I don't know about you, but my heart breaks every time I read or hear about children being neglected, abused, used for evil purposes, or suffering. They are so innocent! They do not deserve to have bad things happen to them. We have a responsibility to see that they are protected. It is our job!
I read earlier this week how ISIS has kidnapped children from neighboring villages who were on their way to take their exams to admit them into high school. They have been gone from home for a month. A few of the boys escaped and told their families how they were being treated, told that they would be beheaded if they tried to escape, and forced to watch jihadists' films at night. It made my blood boil. When we were told of the atrocities to the Christians in that area, my heart yearned to scoop up those children and feed them, shelter them, and allow them a safe place to just live and be. I feel to roar at those who sell children for labor, or money, or sex. Where is your sense of duty?!! Why do you feel no responsibility to protect the innocent but use them for your personal gain??!! That is wrong! It is evil, and it is wicked. You will be held accountable for the suffering you cause those innocent, lovely children!!
That is my biggest beef with homosexual marriage. If you want to live your life that way, fine. If you want to call it marriage, well, I don't agree with that, I don't want you to call it marriage. But if you want some of the same financial protections under the law, OK, I can understand that and see its validity for you. But you want to raise children? Uh NO! That is not fair to the child. Who is standing up for their rights?!! That child has the right to a mother and a father. That is his/her right! It is not a matter of two parents, two mothers or two fathers is still only one gender. The children have a right to two genders of parents. Mothers and fathers are different in how they interact, teach, train, love, discipline, and play with their children. And children are entitled to both! Sorry! End of story.
My heart cannot save all the children. If I could, I would. But I can protect, love, teach, train, help, mentor, soothe, nurture, feed, guide, and hope for the children within my home, in my community, and within my scope of influence. They may not choose to live the way I would live. And that is alright, because how they live as an adult, is their choice. But regardless of the choices they make, children have a right to my responsibility as an adult to protect them and their childhood.
Elder Oaks in October 2013 General Conference explained our position best. Listen to his words.....(I probably should have just linked the talk, but just read what he says).
For
Latter-day Saints, God’s commandments are based on and inseparable from
God’s plan for His children—the great plan of salvation. This plan,
sometimes called the “great plan of happiness” (Alma 42:8),
explains our origin and destiny as children of God—where we came from,
why we are here, and where we are going. The plan of salvation explains
the purpose of creation and the conditions of mortality, including God’s
commandments, the need for a Savior, and the vital role of mortal and
eternal families. If we Latter-day Saints, who have been given this
knowledge, do not establish our priorities in accord with this plan, we
are in danger of serving other gods.
Knowledge
of God’s plan for His children gives Latter-day Saints a unique
perspective on marriage and family. We are correctly known as a
family-centered church. Our theology begins with heavenly parents, and
our highest aspiration is to attain the fulness of eternal exaltation.
We know this is possible only in a family relationship. We know that the
marriage of a man and a woman is necessary for the accomplishment of
God’s plan. Only this marriage will provide the approved setting for
mortal birth and to prepare family members for eternal life. We look on
marriage and the bearing and nurturing of children as part of God’s plan
and a sacred duty of those given the opportunity to do so. We believe
that the ultimate treasures on earth and in heaven are our children and
our posterity.
III.
Because
of what we understand about the potentially eternal role of the family,
we grieve at the sharply declining numbers of births and marriages in
many Western countries whose historic cultures are Christian and Jewish.
Responsible sources report the following:
-
•
The United States now has the lowest birthrate in its history,2
and in many European Union nations and other developed countries,
birthrates are below the level necessary to maintain their populations.3 This threatens the survival of cultures and even of nations.
-
•
In America, the percentage of young adults ages 18 to 29 who are married fell from 59 percent in 1960 to 20 percent by 2010.4 The median age for first marriage is now at its highest level in history: 26 for women and almost 29 for men.5
-
•
In many countries and cultures (1) the traditional family of a
married mother and father and children is coming to be the exception
rather than the rule, (2) the pursuit of a career instead of marriage
and the bearing of children is an increasing choice of many young women,
and (3) the role and perceived necessity of fathers is diminishing.
In
the midst of these concerning trends, we are also conscious that God’s
plan is for all of His children and that God loves all of His children,
everywhere.6 The first chapter of the Book of Mormon declares that God’s “power, and goodness, and mercy are over all the inhabitants of the earth” (1 Nephi 1:14).
A later chapter declares that “he hath given [his salvation] free for
all men” and that “all men are privileged the one like unto the other,
and none are forbidden” (2 Nephi 26:27–28). Consequently, the scriptures teach that we are responsible to be compassionate and charitable (loving) toward all men (see 1 Thessalonians 3:12; 1 John 3:17; D&C 121:45).
IV.
We
are also respectful of the religious beliefs of all people, even of
those increasing numbers who profess no belief in God. We know that
through the God-given power of choice, many will hold beliefs contrary
to ours, but we are hopeful that others will be equally respectful of
our religious beliefs and understand that our beliefs compel us to some
different choices and behaviors than theirs. For example, we believe
that, as an essential part of His plan of salvation, God has established
an eternal standard that sexual relations should occur only between a
man and a woman who are married.
The
power to create mortal life is the most exalted power God has given to
His children. Its use was mandated by God’s first commandment to Adam
and Eve (see Genesis 1:28), but other important commandments were given to forbid its misuse (see Exodus 20:14; 1 Thessalonians 4:3).
The emphasis we place on the law of chastity is explained by our
understanding of the purpose of our procreative powers in the
accomplishment of God’s plan. Outside the bonds of marriage between a
man and a woman, all uses of our procreative powers are to one degree or
another sinful and contrary to God’s plan for the exaltation of His
children.
The
importance we attach to the law of chastity explains our commitment to
the pattern of marriage that originated with Adam and Eve and has
continued through the ages as God’s pattern for the procreative
relationship between His sons and daughters and for the nurturing of His
children. Fortunately, many persons affiliated with other denominations
or organizations agree with us on the nature and importance of
marriage, some on the basis of religious doctrine and others on the
basis of what they deem best for society.
Our knowledge of God’s plan for His children7
explains why we are distressed that more and more children are born
outside of marriage—currently 41 percent of all births in the United
States8—and
that the number of couples living together without marriage has
increased dramatically in the past half century. Five decades ago, only a
tiny percentage of first marriages were preceded by cohabitation. Now
cohabitation precedes 60 percent of marriages.9
And this is increasingly accepted, especially among teenagers. Recent
survey data found about 50 percent of teenagers stating that
out-of-wedlock childbearing was a “worthwhile lifestyle.”10
V.
There
are many political and social pressures for legal and policy changes to
establish behaviors contrary to God’s decrees about sexual morality and
contrary to the eternal nature and purposes of marriage and
childbearing. These pressures have already authorized same-gender
marriages in various states and nations. Other pressures would confuse
gender or homogenize those differences between men and women that are
essential to accomplish God’s great plan of happiness.
Our
understanding of God’s plan and His doctrine gives us an eternal
perspective that does not allow us to condone such behaviors or to find
justification in the laws that permit them. And, unlike other
organizations that can change their policies and even their doctrines,
our policies are determined by the truths God has identified as
unchangeable.
Our twelfth article of faith
states our belief in being subject to civil authority and “in obeying,
honoring, and sustaining the law.” But man’s laws cannot make moral what
God has declared immoral. Commitment to our highest priority—to love
and serve God—requires that we look to His law for our standard of
behavior. For example, we remain under divine command not to commit
adultery or fornication even when those acts are no longer crimes under
the laws of the states or countries where we reside. Similarly, laws
legalizing so-called “same-sex marriage” do not change God’s law of
marriage or His commandments and our standards concerning it. We remain
under covenant to love God and keep His commandments and to refrain from
serving other gods and priorities—even those becoming popular in our
particular time and place.
In
this determination we may be misunderstood, and we may incur
accusations of bigotry, suffer discrimination, or have to withstand
invasions of our free exercise of religion. If so, I think we should
remember our first priority—to serve God—and, like our pioneer
predecessors, push our personal handcarts forward with the same
fortitude they exhibited.
A
teaching of President Thomas S. Monson applies to this circumstance. At
this conference 27 years ago, he boldly declared: “Let us have the
courage to defy the consensus, the courage to stand for principle.
Courage, not compromise, brings the smile of God’s approval. Courage
becomes a living and an attractive virtue when it is regarded not only
as a willingness to die manfully, but as the determination to live
decently. A moral coward is one who is afraid to do what he thinks is
right because others will disapprove or laugh. Remember that all men
have their fears, but those who face their fears with dignity have
courage as well.”11
I
pray that we will not let the temporary challenges of mortality cause
us to forget the great commandments and priorities we have been given by
our Creator and our Savior. We must not set our hearts so much on the
things of the world and aspire to the honors of men (see D&C 121:35)
that we stop trying to achieve our eternal destiny. We who know God’s
plan for His children—we who have made covenants to participate in
it—have a clear responsibility. We must never deviate from our paramount
desire, which is to achieve eternal life.12 We must never dilute our first priority—to have no other gods and to serve no other priorities ahead of God the Father and His Son, our Savior, Jesus Christ.
May
God help us to understand this priority and to be understood by others
as we seek to pursue it in a wise and loving way, I pray in the name of
Jesus Christ, amen.
If you need to read more, check out this article (Homage to the Home).
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