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Dennis Prager
Dennis Prager
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Even if Your Child Is Gay …

Comment

Last week, Republican Senator Rob Portman of Ohio announced that he had reversed his position on same-sex marriage. The reason was that his son had come out to him and his wife as gay.

This is not the first such instance. Periodically, we hear about Republican politicians whose child announces that he or she is gay, prompting the parent to change his mind about the man-woman definition of marriage.

As a parent, I understand these parents. We love our children, and we want them to love us.

Nevertheless I differ with their decisions to support the redefinition of marriage.

In order to explain why, let's analyze some of Senator Portman's words:

"I'm announcing today a change of heart ... "

These words are well chosen. Senator Portman's position is indeed "a change of heart." That's why he didn't say "change of mind." His change comes from his heart.

In this regard, Portman speaks for virtually every progressive/left/liberal position on virtually every subject. To understand leftism — not that the senator has become a leftist, but he has taken the left-wing position on redefining marriage — one must understand that above all else leftism is rooted in emotion, not reason. That is why left-wing social positions always refer to compassion and fairness — for blacks, for illegal immigrants, for poorer people and, of course, for gays. Whether a progressive position will improve or harm society is not a progressive question. That is a conservative question. What matters to progressives is whether a position emanates from compassion.

Progressives do not seem to recognize that in life there is always tension between standards and compassion. Standards, by definition, cannot allow for compassion for every individual. If society were to show compassion to every individual, it would have no standards. Speeding laws are not waived for the unfortunate soul who has to catch an important flight. Orchestral standards are not waived for the musician who has devoted his or her life to studying an instrument, is a wonderful person and needs the job to support a family.

It is either right to maintain the man-woman definition of our most important social institution, or is it not. We cannot base our decision on compassion for gays, whether the gay is our child, our sibling, our friend or anyone else.

Yes, societies have changed qualifications for marriage regarding age and number, but no society before the 21st century ever considered redefining the fundamental nature of marriage by changing the sexes.

That is why it is not honest to argue that same-sex marriage is just another redefinition. It is the most radical change to the definition of marriage in the history of civilization.

How then should people of compassion deal with this, or any other, issue? By asking whether we maintain standards or whether we change them because of compassion. Do we change universities' academic standards out of compassion for blacks and their history of persecution, or do we maintain college admission standards? Do we change military standards in order to enable women to enter fighting units or do we ask only what is the best policy to maintain military excellence?

The only answer that works — and no answer is perfect in this imperfect world — is to maintain standards in the macro and show compassion in the micro.

Every parent owes the same love and support to a gay child as to a straight child. In fact, all of us, parents or not, owe the same respect to gays as individuals as to heterosexual individuals. That does not mean, however, that marriage needs to be redefined. It does not mean that, all things being equal, it is not best for a child to have a male and female parent.

Compassion was the reason Senator Portman raised another issue: "My son," he said, "told us he was gay, and that it was not a choice."

This raises an obvious question. Prior to his son telling him that he did not choose to find men sexually attractive, did Senator Portman believe that gay men did choose to find men rather than women sexually attractive? Unlikely.

So why did he raise this? Because the "gays have no choice" issue tugs at people's hearts. Once again, compassion individual is supposed to trump all other considerations.

Finally, the senator also said:

"During my career in the House and the last couple of years in the Senate, I've taken a position against gay marriage rooted in part in my faith and my faith tradition." But he has been "rethinking my position, talking to my pastor and other religious leaders."

It would be interesting to find out what exactly his Christian pastor said to him. Did the pastor tell him that Christianity looks favorably on man-man marriage? Or that God made men and women essentially interchangeable? If so, why didn't this pastor tell this to the senator the whole time the senator opposed same-sex marriage?

A final note to parents of gays: Parents who believe in the man-woman definition of marriage do not owe it to their gay child to support the same-sex redefinition of marriage — any more than gay children owe it to these parents to oppose same-sex marriage. Parents and children owe each other love and respect, not abandonment of convictions.

Dennis Prager's latest book, "Still the Best Hope: Why the World Needs American Values to Triumph," was published April 24 by HarperCollins. He is a nationally syndicated radio show host and creator of PragerUniversity.Com.

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Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
I'm reminded of a commentator on a Southern Baptist website who wrote, “I can't reconcile how someone could feel he or she was born with strong homosexual feelings, love Christ and yet take on the limitations of what seem to me to be straightforward biblical teachings. That's agonizing, and I don't really understand it.”.


And this is the weird thing: “Straightforward biblical teachings” should at least be understandable to the average person. So often I hear it said, “OUR ways are not GOD's ways,” as if God was some sort of inscrutable alien being.


Consider The Golden Rule: We do unto others as we would have them do unto us. Put all the religious dogma and ritual aside, and this is what our laws boil down to. We don't lie or bear false witness because we won't want people to lie to us. We don't steal from other people because we do not want people stealing from us. We don't betray the trust of our spouses because we wouldn't want them doing the same to us. Same goes for killing and a variety of other “bad” behaviors.


And yet somehow there seems to be this sheepish adherence to a double standard for Gay and Straight people. If you're Straight, it's all so wonderful to be able to find a compatible person of the opposite sex, court and get engaged and marry and live happily ever after. But if you're Gay, all of that is completely out of the question. Don't even bother trying to find a compatible person. Lesbians and Gay men are precluded from any hope for romance or commitment. Gay people are simply told: “Gosh, sorry about that. You make us uncomfortable; acknowledging your existence means we might have to revise what we've been teaching all these years – meaning, Whoops! No infallible Magisterium or “literal” Bible… so you'll just have to sacrifice your life and any hope of finding somebody to love. Tough luck, kid. God said it, I don't necessarily understand it, but there it is.” How could this be considered a good value judgment?


Fortunately, the reason increasing numbers of Americans (including our President) support marriage equality is because they have learned to make better value judgments. The reason couples choose to marry is to make a solemn declaration before friends and family members that they wish to make a commitment to one another's happiness, health, and well-being, to the exclusion of all others. Those friends and family members will subsequently act as a force of encouragement for that couple to hold fast to their vows. THAT'S what makes marriage a good thing, whether the couple in question is Straight OR Gay.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Chuck Anziulewicz
Tue Mar 19, 2013 6:42 AM
Chuck, Obama only came out on gay marriage because thats the way the wind was blowing at the time. Just another of many issues he's flip-flopped on. Anyhow, people like Dennis are really holding the republican party back at this point. If they want to get in the White House anytime over the next decade, they need to drop the Dennis's and start preaching individual liberty like Rand Paul did during his filibuster
Comment: #2
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Tue Mar 19, 2013 9:25 AM
I remember years ago when I was learning about Vatican II and all the reforms to Catholicism that came with it. Let me note that while my mother was raised Catholic and my father was raised Jewish, neither of them still practices their respective religions today, and I was not raised in either religion. When I heard about the various reforms, on the one hand, they were all things I agreed with -- I thought many of the rules that they changed were outdated or silly or unnecessary or what have you (but then, I think that about a LOT of religious rules). But on the other hand, I couldn't help thinking, "if it was a sin to eat meat on Friday (and not just during Lent) one day, how could it suddenly no longer be a sin the next day?" Either these things were always sins and would always be sins and nothing would change that, or these things were NEVER sins, were never sins and the Church was ALWAYS wrong about this.

So, I understand Dennis' argument here. Either gay marriage is wrong, was wrong and will always be wrong, no matter whose child comes out of the closet -- or gay marriage is NOT wrong, was not wrong and will never be wrong, no matter who is preaching about it. On the one hand, as a supporter of gay marriage, I am happy to see Sen. Portman and other formerly anti-gay leaders have a change of heart about opposing gay marriage. On the other hand, I guess I'd rather they came to this realization REGARDLESS of having a child come out of the closet. And what I'd REALLY like to see is for the GOP to finally figure out that many of the things the religious right would have the party fight for are not things government should be involved in in the first place.

@Chris McCoy -- could't agree with you more that social issues, such as gay marriage, are non-starters for the Republican party. If you look back at how the GOP took the House majority in the 90s, it had almost nothing to do with social issues/values issues such as gay marriage, abortion, stem cell research, prayer in school, etc. What got the GOP the majority was the Contract With America. What was the Contract about? It was about fiscal responsibility and accountability. Ask almost anyone on the street what their biggest concern is right now, and it's stuff related to the economy -- paying the bills, keeping their home, keeping or getting a job. The vast majority of "average Joes" will not suggest gay marriage is their top priority. Nor will the vast majority cite abortion, prayer in school, etc. The GOP has allowed itself to be hijacked by the religious right, and until the party finally recognizes that, it is doomed to failure.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Lisa
Tue Mar 19, 2013 11:12 AM
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