The use of the term “traditional marriage” has always bugged
me no end, when used to refer to the practice of one man and one woman marrying
each other voluntarily for love. It’s an
egregious example of revisionist self-serving history. If you’re going to use language that way,
there’s no reason not to call pigshit fried chicken.
A quick fact check or a good history of marriage – here, for example – will reveal how unsound the claim is that people married
traditionally for love. The idea that a
man without sexual experience and a woman without sexual experience should find and marry each other and that neither should ever have sexual experience with another person has got to be one of the quaintest notions to come down the pike in a long time. Definitely an oddity. One possible route to happiness, I suppose. But hardly anybody’s idea of a standard
practice.
Our standard practice, from an anthropological perspective,
is not exclusive monogamy but serial monogamy.
Even the most middle-class of American women who settle down and make a
happy family have likely had a “practice husband” or a series of “getting to
know each other” boyfriends before doing so.
Contending that sexual exclusivity is the only way to go is pure fantasy
on the part of religious dreamers. Many
of us find a richness of sexual experience enriches not only life itself, but
improves the chances you will appreciate a life partner all the more, once you
find somebody you want to commit your life to.
Society is plagued by religious groups known for making
absolute truth claims, including what constitutes a "traditional" marriage. The Roman
Catholic hierarchy, for example, suffer under the illusion they speak for all
Catholics. Some seem to believe they
speak for all humankind. These folks are
fond of speaking in declarative language about “is” when they are doing nothing
more than ticking off what they think “should be.” “God wants us to… God will answer your
prayers… God gets angry when….”
That said, one of the curious events of our time is the
all-out effort on the part of gays and lesbians to claim the institution of
marriage as their own. Unimaginable a
generation ago, same-sex marriage is now the bellwether of the mainstreaming of
LGBT people in society. When it reaches
universality – it’s well on its way already – LGBT people will have half a
chance of being viewed no longer as pariahs, freaks and weirdos, but as
colleagues and neighbors and aren’t they cute when they’re in love.
For this reason, it strikes me as curious – and perhaps the
word “bizarre” is more apt – that groups like the Catholics and the Mormons
should be working so hard to keep lesbians and gays out of the institution they
now claim is theirs to define. Mormons
look particularly silly here, stomping about these days, incensed that somebody
should want to define marriage other than the way they see it. An institution they embraced in its “modern”
form barely a century ago.
Polygamy (specifically polygyny, the practice of marrying
more than one wife), was instituted by the founder of the Mormon Church, Joseph
Smith, Jr., some time in the 1830s. Even
after it was outlawed by the federal government in 1862 by the Morrill Act,
Mormons insisted it was their right to practice their religion as they chose
to, and the tradition of plural marriages, as they call them, went on until
1890, when church president Wilfred Woodruff issued a Manifesto, eliminating
the practice. He specifically left
plural marriages already performed intact, however. Even then the Mormon tradition continued,
even after a Second Manifesto was issued when so many Mormons refused to heed
the first one.
Utah was able to become a state, in 1896, only by agreeing
that a ban on plural marriages would be written into the state constitution. It
wasn’t the Mormon tradition, but they complied, and a century later, in 1995,
Utah, with two-thirds of the population claiming Mormon roots, would become
the first state in the country to enact a DOMA (so-called “Defense of Marriage”
Act). For a group that loves the word “tradition,”
they are remarkably capable of turning themselves around to go with the flow.
Nine years later, in November 2004, two-thirds of the
population voted for a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. They were now using the term “traditional
marriage” to refer not to polygamy but to the marriage of one man and one
woman. But unlike their Catholic bed
partners in the fight against gay rights, they are careful to avoid reference
to traditional marriage as “the way God always intended.” The ones who know their history, at any rate.
On December 20, 2013, U.S. District Judge Robert J. Shelby issued a 53-page ruling
(Kitchen v. Herbert)
saying that the 2004 law violated gay and lesbian couples' rights to due
process and equal protection under the 14th Amendment and ordered the ban be
lifted immediately. Same-sex couples in
Utah began marrying.
Then,
three weeks later, the U.S. Supreme Court stepped in and
placed a stay on that decision. Same-sex
couples could no longer marry after January 6, 2014.
That
raised the question of what would happen to the 1360 couples who had married in that window
between December 20th and January 6th. What
happened in Utah was a replay of what happened between the time gays and
lesbians started marrying in California and Prop. 8. Fortunately, this time the federal government was on top of things and Attorney General Holder quickly announced that the
federal government would recognize those marriages, regardless of local Utah
efforts to have them annulled.
So
what happens next?
It’s
clear that Utah is no longer the Mormons’ exclusive earthly Zion. 13% of the population is now Latino. And while the majority of Utah citizens
still identify themselves as Mormons to census takers, when church leaders
speak, they need to keep in mind they are speaking to a Utah population where
the majority are not active Mormons (The 2010 census showed only 42% of the
population to be ‘actively Mormon.’)
While
a majority of Americans now favor same-sex marriage, and 72% see it as
inevitable, Utah’s socially conservative largely Mormon population is
particularly opposed to homosexuality.
This enabled Utah governor Gary Herbert to instruct state agencies on
January 7 not to recognize the
same-sex marriages performed in Utah and insist the status of the couples that
are already married is up in the air and in the hands of the U.S. Supreme
Court. Not only that, by putting the new
law on hold, according the state authorities, even marriages between same-sex
couples conducted elsewhere will not be recognized in Utah.
On
the other hand, an op-ed piece in the Salt
Lake Tribune yesterday pointed
out that the state has simply re-created the conditions that were in place when
the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the Defense of Marriage Act. Specifically, Utah, like California following
Prop. 8, now has three classes of citizens: straights, who may marry at will, gays who
are married, and gays who may not marry.
And to cancel the 1360 marriages that were legal in Utah at the time they
took place would beg the question, if this was ultimately found unconstitutional in
the California case, why should it not be also found unconstitutional in Utah? No heterosexual people would gain, and only gay
people would lose.
What is it that drives such animus? one has to wonder. What makes a live-and-let-live policy impossible? Why can't they marry each other at will and leave the rest of us to do likewise, those of us not of their religious persuasion?
It’s bad enough the Mormon Church should be one of the prime movers behind efforts to withhold rights from LGBT Americans – and remove them when they are recognized. Now they have to twist the knife by a stunningly arrogant suggestion that seekers of those rights should be scolded for their lack of civility.
It’s bad enough the Mormon Church should be one of the prime movers behind efforts to withhold rights from LGBT Americans – and remove them when they are recognized. Now they have to twist the knife by a stunningly arrogant suggestion that seekers of those rights should be scolded for their lack of civility.
On Friday (two days ago) The First Presidency and the Quorum
of the Twelve Apostles sent out
instructions on how to respond to the latest action by the Supreme Court.
…(W)e encourage all to bear in mind
our Heavenly Father's purposes in creating the earth and providing for our
mortal birth and experience here as His children,
the statement starts out.
...Marriage between a man and a woman
was instituted by God and is central to His plan for His children and for the
well-being of society.
Absent, you’ll notice, is any reference to God’s decision to
do this in the 1880s, when God apparently had a change of heart from his earlier idea of what marriage should look like.
…Changes in the civil law do not,
indeed cannot, change the moral law that God has established. God expects us to
uphold and keep His commandments regardless of divergent opinions or trends in
society.
The Presidency and the Quorum at least recognize there is a
lack of congruence between civil law and what they consider to be God’s
law. That’s hardly news.
The question is what are we to make of this difference of
opinion.
“Be nice,” apparently.
…Just as those who promote same-sex
marriage are entitled to civility, the same is true for those who oppose it.
The Church insists on its leaders' and members' constitutionally protected
right to express and advocate religious convictions on marriage, family, and
morality free from retaliation or retribution," the LDS Church says.
Notice the declaration of the obvious here. “Constitutionally protected right to express
and advocate religious convictions…free from retaliation or retribution.”
Who would argue with that?
And here’s the rub.
What is left out of this declaration is any indication of where the line
is between speech and action. Absent is
any recognition of the Mormon Church’s political role in turning back the
rights of California Citizens in Prop. 8.
Millions of dollars. Millions of
hours of church-led efforts to snatch marriage licenses out of the hands of
fellow citizens with little or no interest in the Mormon view of God’s law.
…
Church officers will not employ their ecclesiastical authority to perform
marriages between two people of the same sex, and the Church does not permit
its meetinghouses or other properties to be used for ceremonies, receptions, or
other activities associated with same-sex marriages.
Not a
problem. Your meetinghouse belongs to
you. Use it in good health, any way you
like. If you want to keep Lutherans or
Jews or black people or people with unruly mustaches from making use of the
facilities, be my guest.
We
have common ground here. Civility,
yes. By all means, let’s withhold
violence and threats of violence.
But
don’t be naïve.
When
you’re standing on my foot, and I shout, “Get off my foot, motherfucker,”
you’ll have to understand that scolding me for being a potty mouth might not
be the best way for you to reach across the gap.
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