Pages

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Love Isn't Enough: 5 Reasons Why Same-Sex Marriage Will Harm Children

.
By Trayce Hansen, Ph.D.

Proponents of same-sex marriage believe the only thing children really need is love. Based on that supposition, they conclude it’s just as good for children to be raised by loving parents of the same sex, as it is to be raised by loving parents of the opposite sex. Unfortunately, that basic assumption—and all that flows from it—is false. Because love isn’t enough!

All else being equal, children do best when raised by a married mother and father. It’s within this environment that children are most likely to be exposed to the emotional and psychological experiences they need in order to thrive.

Men and women bring diversity to parenting; each makes unique contributions to the rearing of children that can’t be replicated by the other. Mothers and fathers simply are not interchangeable. Two women can both be good mothers, but neither can be a good father.

So here are five reasons why it’s in the best interest of children to be raised by both a mother and a father:

First, mother-love and father-love—though equally important—are qualitatively different and produce distinct parent-child attachments. Specifically, it’s the combination of the unconditional-leaning love of a mother and the conditional-leaning love of a father that’s essential to a child’s development. Either of these forms of love without the other can be problematic. Because what a child needs is the complementary balance the two types of parental love and attachment provide. Only heterosexual parents offer children the opportunity to develop relationships with a parent of the same, as well as the opposite sex. Relationships with both sexes early in life make it easier for a child to relate to both sexes later in life. For a girl, that means she’ll better understand and appropriately interact with the world of men and be more comfortable in the world of women. And for a boy, the converse will hold true. Having a relationship with “the other”—an opposite sexed parent—also increases the likelihood that a child will be more empathetic and less narcissistic.

Secondly, children progress through predictable and necessary developmental stages. Some stages require more from a mother, while others require more from a father. For example, during infancy, babies of both sexes tend to do better in the care of their mother. Mothers are more attuned to the subtle needs of their infants and thus are more appropriately responsive. However, at some point, if a young boy is to become a competent man, he must detach from his mother and instead identify with his father. A fatherless boy doesn’t have a man with whom to identify and is more likely to have trouble forming a healthy masculine identity.

A father teaches a boy how to properly channel his aggressive and sexual drives. A mother can’t show a son how to control his impulses because she’s not a man and doesn’t have the same urges as one. A father also commands a form of respect from a boy that a mother doesn’t––a respect more likely to keep the boy in line. And those are the two primary reasons why boys without fathers are more likely to become delinquent and end up incarcerated.

Father-need is also built into the psyche of girls. There are times in a girl’s life when only a father will do. For instance, a father offers a daughter a safe, non-sexual place to experience her first male-female relationship and have her femininity affirmed. When a girl doesn’t have a father to fill that role she’s more likely to become promiscuous in a misguided attempt to satisfy her inborn hunger for male attention and validation.

Overall, fathers play a restraining role in the lives of their children. They restrain sons from acting out antisocially, and daughters from acting out sexually. When there’s no father to perform this function, dire consequences often result both for the fatherless children and for the society in which these children act out their losses.

Third, boys and girls need an opposite-sexed parent to help them moderate their own gender-linked inclinations. As example, boys generally embrace reason over emotion, rules over relationships, risk-taking over caution, and standards over compassion, while girls generally embrace the reverse. An opposite-sexed parent helps a child keep his or her own natural proclivities in check by teaching—verbally and nonverbally—the worth of the opposing tendencies. That teaching not only facilitates moderation, but it also expands the child’s world—helping the child see beyond his or her own limited vantage point.

Fourth, same-sex marriage will increase sexual confusion and sexual experimentation by young people. The implicit and explicit message of same-sex marriage is that all choices are equally acceptable and desirable. So, even children from traditional homes—influenced by the all-sexual-options-are-equal message—will grow up thinking it doesn’t matter whom one relates to sexually or marries. Holding such a belief will lead some—if not many—impressionable young people to consider sexual and marital arrangements they never would have contemplated previously. And children from homosexual families, who are already more likely to experiment sexually, would do so to an even greater extent, because not only was non-traditional sexuality role-modeled by their parents, it was also approved by their society.

There is no question that human sexuality is pliant. Think of ancient Greece or Rome—among many other early civilizations—where male homosexuality and bisexuality were nearly ubiquitous. This was not so because most of those men were born with a “gay gene,” rather it was because homosexuality was condoned by those societies. That which a society sanctions, it gets more of.

And fifth, if society permits same-sex marriage, it also will have to allow other types of marriage. The legal logic is simple: If prohibiting same-sex marriage is discriminatory, then disallowing polygamous marriage, polyamorous marriage, or any other marital grouping will also be deemed discriminatory. The emotional and psychological ramifications of these assorted arrangements on the developing psyches and sexuality of children would be disastrous. And what happens to the children of these alternative marriages if the union dissolves and each parent then “remarries”? Those children could end up with four fathers, or two fathers and four mothers, or, you fill in the blank.

Certainly homosexual couples can be just as loving as heterosexual couples, but children require more than love. They need the distinctive qualities and the complementary natures of a male and female parent.

The accumulated wisdom of over 2,000 years has concluded that the ideal marital and parental configuration is composed of one man and one woman. Arrogantly disregarding such time-tested wisdom, and using children as guinea pigs in a radical experiment, is risky at best, and cataclysmic at worst.

Same-sex marriage definitely isn’t in the best interest of children. And although we empathize with those homosexuals who long to be married and parent children, we mustn’t allow our compassion for them to trump our compassion for children. In a contest between the desires of some homosexuals and the needs of all children, we can’t allow the children to lose.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

why did you post this---it offends just about everyone---are you GOD

Cathy_of_Alex said...

I've met Ray and I can state, with certainty, that he is not God. ;-)

What's offensive about this post? It presents that fact that same sex marriages can deny children the gender formation that they need. It's also a viewpoint that we don't hear very often.

Anonymous said...

offends just about everyone...i am sorry to say this, but that is what happens when the truth is proclaimed in our morally degraded society today.

i proclaim i am not offended, and the World's 1 billion plus catholics will tell you the same thing. in fact, i will spread this message, aka the truth about same-sex marriages.

Unknown said...

How is that I "am not God", Cathy? I and we all were created in His Image and Likeness, weren't we?

And thank you for your comment, Karyn! Please do spread the word. We are in a war on this issue.

Anonymous said...

Sheesh--they'll give a phd to anyone these days. Take a look at this hack's website--she says "dissenters" from George Bush's worldview are essentially ill. A black and white worldview is "morally and psychologically healthy." A black and white worldview like, what, the 9/11 terrorists had?

Take a look at her credentials--she got her phd from what appears to be a mere step above getting it on the internet. And her "novel" is about how to snag an ideal husband.

I am the father of a 1-year-old, and anyone who characterizes my love for my son (or that of most fathers for their children) as "conditional-leaning" needs to leave the office and live in the real world for a while.

Maybe "Dr." Hansen needs to revisit her book, or she'll snag herself a "conditional-leaning" husband.

My views on same-sex marriage are not pertinent to my opinion about "Dr." Hansen. She isn't even able to articulate a realistic picture of heterosexual marriage; why should she be able to comment on a form of marriage that, legally, doesn't even exist in most parts of our country? Moreover, many of the outrageous claims on her website lack any statistical backing or footnotes whatsoever.

I'm not offended by her opinion on same-sex marriage. However, I find her juvenile understanding of a father's love to be laughable.

The fact that people swallow this tripe is one of the reasons our society is "morally degraded."

Anonymous, hardworking minister and unconditionally-loving father.

Unknown said...

Anon.

I did some research on her and agree that her credentials are somewhat lacking. But so are mine.

What gets tiresome is people who post anonymously who don't let us know a bit about them.

We bloggers lay it out and generally put our names on it.

The most important sentence she wrote stated that "using children as guinea pigs in a radical experiment, is risky at best, and cataclysmic at worst."

Anonymous said...

I am the anonymous poster. A bit about me:

I don't have a google account and am not web savvy.

I am, as I said above, a minister and a father.

I didn't come here to troll; I came to sound off about Hansen's statements about fatherhood.

Unknown said...

Anon.

Thanks for posting.

I don't know the woman. But I sensed that her point was not against "fatherhood" but the point that starting families with two fathers or two mothers is not in the best interest of children.

Sadly, there are millions of families with one mother or one father. That is not wrong; however, it is unfortunate.

Post a Comment