Posted on 07/30/2012 3:33:15 PM PDT by markomalley
Recent comments by those who administer our city seem to assume that the city government can decide for everyone what are the values that must be held by citizens of Chicago. I was born and raised here, and my understanding of being a Chicagoan never included submitting my value system to the government for approval. Must those whose personal values do not conform to those of the government of the day move from the city? Is the City Council going to set up a Council Committee on Un-Chicagoan Activities and call those of us who are suspect to appear before it? I would have argued a few days ago that I believe such a move is, if I can borrow a phrase, un-Chicagoan.
The value in question is espousal of gender-free marriage. Approval of state-sponsored homosexual unions has very quickly become a litmus test for bigotry; and espousing the understanding of marriage that has prevailed among all peoples throughout human history is now, supposedly, outside the American consensus. Are Americans so exceptional that we are free to define marriage (or other institutions we did not invent) at will? What are we re-defining?
It might be good to put aside any religious teaching and any state laws and start from scratch, from nature itself, when talking about marriage. Marriage existed before Christ called together his first disciples two thousand years ago and well before the United States of America was formed two hundred and thirty six years ago. Neither Church nor state invented marriage, and neither can change its nature.
Marriage exists because human nature comes in two complementary sexes: male and female. The sexual union of a man and woman is called the marital act because the two become physically one in a way that is impossible between two men or two women. Whatever a homosexual union might be or represent, it is not physically marital. Gender is inextricably bound up with physical sexual identity; and gender-free marriage is a contradiction in terms, like a square circle.
Both Church and state do, however, have an interest in regulating marriage. It is not that religious marriage is private and civil marriage public; rather, marriage is a public institution in both Church and state. The state regulates marriage to assure stability in society and for the proper protection and raising of the next generation of citizens. The state has a vested interest in knowing who is married and who is not and in fostering good marriages and strong families for the sake of society.
The Church, because Jesus raised the marital union to the level of symbolizing his own union with his Body the Church, has an interest in determining which marital unions are sacramental and which are not. The Church sees married life as a path to sanctity and as the means for raising children in the faith, as citizens of the universal kingdom of God. These are all legitimate interests of both Church and state, but they assume and do not create the nature of marriage.
People who are not Christian or religious at all take for granted that marriage is the union of a man and a woman for the sake of family and, of its nature, for life. The laws of civilizations much older than ours assume this understanding of marriage. This is also what religious leaders of almost all faiths have taught throughout the ages. Jesus affirmed this understanding of marriage when he spoke of two becoming one flesh (Mt. 19: 4-6). Was Jesus a bigot? Could Jesus be accepted as a Chicagoan? Would Jesus be more enlightened if he had the privilege of living in our society? One is welcome to believe that, of course; but it should not become the official state religion, at least not in a land that still fancies itself free.
Surely there must be a way to properly respect people who are gay or lesbian without using civil law to undermine the nature of marriage. Surely we can find a way not to play off newly invented individual rights to marriage against constitutionally protected freedom of religious belief and religious practice. The States attempting to redefine marriage has become a defining moment not for marriage, which is what it is, but for our increasingly fragile civil union as citizens.
Francis Cardinal George, OMI
It this point I think that it is time that the US have civil unions performed by city or county clerks. Then those of us that believe in marriage can have a second service of our choosing at a church. If the union is blessed by a church official it will then be called a marriage.
This will also further the divide between church and state. Then the churches will be allowed to openly speak from the pulpit about social issues since they are no longer licensed to perform weddings. Many problems loved in one swoop.
Yes, I understand what you’re saying, but at the same time, and at this juncture, I think people have become used to both church and state being involved in marriage.
As the piece points out:
“Both Church and state do, however, have an interest in regulating marriage. It is not that religious marriage is private and civil marriage public; rather, marriage is a public institution in both Church and state. The state regulates marriage to assure stability in society and for the proper protection and raising of the next generation of citizens. The state has a vested interest in knowing who is married and who is not and in fostering good marriages and strong families for the sake of society.”
I can’t seem to find any values in Chicago... NONE...
Chicago values = oxymoron = not in evidence.
Chicago values: murder, political corruption, theft, and mendacity.
You miss the Cardinal’s point. Marriage is not a religious institution, nor is it a civil or state institution. While your suggestion is marginally better than what the left proposes, it, too changed the nature of marriage, which predates not only our nation, but the very concept of nation-state, and predates if not the Church (there is a strain of thought that says the Church is the first creature as the bodiless angels have been in the Church from before the creation of Man) certainly its manifestation, and predates the writing of the Scriptures.
You propose to remake marriage as a religious institution, the left proposes to remake it as a state institution (and use the power of the state to change its nature). Neither should be done. Marriage is a natural institution, and as the Cardinal argues, neither state nor Church is competent to redefine its nature.
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