It’s
common to hear complaints of how horrible it is that in certain cultures and
religions, polygamy is respected and normal. We hear an outcry that it attacks
woman’s dignity and reduces them to objects. But have those who are raising
this outcry ever stopped to question whether their own sexual behavior may be reducing
their human dignity?
Where is
the difference, when men and women in Western society embrace sexual activity
with whomever they please, whenever they please, leading to multiple sexual partners
by the time they are thirty? The difference between the culture of the
traditional family, based on a lifelong sexual relationship with one person, and
our present culture is in the way sexual conduct is viewed, practiced, and
taught. My question today is this: Have we ever considered that we might be
living in a polygamous society?
As Pat Fagan points out, in the Western culture of polyamorous
sexuality, family life is just one option among many other lifestyles. This
culture treasures sexual freedom, meaning whatever is desired by the partners
(two or more partners, as the case may be). It wants to eliminate religion and suppresses
its public manifestations, attacking religious freedom. One’s moral code is
individual and consequently relative; anyone should do as he or she pleases,
not only sexually but in any arena of life (so if I need to kill an unborn
child, I should have that right). In short, the idea of freedom is to have no
constraints imposed on you, to have a carefree life.
The
consequences of this misguided view of “freedom” range from HIV and unwanted
pregnancies to child depression and adolescent suicide. Yet they are never seen
for what they are: the results of sexual license.
On the
other hand, a monogamous way of life defends marriage to one person of the
opposite sex for life. In this culture, family life benefits not only the
spouses but the children and community. Couples who are married report being happier;
children who grow up in intact families are more likely to grow up mentally
stable, to finish college, and to delay sexual activity, as MARRI research explains
in 162 reasons to marry.
The
monogamous culture also treasures
the worship of God, which strengthens relationships, education, and psychological
wellbeing. In addition, the culture of monogamy defends universal moral norms,
the freedom to pursue the good, and the defense of human life.
So what
kind of society do you want to live in? What kind of culture do you want your
children to grow up in? I would like to live in an environment where my moral code
is protected and defended, where education in virtue is present in our schools,
and where the defense of life and marriage is unquestioned. I encourage you to
take active part in this lifestyle and become an example to others who have
never acknowledged the importance of marriage and commitment. The monogamous
culture does far more than our Western polyamorous society to uphold human
dignity.
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