M
mjwise
Guest
Procreative activity is simply not a requirement of civil marriage, at least in any form practiced in the US. These changes were not introduced by the present ruling.My objective, nonanecdotal, nondoctrinal basis for arguing that marriage should be about procreation is based on biology, sociology, and reason. Exactly two people are needed to procreate; one must be male and the other female.
Most of time, if they are suitable. However, even an avowed pedophile may marry and procreate. Ability to conceive a child does not automatically indicate an ability to raise a child, and of course much more commonly parents cannot always raise their natural children because of unforeseeable circumstances.The children that result from such union will need to be cared for for many years, and these children do best when they are raised by their natural parents.
These points seem doctrinal (especially the “ought to be”), especially since civil marriage already diverged significantly from this model.I agree that everyone should have a right to engage in marriage, including homosexuals. Marriage ought to be properly understood as the permanent fruitful union of a man and a woman. A gay man does not desire marriage, he desires to have his sexual union with another man legitimized and treated the same as marriage when it does not serve the same purpose (the begetting and raising of children with their natural parents).