GAY
AND LESBIAN FAMILIES
Articles and Analysis
Marriage Troubles
By James Ide
LEF Contributing Writer
Gay marriage will not destroy
the institution of marriage. The high divorce
rate (near 50 percent) and the number of children
born to single mothers (one in three) are real
threats. But where are the serious efforts and
serious resources to address such fundamental
threats to marriage? TV shows such as, "How
to Marry a Millionaire" or "Bachelorette,"
or the 55 hour marriage of Britney Spears poses
a bigger threat to the institution of marriage.
Society should be concerned with marriage, but
the focus on gay marriage won't do anything to
improve the institution of marriage.
Opponents of gay marriage often
say that procreation is the only purpose of marriage.
However, some people intentionally, while others
without choice, have remained childless. Should
they be prevented from marrying? Should marriage
vows of non-procreative couples be rescinded or
annulled because they cannot or do not have children?
What about older couples who meet later in life?
Should they be prevented from marrying? Everyone
from George Washington to Pat Buchanan to John
Kerry fall in these categories. Few would argue
their marriages are or were invalid because of
the fact that they didn't have children.
If gay marriage were allowed,
would it open the door to polygamy or incestuous
relationships? No! The reality is that a central
tenet of marriage is to promote stability, far
more likely in two-way relationships than in multiple
relationships. The risk of birth defects in children
of close relatives is a powerful reason to prohibit
them.
Do gay marriages undermine
religious institutions? No! Any church, temple,
or synagogue is free to perform, recognize, or
prohibit such unions. That would not change. Religious
institutions are free to make their own restrictions,
in the future as well as in the past. Many marriages
in the Bible were between one man and several
women simultaneously. For the first thousand years
of Christianity, the church did not want anything
to do with marriage, which was about property,
not spirituality. In the United States, until
after our Civil War, slaves could not marry anyone-not
even each other-because they were property. Interracial
marriage was still illegal in some states until
1967. If any religion wants to believe that a
marriage should consist only of one male and one
female, that is their choice, they are free to
make that restriction for themselves, but there
is still separation of church and state in this
country, and some of us want it to stay that way.
The government should not encourage such discrimination.
Is there a persuasive positive
case for marriage? Yes! Marriage, whatever its
imperfections, is a stabilizing structure encouraging
commitment, caring and responsibility. Marriage
helps connect sex with love and commitment. What
rational society would tell 5 percent of its population
that they are banned from such an institution?
Is that the same society that blames gay men and
lesbian women for promiscuity and then denies
them the right to an arrangement that promotes
monogamy? Is that logical? Is that Christian?
Is that moral?
If the love of two people,
committing themselves to each other exclusively
for the rest of their lives is not worthy of respect,
then what is? Gay couples deserve the same respect
and dignity accorded heterosexual couples, and
equal access to tangible benefits. As long as
marriage remains an exclusively heterosexual option,
lesbians and gay couples remain second-class citizens
denied formal equality. Our government should
not encourage such inequality.
In the last census, there were
600,000 households that identified themselves
as same-sex households and 28 percent or 168,000
of those were raising their children.
There are some 1,138 federal
benefits associated with marriage. They include
such things as taxes, pensions, inheritance, immigration,
health insurance, and services, care decision
making, social security, survivor benefits, etc.
Gay marriage does not disparage
heterosexual marriage, it enhances the very institution
of marriage.
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