Westside church of Christ - Irving, Texas

How the Nuclear Family Became Controversial

by Dennis Prager

Note: I do not know Dennis Prager, his views on religion or politics. This article is reprinted here from TownHall.com because Christians often do not realize just how out of step with culture we are, or how far political correct-ness has come. The very idea that anyone has to justify God's model for the home is incredible, but this is where we are in America today. Prager's article makes us think: are we teaching our children the truth about what God wants for the home? Does today's culture of tolerance affect us so that we cannot speak that truth? --mdr

Los Angeles Family Magazine asked me to write an article making the case for the two-parent family. That a mainstream family magazine would commission such an article is quite a sign of our times.

How has this happened? How has the nuclear family become controversial?

It has happened because many groups and ideologies have a personal interest in denying that it is best for a child to be raised by, or even to start out life with, a father and mother.

What do all these people and groups have in common? None of them is asking what is best for children. The rhetoric of rights (applied here to gays), of compassion (applied here to single mothers and gays), and of equality (applied here to gays and to men-women) combined with a culture of not judging are all preoccupied with the adults involved, not children. Compassion for children, a child's right to a mother and father, their equality as human beings - these all get drowned in the sea of self-centeredness, moral confusion and misdirected compassion that denies them their right to a mom and dad.

And that is how it has come to pass that in America at the beginning of the 21st century, the truism that it is better for children to be raised by a married mother and father is so controversial that the case for it had to be made in a family magazine.