M
Mort_Alz
Guest
This is primarily a question for American and European “social liberals,” though I welcome answers from anyone. Initially, I wanted to take a poll, but I think I’m looking for answers too specific for a poll.
Personally, I think there are many liberal ideals which Catholics can (and certainly do) support. I’m thinking of ideals like actively helping the poor and brainstorming for solutions to help alleviate the severity of poverty in one’s community. Also, I think of generous no-strings attached charities as well. All great things.
But, there is one area where Catholics necessarily differ from western liberals: sexual ethics and other social issues.
When it comes to sexual ethics, the modern liberal opinion is sort of an “anything goes as long as there is consent” kind of rule. A kinder way to put it is that liberal sexual ethics have their root entirely in the concept of consent. A good example of this is that two unmarried persons can be perfectly fine having sex because two unmarried persons can consent to sex with one another. On a much farther end of the spectrum, pedophilia can never be OK because children are incapable of giving consent. Same with beastiality. Animals can’t give consent. Rape, of course, also doesn’t have consent, so it is not allowed. Other than that, though, it seems there are few additional rules.
Immediately, I already have a question: If consent is the primary/exclusive deciding factor of a sex act’s ethicality, then are consensual incestuous sexual relationships ethical? Obviously this would exclude two child siblings or a parent and a child because there is no possible consent there, but what about grown adult siblings? What about a father or mother and their grown adult son or daughter? Can those be ethical since consent is theoretically possible?
Quick disclaimer: my Catholic sexual ethics, of course, forbids incestuous relationships even with consent and I have no trouble understanding why. I’m asking these uncomfortable questions to try and understand the moral reasoning behind liberal sexual ethics.
Catholic sexual ethics have their root in something different than consent, although consent is a necessary part of a Catholic-ethical sexual relationship. Catholic sexual ethics are rooted in the belief that our bodies are designed by a higher power than us and are thus subject to standards of conduct other than whatever we fancy and whatever we consent to. Thus, it is possible for consensual sexual acts to also be unethical. Unmarried persons cannot have ethical sex with each other because there is no prerequisite commitment between the two and sex, because of its life-creating nature damages individuals if there is no established commitment first. Since procreation is ideally inseparable from sex, it is unnatural and psychologically damaging to have sex outside of the security of a committed relationship even when no conception is possible from the sex. It forges a connection with another person that is not supposed to be broken. So, when these connections are habitually made and broken, it is damaging for everyone involved even if it is not easily perceived. This is not to mention the fact that an established and committed relationship before sex will protect the well-being of any children that result from the sex. That is not so with commitment-free sex. If a child results, then that child is more often than not deprived of his or her father; a figure which Catholic ethics says every child is entitled to according to justice.
Anyway, I’m digressing. My last question regards some anger which I have perceived in some of my liberal friends regarding Christian sex ethics. Some of them suggest that Christian sexual ethics inescapably promotes misogyny, patriarchy, and oppressive relationships and also undermines the importance of consent. I am having a hard time understanding how this is. Perhaps someone can spell it out for me more lucidly?
Personally, I think there are many liberal ideals which Catholics can (and certainly do) support. I’m thinking of ideals like actively helping the poor and brainstorming for solutions to help alleviate the severity of poverty in one’s community. Also, I think of generous no-strings attached charities as well. All great things.
But, there is one area where Catholics necessarily differ from western liberals: sexual ethics and other social issues.
When it comes to sexual ethics, the modern liberal opinion is sort of an “anything goes as long as there is consent” kind of rule. A kinder way to put it is that liberal sexual ethics have their root entirely in the concept of consent. A good example of this is that two unmarried persons can be perfectly fine having sex because two unmarried persons can consent to sex with one another. On a much farther end of the spectrum, pedophilia can never be OK because children are incapable of giving consent. Same with beastiality. Animals can’t give consent. Rape, of course, also doesn’t have consent, so it is not allowed. Other than that, though, it seems there are few additional rules.
Immediately, I already have a question: If consent is the primary/exclusive deciding factor of a sex act’s ethicality, then are consensual incestuous sexual relationships ethical? Obviously this would exclude two child siblings or a parent and a child because there is no possible consent there, but what about grown adult siblings? What about a father or mother and their grown adult son or daughter? Can those be ethical since consent is theoretically possible?
Quick disclaimer: my Catholic sexual ethics, of course, forbids incestuous relationships even with consent and I have no trouble understanding why. I’m asking these uncomfortable questions to try and understand the moral reasoning behind liberal sexual ethics.
Catholic sexual ethics have their root in something different than consent, although consent is a necessary part of a Catholic-ethical sexual relationship. Catholic sexual ethics are rooted in the belief that our bodies are designed by a higher power than us and are thus subject to standards of conduct other than whatever we fancy and whatever we consent to. Thus, it is possible for consensual sexual acts to also be unethical. Unmarried persons cannot have ethical sex with each other because there is no prerequisite commitment between the two and sex, because of its life-creating nature damages individuals if there is no established commitment first. Since procreation is ideally inseparable from sex, it is unnatural and psychologically damaging to have sex outside of the security of a committed relationship even when no conception is possible from the sex. It forges a connection with another person that is not supposed to be broken. So, when these connections are habitually made and broken, it is damaging for everyone involved even if it is not easily perceived. This is not to mention the fact that an established and committed relationship before sex will protect the well-being of any children that result from the sex. That is not so with commitment-free sex. If a child results, then that child is more often than not deprived of his or her father; a figure which Catholic ethics says every child is entitled to according to justice.
Anyway, I’m digressing. My last question regards some anger which I have perceived in some of my liberal friends regarding Christian sex ethics. Some of them suggest that Christian sexual ethics inescapably promotes misogyny, patriarchy, and oppressive relationships and also undermines the importance of consent. I am having a hard time understanding how this is. Perhaps someone can spell it out for me more lucidly?