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In Defense of Marriage
BY The Editors
October 4-10, 2009 Issue |
Posted 9/25/09 at 11:53 AM
Why is the
Catholic Church so insistent that the institution of marriage can only occur
between one man and one woman? Because the Church proclaims the truth about the
greatness of human beings. And it’s because of this truth of our human
greatness that the Church affirms that nothing less than the lifelong union of
a man and a woman — freely giving themselves to each other in mutual love — is
capable of being an authentic marriage.
This reality isn’t a negative
proscription about who should or shouldn’t be allowed to marry. It’s a
radically positive expression of who we are, and of what we are invited to
become in this most intimate of human relationships.
In its campaign to legally redefine
marriage laws in the United States to include same-sex couples, the homosexual
lobby has caricatured its opponents, including the Catholic Church, as
narrow-minded bigots bent on perpetuating a cruel injustice by denying
homosexuals an “equal right” to marry their same-sex partners.
Against this false but powerful
caricature, it’s inadequate to highlight the negative behaviors that are
strongly associated with the homosexual lifestyle, to cite the adverse
consequences that must confront children raised within homosexual “families,”
or to point out that until very recently no human society has entertained
seriously the claim that marriage can involve persons of the same sex.
These facts certainly are important,
but negative arguments don’t win hearts and minds. As Pope Benedict XVI said in
an August 2006 interview with German-speaking media, “Christianity,
Catholicism, isn’t a collection of prohibitions: It’s a positive option. …
We’ve heard so much about what is not allowed that now it’s time to say: We
have a positive idea to offer, that man and woman are made for each other, that
the scale of sexuality, eros, agape, indicates the level of love, and it’s in
this way that marriage develops, first of all, as a joyful and
blessing-filled encounter between a man and a woman, and then the family,
which guarantees continuity among generations and through which generations are
reconciled to each other and even cultures can meet.”
So Catholic Americans have a duty to
state their case positively too, when defending marriage and family against
legislative and judicial attacks — attacks like the one just launched in
Congress to repeal the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which we report about
in this issue of the Register. That’s what Bishop Richard Malone of Portland,
Maine, is doing, as he leads the fight in that state to place a “citizen’s
veto” on the state ballot in November asking voters if they want to repeal a
law passed this spring granting homosexual couples the “right” to marry.
“A same-sex union can never realize
the unique and full potential that the marital relationship expresses,” Bishop
Malone has insisted.
But while most people retain an
intuitive understanding that true marriage is a heterosexual-only institution,
it’s not always easy to know how to make that case in a positive and persuasive
way.
Fortunately, there’s plenty of help
at hand. The Catechism of the Catholic Church, numerous Vatican documents and
especially Pope John Paul II’s rich theology of the body are all superb
resources for articulating the truth about love and marriage.
The Catechism succinctly describes
the two positive dimensions of authentic marriage: its “unitive” capacity to
create an intimate communion of “one flesh” that joins the complementary male
and female natures of husband and wife; and the “procreative” capacity of this
intimate communion to generate new human life.
States the Catechism, “By
transmitting human life to their descendants, man and woman as spouses and
parents cooperate in a unique way in the Creator’s work” (No. 372).
And, as John Paul taught in his
theology of the body, in a mysterious yet very tangible way, this loving union
of husband and wife, and the new human life they can generate together, mirrors
the communion of the three divine persons of the Holy Trinity.
To be matrimonial mirrors of God the
Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit — that’s truly a call to human
greatness.
Also of much value in communicating
the positive truth about marriage are the resources made available by the U.S.
bishops at the “Marriage and Family” page of their website
(USCCB.org/laity/marriage/index.shtml).
The ideal model for positive,
effective communication is Jesus himself. Asked by a scribe to summarize the
largely negative rules regulating human conduct that were communicated by God
to Moses in the Ten Commandments, Jesus restated them as two positive,
condensed commandments — to love God and to love one’s neighbor.
And
when the pharisees sought to test Jesus by asking him about the validity of
divorce under Jewish law, he seized the opportunity to deliver a bold
affirmation of the indissoluble character of marriage.
Moses had only allowed divorce
because of “the hardness of your hearts,” Jesus said in reply. But, he added,
God’s intention is that men and women who are joined in marriage should never
be separated.
In effect, Jesus was telling the
pharisees, “As persons created in the image and likeness of my Father, you’re
much, much bigger than this question of yours implies. Marriage isn’t about
negative rules or damage control; it’s about God joining husbands and wives
together for life in a joyful merging of their masculine and feminine
identities.”
Jesus was saying, “Think ‘great,’
when it comes to marriage between one man and one woman. Don’t be so
small-minded and hard-hearted.”
That’s the same Christian message
the Church continues to deliver today as it addresses the destructive bid to
redefine marriage to include same-sex couples. It’s not that the Church is
wedded to a view of marriage that’s too small and too narrow to accommodate the
full range of human love. It’s that the Church knows that the dignity of the
human person is too immense to be compromised through a pretense that this
counterfeit redefinition is equivalent to the unique marital union that exists
between a man and a woman, joined together in love.
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