Thursday, March 14, 2013

Families and Salvation

I'm currently in Washington D.C. with other students from my University, a few of whom I had never met before. Last night the topic of homosexuality and the church came up, and I quickly told them that I'm gay and disagree with the church's stance, and we had a really good and quite productive conversation about it on the metro on our way back to the hotel. As we left the metro, there was an older gay couple walking hand-in-hand, and I started thinking about gay relationships, families, and salvation.

Our conversation about homosexuality tonight started with talking about the Boy Scout controversy, and one of the guys said that he felt that homosexual relationships were contrary to family values, and so people in relationships with others of the same gender shouldn't be allowed into the leadership. That led me to question what exactly family values are, and we started talking about the nature and importance of families.Families are central to Mormon theology. They carry eternal significance because family relationships are saving relationships. There's something salvific about the family. 

So often in church we glorify the importance of families, but I don't think it's often enough that we examine carefully what it is about families that gives those relationships such power, potency, and relevance to our eternal destinies. What I'm going to endeavor to show in this post is that same gender relationships are not only in line with family values and partake of their saving power, but that opposition to same-sex marriage is actually harming the very values it's trying to protect.

The question at the heart of the point I'm endeavoring to make is as to the nature of the relationship between the gender of the parents and the saving power of family relationships. What is it that makes family relationships saving?

I posit that the saving quality of family relationships comes in the nature of the commitment that they entail. In Mormon theology, to be saved from sin is to become like God, and God is love. Family relationships teach us how to love each other in ways friendships aren't capable of doing. I would argue that commitment is central to the saving quality of families (if there's anything I'm missing here, feel free to bring it up.)

So the next question is this: what relationship does gender have in enabling commitments? If a family is defined by the commitment made by two people when they enter into the marriage, then in order for there to be a relevant difference in terms of salvation, gender needs to make a difference. The first point that comes to mind is procreation. It can be argued that if two individuals can procreate, then their children serve as a bond that enhances their commitment. But there are many heterosexual couples who can't procreate for a variety of reasons, and yet they are able to get married, and I assume that the commitment of their marriage still serves a spiritual purpose. There are also people who get married beyond the age of having children. Furthermore, countless people get divorced after having children. Procreation, therefore, does not serve as a unique enough argument for it to be an essential factor in the relationship between families and salvation. In addition, families that can't procreate biologically can still adopt, and both parents assume responsibility for the adopted child, creating the same obligations and commitments that exist in a biological family.

Gender, therefore, does not seem to be relevant to the salvific qualities of family relationships. If family values are those values that enhance commitment, and commitment does not necessitate certain genders, then I would argue that someone who espouses "family values" ought to espouse them everywhere, and not just in certain circumstances or instances. Opposition to same-sex marriage is opposition to same-sex commitment, and is therefore opposition to the fundamental quality essential to family relationships.
Many people also make the argument that men and women naturally complement each other in ways two men or two women cannot. I agree that men and women serve as great compliments to each other within marriage because of inherent differences. It must, however, be noted that there are distinct biological differences between straight men and gay men, and straight women and gay women (such as brain structure). If this is the case and their inherent qualities differ, then straight women do not necessarily complement gay men (or the other way around) the same way that they do in heterosexual relationships. 

So many people bring up God and His plan for families when they discuss gay marriage. Is God really so limited that He didn't make room for homosexual relationships in the eternities? I feel like the same God who made the rainforests and the galaxies is a God of deep complexity. He doesn't seem to me to be a God of black and white. Creating such a straight (no pun intended) plan where there is only one option for everyone doesn't seem to me to fit into the way he's always done things.

And so I think it's incumbent upon us to deeply question the nature of families and their role in the process of salvation. And I could be completely wrong and misguided on all of this, in which case I hope it's made clear to me where my mistake has been made. But to sum up my current view: the saving aspect of families is commitment. Gender is a non-essential part of commitment. Gender is, therefore, a non-essential part of the saving power of families.





9 comments:

  1. Dude. Love it. I full hardly agree. I'm actually going to share you post with another. Keep writing!

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  2. Also, Where is your follow this blog button?

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    1. Just added it :) Thanks for the suggestion.

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  3. Josh, this is such a great post! It goes along with everything I've been feeling about marriage equality but explains things so much better than I ever could. I'll definitely be sharing this post with those who just don't get my views.

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  4. Great post - glad you feel comfortable enough to come out with your name, too. I found the experience liberating. Best wishes.

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  5. Josh, congratulations on this blog: I'm glad for you.

    Alright, you used the word "harms" as a substantive noun, so I feel justified in challenging your premise.

    Joseph Smith redefined the family in his day. He believed that God approved of men and women having multiple spouses. He personally did a poor job, as far as I can tell, of developing high quality, sustained emotional or sexual intimacy with any of his wives. He definitely did not seem committed to all of his wives. (Some of them he simply married, without leaving evidence of any form of relationship beyond marriage.) As far as I can tell, the prophet of the restoration did not believe that any form of commitment was a necessary part of marriage. (Of course, I preserve here the faulty assumption that Joseph Smith acted according to his beliefs.)

    This brings me full circle: I fully respect your position, but I think it is tied to a problem that you didn't mention, at least explicitly: that in order to find meaning in Mormonism, we have to choose our meaning. Now, some Church authorities preach that our religion should be based on deference to priesthood leaders. However, I personally believe that you should feel free to take your own perspective on Mormonism as you see fit. At some points, authority becomes all-important (e.g., when it comes to holding a temple recommend), but wherever possible I think that Mormons should feel free to use Mormonism as a framework on which to hang their own beliefs about God. We just need to recognize that such a move does take us out of TBM land and into the realm of Sunstone/New Order/Buffet-Style/Liberal Mormonism.

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    1. P.S. I think I might make a similar shift in blogging really, really soon.

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    2. Ryan, I completely agree with you, both on what you said about Joseph Smith and about how to approach Mormonism. The argument I'm making in this post isn't about the objective reason that current Mormon theology finds salvation in family relationships; rather, I was positing what I think that element would be (if it exists at all). So I guess the point of the post is to show that if Mormons are going to argue that gay relationships do not have the saving power of straight relationships, then they are going to need to find something other than commitment to be the saving element (and I think commitment is really the most powerful element that could be it.)

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  6. Opposition to Same-Sex marriage is extremely harmful in another important way: I have seen several faithful young gay Mormon men eventually leave the church because they couldn't find a place of acceptance within the church. If you are a gay man (or woman) and not dedicated to living a lonely life of celibacy, then you cannot fully participate in church - hold a calling, participate in the sacrament, etc. Little by little, I have watched extremely dedicated gay Mormons pull away first from the church, then from the doctrine, then from anything spiritual at all. So sad.

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