Posted on 06/17/2015 8:10:27 AM PDT by annalex
A Pastoral Letter from the Catholic Bishops of Australia to all Australians on the Same-sex Marriage Debate
Respect for all
At this time in history there is much discussion about the meaning of marriage. Some suggest that it is unjustly discriminatory not to allow people with same-sex attraction to marry someone of the same sex. Others believe that marriage is an institution uniting a man and a woman. We wish by this pastoral letter to engage with this debate, present the Churchs teaching to the faithful, and explain the position of the Catholic faithful to the wider community.
Because of this, every man, woman and child has great dignity and worth which can never be taken away. This includes those who experience same-sex attraction. They must be treated with respect, sensitivity, and love.
The Catholic Church opposes all forms of unjust discrimination. We deplore injustices perpetrated upon people because of religion, sex, race, age etc. The Catechism of the Catholic Church calls for understanding for those with deep-seated homosexual tendencies for whom this may well be a real trial. They must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided. {2358}
Christians believe that all people including those with same-sex attraction are called by God to live chastely and that, by Gods grace and the support of friends, they can and should grow in fulfilling Gods plan. Even those who take a different view to us about the place and meaning of sexual activity can appreciate the particular significance and importance of this institution. We now face a struggle for the very soul of marriage.
Marriage equality & discrimination
Advocates for same-sex marriage1 rarely focus on the real meaning and purpose of marriage. Instead they assume that equal dignity and the principle of nondiscrimination demand the legal recognition of same-sex relationships as marriages.
This appeal to equality and nondiscrimination gets things the wrong way around. Justice requires us to treat people fairly and therefore not to make arbitrary, groundless distinctions.
Only women are admitted to womens hospitals and only children to primary schools. We have programmes targeted at Aborigines, refugees, athletes, those with disabilities or reading difficulties, and so on.
Thus privileging or assisting particular people in relevant ways is not arbitrary but an entirely fair response. And if the union of a man and a woman is different from other unions not the same as other unions then justice demands that we treat that union accordingly. If marriage is an institution designed to support people of the opposite sex to be faithful to each other and to the children of their union it is not discrimination to reserve it to them.
Indeed, in this pastoral letter we argue that what is unjust gravely unjust is:
If we are right in this assertion and if the civil law ceases to define marriage as traditionally understood, it will be a serious injustice and undermine that common good for which the civil law exists.
Emotional tie -v- Comprehensive one-flesh union
One view of marriage is that it is nothing more than a commitment to love. On this view, marriage is essentially an emotional tie, enhanced by public promises and consensual sexual activity. The marriage is valuable as long as the good emotions last. Proponents of this view of marriage argue that, given that men and women, men and men, and women and women, can have these sorts of emotional ties, all such unions should be recognised as marriages in law. (On this logic marriage could be further redefined to include various types of relationships.)2
The traditional view of marriage, which the Church has always supported, is different. It sees marriage as about connecting the values and people in our lives which otherwise have a tendency to get fragmented: sex and love, male and female, sex and babies, parents and children. This view has long influenced our law, literature, art, philosophy, religion and social practices.
On this view, marriage includes an emotional union, but it goes further than that. It involves a substantial bodily and spiritual union of a man and a woman. As the Old Testament taught and Jesus and St Paul repeated, marriage is where man and woman truly become one flesh (Gen 2:24; Mt 19:5; Eph 5:31). It is a comprehensive union between a man and a woman grounded on heterosexual union.
This is true even where one or both spouses are infertile: they still engage in exactly the same sort of marital acts as fertile couples, i.e. that naturally result in a child. Marriage for them as for other truly married couples is grounded on a total commitment: bodily and spiritual, sexual and reproductive, permanent and exclusive. It is in these senses that marriage is comprehensive.
On this traditional view what allows for this special kind of union between a man and a woman in marriage is precisely their difference and complementarity. Their physical, spiritual, psychological and sexual differences show they are meant for each other, their union makes them whole, and through their union in one flesh they together beget children who are flesh of their flesh. They share the sameness of humanity but enjoy the difference of their masculinity and femininity, being husband and wife, paternity and maternity.
The importance of marriage and family
The Catholic Church cares deeply about marriage because it is a fundamental good in itself, a foundation of human existence and flourishing, and a blessing from God. The decision to commit permanently and exclusively to sharing the whole of ones life with someone of the opposite sex and to raise any children that are the fruit, embodiment and extension of that union, is good in itself, even if no children are conceived. But because children are the natural result of marital life and are best reared within the commitment of marriage, this makes marriage also an essential part of the propagation and nurturing of the human family.
Marriage also joins distinct families to each other, fostering greater communion between people.
Families also provide the social stability necessary for the future by modelling love and communion, welcoming and raising new life, taking care of the weak, sick and aged. The principal public significance of the marriage-based family is precisely in being the nursery for raising healthy, well-rounded, virtuous citizens.
Governments normally stay out of relationships: it is none of their business to say who may be friends with whom and on what basis.
Marriage also has a religious significance. The Catholic Church believes that God is the author of marriage and has endowed marriage with various benefits and purposes including the good of the spouses and the procreation and upbringing of children. 3
Christ raised the matrimonial covenant between baptised persons to the status of a sacrament in which God helps the spouses live out the dignity and duties of their state and so work out their salvation with Him. 4
Thus the Church, as well as the state, has an interest in the right understanding and support of authentic marriage.
The importance of mothers and fathers
Men and women bring unique gifts to the shared task of raising their children. Mothering and fathering are distinctly different. Only a woman can be a mother; only a man can be a father.
A mother and a father each contributes in a distinct way to the upbringing of a child. Respecting a childs dignity means affirming his or her need and natural right to a mother and a father. And there are countless reliable studies that suggest that mothers and fathers enhance and their absences impede child development in different ways. 6
The Church acknowledges the difficulties faced by single parents and seeks to support them in their often heroic response to the needs of their children.
Sometimes people claim that children do just fine with two mums or two dads and that there is no difference between households with same-sex parents and heterosexual parents. But sociological research, as well as the long experience of Church and society, attests to the importance for children of having, as far as possible, both a mother and father. 7
Messing with marriage, therefore, is also messing with kids. It is gravely unjust to them. We know that marriages and families are already under very considerable pressure today and that there is already much confusion about what they mean and how best to live marital and family life. The Church devotes much of her pastoral energy to supporting people to live married and family life well and to assisting the victims of marital and family breakdown. This convinces us that a further tearing away at the traditional understanding of marriage and family will only hurt more people and especially more young people who, because of their vulnerability, demand particular care.
Consequences of redefining marriage
Beyond the effects on spouses and on children, redefining marriage to include same-sex relationships will have far reaching consequences for all of us.
The world around us influences the communities in which we live. Cultural and legal norms shape our idea of what the world is like, whats valuable, and what are appropriate standards of conduct. And this in turn shapes individual choices. Thats one of the main purposes of marriage law: to enable and encourage individuals to form and keep commitments of a certain kind.
All marriages would come to be defined by intensity of emotion rather than a union founded on sexual complementarity and potential fertility.
And people who adhere to the perennial and natural definition of marriage will be characterised as old-fashioned, even bigots, who must answer to social disapproval and the law. Even if certain exemptions were allowed at first for ministers of religion and places of worship, freedom of conscience, belief and worship will be curtailed in important ways.
Here are a few real life examples that have occurred recently:
Time to act
The word marriage isnt simply a label that can be attached and transferred to different types of relationships as the fashion of the day dictates. It has an intrinsic or natural meaning prior to anything we may invent or the state may legislate. It reflects Gods plan for humanity, our personal growth and that of our children and society. To say that other friendships are not marriages is not to demean those other friendships or the individuals concerned, but merely to recognise that...
We all know and love people with same-sex attraction. They are our brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, friends and neighbours. They need love and support like anyone else. But pretending that their relationships are marriages is not fair or just to them. As Christians we must be willing to present the truth about marriage, family and sexuality and to do so charitably and lovingly.
We call upon all those of good will, to redouble their support for the institution of marriage in our community and for the laws and culture that sustain it. We particularly urge you to make your views known to your parliamentary representatives. At this moment in our nations history married people must give the testimony of their own lives in this matter. We especially pray for genuine friendship and love in every persons life, married or unmarried; for a right understanding of the meaning of marriage and the requirements of justice; and for an increasing openness to the powerful witness of married couples in our world.
Additional References
(6) See e.g. P Amato, Research on Divorce: Continuing trends and new developments, Journal of Marriage and Family 72 (2010): 650-666; S McLanahan and C Percheski, Family Structure and the Reproduction of Inequalities, Annual Review of Sociology 34 (2008): 257-276; S McLanahan and G Sandefur, Growing Up with a Single Parent: What Hurts, What Helps (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1994); B Ellis, et al., Does Father Absence Place Daughters at Special Risk for Early Sexual Activity and Teenage Pregnancy? Child Development 74 (2003): 80121; W B Wilcox, et al., Why Marriage Matters: Twenty-Six Conclusions from the Social Sciences, 2nd ed. (New York: Institute for American Values, 2005); E Marquardt, Family Structure and Childrens Educational Outcomes (New York: Institute for American Values, 2005); P Amato, The Impact of Family Formation Change on the Cognitive, Social, and Emotional Well-Being of the Next Generation, The Future of Children 15 (2005): 7596; C Harper and S McLanahan, Father Absence and Youth Incarceration, Journal of Research on Adolescence 14 (2004): 36997.
(7) See, e.g.: S Brown, Marriage and Child WellBeing: Research and policy perspectives Journal of Marriage and Family 72 (2010): 1059-1077; D P Sullins, Emotional Problems among Children with Same-Sex Parents: Difference by Definition, British Journal of Education, Society and Behavioural Science 7(2) (2015): 99-120; W B Wilcox, et al., Why Marriage Matters; W B Wilcox, Reconcilable Differences: What Social Sciences Show about the Complementarity of the Sexes and Parenting, Touchstone 18, no. 9 (November 2005): 36; M Regnerus, How Different Are the Adult Children of Parents Who Have Same-Sex Relationships? Findings from the New Family Structures Study, Social Science Research 41 (2012): 75270; and L Marks, Same-sex Parenting and Childrens Outcomes: A Closer Examination of the American Psychological Associations Brief on Lesbian and Gay Parenting, Social Science Research 41 (2012): 73551, 748.
Other resources
For those who wish to read more we recommend the publications of the Bishops Commission for Pastoral Life, available at http://tinyurl.com/pastorallife
Other Church documents include John Paul II, Familiaris Consortio (1981) and Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Regarding Proposals to Give Legal Recognition to Unions between Homosexual Persons (2003), both available at www.vatican.va
i think, everyone should request a copy and distribute it.
For you ping lists, please.
Amen.
Sadly the letter in spite of many good points is dreadfully weak. For example, nowhere does the word “Sodomy” appear. A true Catholic will not give those who are publicly proud of their grave sin any comfort. For example, the author states:
“We all know and love people with same-sex attraction. They are our brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, friends and neighbours. They need love and support like anyone else.”
If you are bothering at all to mention the sinners’ life of perversion then it needs to be highlighted at that time that they are in a state of perversion and in a state of grave sin. I would not waste the space to say, (for sake of comparison):
“We all know and love people with ATTRACTION TO MURDER OTHERS. They are our brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, friends and neighbours. They need love and support like anyone else.”
Such gentle speech is not fitting but it is in this context that warnings of punishment and God’s displeasure are demanded. So it is with the Sodomite.
To speak harshly with the sinner is not hate speech. It is tough love.
Thus the author never should have used the words “Same sex marriage” either, as those who are waging war on God’s people win when we use their language, even when, as the author did here, your explain that you don’t agree that it is a real word. He could have used a description such as “Perverted State-Sanctioned Sodomy unions” to greater effect.
To destroy a civilization you must first destroy its traditions
This is a remarkable document that presents the issue from what I thought were new and interesting points of view. Worth reading before commenting...
To state that all kinds of sinners, including murderers and homosexuals need and ought to receive love and support (presumably, the authors do not mean “supporting their sexual practices”), — is to state basic Christian teaching, at least from the Catholic understanding of it.
They do say “we do not consider that same-sex relationships can ever amount to marriage”.
You are right, but I would not call marriage a “tradition”, exactly. Eating turkey on Thanksgiving is a tradition; marriage is a sacrament that binds in heaven.
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