for them to fulfill the historic role and task of being fathers and
mothers, which is one of the purposes of marriage. Children raised in such an environment will
retain a skewed understanding of human nature—one which sunders procreation
from the essence of marriage and which remakes the concepts of masculinity and
femininity according to utterly new (and untried) canons of the brave new
homosexual world.
This
does not mean, of course, that if society allows Gay Marriage, and a Justice of
the Peace or some liberal clergy pronounce them “man and spouse” then the
wheels will fall off western civilization by a week next Thursday. But it does mean that changes will have been
put into place which will eventually work themselves out in many unforeseen
ways in the generations to come. Gender
is sufficiently basic to human nature that messing with it and altering the
nature of marriage so fundamentally will produce many far-reaching changes. The family factory is not that busted, and if
we “fix” it or tamper with it, the resulting human product will be altered in
many unforeseen ways. Obviously I cannot
elaborate in which ways, or they would not be unforeseen. But fifty or a hundred years after putting
the leaven of gay marriage into the lump of what it means to be a family, we
may be confident that the lump will be pretty thoroughly leavened. And this resultant bread (to continue to
metaphor) will not be Wonder Bread. It
will not (as Wonder Bread originally advertised) build strong healthy bodies twelve
ways, nor contribute to the health of our civilization. Why should Gay Marriage be disallowed? Because it eventually will alter what we mean
by family, men, and women, and this alteration will not be for the better. If and when that happens, those gathering at
the water-cooler generations hence will not look back on us with favour.
Note: I note in passing that this means that child-rearing in a homosexual world must of necessity be culturally parasitical–or if you like, dependent upon others. That is, ‘gay’ couples can only rear children because ‘straight’ couples have them for them. This is not the case for adoption on the part of ‘straight’ couples; it is only accidently dependent upon others, whereas in the case of homosexual couples it is dependent upon others necessarily and essentially.
I don't think that there has ever been a "traditional prohibition of gay marriage". Gay people have often got married -- even the notorious gay Anglican bishop Gene Robinson was married.
ReplyDeleteNor, for that matter has there ever been a "traditional prohibition" of homosexual marriage. No one would go to the length of prohibiting something that was regarded as ontologically impossible. It would be like prohibiting rivers from flowing uphill from their mouths to their sources, or prohibiting the building houses up in the air with no visible means of support. Perhaps that may become technologically feasible one day, if anti-gravity beams are invented, but no one has seen any reason yet to "prohibit" it.
Thus talking about a "traditional prohibition on gay marriage" is nonsense. What is actually happening is that the word "marriage" is changing its meaning, and is being applied to things that no one ever thought of as marriage. To discuss this more fully would go well beyond the limits of a blog comment, but I've written a post on it on my blog here The theology of Christian marriage | Khanya
I take your point, Steve. By "traditional prohibition on gay marriage", I simply meant the universal human tradition that marriage involved union between male and female, not union between persons of the same gender. You are quite right that such a homosexual union was not so much considered and rejected, as never considered.
ReplyDeleteAnd I am quite sure that that was what you meant, but I'm not sure that that is what those who speak about "the traditional prohibition on gay marriage" mean by it, and that their implicit intention to to make the Church, and by extension God himself, look like an ogre, whose main purpose it to prevent those who "truly love one another" from living "a normal life". So my point is really that such rhetoric is disingenuous, and perhaps ought to be resisted.
DeleteI like the Huffington Post for it's views on economics, and I only listen to CBC Radio 2, which is all music.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, my thoughts.
1.) There is now an effective difference between marriage as defined by the state and marriage as defined by the Church. Secular marriage seems to have more to do with who gets what at the divorce or death. The Church sees marriage as an icon of Christ and His Church. Christ takes on the Church as His bride, not His groom. The Church is betrothed to Christ the Bridegroom, not Christ the Bride. There is not other prototype to be instantiated. Which therefore means that there is nothing disingenous about speaking of a traditional prohibition on gay marriage. Other than that the issue has never come up 'til now.
2.) Theoretically, there should be a distinction between a.) moral disapproval of homosexuality on religious grounds, and b.) all out hatred of gays and lesbians. The problem is that Christian too often fail to make such a distinction.