Author Topic: Marriage Pamphlet from The Heritage Foundation  (Read 792 times)

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Offline Pablo de Fleurs

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Marriage Pamphlet from The Heritage Foundation
« on: October 02, 2013, 07:55:11 PM »
I've been spending a lot of time @ events/forums/debates on religious liberties (Alliance Defending Freedom/Heritage Foundation/Manhattan Declaration) - here's a great pamphlet (PDF d/l) that addresses the topic of redefining marriage without getting judgmental or argumentative.

It addresses topics such as:

1. What is marriage?
2. Why does marriage matter to the government?
3. What are the consequences of redefining marriage?

I find it a great resource for talking points that keep us within the boundaries of civil conversation about a topic that often rages out of control (e.g. the recent Barilla dustup over homosexual advertising).

http://www.heritage.org/marriage/download.html


2 Timothy 1:7
For God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but of power & of love and of calm, a well-balanced mind, discipline and self-control.

Offline Pablo de Fleurs

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Re: Marriage Pamphlet from The Heritage Foundation
« Reply #1 on: October 03, 2013, 07:57:35 PM »
Mom and Dad Together, as It Should Be

Home is a place with a function.  It is the roof under which Mom and Dad, together in marriage, ground and raise a family.  It is a place where children love and learn and build memories they carry within themselves for decades to come.

I remember being a child at home in Kentucky.  When the sun began to set in the late autumn sky, I knew mom would be home any moment -- because she always got home from work about 6:30 p.m.
Anticipating her arrival, I would stand on the cushions of the couch in the front room of our house and press my face against the glass of the picture window -- straining to see down the road so I could spot her headlights coming around the corner before my brother or sister did.

And every night, she came home without fail.  This was not lost on me -- this was her home.
Once home, Mom would find my father drinking coffee -- he got home at 5:30 p.m. -- and my brother and sister and me waiting for a hug (and some dinner).

Like so many memories of Christmas, Easter, and Thanksgiving, these memories concern essential matters: they were formed alongside relationships which cannot be duplicated -- an essential family structure which cannot be replaced.

These kinds of things don't just make life -- they are life. And they stay with us.
So why do we deny these great benefits and experiences to generations around us by trying to redefine the family?  In so doing, we are pursuing change that is literally detrimental.

When activists use the judicial branch or the legislative branch to set up a situation where Tommy has two dads or Susie has two moms -- instead of a mother and father-they deny these children the home they need in which to develop at their best.

Moreover, they undermine the "child-centric" structure that builds adults who wax nostalgic about fishing with Dad, baking with Mom, or taking a family vacation in a car that kept everyone cramped up for hours -- but no one minded.

E.J. Graff made this point in Retying the Knot when she wrote that redefining marriage "is a breathtakingly subversive idea" that transforms marriage from an institution that exists to join mother and father for the benefit of their children into a poorly fashioned, adult-focused replication that "will ever after stand for sexual choice, for cutting the link between sex and diapers."

Part of the home's function is the way it is constructed for the family as a whole, rather than for an individual (or individuals).  Its beauty lies in the safety and strength it provides to children who are raised by a mother and father committed to equipping them to one day raise their family in a similar way.

Graff's point is that this focus is not passed from one generation to the next once marriage redefinition occurs, because the very redefinition of it changes its focus from a family's needs to an individual's -- dare we say sexual -- desires.

Why are so many willing to take away a child's opportunity to press his or her face against the glass and yearn for Mom to be home with Dad, where the whole family can sit together and children can learn early lessons about structure, authority, and joy?  And what will we say to children when they one day ask why they have been intentionally deprived of the love of either a father or a mother?

Many things change with time, but the structure of essential matters -- like the family -- ought never change.


AWR Hawkins is senior opinion editor and writer at Alliance Defending Freedom (www.alliancedefendingfreedom.org).

Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2013/10/mom_and_dad_together_as_it_should_be.html?utm_source=buffer&utm_campaign=Buffer&utm_content=buffer46d66&utm_medium=twitter#ixzz2gi4oar4T
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2 Timothy 1:7
For God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but of power & of love and of calm, a well-balanced mind, discipline and self-control.

Offline IronDioPriest

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Re: Marriage Pamphlet from The Heritage Foundation
« Reply #2 on: October 03, 2013, 08:18:20 PM »
The Heritage pdf is a good read. I think in all my endless online conversations on the subject, I must have made most of those arguments in one way or another. Reading through it, I can almost hear the Leftist blather in response.

This would be good for conversation with those who have formed an anti-marriage opinion without giving the subject much thought beyond their "feelings". Young people, in particular. Committed advocates for the homosexual radicals? Waste of breath.
"A strict observance of the written laws is doubtless one of the high duties of a good citizen, but it is not the highest. The laws of necessity, of self-preservation, of saving our country when in danger, are of higher obligation. To lose our country by a scrupulous adherence to written law, would be to lose the law itself, with life, liberty, property and all those who are enjoying them with us; thus absurdly sacrificing the end to the means."

- Thomas Jefferson

Online Pandora

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Re: Marriage Pamphlet from The Heritage Foundation
« Reply #3 on: October 03, 2013, 09:25:03 PM »
Quote
Committed advocates for the homosexual radicals? Waste of breath.

That is because none of the above matters to them -- not even the children, who are only props in their quest for normalcy.  Children don't matter, it is only the regard in which the concentric circles of society see them that matters.
"Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer." - Mark Twain

"Let us assume for the moment everything you say about me is true. That just makes your problem bigger, doesn't it?"

Offline Pablo de Fleurs

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Re: Marriage Pamphlet from The Heritage Foundation
« Reply #4 on: October 03, 2013, 11:52:20 PM »
Quote
Committed advocates for the homosexual radicals? Waste of breath.

That is because none of the above matters to them -- not even the children, who are only props in their quest for normalcy.  Children don't matter, it is only the regard in which the concentric circles of society see them that matters.

Btw. Hi Pandora (thanks for the welcome in the Newbie area  :D)

I agree - waste of breath. Man does NOT like to have ANY behavior pointed out as "sin" (trite, antiquated non-modern word  ;)). Thus ANY point of view to the contrary...no matter how politely expressed...garners cries out "bigot", "homophobe", "racist", "intolerance" & "hater".

I attended a Manhattan Declaration forum in NYC/Columbia University last week & got to chat w/Alan Sears, lead counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom (http://alliancedefendingfreedom.org/). We discussed the prudence of churches amending their By-Laws...NOW... as a proactive measure. The "Establishment" clause of the 1st Amendment is granted more latitude by Judges where a clear pattern of communication on what a church does & does not do is articulated by said institution.

The SUGGESTED LANGUAGE FOR CHURCH BYLAWS document (PDF) is available here:
http://www.alliancedefendingfreedom.org/content/docs/issues/church/suggested-lang-church-bylaws.pdf
2 Timothy 1:7
For God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but of power & of love and of calm, a well-balanced mind, discipline and self-control.