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I’ve been divorced four times, but homosexuals are the ones destroying marriage
The Matt Walsh Blog ^ | February 4, 2014 | The Matt Walsh Blog

Posted on 02/05/2014 4:15:29 AM PST by xzins

Last night, someone emailed and asked me to write about the gay marriage case in Virginia. This morning, a woman from Wisconsin asked if I would blog about the gay marriage case in her state. A few readers in Utah have also requested that I chime in on the gay marriage fight there.

And so I was going to do just that. I sat down to type a scathing rant about gay marriage. I sat down to tell the world that gay marriage is the greatest threat to the sanctity of marriage.

But then I remembered this:

That’s a sign I saw on the side of the road a little while back. Divorce for sale! Only 129 dollars! Get ‘em while they’re hot!

And then I remembered an article I read last week about the new phenomenon of “divorce parties.” Divorced is the new single, the divorce party planner tells us.

And then I remembered another article claiming that the divorce rate is climbing because the economy is recovering. Now that things are getting a little better, we can finally splurge on that divorce we’ve always wanted!

And then I remembered that – ebbs and flows notwithstanding – there is one divorce every 13 seconds, or over 46,000 divorces a week in this country. And then I remembered that, although the “50 percent of marriages end in divorce” statistic can be misleading, we’re still in a situation where there are half as many divorces as there are marriages in a single year.

And then I remembered no-fault divorce. I remembered that marriage is the ONLY LEGAL CONTRACT A PERSON CAN BREAK WITHOUT THE OTHER PARTY’S CONSENT AND WITHOUT FACING ANY LEGAL REPERCUSSIONS.

Sorry to scream at you.

But I remembered that marriage has for decades been, from a legal perspective, the least meaningful, least stable, and least protected contract in existence, and I think this fact should be emphasized.

And then I remembered how many Christian churches gave up on marriage long ago, allowing their flock to divorce and remarry and divorce and remarry and divorce and remarry, and each time permitting the charade of “vows” to take place on their altars. And then I remembered that churches CAN lower the divorce rate simply by taking a consistent position on it — which is why practicing Catholics are significantly less likely to break up — but many refuse because they are cowards begging for the world’s approval.

And then I remembered that over 40 percent of America’s children are growing up without a father in the home. And then I remembered that close to half of all children will witness the breakdown of their parent’s marriage. Half of that half will also have the pleasure of watching a second marriage fall apart.

And then I remembered that more and more young people are opting out of marriage because the previous generation was so bad at it that they’ve scared their kids away from the institution entirely.

I remembered all of these things, and I decided to instead write about the most urgent threat to the sanctity of marriage.

Divorce.

Divorces are as common as flat tires, and they often happen for reasons nearly as frivolous.

The institution of marriage is crumbling beneath us; it’s under attack, it’s mortally wounded, it’s sprawled out on the pavement with bullet wounds in its back, coughing up blood and gasping for breath. And guess who did this? It wasn’t Perez Hilton or Elton John, I can tell you that.

This is the work of divorce.

I am an opponent of gay marriage, but we here in the “sanctity of marriage” camp are tragically too afraid to approach the thing that is destroying marriage faster than anything else ever could. Gay marriage removes from marriage its procreative characteristic, but rampant divorce takes away its permanent characteristic. It makes no sense to concentrate all of our energy on the former while all but ignoring the latter.

To make matters worse, some of the loudest mouth pieces for “traditional marriage” in media and politics are bigamists, adulterers, and men with two, three, or four ex-wives. It’s not that you can’t defend the sanctity of marriage when you have been divorced multiple times, it’s just that you have zero credibility on the subject.

If you beat and abuse your children so badly that they have to be removed from you, you could, I suppose, still complain if you found out that your kids are also being mistreated in their foster home. But your anger must first be directed at yourself, because it is YOUR FAULT that they are suffering in this way.

So whose fault is it that the institution of marriage is beaten and broken? I don’t think we want to contemplate that question, for fear that we might see ourselves in the answer.

Should laws be written to “defend marriage”? Sure, and let’s start with legislation to make divorces at least somewhat harder to obtain than a magazine subscription. How serious are we about this? Anyone up for a law to criminalize adultery? What about putting some restrictions on re-marriage?

There are certainly times when a couple has no choice but to go their separate ways. What else can you do in cases of serial abuse or serial adultery, or when one party simply abandons the other? But infidelity and abuse do not explain the majority of divorces in this country, and they are not the leading causes of break-ups. According to these “experts,” the top causes of divorce are a lack of individual identity, “getting into it for the wrong reasons,” and “becoming lost in the roles.” A survey done by the National Fatherhood Institute found lack of communication, and finances to be the leading culprits. An article in The Examiner also cites finances as the most potent divorce-fuel.

In other words, these days marriages can be blown apart by the slightest gust of wind, coming from any direction, and for any reason. Noticeably absent from all of these polls about the reasons for divorce: gay marriage.

That’s because gay marriage is not the biggest threat to marriage.

We are.

We are, when we vow on our very souls to stand by someone for the rest of our lives, until death do us part, only to let financial troubles and communication difficulties dissolve that union we forged before God. We are, when we forget about those Biblical readings we picked out for our wedding service:

My lover belongs to me and I to him. He says to me: “Set me as a seal on your heart, as a seal on your arm; For stern as death is love, relentless as the nether world is devotion; its flames are a blazing fire. Deep waters cannot quench love, nor floods sweep it away.”

For stern as death is love.

When we marry, we die. Our old selves die, and we are born anew into each other; into the unbreakable marital bond.

We are a threat to the sanctity of marriage when we let our selfishness fool us into thinking that our wedding vows weren’t that serious.

Indeed, despite popular sentiment, they were serious. They are serious. They’re as serious as death.

The struggle to protect marriage is also serious. It’s an important battle.

So maybe it’s time we actually start fighting it.

*NOTE. To answer your questions: no, I have not actually been divorced four times. I’ve been married once, and I’m still married to her, and I’ll never be married to anyone else. The title was tongue-in-cheek. I was writing it from the perspective of the sorts of people who rant about the sanctity of marriage, yet have racked up multiple ex-spouses. Perhaps I should have been more clear about this. In any case, there it is. I appreciate your concern.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Miscellaneous; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: homosexualagenda; marriage
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To: logic101.net; xzins
Marriage is not and never has been a “right”. If it were a “right” the state could not tell you that you can’t marry your sister/brother.

Yet the "rights" line of reasoning was argued in Loving v. Virginia (1967) and other marriage cases that followed it. Chief Justice Earl Warren's opinion for the unanimous court opined that:

"Marriage is one of the 'basic civil rights of man,' fundamental to our very existence and survival.... To deny this fundamental freedom on so unsupportable a basis as the racial classifications embodied in these statutes, classifications so directly subversive of the principle of equality at the heart of the Fourteenth Amendment, is surely to deprive all the State's citizens of liberty without due process of law. The Fourteenth Amendment requires that the freedom of choice to marry not be restricted by invidious racial discrimination. Under our Constitution, the freedom to marry, or not marry, a person of another race resides with the individual and cannot be infringed by the State."

61 posted on 02/06/2014 7:43:04 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: xzins
You know that "divorce" is a homosexual marriage argument...

But it's a derivative one, not a First Principle, i.e. "Because your family house has a leaky roof and mold damage in 1/3rd of the rooms, we order you to tear the entire house down. A new house will be erected from the proceeds of your insurance and taxpayer funds, large enough for a gay family to live in also; and you may not build another house like the one you had before, nor live in it with only your biological family as before. Your laws were bigoted; this is the fundamentally changed law now."

62 posted on 02/06/2014 7:57:23 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: Tax-chick; xzins
People recognize the social damage caused by easy divorce, and they certainly don't like it when their spouse up and dumps them ... but they don't want the law changed, because they want the option open. People recognize the social pathologies of fatherless "families," but they like free sex outside marriage. ... they want everything ...that they, personally, want, while somehow precluding the things they don't want ... yet. When they decide they do want it, then anyone who disapproves is a "theocrat."

Bingo. Can't take the time to find it, but there was an Atlantic article to this effect IIRC about 20 years ago summing up this point, the negative consequences of which still haven't sunk in to the population at large enough to seek a correction.

63 posted on 02/06/2014 8:01:52 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy
the problem is not marriage, but *government* controlled marriage. The abrogation of a holy rite by religions is a terrible disaster.

Agreed, as long as you are not arguing that the state could somehow stay so far out of marriage that it fails even to support marriage. That is the situation we have now, in fact.

Some of the legitimate reasons for government to support (true, heterosexual and JudeoChristian) marriage are the protection of the institution of marriage itself, the protection of minor children and the disposition of shared property when one of the partners defaults on the marriage. Looking at the state's position on marriage through the distorted lens of the no-fault divorce environment is like looking in a fun house mirror.

64 posted on 02/06/2014 8:10:09 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: Charles Henrickson
there is nothing I can do to stop it. The divorce is scheduled to be finalized next week.

So very sorry; God be with you.

As I've tried to point out in previous posts, abandonment is enabled by no-fault, which permits a partner to leave with no legal consequences specific to the abandonment, therefore delivering no justice to the abandoned party.

65 posted on 02/06/2014 8:22:21 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: redgolum
Most pastors and priests are very scared about preaching or talking about divorce. To many in the pews have gone through it, and many are hurting from it, to make it an easy sermon. We as the Church need to fix our own flippant disregard of marriage.

Catholic churches require "pre-Cana" marriage preparation and also promote Engaged Encounter and Marriage Encounter weekend seminars.

The non-Catholic churches also need to develop curricula about engagement, marriage preparation and marriage, to promote them and be reluctant to marry anyone who has not participated in such instruction, to encourage small-group peer counseling of the marriagable or newly married by stable grandparent couples who have gone through a course and screening, and other proactive steps.

In other words, instead of decrying the darkness, take responsibility for turning on the lights.

66 posted on 02/06/2014 8:30:05 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: AppyPappy
Liberal Premise: Marriage isn’t working so we should let gay people do it.

Nutshell!

67 posted on 02/06/2014 8:32:35 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: Tax-chick
Also, my hands are freezing and I can’t type.


68 posted on 02/06/2014 8:36:31 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: Albion Wilde

That’s an example of building the America you want on your own street. However, I don’t how far it would go. If you’re doing marriage preparation honestly, you have to say, “One of the ends of marriage is the sanctification of the spouses, and sanctification comes only through suffering.”

People get married anticipating that they’ll be happy, not that they’ll look back after 25 years ... and take pride in what they’ve endured without losing their sense of humor.


69 posted on 02/06/2014 8:48:19 AM PST by Tax-chick ("The right" is a gelatinous mass of contradiction.)
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To: Albion Wilde

I have some like that in my drawer upstairs.

Unless there are no gloves, there is only Zuul ...


70 posted on 02/06/2014 8:49:58 AM PST by Tax-chick ("The right" is a gelatinous mass of contradiction.)
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To: redgolum

See my post 41. I am an LCMS pastor whose wife left him and thus I am going through a divorce.


71 posted on 02/06/2014 8:56:40 AM PST by Charles Henrickson (D-Day is set for February 13.)
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To: Tax-chick
If you’re doing marriage preparation honestly, you have to say, “One of the ends of marriage is the sanctification of the spouses, and sanctification comes only through suffering.” People get married anticipating that they’ll be happy, not that they’ll look back after 25 years ... and take pride in what they’ve endured without losing their sense of humor.

Profound. As usual...

72 posted on 02/06/2014 9:02:24 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: Fledermaus
Marriages that end in divorce usally indicate the marriage was a bad idea to begin with.

Or does it indicate taking the easy way out and not respecting the institution enough to work through problems?

73 posted on 02/06/2014 9:03:18 AM PST by DoodleDawg
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To: Charles Henrickson

I saw that after I posted. I am sorry.


74 posted on 02/06/2014 9:04:57 AM PST by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: Albion Wilde

You’re too kind!

We shouldn’t think this is anything new. When Jesus told His disciples that it was wrong to divorce and (especially) remarry, they said, “No way! Then it’s better to stay single!” They considered marriage unacceptable without an escape hatch.

It would be interesting to know what else they planned to do, in their cultural milieu. Were they going to stay single and screw around, as is often recommended on FR? Or was the plan to accept continence as the price of freedom?

And who was going to cook and do the wash ... their mom, forever?


75 posted on 02/06/2014 9:14:53 AM PST by Tax-chick ("The right" is a gelatinous mass of contradiction.)
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To: Tax-chick
hen Jesus told His disciples that it was wrong to divorce and (especially) remarry, they said, “No way! Then it’s better to stay single!” They considered marriage unacceptable without an escape hatch... It would be interesting to know what else they planned to do, in their cultural milieu. Were they going to stay single and screw around...Or was the plan to accept continence as the price of freedom? ...And who was going to cook and do the wash ... their mom, forever?

I wish I knew the answer to that, other than that housemaids to do laundry, etc have always been for hire or enslavement.

All I know is, I lived in America "before" and America "after." And although "before" wasn't perfect, it was better for most children.

You are correct in your several observations that Americans are no longer interested in defending or preserving the common good at the expense of their personal preferences or whims.

76 posted on 02/06/2014 10:02:27 AM PST by Albion Wilde (The less a man knows, the more certain he is that he knows it all.)
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To: Albion Wilde
You are correct in your several observations that Americans are no longer interested in defending or preserving the common good at the expense of their personal preferences or whims.

That's certainly how it appears to me, although it's true that I don't get out much.

I wonder where single men lived in 1st century Judea, if not with their parents. Lazarus lived with his sisters in Bethany. Were there apartment buildings, like in Rome?

77 posted on 02/06/2014 10:10:52 AM PST by Tax-chick ("The right" is a gelatinous mass of contradiction.)
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To: Albion Wilde

When I got married, we went through the Lincoln, Nebraska diocese and did all the steps you mentioned.

I also saw WHY then needed to do that at the marriage encounter. The priest kept tell my bride and I “We are not doing this for couples like you, but you may see why by Sunday”.

The LCMS church I went to had a few similar programs.


78 posted on 02/06/2014 11:12:15 AM PST by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: Albion Wilde

> Agreed, as long as you are not arguing that the state
> could somehow stay so far out of marriage that it fails
> even to support marriage. That is the situation we have
> now, in fact.

I think this idea should be examined. To start with, what kind of support does the state, or should the state, give?

Government has proven time and again that it spoils what it touches. Over time and in many places, government has tried to take over religious sacraments, never for the purpose religion assigned them, but for *other* purposes.

Births used to be registered in church, now they are registered by the state. Marriage (and divorce) are done by the state. Burial, and now even death, are being encroached upon by the state.

None of them are improved by this.

Alternatively, when marriage, as such, is between people and their faith, it is socially enforced by their community and themselves. An absence of government involvement likely helps far more than it hurts.


79 posted on 02/06/2014 12:23:02 PM PST by yefragetuwrabrumuy (WoT News: Rantburg.com)
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To: Tax-chick

Was the change the part in quotes? lol


80 posted on 02/06/2014 1:19:32 PM PST by Frapster (Build the America you want in your home... and keep looking up.)
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