Posted on 12/09/2002 5:13:47 AM PST by SJackson
In modern journalism, radical change is often announced by a yawn-inducing headline. For instance, "Legal Group Urges States to Update Their Family Law" (New York Times, November 29). The headline, one step up from "Don't Bother to Read This," refers to a ponderous 1,200-page commentary and set of recommendations by the American Law Institute, a group of prominent judges and lawyers. The proposals, "Principles of the Law of Family Dissolution," may seem like dry, technical suggestions about custody, alimony, and property distribution. But what this "update" really amounts to is a devastating legal assault on marriage.
The institute report says that in many important ways, domestic partnerships should be legally treated like marriage. It defines domestic partners as "two persons of the same or opposite sex, not married to one another, who for a significant period of time share a primary residence and a life together as a couple." When breaking up, the report says, cohabitants are entitled to a division of property and alimonylike payments, just like married people who divorce. And after a relationship ends, the cohabiting partner of a legal parent may share custody and decision-making responsibility for the legal parent's child.
The report validates homosexual relationships and gives them a status comparable to that of marriage. If accepted, this idea would lead immediately to the next legal argument: If gay and straight commitments have the same status in state law, isn't it picky and discriminatory to withhold the word marriage from the gay version? Heterosexual couples who live together would also get the same status as husbands and wives, blurring or eliminating another line between marriage and serial affairs.
War on tradition. The most drastic notion embedded in the suggestions is that marriage is just one arrangement among many. Marriage is being deconstructed here, downgraded and privatized. It is no longer the crucial building block of the social order and makes no special contribution to civil society that justifies any distinctive honor or status. This report, says Lynn Wardle, professor of law at Brigham Young University, "continues the war on the traditional family and traditional sexual morality that has been waged for over three decades."
Wardle has a point. Marriage is in trouble for a lot of reasons, but surely one important factor is the relentless hostility unleashed by the 1960s counterculture, which portrayed marriage as oppressive, patriarchal, outmoded, and destructive to children. The attitudes of today's elites reflect that never-ending campaign. Now we have lots of "marriage" counselors who never use the word marriage and textbooks on families bristling with hostility to the nuclear family. As I wrote in this space several years ago, "One of the problems in trying to shore up the institution of marriage is that so many of the professionals who teach and write about it-counselors, therapists, academics, and popular authors-really don't support marriage at all."
What they do tend to support is known as "close relationship theory," the idea that sexual and emotional satisfaction comes from intense, fragile, and often short-term relationships that aren't necessarily going anywhere. One advocate calls them "microwave relationships," cooked up fast, served, and consumed, presumably with other similar meals to come. It all seems like the dream world of a randy adolescent chasing cheerleaders. Marriage is knocked off its pedestal, and the family itself fades away. Children tend to fade away, too, in close-relationship theory, as emphasis comes down hard on adult fulfillment.
continued.....
(Excerpt) Read more at jewishworldreview.com ...
I am my local clergy...LOL.
Marriage does not require the stamp of the state to be valid. It existed long before the state came along. The union is between the parties of the marriage. In the Christian faith, of course, we consider God to be one of he parties to the covenant. With God and the husband and wife in the presence of the church affirming their marriage, there is no need for the state.
The marriage license itself is viewed an unnecessary by the state. The "common law" marriage recognizes that the reality of a union precedes the intrusion of the state.
As a Christian bound by scripture to follow human laws which offer no offense, I struggle with determining if this "marriage license" requirement is an intrusion in God's domain. I've come to believe that it is.
The taxation/benefits issue grows out of the "marriage license" question. No one should be asking for or getting special infusions of tax money.
God says: "vengence is mine", but he establishes the state as his ministers of vengence. Marriage licenses are a vestige of when our government used them as a tool in order to defend marriage.
I honestly did not read the entire body of the post before responding. I am in complete agreement with your response for a number of (other) reasons/issues. I would send your response to the Methodist Church/Board & Society in Washington DC, if it wouldn't fall on deaf ears... When the Methodist Church denounced the Boy Scout organization for excluding gays (homosexuals/sodomites) I left. This wasn't by any stretch of the imagination the only reason, just the straw that broke the camel's back. You have stated simply, that which is profound.
A Christian marriage is a covenant between a man , a woman and God...in the case of the elect of God ..we do not NEED the state to regulate our marriage.
As I was writing this it occurred to me that probably no other civil contract is treated with as little respect nor so often broken.
My concern is always for the children. I have become much more a libertarian in my old age..I feel little desire or need to control the lives of others, in any way. The exception is helpless kids..
The state has an interest in minors..for that reason the "Domestic Partnership" idea is troubling..kids could end up with many many "mommydaddys " to visit..because the state says they have an "interest" in them..imagine the possibilty for abuse..
Other than that I do not care what they call themselves
"When Judaism demanded that all sexual activity be channeled into marriage, it changed the world. The Torah's prohibition of non-marital sex quite simply made the creation of Western civilization possible. Societies that did not place boundaries around sexuality were stymied in their development. The subsequent dominance of the Western world can largely be attributed to the sexual revolution initiated by Judaism and later carried forward by Christianity..."
We agree again..WOW...I believe in a comittment service between them and God..The state should have no interest in who I spend my last days with..
The clergy is not exempt from having government guns aimed at them. They must gain the permission of government to proclaim people married or suffer the consequences.
If you notice, the licence doesn't make you married, the ceremony does, whether it is performed by clergy or government employees who are appointed for that and other purposes.
You might also give some thought to the legal standing of common law marriages.
Government permission doesn't make one married, it allows it. It is totally illegitimate.
Anyone else see the irony here?
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