Researchers in Sweden recently announced what makes men good âhusband material.â The key, they say, lies not in his religion, his morals, or even how much he loves his potential spouseâitâs how much he has in common with rodents.
A team at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm studied â552 pairs of male twins enrolled in Swedenâs ongoing Twin and Offspring Study.â The subjects âwere currently in a relationship that had lasted at least five years.â Researchers then used tests, and interviewed the subjectsâ spouses where possible, to assess the subjectsâ ability to âbond and commit.â
The subjects were also tested for variants in what is known as the âvasopressin 1a gene.â Vasopressin is a peptide hormone thought to be âassociated with species-typical patterns of social behaviorâ in many mammals.
Their âmain finding,â published in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Science, was that there was an association between a particular gene variant and the ability to form âstrong bondsâ with their partners. They found that men carrying a variant called â334â scored âespecially lowâ on a test called the âPartner Bonding Scale.â Translation: They find it harder to be faithful.
Not only thatâwomen married to men with this variant scored âlower . . . on levels of marital qualityâ than women married to men without it.
What prompted the researcher to look for a correlation between the variant and fidelity? The behavior and neurochemistry of rodentsâspecifically voles, better known to Discovery Channel fans as âowl chow.â
According to lead researcher Hasse Walum, âstudies in voles have shown that the hormone vasopressin is released in the brain of males during mating.â Voles with higher levels of vasopressin are more likely to âstick around and mingle with the female afterâ a sexual encounter.
As Dave Barry might write, Iâm not making this up.
Walum said that the gene variant cannot âwith any real accuracy be used to predict how someone will behave in a future relationship.â And Dr. John Lucas of Cornell told the Washington Post, it was âunlikely to be a single gene [at work]â in male bonding. Instead, it was âlikely to be multiple genes that are expressed incompletely and interact with the environment . . .â
Genes, environmentâwhatâs missing from the list? Thatâs rightâreligion, morality, virtue, culture. Itâs difficult to imagine a better example of whatâs known as âbiological determinism.â Itâs the idea behind Lucas telling the Post that âgenes help drive much of human behaviorâ and that âthe individual palette of emotions and behaviorsâ is âprobably âhard-wiredâ by our genetics.â
While he and others acknowledge a role for training, itâs too little, too late. In a culture that believes biology is destiny, telling people that something like fidelity is genetically driven is tantamount to calling it âoptional.â
But the apostle Paul, with his âthorn in the flesh,â knew that what was good had little to do what came ânaturally.â
It was a lesson that Christianity helped teach the Westâthat is, until the West decided that men were little more than animalsâin this case, owl chow.
From BreakPointÂŽ, October 6, 2008, Copyright 2008, Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with the permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. âBreakPointÂŽâ and âPrison Fellowship MinistriesÂŽâ are registered trademarks of Prison Fellowship







