Title: Same Sex Marriage
1Same Sex Marriage
- Sue Bohlin
- Kerby Anderson
2Whats Marriage For?
- Marriage begins a family. The family is the basic
building block of society. - Mankind did not invent marriage society codified
it. - one man, one woman,
- in a committed relationship,
- providing a safe place to bear and raise
children. - The concept and institution of marriage is always
about children.
3Whats Marriage For?
- Those who are pushing for same-sex marriage are
seeking to redefine it - From the foundation for building new societal
units, - To
- 1) a way to secure society's legitimization and
approval of their sexual relationship - 2) a way to secure financial and other benefits.
- Note both of these reasons are about the adults,
not about children.
4How Did We Get Here?
- Sexual revolution in the 60's
- The Pill
- Abortion
- Illegitimacy (Fatherlessness)
- Cohabitation
- Reproductive Technologies
- Divorce
- Gay Rights
5Why Same Sex Relationships Are Wrong
- They are an attempt to meet legitimate needs (for
acceptance, approval and affection) in
illegitimate, ungodly ways. - They are outside God's created intention for sex
--the complementarity of male and female
physically, emotionally, spiritually - Marriage is an earthbound illustration of Christ
and the church, the mystical unity of the Truly
Other.
6Why Same Sex Relationships Are Wrong
- They are idolatrous Romans 1, worship of the
creature (sex or the sexual partner) instead of
the Creator. - They are destructive and dangerous
- A façade of normalcy
7The Homosexual Lifestyle Not Parallel to a
Heterosexual Lifestyle
8The Homosexual Lifestyle Not Parallel to a
Heterosexual Lifestyle
9The Homosexual Lifestyle Not Parallel to a
Heterosexual Lifestyle
10The Homosexual Lifestyle Not Parallel to a
Heterosexual Lifestyle
11The Homosexual Lifestyle Not Parallel to a
Heterosexual Lifestyle
12The Homosexual Lifestyle Not Parallel to a
Heterosexual Lifestyle
- Openly gay parents are emotionally and
relationally broken people - Saying that all a child needs is love.
- Many of them were taught at an early age that
love sex. - Their definitions of love are skewed.
13Answering Arguments for Gay Marriage
- "Marriage will encourage faithfulness and
stability in volatile homosexual relationships. - We need same-sex marriage to insure hospital
visitation. - "We need same-sex marriage to insure survivorship
benefits." - "We need same-sex marriage for Social Security
benefits."
14Answering the Discrimination Argument
- Really two issues denied liberties, denied
benefits - Liberties
- Not true, any person can marry, with certain
restrictions. Can't marry - A child
- A close blood relative
- A person already married
- A person of the same sex
- These restrictions apply equally to every person
15Answering the Discrimination Argument
- Benefits are granted to families
- Society has an interest in providing a safe place
for children to grow up and be nurtured. - These benefits are inherent to families marriage
is about building families. - Homosexual relationships cannot build families
legitimately.
16Answering the Discrimination Argument
- Same Sex Marriage is not about civil rights
it's about validation and social respect.
17Politics of Same-Sex Marriage
18Same-Sex Marriage
- Massachusetts began issuing marriage licenses on
May 17, 2004 - Couples married in Massachusetts can use the
full faith and credit clause to force other
states to recognize their marriage. - DOMA 38 states have a Defense of Marriage Act.
19Defense of Marriage Act
- Many law journals are saying that DOMA is
unconstitutional. - Liberal judges are likely to overturn it.
- Possible Remedies
- Federal Marriage Amendment
- Marriage Protection Act
20Constitution Amendment
- Federal Marriage Amendment requires 2/3 House
Senate and 3/4 of state legislatures. - Senate failed to invoke cloture (60 votes).
- House of Representatives will consider the FMA
next month.
21Marriage Protection Act
- Marriage Protection Act was passed by the House
of Representatives and will now go to the U.S.
Senate. - Article III, Section 2 Congress can limit the
appellate jurisdiction of the federal courts to
consider an issue. - An election year issue.
22Remember the 2000 Election?
232000 Election
- Presidential election decided by 527 votes,
change of 5381 votes in 4 states would have
resulted in a 269-269 tie. - Senate elections 50-50 tie.
- House elections a collective shift of 5493
votes in five districts would have put Democrats
in charge.
242004 Election
- Presidential race will probably be close.
- Senate 34 races 5 open seats previously held by
Democrats (NC,SC,GA,FL,LA). - House 38 races are competitive, only 3 contests
can be considered a toss up and 10 others
considered toss up but leaning.
25Christian Vote
- 59 million evangelical voters.
- 15 million voted in 2002.
- 24 million are not registered to vote.
- One article suggests that the people who go to
church Sunday, October 31 will also be the ones
who determine who is elected two days later.