Z
Zoltan_Cobalt
Guest
Yes, infertile men and women get married. Marriage is between men and women, fertile or not. It is a truth that ONLY men and women who marry are capable of sustaining the state.Listen, I get the arguments, I really do. However, there are always going to be questions the opposing side has to answer:
If marriage between a man and a woman is necessary for the continuation of the State, what about people who are infertile? People who find out after marriage they’re infertile? People who get married over the age of fertility? People who choose not to have children? Elderly grandparents who remarry? Are any of those people assisting the continuation of the State? Do any of those people have any business getting married? If marriage is going to be tied up into biological heterosexual fertility, I think it’s time we start coming up with some honest answers.
Recognizing a union that cannot, in itself, sustain the state is beyond the authority of the state.
The Church lists infertility, defects, and the rejection of children as impediments to a marriage and grounds for annulment. But the Church allows the infertile and the elderly to marry because they had, have or may have the capability to produce children.
The burden of establishing that homosexual unions are in need of recognition, as well as being necessary (continuation of the State) and beneficial to the common good, as marriage, is necessarily on those who wish to redefine the status of marriage.