Your
Brother Daniel
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more great blogs as this one go to Daniel’s blog site at: www.Mannsword.blogspot.com
Sex and Civilization
With
the West massively committed to redefining sex, marriage and the family, it
might be fruitful to see if any of these innovations have already been tried
and what has been history’s verdict regarding them.
Brian Fitzpatrick suggests that the most
“definitive
work on the rise and fall of civilizations, was published in 1934 by Oxford
anthropologist J.D. Unwin”:
- In Sex and Culture, Unwin studied 86 human civilizations ranging
from tiny South Sea island principalities to mighty Rome. He found that a
society’s destiny is linked inseparably to the limits it imposes on sexual
expression and that those sexual constraints correlate directly to its
theological sophistication and religious commitment.
- Unwin noted that the most primitive societies had only
rudimentary spiritual beliefs and virtually no restrictions on sexual
expression, whereas societies with more sophisticated theologies placed
greater restrictions on sexual expression and achieved greater social
development.
- In particular, cultures that
adopt what Unwin dubbed “absolute monogamy” proved to be the most
vigorous, economically productive, artistically creative, scientifically
innovative, and geographically expansive societies on earth. Absolute
monogamy is a very strict moral code. Under absolute monogamy, sex can
occur only within one-man/ one-woman marriage. Premarital and extramarital
sex are not tolerated and divorce is prohibited.
Why
should sexual prohibitions cause social flourishing? Perhaps for the same
reason that tobacco prohibitions might cause health to flourish! There are
things that are pleasurable for a season, whose final bill might prove
unaffordable.
There
are other things or institutions that tend to tame the beast within. For one
thing, there is nothing comparable to a committed and trusting relationship.
Only within such an institution can a couple make the necessary sacrifices for
the sake of family well-being.
I
had worked for the New York City Department of Probation for 15 years.
Countless times, I’ve had probationers tell me:
- Mr. Mann, I have a wife and
child now. I really need to settle down and find a job!
They
were committed to taming the beast within with a commitment to something more
glorious. However, society is now telling these probationers:
- “Families” can take many
different forms, and no one can say that one is better than another.
Perhaps
he doesn’t need that job after all. However, In This Present Age, sociologist Robert Nisbet writes:
- “What sociologists are prone to
call social disintegration is really nothing more than the spectacle of a
rising number of individuals playing fast and loose with other individuals
in relationships of trust and responsibility.”
Without
trust, commitment cannot survive, and without commitment, we are left with
nothing more than social disintegration and children who believe that life is
just about taking care of #1!
Our
behaviors can undermine our families and the future welfare of our children,
and our ideas and beliefs will undermine our behaviors. If sexual freedom is
pushed as a virtue or as a “human right,” it will become increasingly difficult
to resist those momentary, powerful urges. And when our sexual conduct
undermines the stability of our families, it also undermines society.
Fitzpatrick
refers to the work of Harvard historian Carle Zimmerman:
- [He] concludes that “the
creative periods in civilization have been based upon” the strongest form
of family, which he terms the “domestic” type: “The domestic family
affords a comparatively stable social structure and yet frees the
individual sufficiently from family influence to perform the creative work
necessary for a great civilization.” (Family
and Civilization)
- In other words, in an amoral,
hedonistic society, you can’t trust the people you need to trust, not even
your spouse. Moreover, if people can make and break relationships at will,
with no legal repercussions or social stigma, they are much more likely to
abandon their marriages—at their children’s expense—when the going gets
tough. Husbands with roving eyes are much more likely to trade in their
wives for new models. (Whistleblower,
Nov. 2010, pp. 38f)
It
is no surprise, therefore, that social commentator, Michael Novak, concludes:
- One unforgettable law has been
learned through all the disasters and injustices of the last thousand
years: If things go well with the family, life is worth living; when the
family falters, life falls apart.
The
new family configurations are not only a violation of traditional values; they
are also a violation of our own
nature. We are not made for sexual gluttony. While we can choose to live
gluttonously, there is another part of our nature – a deeper core - that rebels
against it.
Much
of Israel had been settled by radical socialistic communities – kibbutzim. The
ideal shared by many of these communities was to have everything in common. This included their clothing, sexual
partners, and even their children. Anything else constituted ownership – a dirty word in their
thinking.
However,
over the years, they succumbed to the pull of their deepest human
desires/needs. Consequently, each gravitated to a single mate, forming
committed monogamous unions. Even though, in many instances, the children are
still raised communally, they return to their own parents in the evenings,
thereby proclaiming afresh that there is no place like home, and home is with
one’s own committed parents.
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