The strongest families have both a father and a mother. A single parent can create a strong family that sticks together and supports each other, but children need both a mother and a father.
Delano Squires (Director of the Richard and Helen DeVos Center for Human Flourishing),
Ellie Carson (a member of the Young Leaders Program at The Heritage
Foundation), and Jesse Castrinos (a member of the Young Leaders Program at The
Heritage Foundation) authored an article titled “Why Children Need Both a
Mother and Father, According to Research.”
…
there is never a bad time for Americans to be reminded that strong families
thrive when men and women commit to one another in holy matrimony before bringing
children into the world.
It
is no secret to conservatives that children raised by their married mother and
father are more likely to succeed in school, avoid harmful behaviors, and enjoy
better long-term mental health than those raised in a single-parent home.
Yet
in a culture that has rejected the reality of biological sex and redefined the
meaning of marriage, it can be difficult to explain why the natural
family is the best structure for children’s long-term outcomes.
The
differences between how men and women interact with their children are seen
every time a dad throws a baby in the air – much to the child’s delight and
often to mom’s distress. The complementary parenting styles of men and women
are observed in everyday life, but they are also backed by research.
According
to research from the Journal of Child and Family Studies, when it comes to
raising children, mothers are generally more emotionally available,
self-controlled, and responsive to their children, attributes that help
children feel accepted and supported. Moms also tend to be more lenient with
their children than dads.
Fathers,
on the other hand, are generally more inclined toward discipline and structure
than mothers.
That
does not mean dads don’t enjoy time with their children. In fact, research
shows that fathers are more likely to initiate active play time with their
children and keep them physically active as time goes on.
Yes,
fathers may show less affection as their children grow older when compared to
moms, but they are more likely to grant the type of autonomy that launches
teens into adulthood.
Researchers
have found that fathers also push their children to take chances and overcome
limits.
While
these traits are not universal, they clearly point to the difference in how
mothers and fathers approach parenting. Yet despite these seemingly
contradictory attributes, studies find that most couples acknowledge and
appreciate the balance men and women bring to the home.
Children
don’t just need two parents. They need the care and affection of their mother
and father.
Unfortunately,
whenever you remove children from the traditional family structure, they are
far more likely to experience poverty, abuse, and unstable relationships
themselves.
Furthermore,
children are much safer from abuse and neglect when they are raised by both of
their biological parents.
One
study found that children living with an unrelated adult were 50 times more
likely to die from inflicted injuries than children living with their
biological parents.
This
reality is one reason The Heritage Foundation’s policy paper titled “Saving
America by Saving the Family: A Foundation for the Next 250 Years” treats
restoring the family home as a matter of justice, driven by two truths.
The
first truth is that all children have a right to the affection and protection
of the man and woman who created them. The second is that the ideal environment
in which to exercise this right is in a loving and stable home with their
married biological parents….
Marriage
creates a special lifelong bond between a man and woman, but it is also the
foundation for the best environment for raising happy and healthy children.