12 December
2012

Contradiction at the Heart of ‘Marriage Equality’ and Sex-Education

At present it looks extremely likely that legislation extending the possibility of legal marriage to same-sex couples will be passed in the New Year, and that in spite of strong opposition from voters, churches and even some homosexual people, too.

We have blogged before about ‘gay marriage’ here, here, here and here.

One aspect of the matter that has so far attracted little comment in the national press is that of sex-education. With the advent of new legislation teaching in this area is likely to become very confused.

Sex education will, in all likelihood, be called upon to teach the following:

•         that people can be attracted to each other sexually;
•         that they can have sex with each other;
•         that there are many distinct ways of doing this, alone and with others;
•         that all kinds of sex are equally acceptable and valid.

So far this might seem at least coherent. However, responsible courses should surely have to go on to teach:

•         that babies come from sex between men and women;
•         that this one kind of sex alone leads to babies;
•         that having a baby is a very serious business;
•         that the kind of sexual relationships that lead to babies are more serious than the kind which do not;
•         that variant forms of sex and of sexual relationships should be valued in different ways;
…and therefore…
•         that not all kinds of sex are equally valid.

Heterosexual relationships display two important features that have been hitherto synonymous with marriage: sexual complementarity and an inextricably related potential for procreation. The new legislation will, we believe, be internally confused. It will not, moreover, offer a coherent approach to the future of our society.

2 Responses to Contradiction at the Heart of ‘Marriage Equality’ and Sex-Education

Robert says: 13 December 2012 at 3:06 pm

You’re links are broken (“…about ‘gay marriage’ here, here, here and here.”)

Reflecting on the point made in the article, I do not believe that your ‘therefore’ statement is made undeniable in the preceding statements.

It is true that sex between men and women is the only natural way to conceive, and this distinguishes that form of sexual union from other sexual relationships but this does not invalidate the other types of sexual act.

It would be fair to say “therefore not all kinds of sex are equal” but it is not well argued above that “not all kinds of sex are equally valid”.

Unless of course, the only valid form of sex is for procreation. In that case there are many acts that are not ‘equally valid’, not just acts between same sex participants.

If your opinion is that sex must be for procreation and not merely for intimacy, union or pleasure (and I believe that has been an opinion in various theologies throughout history), then you ought to say so clearly to fully flesh out your deductions.

Reply
thomasmoreinstitute says: 19 December 2012 at 10:09 am

Thanks for your comment.

The intention wasn’t to invalidate other kinds of sex per se. However, the benefits and problems that attend procreative sex are of a different order from those that attend non-procreative sex. This does not, as such, suggest, that non-procreative sexual acts have no validity, but it certainly does assert that any validity cannot be of the same kind. This rather undermines the suggestion that all kinds of sex are ‘equally valid’.

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