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November
07, 2008
One
way you see where the Spirit is present is how people
react to bad news or unfavorable events. We pro-lifers
lost the elections for President and Vice-President,
but remain joyful and are upbeat about the work at
hand. The anti-Proposition 8 people lost the vote
and are angry and violent. If only for this, we praise
and thank God for His grace at work in us, especially
in times of adversity and oppression and trials.
But
the election results give us even more hope and joy
in regard to our ministry. The stand for traditional
marriage, versus gay marriage, is strong and cuts
across political, demographic, racial, gender, economic,
religious and age lines. Marriage, family and life
-- this is what our ministry is all about. And these
are what the social liberals, secular humanists and
gays will continue to assault. Rather than being smug
about the results, we must be vigilant, knowing that
the forces of evil will continue to chip away at what
God has instituted. We need to work even harder.
God
bless you.
frank
Marriage
Appeal Is Universal
Not
everyone was as jubilant about the gains for marriage
as FRC and our supporters. This morning, FOX News
posted photo after photo of the anti-family
rioting in Los Angeles (where a majority of
voters actually voted "yes" on Proposition
8), Hollywood, Santa Monica, and San Francisco. Hundreds
of protestors spilled out into the street last night,
blocking traffic, and, in one incident, climbing atop
a police car. "...[A]bout 500 [demonstrators]
gathered near CNN's Los Angeles bureau, where they
were seen banging on the doors and walls, causing
the [L.A.] police Department to declare a tactical
alert. ...Several others were arrested..." With
nearly all of the votes counted, Proposition 8 leads
by more than a half million votes (52.5% to 47.5%).
Even though there are an estimated three million mail
and provisional ballots, none of the local officials
expect the outcome to change. Members of the "No
on 8" campaign are shocked and distressed, but
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom (who famously declared
that "gay marriage is here whether you like it
or not!") said he is "hopeful" the
courts will overturn the people's will. To that effect,
three separate lawsuits have been filed in California
courts, all challenging the validity of Proposition
8. Once again, homosexual extremists are turning to
their place of preference for creating public policy-the
courts. The nation's voice has long been a casualty
of this powerful alliance between judicial activists
and the radical Left. For years, liberals have used
the courts to impose their agenda on Americans when
the people or legislature refused.
On
this issue, however, democracy has spoken. From every
corner of California, Florida, and Arizona, voters
proved that marriage crosses
demographic lines-even party lines, in some
cases. The attachment to marriage and its meaning
is deeply rooted in the African-American, Latino,
Asian, and white communities. And exit polling proved
it. In the Golden State, where Newsom is trying to
invalidate voters' decision on marriage, Proposition
8 proved to be a moral mandate from every race, every
sex, and all income levels. Although minorities overwhelmingly
supported Barack Obama, seven in 10 black voters and
53% of Hispanics propelled Proposition 8 to victory.
Men and women were equally supportive, as were people
aged 35 and above. Nor did it matter what the household
income was. In a survey of 2,240 voters, the richest
and poorest of California were separated in their
support for marriage by only one percentage point!
The
same trends continue in Arizona on Proposition 102.
Both sexes voted for marriage (57% of men and 55%
of women); Latinos and whites were equally supportive
(at 55% apiece); and even the generational gap was
slight (49% of 18-24-year-olds voted to preserve marriage,
compared to 55-57% among 30-64-year-olds). Down in
Florida, where Amendment 2 rocketed past the 60% approval
it needed, males and females were again equally supportive
(63% of men and 62% of women) and, in California-like
fashion, the support of Latinos (64%) and blacks pushed
the ban (71%) over the top. Even Florida Republicans
(83%), Democrats (47%), and Independents (56%) combined
their support to prove that marriage is a non-partisan
issue. In the state where marriage needed them most,
even a majority of young people voted to protect marriage
(52% of 18-24-year-olds), providing the backing the
amendment needed to pass.
Protecting
marriage means so much to so many Americans that people
across the country gave more to the fight for Proposition
8 than they ever had in the history of a social issues
campaign. In hard economic times, their sacrifices,
so powerfully illustrated in the story of the Patterson
family, are what made this victory possible. "On
Oct. 13... the Sacramento Bee ran a remarkable story
about Rick and Pam Patterson, a Mormon couple of modest
means - he drives a 10-year-old Honda Civic, she raises
their five boys-who had withdrawn $50,000 from their
savings account and given it to the pro-8 campaign.
'It was a decision we made very prayerfully,' Pam
Patterson, 48, told the Bee's Jennifer Garza. 'Was
it an easy decision? No. But it was a clear decision,
one that had so much potential to benefit our children
and their children.'"
Additional Resources
"For
to me life is Christ, and death is gain." (Phil
1:21) |