thestyleguy wrote:I don't like the way the church treats young women who are single and pregnant. More than one time I have seen the girl excommunicated and the guy is disfellowshiped. This seems so unfair.
???
This is so opposite to what I've observed. I've more frequently seen the opposite--the guy excommunicated and the girl perhaps only put on probation--on the beliefs, first, that the initiative for such behavior must come from the man, and, second, that he holds the priesthood and is therefore more accountable. Such disproportionate discipline is particularly likely for male returned missionaries. When they get involved in sex outside marriage, it's generally with a girl who hasn't been on a mission, and therefore hasn't gone through the temple. The guy is considered more accountable because of the ordinances he's received and covenants he's made.
I've rarely seen or heard of a young woman or girl getting excommunicated for sex outside of marriage.
Unwed mothers do, however, face another kind of ecclesiastical pressure. The church began, several years ago, pushing quite hard to have them give their babies up for adoption through LDS Social Services. The rationale offered was that they'd done studies that showed dramatically better outcomes for babies put up for adoption than for those raised by single mothers. (This might well be so. It's no secret, at least in the data, that single motherhood multiplies one's chances of living in poverty.) However, another rationale suggests itself as well: the church wants to stigmatize what has traditionally been called illegitimacy and idealize the nuclear family. LDS family values are fundamentally nuclear family values. Acting to relocate children from unwed mothers into nuclear families reinforces, both practically and ideologically, that children are to be raised in nuclear families.
In the broader US culture, and particularly among African American women, it has been increasingly popular for women to consciously choose to have children with or without an actively involved father. This flouts the traditional ideal, and normalizes something advocates of the nuclear family don't want normalized. (Recall the furor during the 1992 presidential campaign when Murphy Brown chose to have a child outside of marriage: the issue wasn't one of non-marital sex--that had been there all along; it was of disassociating childbearing from the nuclear-family context.)
The extreme pressure placed on pregnant, unmarried women in the LDS church is part of the church's attempt to maintain its nuclear family ideals in the face of changing American values.
Don