Data Supports Wisdom of Biblical Family
One of the major battlegrounds of our society today is in the
area of whether the one man/one wife family is superior to other
arrangements. Between the Gay Movement, Planned Parenthood, the
New Morality advocates, and a variety of pop psychology radicals,
the public has been bombarded with the idea that there is not
support for the biblical standards of sex and family makeup and
conduct. Those of us who maintain that sex should be reserved
for marriage, that fidelity to your mate is highly important,
and that the family of one man/one wife is the only ideal for
raising children are frequently ridiculed and accused of being
out-of-date and of denying the enlightenment of the age in which
we live.
The fact of the matter is that virtually all studies done on these
issues in the last several years support the biblical view. Consider
the following examples:
- Of all sexually active people, married couples report being
the most physically pleased and emotionally satisfied. (Robert
T. Michael, John H. Gagnon, and Edward O. Lauman, Sex in America:
A Definitive Survey, Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1994,
page 124.)
- Sex is best if you have had only one sexual partner in a lifetime.
"Physical and emotional satisfaction started to decline when
people had more than one sexual partner." (Ibid.)
- Cohabiting couples have less healthy relationships than married
couples. (Jan E. Stets, "The Link Between Past and Present
Intimate Relationships," Journal of Family Issues,
114, 1993, page 251).
- Cohabiting partners "experience significantly more difficulties
in subsequent marriages and with issues of adultery, alcohol,
drugs, and independence than couples who had not cohabited."
Marriages preceded by cohabitation are 50 to 100 percent more
likely to break up than those not preceded by cohabitation. (William
Axinn and Arland Thornton, "The Relationship Between Cohabitation
and Divorce: Selectivity or Casual Influence?" Demography,
Vol. 29, 1992, page 358.)
- Males beating female partners are "at least twice as
common among cohabitors as it is among married partners."
(Jan E. Stets, "Cohabiting and Marital Aggression: The Role
of Social Isolation," Journal of Marriage and the Family,
Vol. 53, 1991, pages 669-670)
- The number of cases of major depression per 100 people per
year: Married and Never Divorced--1.5; Never Married--2.4; Divorced
Once--4.1; Cohabiting--5.1; Divorced twice--5.8. (Lee Robins and
David Regier, Psychiatric Disorders in America: The
Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study, New York: Free Press,
1991, page 72.)
- Adolescents who have lived apart from one of their parents
during some period of childhood are twice as likely to drop out
of high school and to have a child before 20 and 1 1/2 times as
likely to be out of work and out of school in their late 20s.
(Sara McLanahan and Gary Sandefur, Growing Up With a Single
Parent, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1994, page 1).
- Families without fathers "more often have lowered academic
performance, more cognitive and intellectual deficits, increased
adjustment problems, and higher risks for psychosexual development
problems." (George Rekers, clinical psychologist, University
of South Carolina in testimony to U.S. House of Representatives,
99th Congress, 2nd session, February 25, 1986, pages 59-60.)
This is just a sampling, and we want to make it clear that we
understand that many adults and children succeed in spite of the
odds against them. The point we are making is that the biblical
plan for the family is not an archaic dinosaur of the past; it
is the very best way to live and to bring satisfaction, health,
and stability to all concerned.
(Our thanks to Glenn Stanton for the sources used in this article
which were taken from Focus on the Family, August, 1995,
pages 2-4.)
--John N. Clayton
Back to Contents Does God Exist?, May/June 1996