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Breakpoint

Co-Parenting

Breakpoint

Colson Center

News, Religion & Spirituality, News Commentary, Christianity

4.82.8K Ratings

🗓️ 19 November 2020

⏱️ 4 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The fundamental idea of the sexual revolution, the one that has led to so many of the sweeping social changes of recent decades, is that sex, marriage, and babies are separable from one another. Prying these created realities apart, realities that went biologically, historically, and religiously unquestioned until quite recently, wasn’t as inevitable as it now seems. Without technological innovations like the pill and legal innovations like no-fault divorce, it would have been impossible to imagine sex not inherently connected to childbearing or the normalization of childbearing outside of marriage. 

The stage that we now enter, after separating sex from marriage and marriage from children, is separating childbearing from sex. Once again, technological innovations, such as in-vitro fertilization, and legal innovations, such as the Uniform Parentage Act, have made thinkable what was previously unimaginable. 

And now, the UK Guardian reports on the rise of something that is being called “platonic co-parenting,” couples who connect in order to fulfill their mutual desire to have a baby, but who have no romantic or relational commitment otherwise. These couples aren’t actually couples, at least not at first. They’re not seeking love or romance. They don’t want to “waste time” on dating or marriage.

“You’re looking to achieve a common goal” described Stephan, a camera operator that had recently fathered a baby girl with a geologist named Jenica. “I really didn’t want a romantic connection,” agreed Jenica. Their daughter was conceived naturally, but the intent from the beginning was to co-parent, without living together or marrying. 

They’re not the only example. Co-parenting apps and so-called “mating sites” like “Coparents,” “PollenTree,” and “Modamily,” are rapidly growing, with some already boasting thousands of members. The main clientele for reproductive matchmaking services are, it appears, wealthy professionals, some who hear their biological clock ticking and others who wish to skip love and marriage and proceed directly to the baby carriage. 

Though the pretense, even in the Guardian’s headline, is that these relationships will remain strictly platonic and clinical, perhaps assisted by artificial insemination or IVF, couples aren’t finding it so easy to treat each other as reproductive vending machines. 

Most of the couples interviewed by Linton chose “natural conception” over artificial fertilization as a cost-cutting measure. At least one couple formed a lasting relationship and settled down. Most, however, endured painful and confusing breakups after having the baby, before settling into various kinds of arrangements, the kinds that children from broken homes know all too well.

One mother who went through a “breakup” said, in an attempt at self-reassurance, “I think there are far worse ways to bring a child into this world. I’ve got my baby and the love of my life, but through two different men. Our son doesn’t see mummy and daddy kissing and cuddling in the same house, but he sees that he’s loved and wanted, very much, by both of us.”

The vast and conclusive data we have on children from broken families makes it difficult to think her words are anything less than wishful thinking. The Guardian article quotes a family researcher at Cambridge who admits that “the quality of parents’ relationships with one another and their level of intimacy have a large bearing on children’s welfare.” Incredibly, she then immediately adds, without any evidence, “It is possible though, that taking away romantic baggage could even make for a more stable environment.”

So, all the data we have says that kids suffer when mommy and daddy are not committed to each other, but if mommy and daddy are participants in a reproductive business transaction, the kids will be fine? 

Ideas have consequences, and bad ideas have victims. Disconnecting sex from childbearing gave us abortion and abandonment. Disconnecting childbearing from marriage gave us a generation of fatherless children. The idea that we can have children without sex gave us rented wombs and robbing them of either a mom or a dad. That children should be created out of contractual arrangements without the burden of mutual love is also a bad idea. Once again, the victims are children.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Ideas have consequences, bad ideas have victims. The worst ideas of the sexual revolution seem to always victimize children.

0:08.0

For the Colson Center, I'm John Stone Street. This is Breakpoint.

0:12.6

The fundamental idea of the sexual revolution, the one that's led to so many of the sweeping social changes we've seen in recent decades is this. Sex, marriage,

0:23.0

and babies are separable from one another. Now, prying these created realities apart,

0:28.2

realities that went biologically historically and religiously unquestioned until quite

0:33.6

recently wasn't as inevitable as it now seems. Without technological innovations like the

0:39.6

pill or legal innovations like no-fault divorce, it would have been impossible to imagine sex not

0:44.8

inherently connected to childbearing or the normalization of child-bearing outside of marriage.

0:50.0

Now, the stage we are now entering after separating sex from marriage and marriage from children

0:54.7

is separating childbearing from sex. Once again, technological innovations such as in vitro

1:00.2

fertilization and legal innovations such as the Uniform Parentage Act have made thinkable what was

1:06.5

previously unimaginable. And now the UK Guardian has reported on the rise of something being called

1:12.5

platonic co-parenting, couples who connect in order to fulfill their mutual desire to have a baby,

1:18.8

but have no romantic or relational commitment otherwise. These couples, explained Deborah Linton,

1:23.9

aren't actually couples, at least not at first. They're not seeking love or romance.

1:28.1

They don't want to waste time on dating or marriage. You're looking to achieve a common goal,

1:32.2

describes Stefan, a camera operator that had recently fathered a baby girl with a geologist named

1:37.6

Jenica. I really don't want a romantic connection, agreed Jenica. Their daughter was conceived

1:42.7

naturally, but the intent from the very beginning

1:45.1

was to co-parent without ever getting married or having a romantic relationship. Now, they're not the

1:51.1

only example. Co-parenting apps and so-called mating sites like co-parents, pollen tree, and modemily,

1:58.7

are rapidly growing, some already boasting thousands of members.

...

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