Transforming the Culture of Fatherlessness
By Rev. Robert A. Sirico
President, Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty
Presented at:
Congress on the Paternity of God and Paternity in Family
Pontificium Consilium Pro Familia
Vatican, June 3-5, 1999
According to an international colloquium co-sponsored last month by the Pontifical
Council for Culture, the family today is the "center of a colossal attack,"
and a realm where action is most urgently needed. This attack proceeds on many
fronts, from local restrictions on parental choice in education to international,
government-sponsored anti-naturalist movements. Increasingly apparent of late
is how absence of fathers from families, combined with changed attitudes about
fatherhood, have contributed to the cultural atmosphere in which the attack
is advanced. What Pope John Paul II wrote nearly twenty years ago in Familiaris
Consortio has become ever more timely: "efforts must be made to restore
socially the conviction that the place and task of the father in and for the
family is of unique and irreplaceable importance" (25).
The contrary notion, that the father is replaceable, gained currency among
the elite of the West in recent decades. David Blankenhorn showed in his influential
book Fatherless America how we no longer have a "cultural script"
for fatherhood. Imperiled is the idea of the father as a necessary male parent
who gives of self for others in distinctive ways. We have moved toward a new
view of men and women as interchangeable wage-earners and caregivers, chiefly
interested not in childrens welfare but in their own "self-fulfillment."
The practical result of this new view has not been that men and women have been
rendered co-equal parents, but rather that men as fathers have been rendered
superfluous.
When a society loses its cultural script for fathers it marginalizes them and,
in doing so, undermines its ability to socialize men. Nature teaches and history
confirms that unsocialized men easily turn unsocial, even antisocial. Responsible
fatherhood is, to paraphrase Lord Acton, a delicate fruit of civilization. A
delicate fruit must be handled with care lest it spoil. We must realize that
responsible fatherhood is in danger of being displaced, to the detriment of
family and society now and into the future. The iniquities of our current "crisis
of fatherhood" truly threaten to be visited upon the third and fourth generation
(cf. Deut. 5:9).
When the new view of parenthood that renders fathers superfluous takes root
alongside the modern welfare state, present and future perils are exacerbated.
Effects of this amalgam on the family and especially on children have been nothing
short of disastrous. This brief presentation identifies some of these effects,
and suggests how the Church may itself lead in cultural movements currently
underway to restore, in the words of the Holy Father, "the place and task
of the father in and for the family."
I. Fatherlessness and the Well-Being of Children
In a culture which conveys messages to men that they are not needed in distinctive
roles of father and husband, many men leave their families or refuse to form
families when they beget children. Gone are most vestiges of traditional stigmas
once associated with divorce and out-of-wedlock births. We have forfeited much
of the traditional wisdom relating child welfare to intact two-parent families.
Fortunately, that traditional wisdom is now being supported by impressive
social-scientific research. In the U.S., statistics that reveal the declining
well-being of children chiefly point to two related causal factors: (1) the
dramatic increase in the proportion of children growing up in fatherless households,
and (2) the rise of the modern welfare state.
The number of children in the U.S. living without fathers rose from nine million
in 1960 to 24 million today. Some estimate that as many as 60 percent of U.S.
children currently live without their biological father. This fatherlessness
has devastating consequences for children. Nearly 75 percent of children in
single-parent households will suffer poverty before age 11, compared with 20
percent of children from intact families. The percentage of U.S. children growing
up in poor families is higher today than when President Johnson declared a "war
on poverty" in 1966. Data show compellingly how children who grow up without
fathers are more likely to fail in school or drop out, develop behavioral or
emotional problems requiring treatment, abuse drugs and alcohol, and become
sexually active. Further, the absence of fathers has been shown greatly to increase
violence perpetrated by the young, including rape, murder, and suicide. As U.S.
criminologist John J. DiIulio observed recently in response to shocking high-school
murders in the state of Colorado, "Character abhors a vacuum. Children
of all demographic descriptions are raising themselves in America today, and
these children will be a bit less darling and a bit more dangerous so long as
they [do not] have...decent on-the-job parents...." Fatherless children
are also more frequently the victims of child abuse and neglect.
There are many reasons for an increase in fatherlessness in the U.S. and the
West. The revolutions in sexual mores in the 1960s, coupled with extreme forms
of feminism, tended toward the separation of childbearing from marriage. A salutary
concern about violence in the home or "domestic violence" has had
a tendency to popularize a notion of husbands and fathers as potentially dangerous
and therefore suspect. The entertainment industry has gone from portraying fathers
overwhelmingly as wise heads of households to showing them as buffoons or non-entities.
Yet the influence of these factors on fatherlessness pales compared with the
influence of the welfare state.
II. Welfare and Disincentives to Fatherhood
John Paul II warned in Centesimus Annus about problems associated with the
welfare state, also termed the social assistance state: "the Social Assistance
State leads to a loss of human energies and an inordinate increase of public
agencies, which are dominated more by bureaucratic ways of thinking than by
concern for serving their clients, and which are accompanied by an enormous
increase in spending" (48). In the U.S. alone, spending on means-tested
welfare programs in the past thirty years has exceeded 5.4 trillion dollars.
In a large and vibrant economy, such expenditures might be warranted if they
succeeded in eliminating poverty. The problem is, as the pope so keenly appreciates,
public welfare programs are typified by ways of thinking that instead deepen
and entrench material poverty. Moreover, these "bureaucratic ways of thinking"
cannot address profounder needs of human persons, often adding moral and spiritual
deprivations to the poverty suffered. In the U.S., welfare programs have fostered
the development of an "underclass" characterized by multi-generational
poverty and social dysfunction. This phenomenon in the U.S. is multiracial and
both urban and rural.
Among communities dominated by the welfare system, fatherlessness is rampant.
Today, fully 90 percent of U.S. families receiving cash welfare from government
are without a father in the home.
The very sociology of public welfare entails disincentives to intact families.
Welfare programs address primarily or exclusively the material needs of people,
most often of women and their children. When women and children are provided
for by the state, a traditional and natural role for a father is usurped, undermining
a mans sense of place in the family. Women, too, may judge the state to
be a more reliable supporter than a husband, and opt out of marriage altogether.
Both of these possibilities are indeed actualized under a regime of public welfare.
In addition, welfare policies undermine two-parent families and encourage out-of-wedlock
births in a host of other ways. To take but two examples: per-child benefit
adjustments alter the mix of variables affecting an unmarried womans decision
to conceive additional children, and low-income men are given incentives to
leave their families when benefits packages favor single-parent households.
III. Marriage: An Age-Old Answer to New Questions
Everyone expects a Catholic priest to conclude that married, two-parent families
are better for children and usually better for parents. It is most heartening
that cutting-edge research now concludes the same. Indeed there are even signs
that cultural elites in the U.S. are recognizing it too. A few years ago former
U.S. vice president Dan Quayle shocked elite cultural sensitivities by suggesting
that it was wrong for a popular television character to become a single mother
on her TV show. The following year, a prominent journal of elite culture featured
a cover story entitled, "Dan Quayle Was Right."
Fatherlessness, whether brought on by failure to marry or by divorce, is socially,
spiritually, and economically damaging among all socioeconomic groups. We now
know from studies that unmarried men earn less money than do their married counterparts.
This makes sense intuitively as well: marriage both reflects and fosters responsibility,
devotion, hard work, and other attributes attractive to employers. Such attributes,
passed on from fathers to children, also nurture success in school and in social
relationships, and strengthen childrens future career prospects. Research
confirms that what is needed to achieve these desired social effects is married
men who live with their children permanently.
The above observations warrant additional consideration. The institutions
of marriage and family promote responsibility among men, who in turn instill
values of responsibility in their children. The institutions of marriage and
family are then schools of virtue, the most basic of what Edmund Burke called
the "little platoons" of civil society. Fathers are essential to these
platoons, and not simply to provide bread for the table. Fathers are key to
transmitting values and skills to the next generation, especially to the next
generation of men who will themselves be fathers. These skills and values, necessary
for perpetuating civilization, are connected also with economic productivity
and abundance. The role of the father reveals in a special way how, as John
Paul II has written, "besides the earth, mans principal resource
is man himself" (Centesimus Annus, 32). Resources must be stewarded, and
in the case of human resources, they must be developed as well. First and foremost,
this development takes place in the family.
To emphasize: if we want to see more children growing up free from poverty,
free from social pathology, free from violence, and free to participate in and
contribute to the common good, we must see an increase in the number of children
growing up with married fathers.
Conclusion
The problems are now more broadly recognized, and this recognition has created
an atmosphere in which positive changes can be made. It is incumbent upon countries
of the West experiencing crises of fatherhood to rethink their attachment to
the welfare state. Concretely, countries must reform existing programs not only
to eliminate disincentives to intact families, but also positively to promote
intact families. Although imperative, this will not be easy; as the pope himself
has observed, public welfare by its nature inhibits genuine concern for its
clients.
Yet more important than the political realm in promoting intact families is
the cultural realm. In the U.S. today an ecumenical Christian movement involving
many Catholics fills sports stadiums with men who pledge to devote their lives
more fully to God and family. In cities, community-based organizations under
the auspices of churches teach fathering skills to yet-unmarried fathers. Conferences
on fatherhood that a few years ago attracted handfuls of participants now draw
hundreds, including lawmakers and religious leaders. There are many other encouraging
signs.
The Catholic Church is in a unique position to proclaim the fullness of fatherhood
by proclaiming the fullness of the Gospel. In outlining "The Year of the
Father" for 1999, the Holy Father inTertio Millenio Adveniente reminds
us that "the whole of the Christian life is like a great pilgrimage to
the house of the Father" (49). Through the Church, we encounter God the
Father through His Son our Lord. We encounter the Father because we encounter
the Son Who does the will of the Father and leads us to Him. Human fatherhood
is exalted and sanctified by reflecting, as if in a glass darkly, that fundamental
relation of divine Father and divine Son.
The people of God in every generation also look to the Church for reflections
of divine Fatherhood. The throngs of young people who converge on World Youth
Day festivities testify to a hunger among this current generation for a better
way of life and love than they have seen in the secular culture and, too often,
in their own families. Their love of the Holy Father is surely love of one who
is holy, but also unabashed affection for one who is "father."
The Catholic Church is in a unique position as well to illustrate the connections
between responsible fatherhood and the development of "mans principle
resource" which is "man himself." Contrary to the beliefs of
anti-natalists promoted at the 1994 United Nations conference in Cairo, human
beings raised with proper skills and values add to the worlds wealth rather
than take from it. Abiding, fruitful marriages enrich the world in many ways,
not least, as becomes ever clearer, in adding to the blessings of abundance
for all.
Pope Pius XII wrote, "if the mother is the heart, the father is the head
of the family, and consequently its health and efficiency depend on the vigor,
the virtues and activity of the father." The Church is the great keeper
of this profound truth. Even though, and perhaps because, a nadir of carelessness
about fatherhood has been reached in the West today, this profound truth is
becoming all the more apparent.
Let us pray and work diligently that fatherhood may be advanced again in our
societies. Let us pray and work diligently that the hearts of the fathers may
be turned again to their children, lest the land be smitten with a curse (cf.
Mal. 4:5).
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