During the past several weeks I have had a chance to read many articles
dealing with the redefinition of marriage to include homosexual couples. I have posted a number of these on my
blog. As I have read these articles and
watched the events at the Supreme Court case dealing with marriage, I now find
it impossible to avoid the conclusion that homosexual marriage in the United States
is now inevitable. It really doesn’t
matter what specific decision the Supreme Court arrives at in relation to the
matter before it. It is no longer a
question of if, but rather when full legal status for homosexual marriage
arrives.
When homosexual marriage becomes legal in all states, it will be a
significant moment. It will signal that marriage in American culture is in its
death throes. But such a decision will
not be the cause of this. Instead, it will be a moment that forces us to
recognize what has already taken place.
It will impel us to grapple with developments that have been going on
for a very long time. It is easy to
describe homosexual marriage as a “redefinition of marriage.” However, in truth this misses the point.
Instead, the fact that homosexual marriage can be discussed as a potential
option bears witness to the fact that marriage has already been redefined.
Contraception – the revolution of “the pill” – has allowed people to use
sex as an end itself. They have been
able to use sex solely for the purpose of physical and emotional pleasure and
enjoyment. Previously, marriage, sex and
children provided the foundation of human society just as God ordered it. These three were indivisibly united with one
another. However, since the end of the
twentieth century we have lived in the first time in human history when people
have had the technology to separate sex and children. When sex became disengaged from having
children, it inevitably became disengaged from marriage as well, since marriage
existed for the purpose of creating and raising children. Set loose from the channel that was intended
to control and constrain it in positive ways, sex has run wild in our culture.
Once marriage was disengaged from the creation and raising of children, it took
on a new purpose: adult personal fulfillment.
Marriage was now about the personal satisfaction of adults. The inevitable result of this was the “no
fault divorce.” With children removed
from the center of marriage’s purpose, now if adults were not experiencing the
personal fulfillment in marriage they desired they simply ended marriage in
divorce and sought a new marriage. This
was truly the moment when marriage was redefined. Everything that we are experiencing in regard
to marriage is really just the working out of this basic fact.
Sex was unhinged from marriage. This produced not only a culture of
fornication but also the new development of wholesale cohabitation. Of course despite all our efforts using
contraception, sex never wholly ceases to produce the result God has given to
it. It continues to produce children and
so generations of children have not been born outside of marriage, and with
great frequency, to single mothers. This
along with divorce have decimated the family in American culture. They have proven to be the sins that visit
themselves upon the children of the parents to the third and fourth generation
… and beyond.
The course of this development since the 1960’s set the stage for today’s legal
effort to include homosexual couples within marriage. Yet in order for this to reach the full
fruition we are now seeing, the homosexual movement had to accomplish one other
thing. They had to convince the public that homosexuality was a natural disposition. This is a goal they have achieved. It doesn’t matter that the research on this
topic has yielded mixed results and that presently the best evaluation is that
homosexuality is a combination of nature and nurture in varying degrees in
different people. The homosexual
movement has convinced the general public “that they were must made this
way.”
Since marriage is not about producing and raising children and is instead about
adult personal fulfillment, there is no reason that “marriage” can’t include
couples who are of the same sex. Yet along the way, something interesting
happened. Homosexual couples began to
decide that children were a part of the equation that provided personal
fulfillment. By definition their union
could not produce children. But just as
they had a right to marriage for the sake of personal fulfillment, so also they
maintained that they had a right to children for the same reason.
Even if marriage had already been redefined on the basis of adult personal
fulfillment, and homosexuals had convinced the public that they had a natural
disposition, there was one other hurdle to clear in order for homosexual parenting
of children to be accepted by the public.
They needed to convince the public that there was no appreciable
difference between the experience of children raised by heterosexual and
homosexual couples. Since academia as a
whole and the social sciences in particular are dominated by a pro-homosexual
orthodoxy, it is not surprising that their research produced these very results
using research samples and methodologies that were suspect. Subsequent research
by Mark Regnerus has called attention to these deficiencies and using better
samples and methodology his research has yielded different results. Not surprisingly, Regnerus has received
concerted attacks (http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2012/10/the-regnerus-study-social-science-on-new-family-structures-met-with-intolerance).
As with the nature of homosexuality itself, once again a lack of certainty in
the research has not stopped the homosexual movement from proclaiming as
“scientific fact” that homosexual couples make equally good parents as heterosexuals
(http://surburg.blogspot.com/2013/03/american-acadmey-of-pediatrics-speaks.html).
This set the stage for what really made homosexual marriage inevitable. At its most basic level, marriage is about
children. Armed with “research” declaring that they made equally suitable
parents, homosexuals began to be granted the right to adopt children. There were already children in the homes of
homosexual couples that had been produced in a heterosexual relationship from
one of the partner’s past. Artificial
insemination and similar methods were allowing homosexuals to possess children.
But when the state and society as a whole began placing children into the
homes of homosexuals, the future of homosexual marriage was assured. All efforts to prevent it amount to a rear
guard action. The arguments for
homosexual marriage are a custom fit for the spirit of our age (http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/kevindeyoung/2013/03/27/why-the-arguments-for-gay-marriage-are-persuasive/).
In the last few weeks I have posted links to many fine articles that
accurately describe why homosexual marriage is detrimental to society. However, the fact of the matter is that when
homosexual marriage becomes a full and complete legal reality very little will
change. The redefinition of marriage and
its ongoing death in American culture was already happening. Homosexual marriage really does nothing more
than provide the unavoidable conclusion that marriage in our culture in now in
hospice. It doesn’t fundamentally change
things. Instead it forces us to
acknowledge that things have fundamentally changed for marriage.
Yet at the same time, homosexual marriage as a legal reality changes
everything. It does so because it
provides the legal basis for the homosexual movement to attack everything and
everyone in society that does not fully accept it. It provides the legal basis for insinuating
homosexuality into many different aspects of society such as education. It is an even more powerful tool than “hate
speech legislation” since it takes the form of a “civil rights issue” that can
be aimed at many different targets. As
Robert Knight has written:
Which brings us to the bigger
picture. The Left’s drive for “gay rights” poses the greatest domestic threat
to the freedoms of religion,
speech and assembly. When traditional morality is equated with racist bigotry,
civil rights enforcement becomes a gun aimed at the head of citizens, forcing
them to choose between God and Caesar. That should never happen in America,
where our founders said rights come from our Creator, not capricious man, who
can mistake fashion for morality (http://www.religiontoday.com/columnists/guest-commentary/war-on-marriage-is-a-war-on-reality.html).
The Church and
the homosexual movement have very different approaches to one another. The Church
condemns homosexuality as sin. Yet like
many other sins that continue on in a fallen world, the Church
realizes that she cannot stamp it out. She can only speak Law and Gospel as she
seeks to lead sinners to repentance. She
understands she will have to live in a world where sin like homosexuality
continues until Christ returns.
The homosexual movement on the other hand is not willing to
tolerate the existence of a position that labels homosexuality as sinful and
contrary to God’s ordering of creation.
It will use every means necessary to destroy the opposition. The legal
status of homosexual marriage will provide the hammer of civil rights
enforcement they need to do just that.
Marriage, of course, cannot really die or be destroyed. It was instituted by God and is part of his
ordering of creation. It can be
perverted and ignored in ways that bring unimaginable harm upon the adults and
children who are touched by these things.
Yet it will continue to exist and certainly will find a healthy presence
among many couples in the Church.
What then does homosexual marriage mean for the Church?
First, it underscores the fact that with renewed vigor the Church must uphold marriage among the baptized. She must allow herself to be examined by
God’s Law and be led to repentance where her practice has not been faithful to
God’s Word. In particular, there are two
areas where this must happen.
The first is divorce.
The fact of the matter is that the Church
has caved into the culture when it comes to “no fault divorce.” She has lost her nerve and is unwilling to
listen to her Lord when he says, “It was also said, ‘Whoever divorces his wife,
let him give her a certificate of divorce.’ But I say to you that everyone who
divorces his wife, except on the ground of sexual immorality, makes her commit
adultery, and whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery” (Matthew
5:31-32). She fears and loves the world
more than Christ and so ignores him when he says, “Have you not read that he
who created them from the beginning made them male and female, and said,
‘Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his
wife, and the two shall become one flesh’? So they are no longer two but one
flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let not man separate” (Matthew
19:4-6).
I am a parish pastor, so I understand well the tremendous
challenges that divorce presents. I
recognize that there are times when despite our best efforts to discern black
and white we are unable to see anything but grey because of the hideous ways
sin twists and perverts things. I
recognize that there is a valid exegetical insight in the recognition that
these biblical texts about marriage are not intended be a kind of “canon
law.” But at the same time they also
clearly say that divorce should not occur.
When divorce becomes the easy default position with absolutely no consequences
for the Christian, I find it hard to believe that the Church
really is being faithful to God’s Word.
The second area is fornication and cohabitation. Paul told the Thessalonians, “Finally, then,
brothers, we ask and urge you in the Lord Jesus, that as you received from us
how you ought to walk and to please God, just as you are doing, that you do so
more and more. For you know what instructions we gave you through the Lord
Jesus. For this is the will of God, your sanctification: that you abstain from
sexual immorality; that each one of you know how to control his own body in
holiness and honor, not in the passion of lust like the Gentiles who do not
know God” (1 Thessalonians 4:1-5). Paul
wrote these words to Christians who lived in a culture that was awash in sexual
immorality, just as we are. And yet all
the evidence of the New Testament and the first centuries of the Church indicates that this was an important emphasis
of the Church’s life. It was something that set the Church apart from the world and those refused to
live in this way were set apart from the Church
(see 1 Corinthians 5:1-13).
The Church of the
twenty-first century knows little of the earnestness with which the early Church approached this. We desperately need to learn. We live in a time when we congratulate
ourselves that the couple that has been living together finally was married in
church. The pastor teaches the Sixth
Commandment in catechesis on Saturday morning and then turns around and denies
everything he just said by marrying the unrepentant fornicating couple on
Saturday afternoon. Pastors don’t
practice discipline because they are afraid they will lose members. Congregation members attack faithful pastors
who seek to practice pastoral care and discipline toward their cohabiting son
or daughter. Members learn that they can
transfer to the congregation of the neighboring pastor who will allow them to
live together and then will eventually marry them whenever they decide the time
has arrived.
The Church has been
called out of world. She must be
different from the world when it comes to sexual ethics. If being faithful in this way causes her to
lose members, then she must become smaller so that she can be healthier. Until we are willing, fortified by God’s Word,
to take this stance we will never be able to face the challenge of the world
around us. The Church
will continue the long, slow slide down into the morality of the world, and the
practice of marriage in the Church
will suffer.
On the positive side, the Church
must make renewed efforts to hold up marriage and sexuality as God’s good
gift. We need both catechesis and
preaching that directly address these areas of life, because God’s Word does. We need to frame this preaching and teaching
in terms of vocation using the guidance provided by the Table of Duties in the Small
Catechism. We need to learn from the master practitioners of pastoral care
throughout the history of the Church. We are not the first to learn marriage can be
difficult for two sinners. Surely the
fathers who have come before us have insight to share – insight that is less
laden with spirituality of our own age.
Finally, the Church
must be ready to suffer with Christ.
Homosexual marriage will bring hardships upon the Church. If we continue to confess what God’s Word
says about homosexuality, the time will come when we will have to pay the price
for this confession. Naturally we need
to look to the promises of God’s Word as we prepare for this challenge. We also
need to become friends again with the saints who have gone before us – the
martyrs and confessors. We need to learn
their stories so that we can see how God’s grace was at work in their lives,
and so that we can learn from their examples of faith and confession.
It is Christ’s Church
and he has promised that as she lives a life of faith that confesses him “the
gates of hell shall not prevail against it” (Matthew 16:18). Nourished by his Means of Grace we will be
able to walk the way our Lord sets before us praying “Come Lord Jesus!” Until
that Day we must live in the confidence of the apostle Paul’s words:
Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have
peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Through him we have also obtained
access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of
the glory of God. Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that
suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character
produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because God's love has been
poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us (Romans
5:1-5).
This article is insightful. We also need to be ready to forgive those who are repentant. For all of have sinned and have fallen short.
ReplyDeleteGennabier, You are absolutely correct. We all live by repentance and forgiveness.
ReplyDeleteI apologize for two obvious typos that slipped in:
ReplyDeleteFirst, The sentence, " It continues to produce children and so generations of children have not been born outside of marriage, and with great frequency, to single mothers," naturally should read "have now been born."
Second, the next paragraph contains the sentence, "The homosexual movement has convinced the general public “that they were must made this way.” Of course, this should read, "that they were just made this way."
We Lutherans also need to encourage our children to look for Lutherans to marry, or someone who is willing to convert to Lutheranism. The latter is trickier because sometimes people convert just to please their boyfriend/girlfriend and don't really give it enough serious thought.
ReplyDeleteWhen I suggested--during adult Bible class once--that we parents ought to encourage our children to find Lutherans to date and marry, everyone laughed at me. Even the lay-teacher. I was astonished, to say the least.
Kathrine, You are exactly right. As I tell the kids in our congregation, if you can't commune with someone in your church before you marry them, you shouldn't be at the point where you think you are going to marry him/her. If you don't share the same beliefs about the most important things in life, you have no business getting married. You are only inviting hardship.
ReplyDeleteGreat article! Even though I'm a Presbyterian (PCA) I love that my Lutheran brothers and sisters are standing firm.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
ReplyDeleteMark:
ReplyDeleteI serve as the Pastor of an Assemblies of God Church in California. Today is my first day on your blog. So very much appreciate your high view of scripture, your insightful comments about the issue at hand, your loving but very firm challenge to the Church to stand and stay faithful to God's truth, and your reminder that we should prepare ourselves, with the Spirit's help to pay the price for doing so.
Good bless your work for the Kingdom.
Rick
Nice blog post you have posted here on homosexual marriage .You have posted here very strong views of yours. Thanks for posting.How to make him commit is also an useful site for the girls who were planning for their marriage.
ReplyDeleteReply
Well said, Mark.
ReplyDeleteIndeed. Insightful.
ReplyDeleteWe are watching the shadows lengthen, every day growing more oppressive and nearer to the dreadful darkness of the last days...the days begun when Jesus ascended...the days in which the Light of Life and Truth have been entrusted to the Church - the Body of Christ. How good it is to find Pastors who still hold to the infallibility and inerrancy of scripture (@ Timothy 3:16-17), as did the Lord Himself, who quotes the Old Testament 78 times (NT quotes from the OT 855 times according to the Blue Letter Bible)! To do so will not win for you the accolades sought by those of this world. The world hated Jesus and it will, more strongly said, it MUST, hate us (John 15:18). The Church is like a ship afloat in an ocean of sin and it is taking on water. Many think it is wisdom to accept the water...to desire it, as if somehow this might forestall or even prevent drowning. Brothers and sisters, even folks who love water will drown if they attempt to breath it!
ReplyDeleteI love that Pastor Surburg notes that many are walking away from the Gospel given once for all unto the Saints (John 6:66). I love more that he notes the character of those who remain. We live in perilous times. We stand at the "Hot Gates." Who would you have standing beside you? Three hundred of great skill and courage, friends willing to give their life for yours...or thousands who know not which end of a Sword (Sword of the Lord) to hold, who have allegiance only for themselves?
The world never needed Christian warriors so badly as now. As the hymn writer (Sabine-Baring Gould, 1865)proclaims, "Onward Christian Soldiers!"
God richly bless you all.