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townhall.com
The
future of same-sex marriage
Maggie
Gallagher
August 7, 2003
For those who adhere to traditional
Christian (or Jewish) sexual teachings, the future may look bleak.
America is disfigured by high rates of sexual
disorders, including unnecessary divorce, unmarried childbearing,
sexually transmitted diseases, a pornographic culture, and the
progressive normalization of alternative sexual lifestyles, along
with the sudden real threat that courts will impose gay marriage. A
Vatican statement simply repeating a 2,000-year-old ethical
tradition about marriage and sex has prompted a flurry of threats,
overt and implicit, around what we used to call the Free World.
Hate-speech codes intended to prevent violence
and harassment are being directed at Catholics simply for being
Catholic. The Irish Council for Civil Liberties has warned priests
and bishops they may face charges for simply quoting or handing out
the Vatican statement, according to the Irish Times. "The wording is
very strong and certainly goes against the spirit of the
legislation," warned Aisling Reidy, director of the ICCL. Violators
face six months in jail.
In 2001, the Dutch government considered
charging the pope with violating its speech codes before concluding
that, as head of state, he had sovereign immunity, according to
press accounts. Andrew Sullivan wonders aloud why the U.S.
government does not strip the Catholic Church of its charitable
status. One of the top Democratic candidates, Sen. John Kerry,
charged the Vatican with "crossing the line" violating the
separation of church and state for expressing its views of
Catholics' obligations.
Commitment to religious freedom among powerful
elites seems suddenly uncertain. Call it the revenge of the WASP: In
some people's minds, religion is becoming something like what sex
used to be: private. Sure, you are free to do it, but only behind
closed doors, where you won't annoy or seduce anyone else.
Privately, I hear more and more mainstream
people worry about where this is all going to lead: Will the soft
power of the state be aimed directly at oppressing faith communities
who hold fast to traditional sexual morality? Will radio licenses be
yanked, charitable tax deductions pulled, individuals or ministers
who try to share traditional Christian (and Jewish) sexual values be
threatened with prosecution here?
It is hard for me to give credence to such
fears. This is America, after all. Religious liberty is our
birthright, part of our founding creed.
But it is even harder for me to give credence to
the pessimism behind such fears. What will happen in the short run?
I do not know. Which ideas will triumph over the long run? That I do
know. In the early '80s, the Soviet Empire appeared to be at its
height, but Ronald Reagan, perhaps alone, understood: "The task,"
President Reagan said then, is "to manage the decline of the Soviet
Union." A few years later, a false idea contrary to human nature
collapsed in on itself. The Cold War was over, without a shot fired.
Human beings are free to adopt self-destructive
ideas, but we are not free to make them work. Ideas based on a
faulty view of human nature can grip the imagination of the powerful
for decades, wreak havoc and suffering on untold millions, but they
cannot triumph in the end. What is contrary to nature, including
human nature, cannot ultimately survive.
Many good things, from a culture of civility and
minority rights to greater respect for the unique contributions of
women, may be rescued from the self-destructive impulses of -- what
shall we call this beast, postmodern secularism? Fascist
egalitarianism? Meanwhile, every tribe or group that adopts its sex
code, from Europe to mainline Protestantism, is dwindling.
The present may look bleak, but the future
belongs to those people and cultures that deeply commit to ideas
grounded in human nature: Men and women are not interchangeable
units, sex has a meaning beyond immediate pleasure, society needs
babies, children need mothers and fathers, marriage is a word for
the way we join men and women to make the future happen.
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