The tide is going out. Words like fornication have a musty, antiquated ring. Unwed mothers no longer suffer social stigma. Divorce has become common. The large, complicated human reality of sexual desire, mating, romance, and childrearing no longer finds itself ruled by elaborate and widely accepted social norms. And now, of course, we are in the midst of a drive toward same-sex marriage.
I’m not surprised by the latest development. In my years as an Episcopalian, I came to see that homosexuality plays in important role in the much larger phenomenon of changed social mores in the area of sex, family, and marriage. The image of two men or two women kissing gives a dramatic immediacy to the many aspects of sexual revolution: real people, genuinely felt desires, new possibilities, the courage to transgress old norms, and the hope for the lasting happiness based on love’s unifying power.
In other words, homosexuality richly suggests freedom from an old, restrictive moral order, freedom from the inhibiting power of shame, freedom from the burdens of judgment, censure, and condemnation. And it evokes the promise of existential freedom, the inner release from inhibition and fear of social censure.
The allure of existential freedom is not new. In 1859, John Stuart Mill published On Liberty, an argument for expanding the scope of human freedom beyond the realm of the political narrowly understood. In order to undertake what Mill famously called “experiments in living,” we need to be able to escape from “the tyranny of the prevailing opinion and feeling.”
Mill was correct. We are social animals. Hardwired to want to fit in, all of us feel the soft coercion of cultural norms. As a result, a deep freedom to live as we please requires more than political rights. We need something like “social rights” that give us leverage over and against inherited culture.
To a very great extent, the cultural history of the twentieth century can be understood as the gradual acceptance of “social rights.” In America, a long dominant Protestant and bourgeois ethos eroded—and then in the 1960s collapsed. In a short decade, divorce went from something dangerously shameful to socially acceptable. Premarital sex and cohabitation followed the same trajectory. Acceptance of out-of-wedlock childbearing came more slowly, as did same-sex relationships. But the end result is now the same. Gay couples now have a social right to live their personal lives free from social censure.
Our courts tend to reflect social reality. In 1965, the Supreme Court was faced with a case (Griswold v. Connecticut) that challenged a law against contraceptives. In its majority decision, the Court identified a right to privacy. As a legal right narrowly understood, it means that the government has no business policing bedrooms. However, it has become more expansive, most notoriously to include right to abortion. Today, the right to privacy pretty much accords with Mill’s notion of freedom from “prevailing opinion and feeling.” It amounts to a right to conduct one’s personal life as one wishes, unhindered by other people’s ideas of right and wrong.
This expansive legal right has been reinforced by a new social consensus. Today, it is singularly gauche to announce that you regard someone’s marital, sexual, or parental choices to be “wrong” or “immoral.” Indeed, the very fact that I put scare quotes around “wrong” and “immoral” is telling. We are now heavily socialized to be tolerant and non-judgmental—with the exception, of course, of refusing to tolerate the intolerant and quick to judge the judgmental. But there is no contradiction. Both the tolerance and intolerance serve to provide and reinforce the now dominant culture, one that believes we should be able to live as we wish.
The controversial question of same-sex marriage is so interesting and important because it marks decisive new phase in our cultural drive toward an every deeper freedom to live as one pleases. Freedom from censure is no longer sufficient. Today, we see an emerging right to cultural approval and endorsement.
Some months ago, the Supreme Court of Connecticut handed down a decision that required the state legislature to make provisions for same sex marriage. The most interesting part of the opinion concerns the alternative of civil unions. As the Court recognizes, the artifice of “civil union” is a bloodless affair designed to remove the legal disadvantages that adhere to the private choices of same-sex lovers: matters of inheritance, health coverage, and so forth. The Connecticut judges deemed civil unions separate but unequal, and their reasoning is telling. Civil unions are unsatisfactory, because they lack the “transcendent historical, cultural, and social significance” of traditional marriage.
Gays and lesbians, by this way of thinking, have a right to a full range of cultural resources for defining their lives together, including the rich symbolic legacy of traditional norms for marriage. Privacy is not enough. It is unfair to deny public endorsement and quasi-sacred sanction to personal choices.
Therein lies the final act of the sexual revolution that has defined Western culture for the last fifty years. A traditional culture constrains and limits desire, especially the volatile complexities of sexual desire. The reasoning behind the drive toward same-sex marriage reverses the direction of authority. Our secular elite culture believes that desires—as long as they do not directly harm others—should command and shape culture. We should be able to make of marriage what we wish.
Result: the emerging postmodern Empire of Desire. In the past, the instruments of political power (e.g., the right to privacy) have been used to tear down official forms of limitation and censure so that desires can find their satisfactions. The soft power of culture has followed the same path. Our present and widespread social censure of moral censure inculcates and reinforces a non-judgmental ethos. Now we are embarking on a much more aggressive program. Everybody should have access to the cultural symbols of affirmation. Everybody has a right to feel normal.
This right to normalcy is very different from the right to privacy. Indeed, they can seem antithetical, since the former requires mobilizing the power of the state to redesign social institutions that we all must live with, while the later is focused on minimizing the role of government in people’s personal lives. Yet I think the right to normalcy follows from the logic of John Stuart Mill’s insights.
As social animals we don’t just want to be free from censure. We are not rugged individualists. We want to feel like we are part of the pack, and as everybody knows, feeling marginal can be very painful, even if everybody is smiling and nodding and uttering reassuring platitudes of acceptance. Therefore, if we really believe that human beings are most happy when they design their own lives, then eventually we will come around to the view that culture as a whole should be turned over to serve our desires. Moral traditions must be available for personal tailoring.
Thus, whatever one thinks of homosexuality, one can see that the judges in Connecticut framed the issue clearly. Same-sex marriage is about achieving a social or cultural equality for everyone, regardless of their experiments in living. It’s about our need to feel normal, and it’s about giving everybody access to institutions that confer feelings of normalcy and legitimacy. In the Empire of Desire, everybody gets ceremonies and ribbons and prizes and their fifteen minutes of fame.
But we cannot turn culture into the equivalent of a public access channel. As Aristotle explained in his account of moral formation and human flourishing, culture humanizes us by demanding our obedience. Happiness does not come from living according to your desires. It comes from desiring to live according to demanding and disciplining social norms that transcend individual desires.
The judges in Connecticut and elsewhere, as well as the larger same-sex marriage movement, are entertaining a fantasy. It is sociologically incoherent to imagine that we can both radically redefine marriage and transfer its “transcendent, cultural, and social significance” to same-sex couples, as if the former does not alter and undermine the later.
We cannot make culture serve our desires—or our ideals for that matter. We cannot turn traditional modes of moral discipline such as marriage into a ready resource for conferring feelings of normalcy or equality. To consciously modify the moral norms of moral institutions such as marriage turns them into something else: existential decoration, imaginary seriousness, or an engineered garment of meaning that cannot help but feel plastic and artificial. A bespoke “transcendent, cultural, and social significance” is ephemeral and short lived.
R.R. Reno is features editor of First Things and professor of theology at Creighton University.
Comments:
When the issue of sexuality is radically separated from progeny and the nurture of that progeny, as it now is, the place and role of the creator shifts from the deity to the creature. If the new "designer" babies are the expression of self as product, they lose the joy/wonder of being gift. The upshot is that all "inalienalble rights" become reduced to social goods. What is only the social good of a culture can be easily manipulated to the loss entirely of human freedom under a just God.
in that religious officials act as agents of the state in performing marriages, wouldn't the civil union only rule discriminate against religous denominations that
recognize gay marriage (Reform Judaism, Universal Unitarianism, Ethical Culture)?
"It is sociologically incoherent to imagine that we can both radically redefine marriage and transfer its 'transcendent, cultural, and social significance' to same-sex couples, as if the former does not alter and undermine the later."
But I think this argument only works if same-sex marriage really is a "readical" redefinition of marriage -- i.e., if it really does alter that which constitutes the root of marriage into something new. But I don't think it does. Heterosexual sex is not -- and cannot be -- the root of marriage. If it were, then either Mary would not have remained a perpetual virgin, or her marriage to Joseph was a sham and there really was no Holy Family after all.
Of course, many Protestants don't believe Mary remained a virgin. But then they have little basis for opposing any redifinition of marriage unless they are willing to stop getting divorced and remarried, their idea that the marital union is not until death being perhaps the most radical redefinition of marriage to have occurred since the first century.
I probably couldn't ask for a more timely and pertinent confirmation of the criticisms I expressed on the "Yeah, But What Was in it for Mother Teresa?" post. Now do you see why I hurled some of the invective that I did?
If I was unfailry harsh to anyone, especially to Fr. Neuhaus, then I wholeheartedly apologize for that. Let me stand corrected, let me be mocked, let me be ignored, if that is what it takes to restore justice.
But all things considered, I think I have a valid point. When articles like this one appear in FIRST THINGS, something has definitely jumped the shark. In describing the magazine's approach to confronting disturbing cultural trends, I used the phrase "extreme intellectualization and a spirit of sympathy bordering on conciliation."
Now, does that not describe the article above? Please tell me if I'm wrong.
I also agree with those who say divorce and contraception have rendered the social construct of marriage (though not, happily, many individual marriages) the equivalent of playing house. To say that the gays can now play house too is no radical redefinition.
Contra Mr. Renner, the New Urbanists and others like them wouldn’t dream of “piling you together” if you don’t care for living in a high-density area, or for the goods that an urban area has to offer. Now, they would like to make it permissible to build such places for the non-trivial number of people who ARE interested in them. I’ve no problem with suburbia per se, but don’t see why zoning laws and transportation policies should make it illegal or artificially prohibitive to build anything else in most places. And I don’t see why believing that makes one a social engineer, but not so the state and local DOTs who for generations have funnelled all consumer choice into subdivisions like ... well, like the ones the board members spend their day jobs building.
Maybe instead of spending so much time talking about Who has the rights to be married and who does not, WE SHOULD be thinking about those that are struggling with their sexuality. Have you ever woke up one day and thought, "Oh i want to be heterosexual today?" Well im absolutely positive that no one that is gay, lesbian, or a transgender woke up and thought that, let alone ever thought that.
People should be trying to help them figure out who THEY want to be instead of telling them that their feelings are MORALLY wrong, go against NATURE, and that they cannot get married. Think about those who are struggling to find their way, think about how difficult their lives already are. Better yet, LIVE a day in their shoes. Experience what they go through on a day to day basis.
Regarding gay " marriage, " the natural law and objective truth show no partiality towards a religious denomination or an atheistic slant. Two people of the same gender have no unitive bond; two people of the same gender cannot be open towards procreative potentiality. A Jew, Catholic, Lutheran, and atheist are all subject towards the law of complementarity, as that law, as any natural law, is inscribed upon our beings by virtue of our human existence.
I am proudly Catholic, despite my sinfulness and shortcomings, yet it has been my experience that those who argue that we cannot impose universal religious or moral norms are instead defending the religion of " relativism, " accompanied by its " I'm O.K.; You're O.K.; there is no right, wrong, natural law, nor objective truth " mantra.
Freedom is not doing what you want to do; that's license. Freedom is having the wherewithal to do what you should do, and as long as this country continues disavowing God, natural law, objective truth, and the utter sanctity of life, marriage, and family, then, rest assured, the daily erosion of our country will continue unabated.
God can override the natural law as He so chooses. We cannot, despite our often arrogant protestations otherwise.
I think Patrick F. Fagan's recent speech to the World Congress of Families adds to the discussion.
http://downloads.frc.org/EF/EF09H36.pdf
I believe that homosexuals should have the right to marry and adopt. Love is love. Homosexual marriages are currently illegal. This implies that their love is a crime. That what they are doing is wrong. I understand that the "Bible" says that it is wrong, but t
the Bible also says that it is legal to sell your daughter. I do'nt see everyone rushing to do that. "man must not seperate then, what God has joined" If Gay people fall in love and all love is God's will, well then. denying the homosexuals one could say you are going against God.
The Christian family is the most the basic and elemental unit of a Christian nation and community. It is even more fundamental than the church, for as the church in the west is discovering it cannot regenerate without children.
Marriage is universal and is not only transcendent of historical, cultural, social considerations or human desires but, above all, is often no respecter of them. Like the laws of gravity that operate regardless of how we think, feel or desire, if we ignore them we destroy ourselves.
Job 38: 33 Do you know the laws of the heavens? Can you set up God’s dominion over the earth?
36 Who endowed the heart with wisdom or gave understanding to the mind ?
And "The Christian family is the most the basic and elemental unit of a Christian nation and community. It is even more fundamental than the church, for as the church in the west is discovering it cannot regenerate without children"?
So much for Jesus' saying that whoever does the will of his Father is his mother, brother and sister. And that he came not to bring peace, but to set parent against child and child against parent. And that our mission is to go into all the world and make disciples through teaching and baptism (rather than sex).
I have often suspected that the hysteric reaction to same-sex marriage was not motivated by the Gospel of our Lord, and these comments confirm my suspicion.
BTW, those of you hell bent on making an idol of marriage should consider converting to Mormonism.
What's marriage worth when we disregard its evident value for fostering child rearing and responsible reproductive behavior? Given how easily we disregard marriage's vital social role in order to see it as a way to fulfill our personal romantic expectations (and we all know how well that works out), how long will we value marriage after it's been redefined as a consolation prize for having to put up with homophobic slights and slurs?
Hopefully, committed gay couples with children will cotton on to this sooner or later and make common cause with pragmatic social conservatives. The way things are headed, the best we can hope for is that society recognizes that a relationship, gay or straight, built around the function of childrearing is better for children than granting equal legal and social status to any and all sorts of sexual, reproductive and child rearing arrangements.



