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Gay by Choice?
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Former Megachurch Pastor Goes Church Hopping as a Newcomer
The lead in a recent Washington Post article paints a disturbing picture: Children rank as the highest source of personal fulfillment for their parents but have dropped to one of the least-cited factors in a successful marriage, according to a national survey.
Whats the matter with that sentence? Too much to unpack entirely in a few minutes, but lets zero in on those two enticing words: personal fulfillment. The emphasis on that idea tells us a lot about whats really wrong with marriage and family today.
As the article states, The 88-page report . . . underscores a widening gap between parenthood and marriageat a time when living together out of wedlock has grown increasingly common and nearly one in four births is to an unmarried woman.
The author quotes several people who say that they think of marriage and children separately, not as a package deal. By a wide margin, the respondents in this survey still want children. They even realize that children need a mother and a father. But increasingly fewer of them are practicing what they say they believe. Why? Because they also believe that marriage is all about mutual happiness and fulfillment and personal satisfaction instead of the bearing and raising of children.
Do you see whats missing here? Nothing about putting someone else first. Just marriage as something that makes you feel goodwhich, as anyone whos been married will testify, isnt an idea that works for very long. Its no wonder that more and more couples have trouble committing to marriage, and that many who do are having trouble making their marriages last.
This is so ironic. We live in an era where romance seems to be on its deathbed and sexual relationships have become casual, ordinary business. Yet here we have a generation with such an impossibly romanticized view of marriage that they have to find the spouse whos always wonderful and satisfyingor no spouse at all.
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And its also no wonder that the idea trickles down to child-raising. People want children to satisfy their own needs, or not at all. You may remember that a while back I talked about two very different mothers: one of them risked her marriage and her health and spent a small fortune conceiving a child; the other was filing a wrongful-birth suit over a botched abortiona child she didnt want. At bottom, I said, they both had the same idea: that a child was a commodity and that their right to self-fulfillment was their chief goal.
At least one married father quoted in this article, David Joyce, got it right when he said, I think what were running into . . . is people saying, [marriage] needs to be about me. And it doesnt. It needs to be about us or about we. Anything thats based on a me scenario isnt going to last very long. Joyce is right.
So what kind of marriage lasts? A marriage in which the husband and the wife understand that marriage is about self-giving, not about self-satisfaction. That parenthood is a calling to self-sacrifice for the good of the child, not an avenue for self-fulfillment.
We need to start teaching our kids and young adults that me-centered families cannot survive. And instead of delivering happiness and self-fulfillment, the me-first attitude will bring, in the end, nothing but emptiness and a declining birthrate that will soon enough bring about the end of western civilization.
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From BreakPoint®, July 13, 2007, Copyright 2007, 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. BreakPoint® and Prison Fellowship Ministries® are registered trademarks of Prison Fellowship





















