Heroic Aspirations, Gay Marriage, and the Mormon Church

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My name is Brent Beal.  I’ve been married for eighteen years.  My wife and I have three beautiful kids.  We are both university professors, we’re Mormon, and we support gay marriage.

I support gay marriage for two reasons.

Heroic Aspirations

People are people.  On our bad days, we’re capable of unforgivable indifference and unimaginable cruelty.  On most days we muddle through—we help each other out, we keep each other company.  On good days, we do things that make the world a better place.

There are quite a few good days in our history.  For me, when it comes to the issue of gay marriage, one day, in particular, sticks out: July 4, 1776.  This is the day, of course, that the committee of the whole of the Continental Congress adopted the final draft of Declaration of Independence.  Here’s the second sentence:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

When I was younger, I found the reference to God comforting.

As I’ve gotten older, I’ve come to a deeper understanding of the wisdom of referencing God as the ultimate source of individual rights, but I also see now that that’s not the source of this passage’s power.  What this passage does, in a heroically aspirational way, is elevate basic rights—the right to Life, Liberty, and pursuit of Happiness—above all else.  The existence of these rights is not open for debate.  They cannot be put up for vote.  The majority, even in a democracy, cannot take them away from the minority.  All men are created equal, and they have certain rights, full stop.  Notice that not only are these rights set safely beyond the reach of government—they are put beyond the reach of everyone, and that includes those who think God has informed them otherwise.

This is an incredibly important concept.  We are not so much a “Christian” nation as we are a nation where certain unalienable rights have been put out of the reach of religion, Christianity included.  We are not a great nation because we believe in the right God, we are a great nation because everyone is free to believe in whatever God they choose, as long as—and this is critical—as long as everyone understands that their right to impose their understanding of God ends where others’ rights begin.

This ideal is aspirational.  It requires effort.  Equity, fairness, a belief in the worth and dignity of the individual, a commitment to the rule of law, and a willingness to respect the rights of others even when it’s not convenient—these are not easy things.  We’ve been trying to live up to these ideals for more nearly 250 years.  Sometimes we have fallen shamefully short.  We have had to go back again and again, hold those ideals up to the light, and see our own deficiencies reflected back at us.  Trying to live up to those ideals, I believe, has made us a better people.

Public Policy

Public policy is serious business.  We should deliberate carefully before making changes to foundational institutions.  Bringing religion into these deliberations, however, makes no sense if you believe in what Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence.  This debate is about whether or not a significant segment of our population is going to have equal access to what all parties acknowledge is an important social institution.  We are debating whether or not fellow Americans will be allowed to fully engage in the unalienable rights of Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness.  Because this debate is about individual rights, it is above the pay grade of religion.  I may hold certain religious views on the matter.  You may hold different religious views.  Both our religious views are irrelevant.  The only question is whether or not granting these rights gets us closer to the ideal of treating all men equally and making sure everyone has equal access to Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

The first reason I support gay marriage, therefore, is because I believe in the values and ideals that our country was founded on.

I Believe in Religious Freedom

The second reason I support gay marriage is because I believe in religious freedom.

For those of you that are familiar with Mormon history, you know that the Mormon church has been on the receiving end of religious intolerance.  Those experiences have, I believe, made us more tolerant—at least for most of our history.

One of our Articles of Faith—an official summary of our principal beliefs—states that “We claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may.”

Heber J. Grant, an early president of the church, stated in a church-wide conference, in April 1921, that “We claim no right, no prerogative whatever, to interfere with any other people.”

A few years prior to that statement, in 1907, the First Presidency of the church, stated categorically that “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints holds to the doctrine of the separation of church and state. . . . We declare that from principle and policy, we favor the absolute separation of church and state. . . .”

In 2006, this same sentiment was repeated in another official church statement: “Elected officials who are Latter-day Saints make their own decisions and may not necessarily be in agreement with one another or even with publicly stated Church positions. . . officials must make their own choices based on their best judgment and with consideration of the constituencies whom they were elected to represent.”

In 2009, Dallin H. Oaks, a church leader, warned church members in a speech given at BYU-Idaho that “fragile freedoms are best preserved when not employed beyond their intended purpose” and that members should be careful “never to support or act upon the idea that a person must subscribe to some particular set of religious beliefs in order to qualify for public office.”  The danger, Oaks warned, is that if such a standard were to be employed, then those elected under such conditions might attempt to use government power to support their religious beliefs and practices, and the “free exercise of religion [would be] weakened at its foundation.”

We have a long history of behaving ourselves in the public square.  We recognize, as do other thoughtful people of faith, the blind alley of religious argument in the context of political discourse.  If I bring my religious beliefs into the public square and assert that my understanding of God should be enshrined in public policy, what is to prevent people of other faiths from doing the same?  When our respective views of God conflict, whose interpretation should be given precedence?  We could each cite as evidence our respective spiritual impressions and experiences, but in the end, we would find ourselves with no effective way to referee the impasse.  If you claim that your experiences are superior to mine and that your religious views should therefore be given precedence, then what is to prevent me from making the same claim?  It is a blind alley—and the only safe exit is a mutual agreement to use the general welfare as an arbiter.  In other words, when we leave our private lives and enter the public square, we leave our respective religious views at the curb.  We talk about what is is best for everyone.  We debate, we compromise, and we figure out how to live together.  And we leave God out of it (at least until he gets his story straight and starts telling everyone the same thing).

When I approach the issue of gay marriage from this perspective, the right choice seems clear.

The Decline of Religion in Public Esteem

When we use religion as a basis for public policy, we bring it into a contested domain.  When we allow religious beliefs to be enshrined in law, we privilege certain religious views over others, and that puts the delicate balance that supports religious freedom at risk.  If I can impose my religious views on others today, then what prevents them from doing the same to me tomorrow?  If I can keep someone from marrying today because that is what I believe God wants, then what happens when they invalidate my marriage tomorrow because that is what they believe God wants?

We protect and preserve our religious freedom by keeping religious views out of the public square.

So why did the Mormon church get involved in Prop 8?  I don’t have an answer.

Dallin H. Oaks recently gave a speech at Chapman University School of Law in which he bemoaned the ascendancy of moral relativism and the decline of religion in public esteem.  He and other church officials have, on numerous occasions, defended the church’s opposition to gay marriage.

When I read the speech, I couldn’t help but assume that he was throwing me in with the moral relativists.  I couldn’t disagree more.  I support gay marriage because I believe in values and ideals that haven’t changed.  What’s changed, I hope, is our capacity to live up to those ideals.  In my opinion, the decline of religion in public esteem should be attributed to religion’s failure to live up to these ideals rather than to any imaginary wounds inflicted by moral relativism.

A Truly Religious Experience

For me, it was truly a religious experience to listen to President Obama’s remarks at the signing of the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal Act of 2010:

For we are not a nation that says, “don’t ask, don’t tell.” We are a nation that says, “Out of many, we are one.”

We are a nation that welcomes the service of every patriot. We are a nation that believes that all men and women are created equal.

Those are the ideals that generations have fought for. Those are the ideals that we uphold today. And now, it is my honor to sign this bill into law.

Is it too much to ask that the message we get in the pews on Sunday be as inspiring? 

About the author

Brent D. Beal is an associate professor of management in the College of Business and Technology at the University of Texas at Tyler. In his spare time, he enjoys debating religious and political issues, reading and writing short stories, playing Scrabble, and hanging out with his wife and their three kids.

37 Comments

  1. Bitherwack says:

    One man’s tolerance is another man’s moral relativism.

    I can see missionary work declining dramatically as members have difficulty being associated with intolerance.

    “This little light of mine, why should I let it shine?”

    Who wants to bring people into a church that will strain their relationship with gay relatives?

    Reply
  2. Betty Linch says:

    It should not strain our relationships between gay relatives (and I have some) any more than it should strain our relationships with our drug addict or alcoholic relatives (and I have some). I do not hate or mistreat any gay person, the same way that I do not hate any other person who has a life burdened by “outwardly noticeable” sin. The constitution states “created equal”. For members of the Church who sustain a living prophet, it is simple. Marriage is “between a man and a woman”. All men may be created “equal”, but they are NOT created the same. Men cannot impregnate men, nor women, women. It is the breakdown of families at the very core. Satan does a happy dance when members get on board with this.

    Reply
    • Greg says:

      The fact that you are comparing sexual orientation with drug addiction automatically puts a strain on those relationships… are you kidding?

      For members of the Church who support the scriptures it is as simple as D&C 134:9. Do you believe Joseph was a prophet? Do you believe the scriptures? Welcome to the problematic world of contradicting doctrines.

      Do you believe God really didn’t want His black children to have the priesthood until 1978? Not even the General Authorities claim that.

      This isn’t the first time the Church has been on the wrong side of civil rights.

      The Prophet has led the Church astray before (most notably when he said God would never allow that to happen), it’ll happen again.

      If you’re going to stick with anything, try to stick to the scriptures.

  3. Heather says:

    Wow, Betty. It totally bums me out to see people equating sexual orientation with drug addiction and alcoholism.

    Reply
  4. BD Beal says:

    @Betty, some other things are also simple: A man cannot impregnate an infertile women (hence infertile women should not be allowed to marry); An infertile man cannot impregnate a women (hence infertile men should not be allowed to marry); women past a certain age cannot be impregnated, hence. . . (and so on). Yes, the constitution says “created equal.” And that’s all it says. Note: It doesn’t say “equal, except for those who cannot impregnate or be impregnated.” I could try to reason with you here, but I doubt it would do any good. I suspect you are firmly in “follow the prophet” mode. And that’s my point–the “god-wants-it-this-way” logic has been (and continues to be) behind a lot of racism, bigotry, and prejudice (and that’s what has diminished religion, not moral relativism).

    Reply
  5. ZehnWaters says:

    And what ‘mode’ are you in Mr. Beal? You’ve yet to address the discrepancy between your belief in your religion and fundamental idea that one should follow the current prophet. What say you about the issue by the First Presidency to support efforts to pass the marriage amendment? The marriage amendment did not discriminate against anyone. Homosexuals could get married to someone of the opposite gender, just like everyone else.

    Reply
    • BD Beal says:

      I think it’s important to take personal responsibility for one’s spiritual life. Given the obvious fact that one does not choose one’s sexual orientation, allowing only those who happen to be born heterosexual to marry is, by definition, discrimination (and, as I’ve argued, inconsistent with the ideals enshrined in our country’s founding documents).

  6. Another Heather says:

    Thank you, Mr. Beal. It’s always refreshing to hear from people on the correct side of this debate. The comments you’ve received so far? Well, I find them to be expected but still disappointing.

    Reply
  7. Robert Page says:

    The Constitution Was Written By MAN (an Imperfect Being and an enemy to God By his own sinful nature. God, However, IS perfect and is qualified to judge in Rightousness. We, the created, are to live according to Gods Law and Not by the right we think we deserve! We are NOT to Judge one another..that Belongs solely to God! But, We should HATE the Sin and Love the sinner. Our happiness is not in question, but our walk with and toward the Creator should be of the utmost imortance. I Love ALL people, and I dont judge Gay people!!!!! But I acknowledge that God Has commanded us and warns us to stay far away from Sexual Immorality. Again I Say..I Dont Hate Gay People…Just The Sin!

    Reply
  8. Robert Page says:

    weather or not one is Born with gay emmotions or straight emotions…WE Can Choose To act or not act on those emmotions! 1 corinthians 10:13
    I have lived Most of my Life, struggling with the Gay Attractions and emmotions. But I Choose to Live according to my Faith In Jesus Christ! If I am to be single and not have sex ever again, It is Gods will that I am Living and Not By The Way I Feel! The scripture is Very Clear on how we are to Handle our Bodies and thus our Souls!

    Reply
  9. Thank you for your sensible words and your bravery in stating what seems to me to be common sense. When my son married his returned missionary partner of 8 years in San Francisco in June of 2008, I was shocked and saddened as “religious” people became so hateful and hurtful toward them and me as a supportive mother. I honestly don’t know of ANY marriage that has fallen apart because of their legal commitment to each other.

    Reply
  10. Brent says:

    @Linda, thanks for your post. Great site. I recommend everyone check it out: http://www.momsforequality.com

    Reply
  11. Matt Kulisch says:

    First and foremost, I’m curious if you’re aware of the history of the sentiment, “Love the sinner, hate the sin.” It comes from Gandhi. He spoke it, hoping to teach a rigorously non-violent response of love for the oppressor–English Imperialists–while still encouraging the Indian people to fight against the systemic racism put in place by their white upper-class rulers. It was an effort to separate the people from the system they either silently or actively supported–a worthy effort. While I cannot be sure, my guess is that Gandhi would be disgusted by the way you and other religionists have co-opted the phrase to do exactly the opposite of what Gandhi intended: to oppress, to write into our system those similar inequalities which lift one and refuse to lift another.

    Secondly, can you be more specific about what precisely “the sin” is? I’m still unclear, because nobody can give me a straight answer. You separate “sin” from “sinner” and I think: “convenience.” Because there is no easy line to draw between a person and their behavior. Because any effort to do so is reductive and crude. Because you cannot–in actuality–make such a separation with impunity.

    It seems to me that–like Mr Beal initially alluded–this debate consistently reduces itself to discussions of religious ideology, and away from the actual questions of governing ourselves within a pluralistic society. Yet consistently, even when moved toward a discussion of religious ideology, the religionist seems unable to discuss as so much as assert. You don’t get to say, Robert, “the scripture is very clear,” when all the evidence points to the exact opposite: scripture is interpretation, faith is up for interpretation, and these are all questions that different faiths are giving different interpretations–and different answers to–for hundreds of years.

    Reply
  12. Brent says:

    Matt, thanks for the thoughtful comment. I assume your post was a response to Robert (above).

    Reply
  13. Trevor says:

    Why is it that some people have grown so smart and so intellectual that they think they can redefine marriage? And how does infertility compare to a gay union? Moral relativism at its best! ha ha

    Reply
  14. Blake says:

    I stumbled on your site from Doves and Serpents and just wanted to chime in with a quick thought that I think ties in with this.

    I was talking to my dad recently about why I now support gay marriage.

    I used this argument.

    ME: Who created marriage, God or Government?
    HIM: God.
    ME: So when the government starts giving benefits OR EVEN JUST a stamp of approval for something that we believe God created, Government is getting into religion. So the only way to make it right for all religious beliefs is to give those same rights other people who have a different religious belief.

    BTW: I’ve been using a similar argument when discussing the topic. You phrased this perfectly:

    “We are not a great nation because we believe in the right God, we are a great nation because everyone is free to believe in whatever God they choose, as long as—and this is critical—as long as everyone understands that their right to impose their understanding of God ends where others’ rights begin.”

    Reply
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