In Part 1, we looked at the ruling of the Proposition 8
judges and saw that their standard for marriage was really no standard at all.
We’ll now continue and see why a real standard and authority are needed to
answer the question of if homosexual marriage is “inferior” to traditional
marriage and really all moral queries.
Options for a Moral Standard and Authority
To be effectively answered, the ethical question concerning
homosexual marriage needs to be bumped up to the larger question of: “Is there
anything wrong with anything, and why?” To answer that question requires a
source for an absolute moral standard and a moral authority.
A standard is needed because a standard determines how
something is measured or determined and/or if something is rejected. If the
judges in the Proposition 8 decision claim it is wrong to say homosexual
marriage is inferior to traditional marriage, they need to put forward a
standard for marriage that can be used as a reference. As C. S. Lewis correctly
observed, “A man does not call a line crooked unless he has some idea of a
straight line.”
Once a standard is established, a moral authority is then
needed too so the question of “says who?” can be answered. An authority is
needed because it alone is the entity that has the right to impose the
obligation of acceptance for the proposed standard, and therefore enforces that
it be adhered to.
Whether it is homosexual marriage or any moral issue, to
what standard and authority should we look to answer the question of whether
something is ethically “inferior” that therefore should be cast out? Thinking
through the question will bring forward four possible answers. The first three
are found within the secular humanist worldview and the fourth, the theistic
worldview.
The only options available to the secular humanist where a
standard and authority are concerned are: (1) the natural universe; (2)
culture; (3) the individual. Right from the start, the natural universe can be
ruled out because amoral matter cannot produce moral beings nor prescribe moral
behavior.
Culture cannot be appealed to as there are many cultures
throughout the world, all with different moral standards and practices; there
is no way to ascertain which culture is morally ‘correct’. Culture merely
displays what “is” with respect to morality. Even the famous skeptic and
antagonist of religion David Hume stated that humanity cannot derive an “ought”
from an “is” where morals are concerned.
Moreover, how does one determine what culture dictates? The
voters of California thought that with Proposition 8, the majority should
dictate whether homosexual marriage should be permitted, but it turns out they
thought wrong. If a majority-rules method cannot be used for culture, what can?
The third choice of the individual deciding what’s morally
right and wrong is a disastrous alternative as it only takes the problem seen
in using cultures as a moral compass and compounds it exponentially.
What about using science as a moral compass? Some atheists
say science should dictate moral behavior. However, intellectually honest
secular scientists admit that science is a descriptive discipline and not a
prescriptive one. In addition, its empirical methods are impotent to answer
such moral questions such as if the Nazi’s were evil. Einstein sums up the
correct position in this matter when he said, “You are right in speaking of the
moral foundations of science, but you cannot turn round and speak of the
scientific foundations of morality.”
So, in the end, when Cheryl Jacques says polygamy is wrong
because “I don’t approve of that”, it really is all she can fall back on.
And that simply won’t do.
The Alternative Source for a Moral Standard and Authority
The theistic worldview says that the Creator God who brought
everything into existence is also the immutable source of morals and ethical
behavior. His nature is the standard and He alone is the authority, which
imposes obligation on His creation. In the case of homosexual marriage, He
defined marriage and therefore His definition should not be twisted to be
anything other than what He has intended.
Having an unchanging and transcendent source that can be
turned to in order to ground morals is the only true way of answering not only
the question of if homosexual marriage is morally valid, but if any behavior is
ethical or not.
This is something those founding the United States
recognized long ago. Our Declaration of Independence says, “We hold these
truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are
Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
Nothing similar can be found in a statement made by any
other nation: moral benefits and rights hinged on a creative act. Notice also
that the statement echoes the 14th amendment in the Constitution:
“nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without
due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
protection of the laws.”
This, then, leads to the last questions we need to examine,
which are what does it mean to be equal and just how much liberty – morally –
should a person really possess from a societal perspective?
Correcting Two Errors
Taking the last question first, if, as the Declaration of
Independence says, the rights humans enjoy come from their Creator, then that
spawns another question: Does God ever desire the granting of a civil right to
do a moral wrong? The answer to that seems as self-evident as the phrase that
speaks to all people being created equal.
Which leads to the next issue: are Christians guilty (as the
Proposition 8 judges say) of saying homosexuals are “inferior” as people? The
answer is not at all. Instead, the Christian worldview makes this argument: there is a distinction between every person
being equal from an innate worth perspective and what moral behaviors a person
participates in.
There is a clear separation of the two in Scripture, and
truth be told, in society. The homosexual activists desperately try, however,
to conflate the two into one and so does the liberal media. But they aren’t the
same.
Christians strongly defend the human equality of all people
and affirm that all have the image of God. But while the Bible verifies that
all people are equal in terms of their worth before the Creator, it makes it
quite clear that not all moral acts are.
Not Comfortable with the New Standard
Opponents of Proposition 8 know this, so their goal is
simple: redefine the standard of marriage so that it includes them. However, if
the arguments that homosexuals rely on to make their case are used to create
that redefinition, there can be no opposition to any other form of sexual union
or marriage. All seven combinations previously covered must be admitted. And it
is odd how many homosexuals appear uncomfortable with that. They themselves are
not comfortable with the fact that the new standard is fast becoming … there is
no standard!
This shouldn’t be surprising. Given that all humans have
God’s moral law imprinted on them, all know moral right and wrong and
instinctively recognize the need for moral boundaries. When all fences are
removed, protests abound, with the understanding, of course, being that when
the fences are re-erected their moral practices must be on the inside (i.e.
blessed and accepted) and the ones they frown upon on the outside.
How such divisions are handled, well, that’s the sticky
issue isn’t it when a person has no ultimate source for a standard or
authority?
Trading Truth for Unrighteousness
The concept of redefining truth and standards is covered in
the first chapter of Romans where Paul describes how people “exchanged” (i.e.
redefined) God’s standard for sexuality for something else that they desired.
What they swapped out, Paul says, is God’s truth (cf. Rom. 1:25).
A little known fact is that a standard or truth in Scripture
is synonymous with righteousness. For example, Paul says there are “those who
are selfishly ambitious and do not obey the truth, but obey
unrighteousness, wrath and indignation” (Rom. 2:8, emphasis added) and
that love “does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth” (1
Cor. 13:6).
The sad fact is, those championing the defeat of Proposition
8 and affirming homosexual marriage are exchanging truth for unrighteousness
and are left without any moral ground to stand on or argument to use in denying
the same privileges from others who are different from them (e.g. polygamists,
etc.)
The Proposition 8 judges don’t seem to believe that homosexual
marriage is “inferior” to traditional marriage, although they reference no real
standard to validate their pronouncement. It will be interesting how long it
takes for them to assert the same thing about a bisexual man, his homosexual
brother, and their 15-year old female girlfriend who want to marry because they
all love each other.
Because after all, who are you to say their intended family
is inferior to yours?

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