BY BROTHER HAYDEN AUGUSTINE
GAY marriage has become a hot topic, a burning issue.  Some time  ago, on the front pages of our dailies, two women are captioned in matrimonial  embrace.  As we continue perusing the news, more captions, more divergent  opinions and viewpoints, columns and letters are expressed on this most  elemental of traditions.  One journalist even feared for her life in the  firestorm of opinions.
Is sexual expression a human right? Could opposition to  homosexuality be considered a hate crime?  Would homophobia be one day declared a  mental sickness? These are some of the thoughts that run through my mind as I  reflect on this ongoing impassioned debate about same-sex marriage.
Marriage has been a noble institution that virtually all cultures  have embraced. It is the substratum of civilisation, the most fundamental unit  of human society. By definition, it is the state of union between a man and a  woman, a permanent and affective relationship of a husband and his wife that  generates and educates its offspring.
 
All religions, not just Christianity, have denounced homosexuality  and see no reason for it in marriage.  That is to say, it is part of natural law.  Christianity, which is Jamaica's bedrock religion, has pronounced unequivocally  on the nature of marriage as the exchange of vows between a man and a woman,  equally made in the image and likeness of God,  and joined together in  harmonious unity to "be fruitful and multiply, and (to) fill the earth and  subdue it".
 
Thus, marriage is part of the natural order of the universe, the  pristine and constitutive ingredient uniting man and woman in their joint  stewardship of creation and as progenitors of the human race. Marriage is thus a  primordial commandment, a natural law.
 
Is it now God's will that two women marry each other? Would the  Creator unite two men in marriage? And to what end? We cannot now throw out the  natural laws of God uniting man and woman, laws which have made possible the  posterity of the race, the creation of family life and the guarantee of social  cohesion, for this anomalous situation.
 
It is irrational and against natural law for two men or two women  to marry each other. If they fall into sexual relationship, it is sinful and  they can be forgiven.  But they must control their passions and transform their  relationship into friendship.
 
Indeed, its foundation is noble. It is friendship, but friendship  which does not require marriage.  Friendship oftentimes grows deeper than  marriage. Friendship is created for the sake of brotherhood or sisterhood,  people get united to achieve one purpose or common cause. Companionship and  fellowship are time-honoured joys of civilisation.
 
These must continue, be nurtured and allowed to flourish.  Friendship is found in the myriad ways in which man relates with his fellow man in all the aspects of his life. Oftentimes it leads to heroic expressions of  love and commitment far surpassing that of marriage, such as happened between  Jonathan and King David: "They loved each other more than husband and  wife......even unto death."
 
In the Christian dispensation, friendship without Eros is the  highest form of love. Jesus said that "a man can have no greater love than to  lay down his life for his friend." For the Christian, friendship is one of the  foundation stones that builds the kingdom of God.
 
Friendship is also based on feelings. Feelings are beautiful and  give power to our actions. They are part of the expression of our humanity, our  personality, and they flavour our interpersonal relationships. But often they go  awry unless we rein them in.
 
Feelings can be like an unbridled horse. If we don't control them,  they will control us. Sometimes we must reject them, otherwise they create  irreparable damage.
 
If we love God, we will obey His commandments, no matter how  difficult. Life and love are difficult, requiring risk, trust in another,  constant self-sacrifice, a veritable dying on the cross with Christ, so that  something honourable and noble and beautiful is birthed in all our relationships -- with our friends, with our wives and husbands, our children, and our  neighbours, without carnality, but in the love of God.
 
— Brother Hayden Augustine is a member of Missionaries of  the Poor
March 26, 2013
Jamaica Observer