Love and Marriage
L’amour, L’merrier
Y’know, I’m getting pretty sick of opponents of same-sex marriage
trotting out the argument about thousands of years of tradition, as if
they themselves have lived that long and gotten used to it that way. As
far as I’m concerned, unless you’re Shirley MacLaine or the Vampire
Lestat, you’ve got no credibility.
Opponents of same-sex marriage have some very good points—unfortunately,
they’re on their heads. Naturally, they thump their Bibles for
evidence, conveniently forgetting other Biblical teachings like this
little gem from Deuteronomy: "A marriage shall be considered valid
only if the wife is a virgin. If the wife is not a virgin, she shall be
stoned to death."
Yet nowadays, the only virgins getting stoned are the Bush twins.
Polygamy is also popular in the holy book. For instance, Solomon the
Wise was married to seven hundred women; perhaps they should have called
him Solomon the Exhausted.
Like it or not, marriage is an ever-changing institution. Until the
12th century, Catholic priests were, like Solomon, allowed to have
multiple wives and mistresses. But the church wanted their real estate
so, in 1139, it ordered all priests to divorce.
Some argue that Jesus himself was married to Mary Magdalene, but
since the idea of a wedded (and bedded) Jesus invalidated the whole
notion of celibacy, the church recast Mary Magdalene as a whore. I
imagine her stepping out of the cave after Jesus has ascended and, like
Judy Garland in A Star is Born, addressing the crowd by saying,
"Hello, everybody. This is Mrs. Jesus Christ."
Conservative theologians call Jesus’ marriage a "crackpot
theory," as opposed to all that logical stuff like walking on water
and turning loaves into fishes.
But a married Jesus explains a lot of things, particularly when you
consider that his mom was also named Mary. Like lots of good Jewish
boys, Jesus married someone who reminded him of his mother.
The whole idea gives me hope that one day priests may be able to
marry—each other.
Likewise, many cherished wedding traditions derive from all kinds of
long-discarded notions. For instance, the groom not seeing the bride
before the wedding comes from the custom of arranged marriages because
if the bride was a real bowzer, the groom might bolt.
Yet, every time marriage changes, some pinhead screams it’s the end
of civilization. As late as the 1850s, politicians argued that allowing
married women to own property "virtually destroys the moral and
social efficacy of the marriage institution." Sound familiar?
Here’s the deal: if you don’t like the idea of gay marriage, don’t
marry a gay person. Duh.
Just look at what happened to Liza and David. (If you dare.) Liza’s
lawyers argue that she was suffering from Mad Diva Disease; but does her
alleged battery of David count as a gay bashing?
(Personally, I don’t believe a word David Gest says. That guy puts
the strange in estranged.)
Meanwhile, Mattel announced that, after forty years, Ken and Barbie
have broken up. Apparently, Ken finally came out of Barbie’s dream
closet. In a related story, GI Joe has been kicked out of the military,
having been given a full milky discharge.
Barbie has already rebounded, sporting a new look with hoop earrings,
booty shorts and a deep tan, which make her look suspiciously like that
exemplary role model for children, Paris Hilton. I’m sure it’s only
a matter of time before we see Barbie tonguing Skipper on awards shows.
So it’s not same-sex couples who are threatening the sanctity of
the institution; in the age of Britney Spears’s micro-marriage,
heterosexuals are doing a fine job degrading it all by themselves.
Anti-gay activists ought to amend their signs from "1 Man + 1
Woman = 1 Marriage," to "1 Man + 1 Woman = 1 Divorce." Or
at least get advice from the author of the "Defense of Marriage
Act," Rep. Bob Barr, who is a true expert on the sanctity of
marriage, having sanctified it three times himself.
No, if marriage needs strengthening, perhaps it should require a
test. After all, you need one to get a driver’s license. Here’s a
sample question: When your spouse makes an illegal U-turn in an
argument, what should you do?
A) Speed up.
B) Slow down.
C) Savor the inconsistency to use it against them in a future argument.
For generations, queer people have moved into distressed
neighborhoods and fixed them up. With lesbian carpenters and gay
decorators, urban renewal inevitably follows. So it stands to reason
that marriage, too, can be renewed when gay people are finally allowed
to give it an Extreme Makeover.
And that, my friends, is The Gospel According to Marc.
Marc Acito’s first novel, HOW I PAID FOR COLLEGE, can be
pre-ordered at