G. K. Chesterton: It’s Not Gay, and It’s Not Marriage
By Dale Ahlquist
One of the pressing issues of Chesterton’s time was “birth control.”
He not only objected to the idea, he objected to the very term because
it meant the opposite of what it said. It meant no birth and no control.
I can only imagine he would have the same objections about “gay
marriage.” The idea is wrong, but so is the name. It is not gay and it
is not marriage.
Chesterton was so consistently right in his pronouncements and
prophecies because he understood that anything that attacked the family
was bad for society. That is why he spoke out against eugenics and
contraception, against divorce and “free love” (another term he disliked
because of its dishonesty), but also against wage slavery and
compulsory state-sponsored education and mothers hiring other people to
do what mothers were designed to do themselves. It is safe to say that
Chesterton stood up against every trend and fad that plagues us today
because every one of those trends and fads undermines the family. Big
Government tries to replace the family’s authority, and Big Business
tries to replace the family’s autonomy. There is a constant commercial
and cultural pressure on father, mother, and child. They are minimized
and marginalized and, yes, mocked. But as Chesterton says, “This
triangle of truisms, of father, mother and child, cannot be destroyed;
it can only destroy those civilizations which disregard it.”
Marriage is meant to be between a man and a woman for the purpose of procreation and mutual support, or love. Those who profess to have homosexual tendencies have pushed for a re-definition of marriage to suit their own agenda. We must push back and stand up for God’s laws and not man’s!
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