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Why it matters
Given the enormous new social impediments to courtship
and marriage, and
given also that they are firmly and deeply rooted in the cultural
soil of
modernity, not to say human nature itself, one might simply
decide to declare
the cause lost. In fact, many people would be only too glad to do
so. For
they condemn the old ways as repressive, inegalitarian, sexist,
patriarchal,
boring, artificial, and unnecessary. Some urge us to go with the
flow; others
hopefully believe that new modes and orders will emerge, well-
suited to our
new conditions of liberation and equality. Just as new cultural
meanings are
today being "constructed" for sexuality and gender, so too new
cultural
definitions can be invented for "marriage," "paternity and
maternity," and
"family." Nothing truly important, so the argument goes, will be
lost.
New arrangements can perhaps be fashioned. As
Raskolnikov put it — and he
should know — "Man gets used to everything, the beast!"
But it is simply wrong
that nothing important will be lost; indeed, many things of great
importance
have already been lost, and, as I have indicated, at tremendous
cost in
personal happiness, child welfare, and civic peace. This should
come as no
surprise. For the new arrangements that constitute the cultural
void created
by the demise of courtship and dating rest on serious and
destructive errors
regarding the human condition: errors about the meaning of
human sexuality,
errors about the nature of marriage, errors about what
constitutes a fully
human life....
According to the story of the Garden of Eden, our
humanization is in fact coincident with the recognition of our
sexual
nakedness and all that it implies: shame at our needy
incompleteness, unruly
self-division, and finitude; awe before the eternal; hope in the
self-transcending possibilities of children and a relationship to
the divine.5
For a human being to treat sex as a desire like hunger —
not to mention as
sport — is then to live a deception.
Thus how shallow an understanding of sexuality is
embodied in our current
clamoring for "safe sex." Sex is by its nature unsafe. All
interpersonal
relations are necessarily risky and serious ones especially so.
And to give
oneself to another, body and soul, is hardly playing it safe.
Sexuality is at
its core profoundly "unsafe," and it is only thanks to
contraception that we
are encouraged to forget its inherent "dangers." These go
beyond the hazards
of venereal disease, which are always a reminder and a symbol
of the high
stakes involved, and beyond the risks of pregnancy and the
pains and dangers
of childbirth to the mother. To repeat, sexuality itself means
mortality — equally for both man and woman. Whether we
know it or not, when we
are sexually active we are voting with our genitalia for our own
demise.
"Safe sex" is the self-delusion of shallow souls.6
It is for this reason that procreation remains at the core of a
proper
understanding of marriage. Mutual pleasure and mutual service
between husband
and wife are, of course, part of the story. So too are mutual
admiration and
esteem, especially where the partners are deserving. A
friendship of shared
pursuits and pastimes enhances any marriage, all the more so
when the joint
activities exercise deeper human capacities. But it is precisely
the common
project of procreation that holds together what sexual
differentiation
sometimes threatens to drive apart. Through children, a good
common to both
husband and wife, male and female achieve some genuine
unification (beyond
the mere sexual "union" that fails to do so): The two become one
through
sharing generous (not needy) love for this third being as good.
Flesh of
their flesh, the child is the parents' own commingled being
externalized, and
given a separate and persisting existence; unification is
enhanced also by
their commingled work of rearing. Providing an opening to the
future beyond
the grave, carrying not only our seed but also our names, our
ways, and our
hopes that they will surpass us in goodness and happiness,
children are a
testament to the possibility of transcendence. Gender duality
and sexual
desire, which first draws our love upward and outside of
ourselves, finally
provide for the partial overcoming of the confinement and
limitation of
perishable embodiment altogether. It is as the supreme
institution devoted to
this renewal of human possibility that marriage finds its deepest
meaning and
highest function.
There is no substitute for the contribution that the shared
work of raising
children makes to the singular friendship and love of husband
and wife.
Precisely because of its central procreative mission, and, even
more, because
children are yours for a lifetime, this is a friendship that cannot
be had
with any other person. Uniquely, it is a friendship that does not
fly from,
but rather embraces wholeheartedly, the finitude of its
members, affirming
without resentment the truth of our human condition. Not by
mistake did God
create a woman — rather than a dialectic partner —
to cure Adam's aloneness; not
by accident does the same biblical Hebrew verb mean both to
know sexually and
to know the truth — including the generative truth about
the meaning of being
man and woman.7
Marriage and procreation are, therefore, at the heart of a
serious and
flourishing human life, if not for everyone at least for the vast
majority.
Most of us know from our own experience that life becomes
truly serious when
we become responsible for the lives of others for whose being in
the world we
have said, "We do." It is fatherhood and motherhood that teach
most of us
what it took to bring us into our own adulthood. And it is the
desire to give
not only life but a good way of life to our children that opens us
toward a
serious concern for the true, the good, and even the holy.
Parental love of
children leads once wayward sheep back into the fold of church
and synagogue.
In the best case, it can even be the beginning of the
sanctification of
life — yes, even in modern times.
The earlier forms of courtship, leading men and women to
the altar,
understood these deeper truths about human sexuality,
marriage, and the
higher possibilities for human life. Courtship provided rituals of
growing
up, for making clear the meaning of one's own human sexual
nature, and for
entering into the ceremonial and customary world of ritual and
sanctification. Courtship disciplined sexual desire and romantic
attraction,
provided opportunities for mutual learning about one another's
character,
fostered salutary illusions that inspired admiration and devotion,
and, by
locating wooer and wooed in their familial settings, taught the
inter-generational meaning of erotic activity. It pointed the way
to the
answers to life's biggest questions: Where are you going? Who is
going with
you? How — in what manner — are you both going
to go?
The practices of today's men and women do not accomplish
these purposes, and
they and their marriages, when they get around to them, are
weaker as a
result. There may be no going back to the earlier forms of
courtship, but no one should be rejoicing over this fact. Anyone
serious about "designing" new cultural forms to replace those
now defunct must bear the burden of finding some alternative
means of serving all these necessary goals.
A revolution needed?
Is the situation hopeless? One would like to be able to offer
more encouraging news than the great popularity — and
not only among those 50 or older — of the recent Jane
Austen movies, Sense and Sensibility, Persuasion, and Emma,
and (on public television) the splendid BBC version of Pride and
Prejudice. But, though at best a small ray of hope, the renewed
interest in Jane Austen reflects, I believe, a dissatisfaction with
the unromantic and amarital present and a wish, on the part of
many 20- and 30-somethings, that they too might find their
equivalent of Elizabeth Bennet or Mr. Darcy (even without his
Pemberly). The return of successful professional matchmaking
services — I do not mean the innumerable "self-matching"
services that fill pages of "personal" ads in our newspapers and
magazines — is a further bit of good news. So too is the
revival of explicit courtship practices among certain religious
groups; young men are told by young women that they need
their father's permission to come courting, and marriage alone is
clearly the name of the game. Various groups, including David
Blankenhorn's Institute for American Values, have put marriage
— and not only divorce — in the national spotlight.
And — if I may grasp at straws — one can even take
a small bit of comfort from those who steadfastly refuse to
marry, insofar as they do so because they recognize that
marriage is too serious, too demanding, too audacious an
adventure for their immature, irresponsible, and cowardly
selves.
Frail reeds, indeed — probably not enough to save
even a couple of courting water bugs. Real reform in the
direction of sanity would require a restoration of cultural gravity
about sex, marriage, and the life cycle. The restigmatization of
illegitimacy and promiscuity would help. A reversal of recent
anti-natalist prejudices, implicit in the practice of abortion, and
a correction of current anti-generative sex education, would also
help, as would the revalorization of marriage as a personal, as
well as a cultural, ideal. Parents of pubescent children could
contribute to a truly humanizing sex education by elevating their
erotic imagination, through exposure to an older and more
edifying literature. Parents of college-bound young people,
especially those with strong religious and family values, could
direct their children to religiously affiliated colleges that attract
like-minded people.
Even in deracinated and cosmopolitan universities like my
own, faculty could legitimate the importance of courtship and
marriage by offering courses on the subject, aimed at making
the students more thoughtful about their own life-shaping
choices. Even better, they could teach without ideological or
methodological preoccupations the world's great literature,
elevating the longings and refining the sensibilities of their
students and furnishing their souls with numerous examples of
lives seriously led and loves faithfully followed. Religious
institutions could provide earlier and better instruction for
adolescents on the meaning of sex and marriage, as well as
suitable opportunities for co-religionists to mix and, God
willing, match. Absent newly discovered congregational and
communal support, individual parents will generally be helpless
before the onslaught of the popular culture.
Under present democratic conditions, with families not what
they used to be, anything that contributes to promoting a lasting
friendship between husband and wife should be cultivated. A
budding couple today needs even better skills at reading
character, and greater opportunities for showing it, than was
necessary in a world that had lots of family members looking on.
Paradoxically, encouragement of earlier marriage, and earlier
child-bearing, might in many cases be helpful — the
young couple as it were growing up together before either
partner could become jaded or distrustful from too much pre-
marital experience, not only of "relationships" but of life.
Training for careers by women could be postponed until after
the early motherhood years — perhaps even supported
publicly by something like a GI Bill of Rights for mothers who
had stayed home until their children reached school age.
But it would appear to require a revolution to restore the
conditions most necessary for successful courtship: a desire in
America's youth for mature adulthood (which means for
marriage and parenthood), an appreciation of the unique
character of the marital bond, understood as linked to
generation, and a restoration of sexual self-restraint generally
and of female modesty in particular.
Frankly, I do not see how this last, most crucial, prerequisite
can be recovered, nor do I see how one can do sensibly without
it. As Tocqueville rightly noted, it is women who are the teachers
of mores; it is largely through the purity of her morals, self-
regulated, that woman wields her influence, both before and
after marriage. Men, as Rousseau put it, will always do what is
pleasing to women, but only if women suitably control and
channel their own considerable sexual power. Is there perhaps
some nascent young feminist out there who would like to make
her name great and who will seize the golden opportunity for
advancing the truest interest of women (and men and children)
by raising (again) the radical banner, "Not until you marry me"?
And, while I'm dreaming, why not also, "Not without my parents'
blessings"?
This is the final of three excerpts from Kass's
essay.
The first excerpt is available here.
The second excerpt is available here.
Footnotes
5 See my "Man and Woman: An Old Story,"
First Things, November, 1991.
6 This is not to say that the sole meaning of
sexuality is procreative; understood as love-making, sexual
union is also a means of expressing mutual love and the desire
for a union of souls. Making love need lose none of its
tenderness after the child-bearing years are past. Yet the
procreative possibility embedded in eros cannot be expunged
without distorting its meaning.
7 I recognize that there are happily
monogamous marriages that remain childless, some by choice,
others by bad luck, and that some people will feel the pull of
and yield to a higher calling, be it art, philosophy, or the celibate
priesthood, seeking or serving some other transcendent voice.
But the former often feel cheated by their childlessness,
frequently going to extraordinary lengths to conceive or adopt a
child. A childless and grandchildless old age is a sadness and a
deprivation, even where it is a price willingly paid by couples
who deliberately do not procreate.
And for those who elect not to marry, they at least face the
meaning of the choice forgone. They do not reject, but rather
affirm, the trajectory of a human life, whose boundaries are
given by necessity, and our animal nature, whose higher
yearnings and aspirations are made possible in large part
because we recognize our neediness and insufficiency. But, until
very recently, the aging self-proclaimed bachelor was the butt of
many jokes, mildly censured for his self-indulgent and carefree,
not to say profligate, ways and for his unwillingness to pay back
for the gift of life and nurture by giving life and nurturing in
return. No matter how successful he was in business or
profession, he could not avoid some taint of immaturity.
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