Dorry and Earl Dahl, members of St. John the Evangelist Church in Streamwood, Ill., kiss after renewing their vows at the annual golden wedding anniversary Mass at Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago Sept. 9. The Mass honored more than 600 Catholic couples married for 50 years. Chicago Cardinal Francis E. George presided over the celebration. (CNS photo/Karen Callaway, Catholic New World)
It is imperative
for Catholics to develop rational arguments to defend the institution of
marriage in the public square. We live in a pluralistic society and, therefore,
what we accept as revelation is not necessarily accepted by others. However, an
argument grounded in right reasonwithout explicit recourse to
revelationis in principle comprehensible to all persons of good will.
As we consider the
current debate over marriage, it would be a mistake to underestimate the
pedagogical function of the law and how a fundamental change in marriage law
will result in a fundamental change in our understanding of the human person.
What is at stake in the push to redefine marriage to include same-sex partners
is not only the radical redefinition of marriagebut, also and
necessarily, the radical redefinition of the human person and the entire range
of relationships that constitute our basic experience as persons: male and
female; husband and wife; mother and father; son and daughter; brother and
sister.
Same-Sex Marriage Renders the Public Recognition of
Marriage Unnecessary
Marriage between
one man and one woman is recognized as a public institution, with its attendant
benefits and responsibilities, precisely because it serves the common good.
Marriage offers the State its most
necessary common good: bringing children into the world and raising them
in a family that includes the love of their mother and father. The State needs
people (citizens) in order to flourish: no people = no State. Under the
principle of subsidiarity, the common good is better served when mothers and
fathers raise their children, not the State.
Extending marriage to same-sex partners will redefine
marriage in such a way that marriage will no longer be understood to have a
direct relationship to the procreation and education of children. Bringing
children into the world and raising them will be seen as
extrinsic rather than
intrinsic to marriage.
[1] Openness to procreation will no
longer belong to the very substance and definition of marriage. It will be
reduced merely to an option for those couples who happen to want children.
Some might object that if we have proven anything, we have
proven too much: if we were to insist that openness to procreation belongs to
the very essence and definition of marriage, we would have to exclude not only
same-sex partners from marriage, but infertile heterosexual couples as well.
When examined carefully, however, this objection is not valid and does not hold
weight. The sexual activity of an infertile heterosexual couple is
intrinsically open to procreationeven though their sexual union cannot
result in procreation. The sexual act of an infertile couple is the
kind of
act that is open to procreation; the fact
that it cannot lead to procreation is accidental to the act itself. Under
normal circumstancesi.e., functioning fertilitytheir act could
lead to procreation. On the other hand, the sexual act of a same-sex couple is
the
kind of act that is never open to procreation; the non-openness to procreation
belongs
to the very substance and definition of that act.
Thus, one can rationally hold that openness to life is
intrinsic to marriage without excluding infertile couples from marriage.
Infertile heterosexual couples engage in the kind of act that leads to
procreation; homosexual couples do not. A marriage comes into being not only
though the exchange of the mutual consent of willsas if we were
disembodied spiritsbut through conjugal, bodily union as well. A
marriage, to properly exist, must be consummated: i.e., include the sexual
union of spouses in an act which is open, in principle, to the procreation and
education of children.
Redefining marriage to include same-sex partners would thus
remove the essential public purpose of marriage from its definition: that is,
the procreation and education of children. It thereby severs the institution of
marriage from the common good. Yet, this would remove the very rationale for
recognizing marriage as a public institution in the first place. The objection
that legalizing same-sex marriage will have no harmful impact on heterosexual
marriage is, therefore, shown to be entirely false. Such a redefinition of
marriage would have the necessary effect of reducing all marriages to the
status of private relationships with no relation to the common good. This, in
turn, renders the public recognition of marriage as an institution utterly
superfluous. To render a public institution superfluous is, of course, to undermine
and call into question why the state should recognize and support that
institution at all.
The Battle to Redefine Marriage Is a Battle to Redefine
the Human Person
The move to
redefine marriage will require us to reject the idea that women
precisely as
women and men
precisely
as men are
essential to the relationship that is the foundation of all healthy societies:
marriage and the family. Ultimately, those who want us to redefine marriage ask
us not only to understand marriage as an essentially gender-less institution,
[2] but ask us to understand the entire range of
relationships common to human experience as essentially gender-less. There is
nothing less at stake in the marriage debate, therefore, than the battle to
redefine our understanding of the human person and the relationships which
constitute our experience.
This new
understanding of the human person carries with it an implicit rejection of the
body in its masculinity and femininity as a reality that is constitutive to our
experience of personhood. It has, perhaps unwitting, the effect of alienating
the body from the self and reducing the body to an object or instrument to be
manipulated and shaped by what is understood to be an essentially androgynous
consciousness. Under this view, the body is no longer affirmed as an
always-already personal realitya visible manifestation of the
subjectivity of the human person. Rather, the body in dualistic fashion is
reduced to the merely physical or animal leveli.e., to dumb, impersonal,
biological matter. The dis-embodied person (subject) is then free to use the
de-personalized body (object) as moved or inclined to do so.
Those who defend
marriage as the life-long conjugal union of one man and one woman propose a
different understanding of the human person and the body. The human person is
seen to be a body-person, a composite-unity of body and soul
(self-consciousness and self-determination). Under this view, the human body is
different from an animal body not only in degree but in kind, because the human
body is always-already a personal reality that cannot manipulated and used as a
mere instrument.
[3]
As body-persons, our bodies reveal and participate in our male or female
personhood (subjectivity). When a man encounters a woman, he encounters a body that
is different than his in her visible femininity, yet similar in that her body
expresses personhood like his (and unlike animal bodies). In this sense, our
common bodiliness serves as a visible affirmation of our shared humanity and
our equal dignity as persons.
In a difference
sense, however, the sexual differentiation of the male and female body serves
another purpose: visible signs that accentuate the difference between man and
woman in a way that highlights and affirms the unique dignity of woman
vis-À-vis man (and vice versa). When a man encounters a woman, her body offers
him limpid testimony that there exists another and different way of being human
(female). This, in turn, gives visible witness to the man that he can never
fully exhaust what it means to be human. He is limited and, furthermore, has no
access to that other way of being human (female) unless the woman opens and
gives him access to herself. The union of man and woman, then, is a
unity-in-difference, a dual-unity in which it is precisely their difference
that serves as the ground that makes their union possible. Moreover, this union
is possible only on the basis of a mutual gift of self, the man to the woman
and the woman to the man. Yet, even in their union, in their oneness, their
personhood or identity is not absorbed or lost in the other. The very fruit of
their union is an otherthe child. And this other is, yet again, another
visible sign of their unity-in-difference. The union between man and woman in
marriage, then, is meant to be a union that is mutually enriching, that
strengthens the identity of each even as it increases their oneness. Their
union becomes all the more intimate as their uniqueness and difference is all
the more affirmed by the other.
We who defend
marriage as a life-long union of one man and one woman do so not with a spirit
of animus toward those with same-sex attraction. Rather, we believe marriage
should not be redefined because we are convinced that women bring something
unique and irreplaceable to the marital relationship, something that men
cannotand vice-versa with respect to men. We also believe that women
(mothers) possess a unique genius and offer their own special gifts to raising
childrenand vice-versa with respect to men (fathers). Further, we affirm
that children have both the right and the need to experience the love of their
mother and their father. Marriage between one man and one woman is the
only form of marriage which provides children the
ability to experience the love of their mother and father.
When a child’s
biological mother and father are unable to care for him/her, we believe this is
a great tragedy and sorrow. We try to remedy this sorrowful situation through
the institution of adoption. Husbands and wives have the unique capacity to
provide a home where adopted children can experience the love of a mother and a
father. Yet, to redefine marriage is to purposefully deprive children the
opportunity to experience the love of both a mother and a father. Two men
might each be a good father, but neither can be a motherand vice-versa
for two women. The ideal for children is to experience the love
of their own biological mother and father. Where this is not possible, children
can experience the love of a mother and father through adoption. No same-sex
couple can provide this experience for children. Therefore, no same-sex couple
can provide for this common good of children and society.
In the end, there is more at stake in the marriage debate
than appears at first glance. To redefine marriage to include same-sex partners
severs marriage from the common good and, thereby, calls into question the very
need for recognizing marriage as a public institution. By rejecting the idea
that bodily difference (masculinity and femininity) is constitutive of the
human person and is the indispensable ground for spousal union, those who push
for the radical redefinition of marriage also and necessarily push for the
radical redefinition of the human person. The force of law, then, will impose a
fundamentally different understanding of those relationships which are most
intimate to our human experience: male and female;
husband and wife; mother and father; brother and sister.
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