Posted on 07/01/2014 8:56:15 AM PDT by PROCON
CNSNews.com) Duck Dynasty matriarch Marsha Kay Robertson said her oldest son, Alan, was born out of wedlock, two years before she and Phil Robertson were legally married, and that because of this, Alan Robertson says, Yeah, I would be the B[astard] in the family.
Alan Robertson, who has been married to his wife Lisa for 29 years, is a Christian minister and he also now stars in the popular reality-TV show Duck Dynasty, with his other family members and relatives.
Kay Robertson, or Miss Kay, disclosed the details about her marriage and Alans out-of-wedlock birth in a special edition of US Weekly magazine, published on Monday, June 30.
Miss Kay reveals that when she was 16, in 1964, she made a vow to God and to Phil Robertson, but this was an informal ceremony, not a legal marriage.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnsnews.com ...
When God brought Eve to Adam, Adam’s first words where “Whoa Man”!
you have identified the reason for abortions during prior decades. Some shame was placed on the woman, some on her family and if the child was not aborted, he or she was burdened with the total shame of being ‘a bastard’.
Seems as if there was no shame attached to the sperm donors.
Young couples who were caught and scared - rushed to the altar and called their first-borns ‘premature’.
With the removal of ‘shame’ for unwed mothers you would expect fewer abortions.
Correct. The problem is instead of focusing on both progenitors doing the right thing, the idea of shame--for anything--was done away with altogether when Government became the new god.
Sex before marriage? Almost everyone does it. You should be ashamed if you're not.
Getting pregnant outside marriage? An oopsie, but understandable. Now fill out those welfare forms.
Abortion? Well the government sanctions that, shame doesn't even come into the equation.
Going from one extreme to another didn't make these situations any better. Myself, I like Christ's solution of "Leave the little children alone, and don't try to keep them from coming to me," and "Go and sin more."
No, but he promotes teenage marriage, as if that had worked out really great for him and Miss Kay, instead of being just about a disaster. I won't say that's "hypocrisy," but it's certainly "selective memory" or not thinking things through all the way.
Miss Kay wrote, in a sidebar in Phil's book, that she believed he ran wild when he got to college because all the other football players were drinking and partying ... only Phil was an 18-year-old college football player with a wife and children. He did not accept the responsibility of the role he had freely chosen, and bad results ensued.
I had a similar experience in my own marriage. When my husband finished graduate school, he was 34 with a wife and three children. His peers at work were 24 and single, and he felt very put-upon at not having the freedoms they did ... even though he'd already had his turn to be 24 with no dependents.
Fair enough, I shouldn’t have been so harsh. But Alan’s not a bastard, and as his parents did the right thing and have raised a great family, neither are they.
The problem is that “bastard” shames the offspring, not the people responsible. I don’t think any bastard child has ever had a choice to make in the matter. I don’t like the term at all.
We could call the male progenitor the “sperm-scatterer.”
It used to be that the parent/mother and her family were shamed as well, and that was an incentive to protect their daughters. Also, families cared about the offspring and NOT having them shamed with the brand of “bastard”.
Now we have “Generation B”, with children with married parents in the minority.
So they just secretly aborted the little bastards. Avoided shame.
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