How Americans Said ‘I Do’ to Gay ‘Marriage’

A small but ambitious group of activists committed to the 'long game' changed the landscape of marriage.

By John Stonestreet Published on May 31, 2024

In 2012, 31% of those who attended religious services weekly supported same-sex β€œmarriage.” According to recent Gallup polling data, that number is now 41%. Across the general population, support sits at over 70%.

In a WORLD News article earlier this month, Dr. Rosaria Butterfield described how β€œa moral revolution,” instigated by activists committed to playing the β€œlong game,” was so effective. Specifically, Dr. Butterfield underscored the impact of a book published in 1989. In After the Ball: How America Will Conquer Its Fear and Hatred of Gays in the ’90s, neuropsychologist Marshall Kirk and advertising executive Hunter Madsen outlined a game plan to change how Americans view homosexuality. Part of this plan was to normalize same-sex β€œmarriage” for Americans, especially Christians.

A Game Plan to Normalize Same-Sex “Marriage”

The plan was simple and straightforward. First, Kirk and Madsen advised activists to be on their best behavior and to focus attention on the victimization of gay men and lesbians: β€œThe authors declared it in plain English: no public sex and no gay disturbances until gay marriage is the law, and Christians see us as victims.”

To accomplish this, activists needed to identify β€œeasy-to-manipulate churches” that would capitulate and β€œpromote the idea that gays are victims.”

Second, Kirk and Madsen directed activists to redirect the issue at hand from β€œgay rights” to β€œantidiscrimination.”

This revolution can never (and will never) provide the liberation it promises. That’s because it does not align with reality.

Third, activists would also need to claim or invent a β€œnoble history” for gay men and lesbians. According to Dr. Butterfield, β€œAnyone single, over 40, and dead could be marshaled to the cause as a gay forebear.”

Finally, Kirk and Madsen said, activists should β€œmake victimizers look bad.” For example, β€œhysterical backwoods preachers” should be compared to Nazis and distinguished β€œfrom open-minded pluralists and liberal, loving pastors.”

According to Dr. Butterfield,

Kirk and Madsen’s book was considered seminal reading for gay activists. It was the road map. The game plan.

In fact, Sean McDowell and I also described the importance of After the Ball in our book Same-Sex Marriage, which was published in 2014. At the time, we were told  the notion that there was a plan was ridiculous, and that After the Ball was insignificant and largely unknown.

A Moral Revolution, Not a Legal One

However, within 30 years of the book’s publication, Kirk and Madsen’s vision has been largely fulfilled. The U.S. Supreme Court assisted with two landmark decisions along the way.

In 2015’s Obergefell v. Hodges, the Court mandated that every state nationwide recognize same-sex β€œmarriage” (striking down  existing state-level Defense of Marriage Acts and constitutional amendments defining marriage as the union of one man and one woman) and β€œthe legal definition of harm (expanded) to now include failure to β€˜affirm’ one’s LGBTQ identity.” In Bostock v. Clayton County, the Court expanded its interpretation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act to include LGBTQ identities.

Despite these Supreme Court wins, however, the activism continues, and Dr. Butterfield explained why: This movement was never really about legalizing same-sex β€œmarriage.” As she wrote, β€œthe campaign for gay marriage was always a moral revolution, not a legal one.”

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Even so, this revolution can never (and will never) provide the liberation it promises. That’s because it does not align with reality. It is based on a lie about the world we live in and the kind of creature that humans are. As Dr. Butterfield put it,

Activists thought the freedom to marry meant freedom from that quiet internal soul-whisper that something isn’t right. They were fooled into believing that contrary voices came from the outside, from Christians and rednecks, when in fact it was baked in at Creation.

Freedom cannot be found by calling evil good. It is found by living in the truth. So, if true liberation is to be had, it won’t be through a Church that continues to morally devolve on these issues. It will be through a Church committed to the biblical account of reality and the human person.

We must not be distracted by the vitriol and danger of our day. We must bring the gospel to those people who have become casualties of the LGBTQ movement, including Christian parents whose adult children have cut them off. And we must labor as Christian statesmen, speaking truth to school boards and legislatures, actively speaking boldly in the public sphere, and trusting Christ with the consequences. Should the Lord bless our work, we will see reformation in our churches, revival in our land, and freedom through repentance and faith of those currently captive and enslaved to homosexuality. Even as the whole world rages, our labor is not in vain.

Amen.

 

John Stonestreet serves as president of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. He’s a sought-after author and speaker on areas of faith and culture, theology, worldview, education and apologetics.

Originally published on Breakpoint.org: BreakPoint Commentaries. Republished with permission of The Colson Center for Christian Worldview.

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