Catholic Exchange

Standing Up for What is Right

I have hesitated to write this next article as I have been praying about it for a good deal of time, yet it is something that will not leave my mind.  Ever since the election, it is something that I have wrestled with and thought about, knowing what the right thing is, yet unable to deny the pain that is felt by a good number of my friends on this issue.

When it comes to the topic of homosexuality, it is an issue that I do not take lightly.  I have friends who wrestle with this and, to be honest, they are funny, honest, and caring individuals for the most part.  They know that I do not agree with their behavior, but now that this issue has become political and I find myself on the other side of the fence, I truly fear losing them as friends, so this is at once a plea for their friendship and an explanation as to why I cannot support anything other than what is now known as traditional marriage.

History

Rather than a history of marriage or homosexuality, I offer my own history from my own life.

In high school I was, to be honest, an opinionated bastard.  There really is no other way to put it.  I had set in my mind that the world worked a certain way and if you did not fit into the mold that I had determined was a “good person” then as far as I was concerned you were destined for hell. 

When I look back on that person I don’t know how I sustained any type of friendship since I didn’t even do a good job of living up to my own standards.  One of the areas where I had no patience for people at all was in sexual sin.  My own temptations in private had absolutely no impact on the judgementalism that I leveled on the people around me.

At the same time, I had a soft spot in my heart for the underdog.  If there was a person in school who was being picked on, most times I would try to stick up for them.  It just seemed like the right thing to do.

As I grew and matured into a young man and dealt with my own conflict of faith that was brought on by my own weaknesses, my soft spot for the underdog never changed.  I would often find myself in arguments sticking up for an unpopular position or a person who could not defend himself.

This would manifest itself in arguments against abortion but for the dignity of people who struggled sexually, especially friends of mine who were homosexual.  Eventually I came to live in a house after college with a good number of people who considered themselves to be homosexuals.  I remember a number of conversations with them regarding the homosexual lifestyle, my own misconceptions about it, and even the people involved in it. 

At this point I believe that I am the last person that would demonize an individual for being a homosexual or for dealing with that temptation.  I certainly have had moments during my time as a youth minister when I disciplined students and teenagers who thought that the term “fag” was an acceptable comeback to another person.

I dealt with teens and adults who have struggled with all sorts of temptations, from homosexuality to heterosexuality, and I have seen these temptations overcome and succumbed to by various individuals.

The truth is, I do not know what another person is dealing with as far as their temptations and background in their lives.  I am the very last person to be sitting in judgment as to a person’s motivations in his or her life.  I do not understand, though, why we would identify ourselves with our sexual desires, which are only a part of us, not who we are.

I think I am better now at dealing with my own demons.  I still have them and I still wrestle with them and they have changed over the course of the years, but while I have never dealt with the temptation of homosexuality, I don’t know why anyone’s temptation is a bigger sin than anyone else’s or that it deserves special attention or judgement.

Marriage

I think that the biggest argument about marriage is the idea that it should be for anyone who loves each other.

The problem is that marriage was never meant to be about someone’s desire for another person.  While it might be helpful and even important if two people desire each other, marriage is about one thing and one thing only: children.

Anyone can be in a committed relationship without the term “marriage” attached to it.  Marriage is a way for society to protect the weakest members of its group: women and children.  You can argue that women are not weak, but since the dawn of man, the widow and the orphaned were considered the ones in society that were most preyed upon.  Widows were often forced into prostitution while orphans became criminals and beggars.  We have seen the damage done today through divorce as fatherless families lead the demographic that produces crime and poverty.  When Judaism became a way of life in Canaan, it was the first civilization to protect these groups.  This was through marriage.

In marriage, two people make a commitment in front of society and God to produce children and bring them up to be a benefit to that society.  The husband and father has an obligation to that family and to the mother as well.  The fact that this has fallen out of practice in the last 40 years does not negate the previous 5000 years.

What our society has done is separate childbirth from marriage and make marriage purely about the desire to have our society recognize that these two people can have sex whenever they want.  We want “cute couples” who have Pottery Barn homes that can be renovated for an HGTV special and the freaks with children end up on The Nanny.

Children have become optional.  Instead of being the main purpose of marriage, they have become an unintended consequence or a piece of decoration on a Christmas card at best.  They are tolerated instead of treasured.

As soon as children become optional, adultery, incest, polygamy, beastiality, and homosexuality present no impediment to marriage for marriage is simply about two people wanting to be together and what makes their desire any less than someone else’s?

Questions

The immediate reaction to this is “what about the couples that cannot have children that get married?  Are you saying that they should not be allowed to be married?”

The interesting thing about this question is that you have to go outside the natural order of things to a physical defect (infertility) in the person in order to justify what is quite simply a physical normality (homosexual infertility).  You are then saying that because of the unnatural infertility in one legally recognized relationship you should legally recognize a naturally infertile relationship. 

Granted there have been medical advancements and science can do all types of things, but because science can manipulate our bodies to do all types of things doesn’t justify doing it.  We still do not know all of the medical complications that can arise from all of the ways that we try to skirt nature. 

Once marriage has become simply a matter of two people wanting to share a tax burden rather than obligating themselves to make more people, it is hard to argue against any two people of any gender (or any three people) getting married if that is the only ground that you walk on.  For why should you draw the “marriage line” at two people?  What makes anyone’s desire for partnership better than anyone else’s?

If marriage is about society making more people, growing children and having them protected in the best way possible, then we need to fix heterosexual marriage because it has gone completely off the rails.  Perhaps that is the problem.

When reproduction, human life, and children are considered a burden and not the main focus of marriage, the idea of sacrifice, the idea of a self-giving love become secondary.

Do I love my wife?  Absolutely.

Do I desire good for my wife?  Absolutely.

Do I want to be a partner to my wife for my entire life?  Absolutely.

Is that the reason we are married?  No.

If you want the reason for our marriage, look at our two daughters.  When my wife and I argue, fight, and disagree, we know that there is something beyond our earthly temptations and desires that are more important.

They are two girls that are little bit of me and a little bit of her. 

Our obligation and responsibility to each other, to them, and to our society as a whole is more important than our selfish desires.

If marriage is completely about the production and rearing of children, then there are a few obstacles that may arise as we begin to contemplate this relationship in our society.

Sexual Desire in Marriage

One cannot deny that sexual desire is a part of marriage, but the difference here is that sexual desire is not the reason for the marriage in the first place.  The couple is not getting married because of their sexual desire for one another.

Rather, the sexual desire of the couple is simply a manifestation of the desire to have children, of which having sexual intercourse is an integral part.  Since having children can only come about in a natural sense from the sexual union of a man and a woman, the desire to have children must be regarded as a heterosexual desire, even if the person exhibiting the desire for children is considered a homosexual.

Sexual desire in marriage serves a purpose other than reproduction. For the couple that is reproducing, sexual desire often does not lead to a child, but many times leads to the bonding of that couple in a relationship that will be supportive of the children that they have or will have.

But what if this “bonding” effect is seen as the sole reason for a couple to get married, if they marry out of loneliness, or the need to simply fulfill desires manifest for them from childhood.? When this is the case — when “what I want or need” dominates the thinking — anyone who is married will tell them that they will find a marriage fraught with difficulties.

In the family where there are children present, yet the couple does not conceive when engaging in sexual intercourse, this bonding ensures that the parents will remain together to support the children and continue to develop a protective family unit so that the children can continue to grow to be contributing members to society.

Sexual Desire Outside of Marriage

In recent years our society has become quite obsessed with the idea of sex as a means of exchange. We use sex in order to cure loneliness, we use sex to cure our need for acceptance, or we use sex to cure our low self-esteem.

When sexual intercourse occurs outside of marriage it often leads to pain, disappointment, heartache; it’s the opposite of what we desire it to be. Our society has been on a 40 year campaign of removing consequences from sexual intercourse so that it can simply function as some type of drug, a weak cure to loneliness, and a bandage to blind us to our real needs and make us feel good about ourselves.

What are some of the consequences that we have tried to remedy so that sexual intercourse outside of marriage would not lead us to some type of permanent fixture on another person?

Pregnancy.

Disease.

Emotional bonding.

Personal responsibility.

While it is always good to do everything we can to limit disease in our society, the idea that the creation of human life is something that can just be tossed aside every time we want to have sexual intercourse has transformed the way that we view sex and sexuality in our society.

Pope Paul VI was right when he wrote that removing pregnancy as a consequence of sexual intercourse could lead to greater incidences of adultery, for if there are no consequences, why limit bad behavior?

This adultery would also lead to higher incidences of single parenting as fathers refuse to take responsibility for their children they conceived outside of marriage.  This would lead to an increase of poverty.  Anyone who has worked with single mothers knows the struggle that they have making ends meet and keeping their families afloat.

As pregnancy is removed as a consequence of sexual intercourse then the need for marriage itself is also eliminated, for what is the need of getting married when no children  are going to result from the relationship?

If pregnancy is removed as a consequence of sexual intercourse, then what makes the relationship of man and woman any different than the relationship of same-sex couples, polygamous couples, or even incestuous couples who may be “in love”?

For if the end goal of marriage is simply the sexual bonding of two people and we had ceased to celebrate parenthood and the creation of a new human being as a significantly different relationship from all others, there can be very little argument that one person’s idea of marriage is any better than any other person’s idea.

Children Are Special

The truth is, without a relationship that makes more people, there would be no people to advance us in science, technology, or any other fields. We lose potential presidents, Heisman Trophy winners, Olympic athletes, doctors, diplomats, priests, saints, teachers, youth ministers, and even the people who cause us to be charitable as we give to them out of love.

Why is making children so important?

Because children solve the Social Security crisis.  Because children can solve the environmental crisis.  Because children can solve the problem of alternative energy sources.  Because children can solve the problem of lessening resources in an increasing world.

In fact, every good idea and every movement forward in humanity has come from someone who was at one point a child.

The instant we as a society lose the respect and awe, the desire to protect and care for children in those relationships that cause children to come forward, is the instant we have lost our society, our future.

Therein lies the deepest problem that no one would like to confront.  It is only those who will stand up for all human beings and their inherent dignity, who can show us that our dignity goes even beyond our own desires. 

In short, the Catholic Church will fight for the dignity of all human beings, but will not tolerate behavior that lessens the dignity of those human beings.  That same moral standard requires that we fight against any indignity, against any notion that human beings are to be used, commodified, or made disposable, no matter which part of society becomes disposable to another.

In the end, the Catholic Church, like Christ, accepts all: Will bury the dead without question; will care for the sick without question; will house the homeless without question; will provide care for those abandoned by a society too busy pursuing its desires without question; will serve the poorest of the poor, the “widows and orphans” of society without question.

Because we have been redeemed to something bigger than desire.

I will continue to fight for what is right.  The dignity of every single human person, no matter the size, shape, age, sexual orientation, religious background, political party, nationality, race, color, or creed. 

I will fight to be more than my own desires and I hope that we as a society can live, work, dream, and pray for something much bigger than our own selfish desires and start to embrace true human dignity.

Comments

14 responses to “Standing Up for What is Right”

  1. Claire Avatar
    Claire

    Great article. Thank you.

  2. lessa Avatar
    lessa

    Thank you for writing about this issue. Some of us are dealing with it daily because of family members whose response is “Why do your religious principles trump my need for a loving relationship?” or “Why can’t you attend a same-sex marriage and acknowledge how much thse two people love each other? Everyone knows it will be hard for you but they will still respect you as a person of faith.” We need the encouragement to see the issue for what it is and means and to persevere in our faith.

  3. CrisDee Avatar

    Thank you, Mr. Lemieux, for this most excellent article! These are concepts that I have tried to articulate for years when explaining the Catholic position on contraception to those who don’t agree with it, but you articulated them far better than I’ve been able to. Thank you again for this excellent teaching tool.

  4. fishman Avatar
    fishman

    excellent article !!

    If the author reads this I was wondering if you might say a bit about josephite marriage and how it fits into this picture.

    I think one of the problems is that there are many subtle and beautiful aspects to marriage.

    Still, marriage has a purpose, and giving up a natural good for the purpose of a greater good is not wrong.

    I think the problems of coarse have run much deeper then and are intertwined with the problems involving marriage. Specially people are selfish and our society promotes selfishness as a way of life. It is a consequence of a practical atheism that cannot be escaped if you ascribe to the philosophy of ‘en sola scriptura’ which naturally begets philosophical liberalism and moral relativism.

  5. mjlaloggia Avatar
    mjlaloggia

    Amen! Awesome article! Thank you, Mr. Lemieux!

  6. jayme Avatar

    Thank your for this very thought-provoking article. I will certainly share it with friends.

    I can commiserate with the high school experience. I thank God that I never have to be 17 again and have the burden of knowing everything!

  7. madhattertea Avatar

    Very very good article, an absolute must to pass around!
    madeline

  8. jooleez Avatar
    jooleez

    Excellent! This also translates to lust. . .and the (TOB) Theology of the Body, self mastery, self control and an up close and personal relationship with God.
    The porn issue has hit in my family. It is important I believe to get the understanding out there of the TOB. This knowledge will help in all the areas mentioned and more. When we undertand the why’s and delve into a deeper understanding of things we begin to act on them. We get a whole boatload of incorrect thinking from the culture of death. Now it is time to counter it with the details and truth from the other side! God bless you!

  9. Warren Jewell Avatar
    Warren Jewell

    A marvelous copied-for-posterity article.

    The essence of marriage has been marginalized as the Sacrament of Matrimony. The very name of the Sacrament – Matrimony – is millenium-long Latin-based reflection that the institution derives its power and grace and has its firmest foundation in motherhood – parenthood – those most precious gifts and real prosperity who are our babies.

    I love putting a newly newborn under the Christmas tree – and just delight at the wonder written on her face, in her groping gestures, her kicks of excitement. She quite simply acts out the very wonder we should find in ourselves every time we look at her. And, it is Matrimony – two become as one in God’s grace and eyes that He can create His most marvelous childen – which makes us so wonderful in how it makes her and her cadre of siblings, cousins, playmates, etc., so wondrous.

  10. SolaGratia Avatar
    SolaGratia

    Excellent article! Definitely going to pass this one on!

    fishman, I don’t claim to know much & I may be missing your point, but doesn’t this article already address josephite marriage? Wasn’t the entire purpose of Joseph’s marriage to Mary to provide a family for the Child Jesus?

  11. Lucky Mom of 7 Avatar
    Lucky Mom of 7

    I know that took some courage to write. I lost a friendship and strained another one over the abortion debate leading up to the election.

    Praise God that California voted in favor of marriage. There is still hope. Sometimes I feel like an island lost in a sea of extreme liberal ideas and agendas. Then I chat with another parent in the pediatrician’s office or with a stranger in the grocery line and I realize that it’s primarily the media painting such glum pictures of society. There are more moral, sensible people in the world than we often realize. More of us need to speak up and be willing to provide leadership.

    Anyway, thanks for the well-written piece. It’s encouraging and full of truth.

    Lucky

  12. Daughter of the King Avatar
    Daughter of the King

    While I do not disagree that one of the ends of marriage is children I do not agree that “marriage is about one thing and one thing only: children”.

    In the CCC 1601 it says “The matrimonial covenant, by which a man and a woman establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life, is by its nature ordered toward the good of the spouses and the procreation and education of offspring; this covenant between baptized persons has been raised by Christ the Lord to the dignity of a sacrament.”

    It also says in 1603 “The well-being of the individual person and of both human and Christian society is closely bound up with the healthy state of conjugal and family life.”

    1604 “Their mutual love becomes an image of the absolute and unfailing love with which God loves man.”

    If marriage is about one thing and one thing only: children then you’re saying that all we are as people are baby making machines. We’re not. God calls many to be married and then does not bless them with children? Does that then make it wrong for them to be married?

    Yes marriage is about children and I can understand what you’re trying to say with regard to other unions that exclude children but you’re lowering the meaning and santity of marriage when you say it’s just about children.

  13. DonHudzinski Avatar
    DonHudzinski

    There is no marriage whithout the Incarnation…

  14. kirbys Avatar
    kirbys

    THis is a great article, but I think there may be something else and it has to do with how deeply rooted we are in our sexual identity, our maleness and femaleness. I lost a dear friendship with someone who was SSA and demanded that I accept the “whole package”–his “union” with his partner — or lose the friendship entirely. He would not accept that I would love him as a friend but not approve of his lifestyle. In his eyes, I was denying his very being — as if someone was telling me that I was not completely a woman, I guess. (Being 7 months pregnant, I’d be highly offended if someone were entirely convinced that I was not a woman and was not following the natural course of things! 🙂

    The points regarding parenthood and marriage are great, but the real travesty and tragedy of the SAA behaviors is that the depth of personhood–who we are and who we ought to be as a male and female created in His image and likeness — is being denied. (And I think that in this topsy-turvy society, even heterosexuals can be denying that male- or female-ness!)

    I am sure someone else can articulate this better!

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