The Case Against Same-Sex Marriage
Tim Leslie
Crisis Magazine
Anyone not living in a cave has noticed the intensifying attack on
traditional marriage. In Vermont, Canada, and Massachusetts—and now
California, with the signing of a de facto gay marriage bill—the war drums
against traditional matrimony are beating with ever-growing intensity.
The
onslaught will not be turned back unless the public is given better, more
coherent arguments against same-sex spousal unions. While religion plays an
obvious role in the debate, the effectiveness of faith-based arguments is
limited because most Westerners care little what the Bible or theologians
say. To argue from religion will only convince those who are already
convinced and will simply alienate the rest.
So
how can we assemble a coherent and persuasive case? By steering the
discussion back to the historical understanding of marriage’s primary end.
In
recent generations, we’ve seen the belief evolve that the overriding purpose
of marriage is the spouses’ mutual pleasure. This is what enabled Sally
Lieber (D-San Jose), my colleague in the California assembly, to say, “I
don’t see how my marriage is any more moral than the same-sex couples I
know.” This claim, of course, only makes sense if companionship and sexual
pleasure are matrimony’s preeminent ends.
But
this deviates from what every culture in history has recognized as the heart
of marriage: the begetting and education of children. The happiness of the
couple is vital, to be sure, but it’s not the only or primary purpose and
never has been. Why? Because “happiness” produces no definitive benefit for
society, whereas the rearing of children clearly does. As the Vatican
recently noted, “Society owes its continued survival to the family, founded
on marriage.”
Because of this, it makes sense for society to support traditional marriage
alone. Conversely, allowing same-sex spousal unions makes no sense.
Indeed, we can only allow homosexual spousal unions if the central purpose
of marriage is the spouses’ happiness. If that’s true, then
heterosexual-only wedlock is indeed discrimination. But if marriage has a
higher purpose, then anything that undermines its traditional framework also
threatens to undermine its desired result—the rearing of healthy,
productive, contributing citizens.
Promoting the General
Welfare
If
the central purpose of government is to promote the general welfare, then
the state must promote always what is best for society’s health, security,
and long-term viability. This requires the state to make prudential
judgments about various segments of our population: Those under 16 may not
drive. Those under 21 may not drink. You must possess a high-school diploma
to join the military. Information about paroled child molesters must be made
available so parents can protect their children.
Some
label these prudential decisions “discrimination,” but discriminating in
such matters promotes the general welfare. The unique affirmation of
heterosexual marriage operates under the same principle. Traditional
matrimony is the foundation of society, and society should neither encourage
nor recognize anything pretending to approximate it. Again, the reason for
this relates to marriage’s primary purpose: The spousal union produces
families, and such families are the building blocks of society.
Granted, many marriages don’t produce children. Most soldiers don’t face
combat and yet are still eligible for veterans’ benefits. But the state
rewards each institution based on its ability to provide society with a
valuable function. Governments favor historical marriage and seek to
strengthen it in its policies because virtually everything that happens in
society, for good or ill, can be traced back to families and family life.
The
marriage revolution would not only undermine matrimony—and thus society—but
it would effectively destroy it.
Gay
Assemblyman Mark Leno asked during the floor debate for the California gay
marriage bill, “Is marriage so fragile?” The answer is yes. The marriage
rate is at an all-time low. Fifty percent of marriages end in divorce.1
Annually, more than one million children experience divorce, and they will
suffer in many ways as a result.2 More couples than ever are
living together outside of marriage, which several studies show leads to an
even higher divorce rate.3
By equating
homosexual partnerships with marriage, society’s attitudes toward marriage
will be cheapened to an even greater degree. As Canadian TV show host
Michael Coren notes, “If marriage is suddenly fundamentally altered to
include people of the same gender, it loses its genuine meaning to the rest
of us. We may include the earthworm in the cat family. Does this make worms
feline? Of course not. But it destroys the definition of cat.” Instead of
being recognized as the crucial, indispensable building block of
society—through which most of its benefits flow—marriage will simply be
another choice among many. “What’s the big deal about marriage?” our
children and grandchildren will ask. In the Sixties, this was a fringe
sentiment. If gay marriage goes through, it will become the norm.
And
as that happens, our society will slide with ever greater speed down the
slope of social chaos. Why? Because it will only further encourage marital
instability and broken homes, and children growing up in these situations
are more likely to exhibit a variety of antisocial behaviors.4
Children growing up in traditional homes, on the other hand, have these
problems to a significantly diminished degree.5 They have better
emotional health, engage in fewer risky behaviors, are less likely to engage
in premarital sex, and do better educationally and economically.6
Finally, a recent Utah study found that divorce costs the federal, state,
and local governments $33 billion per year. For all these reasons, the state
has a vested interest in promoting stable traditional marriages.
Furthermore, these marriages provide the natural complementarity between the
sexes, which benefits children. Studies show mothers devote special
attention to their children’s physical and emotional needs, whereas fathers
devote their primary efforts to character traits. David Popenoe of Rutgers
University’s National Marriage Project writes, “Both dimensions are critical
for an efficient, balanced, and human child-rearing regime.” Left unsaid is
the fact that same-sex couples can never provide this complementarity and
thus cannot provide an optimally “efficient, balanced, and human
child-rearing regime.”
Still, some would argue, since gays will continue adopting, shouldn’t we
encourage same-sex marriage? Wouldn’t this help give children the stability
they need? No, because studies by even homosexual researchers reveal that
same-sex couples are fundamentally different from their straight
counterparts. They are more promiscuous, have greater physical and mental
health problems and shorter life expectancies, and the average duration of
relationships is woefully short.7
And
these differences don’t produce a healthy environment in which to raise
children.8 Any number of indicators prove this; indeed, they
prove that it would be detrimental and possibly even dangerous.9
For instance, the journal Adolescence reported that researchers found
a “disproportionate percentage—29 percent—of the adult children of
homosexual parents had been specifically subjected to sexual molestation by
that homosexual parent, compared to only 0.6 percent of adult children of
heterosexual parents having reported sexual relations with their parent....
Having a homosexual parent(s) appears to increase the risk of incest with a
parent by a factor of about 50.”10
So,
while same-sex marriage might promote a particular welfare—that of the
couple—it would not promote the general welfare, which arises from raising
healthy, balanced children who have all the interior resources necessary to
become contributing citizens.
Infidelity and
Promiscuity
Gay
“marriage” would further redefine marriage in the way it treats conjugal
fidelity.
In
their book The Male Couple: How Relationships Develop, David
McWhirter and Andrew Mattison found that of the 156 couples they studied, 75
percent of the partners learned within five years that for the relationship
to survive, cheating had to be tolerated, as long as one or the other did
not become emotionally involved with the other sex partner. In her book
The Mendola Report, lesbian Mary Mendola conducted a nationwide survey
of approximately 400 homosexual couples. She, too, found that homosexuals
distinguish between sexual and emotional exclusivity. Indeed, just 26
percent of homosexuals believe commitment is paramount in a marriage-type
relationship.
This
translates to an almost unfathomable degree of sleeping around. A recent
Amsterdam study found that men in homosexual relationships cheat with an
average of eight partners a year. Others have found that the average
homosexual has between 100 and 500 sexual partners over his or her lifetime.
One study showed that 28 percent have had 1,000 or more sex partners, with
another study placing the percentage between 10 and 16 percent.
While adultery is certainly a factor in traditional marriages, it is
comparatively rare. In fact, studies on matrimony place the male fidelity
rate between 75 and 80 percent and that of females between 85 and 90
percent. The reason is simple: Unlike homosexual relationships, emotional
and sexual fidelity within matrimony are inexorably linked and always have
been by definition. To extend the concept of marriage to a situation wherein
fidelity is not the norm would not only cheapen the institution, but it
would have disastrous consequences for children. Simply put, a marriage is
not a marriage without total exclusivity.
Homosexuals argue that marriage would make their relationships more stable.
However, given the runaway promiscuity in this subculture, the assertion is
at best unlikely. As UCLA sociologist Anne Peplau notes, “There is clear
evidence that gay men are less likely to have sexually exclusive
relationships than other people.”
Their argument also fails to take into account the institutions that have
relaxed prohibitions against homosexuals. The most poignant example of these
is the Roman Catholic priesthood. It was argued in the 1960s that allowing
gay men into the clerical state would instill in them sexual restraint and
celibacy. Just the opposite happened. Most of these men have consciously
subverted the historic norms of priestly celibacy. Furthermore, the
sex-abuse scandal was largely driven by homosexual priests in that 90
percent of victims were adolescent boys. One study of 50 gay Catholic
priests found that only two abstained from sexual activity. Many were very
open about their carnal habits. Therefore, we should seriously question the
homosexual community’s soothing words regarding the consequences of gay
marriage.
In
response, gay activists point to Vermont and its civil unions and note the
sky has not fallen there. However, people said the same thing immediately
after the changing of divorce laws, which set in motion forces that would
not be evident for 40 years.11 Says one homosexual researcher who
opposes same-sex marriage, “This new experiment would be unprecedented in
human history, and yet we haven’t taken the time to think carefully about
possible consequences. Instead, we’ve allowed emotion to sweep aside all
other considerations.”
Redefining Marriage
The
final reason same-sex marriage would have a detrimental effect on society
comes from homosexuals themselves: Many freely admit they want to redefine
marriage, not only to include same-sex couples but to change its very scope
and meaning.
Patti Ettelbrick, former legal director of the Lambda Legal Defense and
Education Fund, once said, “Being queer is more than setting up house,
sleeping with a person of the same gender, and seeking state approval for
doing so…. Being queer means pushing the parameters of sex and sexuality,
and in the process transforming the very fabric of society.”
Michelangelo Signorile, homosexual activist and writer, says the goal of
homosexuals is to “fight for same-sex marriage and its benefits and then,
once granted, redefine the institution of marriage completely, to demand the
right to marry not as a way of adhering to society’s moral codes but rather
to debunk a myth and radically alter an archaic institution…. The most
subversive action lesbians and gay men can undertake…is to transform the
notion of ‘family’ entirely.”
Even
when homosexuals are circumspect about their intentions, their goals are
clear. Gay pundit Andrew Sullivan has said the “openness” in many gay
relationships would in reality fortify heterosexual marriages by allowing
straight couples to see that adultery doesn’t necessarily destroy a
marriage. Furthermore, once gay “marriage” is allowed, the faithful nature
of traditional unions will be transformed accordingly. He says this is a
good thing.
None
of us should hate those with same-sex attractions. But while embracing them
as people made in the image and likeness of God, we should instead make it
clear that our problem is with their agenda because it goes against God’s
plan and would do great damage to our culture and its future stability.
These are complex arguments and do not fit easily into a news producer’s
need for a sound bite. However, we must make the case for the central
importance of marriage for society. If we don’t, it will result in an
unprecedented societal breakdown every bit as catastrophic as the
disintegration of the great cultures of the past.
End Notes
1. The State of Our Unions 2003, What are your chances
of divorce? National Marriage Project, Rutgers University,
http://marriage.rutgers.edu/Publications/SOOU/TEXTSOOU2003.htm#Chances
ofDivorce.
2. Donna Kato, “Children suffer more
from divorce than previously thought,” San Jose Mercury News, 1997,
http://www.infidelity.com/the-kids/articles/children-suffer.htm,
et al.
3. Katherine Kersten, “We should work to
save kids from divorce,” Minneapolis Star-Tribune, July 26, 2000, et
al.