Same-Sex Marriage: Good for Marriage, Good for the Pocketbook
By Candace Chellew-Hodge
July 14, 2009
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Bishop Harry Jackson, pleading for the president to maintain the ban on same-sex marriage, calls it the number one domestic issue. But what about, say, the unemployment rate? Will the ban help those without jobs?

Seven years ago, my partner and I had a holy union ceremony in a small chapel in Georgia—a chapel, incidentally, that starred in the Stephen King movie Pet Semetary II. Don’t worry if you don’t recognize it, no one else has seen the movie either. The rehabbed chapel served as a beautiful backdrop to our happy day, despite its obscure infamy.

Next month, my beloved spouse and I will travel to Canada and speak those vows to one another again, only this time with the force of at least one country’s laws behind them. We hope that one day the United States will grant recognition to same-gender marriages performed in other countries, just as they recognize all other foreign marriages.

If you believe those who oppose marriage equality for me and my partner, it’s apt that our marriage took place in a horror film setting. We’re apparently to blame for the decrepit state of marriage in the United States today, and giving recognition to the nuptials we will soon celebrate will only hasten the demise of this esteemed institution.  That’s the gist, anyway, of Bishop Harry Jackson’s open letter to President Obama, urging him to prevent the overturning of the Defense of Marriage Act or DOMA.

Jackson, a vocal opponent of marriage equality and senior pastor of Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, Maryland, uses his letter to air a litany of disappointments over the decline in marriage:

1. A lowering of the marriage rate:
• The marriage rate has plunged 50% since 1970
2. An increase in divorce:
• Half of all new marriages end in divorce
3. A rise in heterosexual cohabitation:
• The number of unmarried couples living together has soared 12-fold since 1960
4. A multiplication of unwed births:
• Out-of wedlock births jumped from 5.3% to 39.6% from 1960-2007

Since the push for marriage equality for gays and lesbians has really only been an issue since 1993, it’s hard to see how the gay community has contributed the decline in marriages, increase in divorces and unmarried heterosexual cohabitation and well as out-of-wedlock births.

But, Jackson uses these statistics to claim that they “show the fragile nature of the institution of marriage today. Changing the definition of marriage will have many unintended consequences, which will hurt generations to come. If one redefines marriage, then the family is redefined. If the family is redefined then the nature of parenting must also be redefined.”

Indeed, marriage has become a fragile institute, thanks to the heterosexuals who have dominated it since, oh, forever. Yes, changing the definition of marriage may have some unintended consequences, but, the one consequence we know it will have is that more people will be interested in actually doing it. That will pump up the decline in marriage rates. Certainly, gay and lesbian relationships may also end in divorce and some will forgo the right to marry and simply live together—and that may still affect out-of-wedlock births as more and more same-gender couples have children. But, for all Jackson’s fear mongering, adding gays and lesbians to the marriage roles will not destroy the institution. In fact, it will give the institution the much needed injection of enthusiasm and respect that it sorely needs right now.

This is nothing new—a vocal homophobe sending letters to the president spelling out his position on an issue dealing with the gay and lesbian community using worn arguments and religious justifications. What’s most shocking about Jackson’s letter isn’t his well-worn rhetoric, it’s this one line at the very beginning:

“We believe that the central domestic problem we face is the disintegration of marriage.”

Really? The “central domestic problem” facing this country is the “disintegration of marriage”? If that’s what Jackson believes, then he’s got some mighty thick blinders on. He might want to check out the most recent unemployment numbers:

The Bureau of Labor Statistics preliminary estimate for job losses for June is 467,000, which means 7.2 million people have lost their jobs since the start of the recession.

If you want to end a marriage, put a little financial strain on it and see where it goes. Yep, the disintegration of marriage is a big concern—but it’s not the demand for marriage equality that is destroying marriage—it’s the “central domestic problem” we are all facing right now—a declining economy and soaring jobless numbers.

But, studies, like this one from UCLA, are showing that marriage equality for gays and lesbians could be an economic boon, especially to the states, like Vermont, that embrace it:

Throughout this report, we estimate the economic impact of weddings conservatively. In other words, we choose assumptions that are cautious from the State’s perspective in that they tend to produce lower revenues given the range of possibilities. Even so, we find that the effect of allowing same-sex couples to marry in Vermont is a gain of $30.6 million to Vermont’s businesses and workers, and $3.3 million in state and local government revenues over the next three years.

Winston Churchill once said, “A fanatic is one who can’t change his mind and won’t change the subject.” Jackson and his anti-marriage equality cohorts qualify as fanatics on this issue. They can’t let go of their prejudices long enough to see that we’re all in the same economically sinking boat. Tossing out the gays and the lesbians won’t prevent us all from going down.

Tags: bishop harry jackson, doma, gay marriage, religious freedom, same-sex marriage, unemployment

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Gay cruises

Am I the only one who saw advertisements for "all gay" cruises featuring beefy barechested young men on the Townhall website that that letter was printed?

Good times.

glad to see the post
really bad

i dislike the same sex marriage. Could tell me why the god create women and man? They make for each other. If not then no need to make man or may be women. Everything has a explanation.
Malaysia will writing
shag rug

Rethinking marriage

The world's major problem is overpopulation. A major national problem is children being born to parents who are incapable of loving them.
Cohabitation is not necessarily an evil. It does take most relationship breakups out of the court system where unfair treatment is too often the rule.
Homosexual partnerships are less likely to have children. This is a plus for the world.
Some of these issues are effectively addressed in the popular free ebook series "And Gulliver Returns" --In Search of Utopia-- at http://andgulliverreturns.info

Same Sex Marriage

Marriage is an institution created by God for a man and a woman, if you believe what the Bible says, and I do. I Timothy includes homosexuality in the category of lawbreakers. God's word also states that those who practice homosexuality will not inherit the kingdom of God.
Your argument isn't with the people (homophobes) you don't agree with. Its with the Bible. I'm not afraid of homos, however, I do feel very bad for them in that their sin is a barrier to fellowship with God. A relationship with God is our goal as Christians and our prime objective. Jesus died and shed his blood to make a way back to God. It would be wise to let go of anything that would get in between you and God, including sexual sin.

RE: Same Sex Marriage

First you might want to consider what biblical scholars who understand Greek and Hewbrew have to say about the scriptures in the book of Timothy. Secondly, you and everyone else who professes to be a Christian are a sinner just as much as any homosexual is. Third, you might take your own advice - "It would be wise to let go of anything that would get between you and God" such as self-rightousness.

same sex marriage

If Stephen could forgive those who were taking his life (by stoning), I certainly can forgive homosexuals.
But yet the Bible tells us to not continue in sin......"6If we say that we have fellowship with Him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth;" I John 1:6

God has never condoned homosexuality, and it takes some twisting of the scripture to make it say that.


8"If your hand or your foot causes you to stumble, cut it off and throw it from you; it is better for you to enter life crippled or lame, than to have two hands or two feet and be cast into the eternal fire.9"If your eye causes you to stumble, pluck it out and throw it from you It is better for you to enter life with one eye, than to have two eyes and be cast into the fiery hell."
Jesus' attitude toward any sin is to not continue in it but to have victory over it. Victory over homosexuality AND over self righteousness is God's plan for us all.

"Your kingdom come, your will be done, ON EARTH AS IT IS IN HEAVEN!" Victory over sin and the devil is God's plan for us.

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