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Posted: 01/31/2008
Is Marriage Unnecessary?
Some call it "living together" or "cohabitating", others call it "shacking up." Yet no matter what terminology is used the fact remains that a rising number of couples are choosing not to get married. According to a new survey, more than 4 in 10 Americans believe that marriage is not necessary in order to have a successful long-term relationship. Of those surveyed who were in their 20s the numbers were even higher, more than half said marriage wasn't essential. Most of those polled also said that they favored living together before getting married.
In recent years societal trends have moved away from traditional marriage. In 2005, the number of married couple households in America dropped below 50 percent for the first time. Correspondingly, the number of unmarried women bearing children rose to its highest level ever. Compare that to 1930, when about 84 percent of households were married couples.
Many young adults think it's a good idea to live together to "test drive" a potential spouse in order to insure that they are "compatible." While such logic may seem practical to some, statistics show that such relationships usually end in tears and heartache. While some of these couples intend to eventually get married, the reality is that cohabiting couples break up far more than married couples, and couples who cohabit before marriage are more likely to get divorced after marriage. Research conducted by Rutgers University's National Marriage Project indicates that couples who live together before marriage are 46 percent more likely to divorce and significantly more likely to experience domestic violence within their relationships.
The Word of God is clear: "Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed undefiled; but fornicators and adulterers God will judge (Hebrews 13:4)." The Bible expressly condemns fornication (1Cor 6:9,18) and there are great reasons why. Sex is a physical, emotional and spiritual act of two people becoming one (Matt 19:5-6, 1 Cor 6:15-16). Any relationship will have a better start if both spouses are free of vast amounts of baggage from previous broken relationships. Besides the risk of disease, of children born out of wedlock, and other complications, it is simply spiritually and emotionally damaging to engage in a series (long or short) of sexual relationships. Waiting until marriage also involves practicing self-control, which is just as useful a virtue in the years after the wedding as it is before. Couples who have proven self-control also tend to trust and respect one another more than those who were sexually active before the wedding date.
In the scriptures husbands are exhorted to love their wives "even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it." In other words, a Biblical marriage is one rooted in God's love rather than human love. C.S. Lewis calls this kind of love a "gift of love." Whereas, human love is a "need love." God's love is a gift because there are "no strings attached" to it. There are no conditions to fill, nothing to earn, nothing to do, and nothing to be. It just loves unconditionally, spontaneously, and continually.
Marriage is one of God's greatest inventions, offering us partners in the battle through life, to encourage us in times of discouragement, to help us up when we fall. Marriage offers us a constant friend and companion, a second head in trying to solve problems and a second set of hands in doing the work that needs to be done. Marriage is the foundational structure of a whole, happy family, where children can be raised in security and love. To learn more about God's unconditional love and what makes a marriage last click on the links below.
Distributed by www.ChristianWorldviewNetwork.com
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KJB?
| Posted On: 02/05/08 03:07:14 PM |
Age 59, WV |
I thought you were one of the few writers for Christian Worldview who is using the real Bible--the King James.
Was this a typo?
"Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed undefiled; but fornicators and adulterers God will judge (Hebrews 13:4)."
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Marriage
| Posted On: 01/31/08 03:30:23 PM |
Age 61, MO |
Marriage is a commitment made by two people of the opposite sex and to God. It is meant to be a lasting covenant. A state issued marriage license is useful, but not necessary in the eyes of God. George Cancilla
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- I humbly disagree, Mr. Cancilla
| Posted On: 02/01/08 10:19:26 AM | | Age 51, OH | Sir, your statement that a "state issued marriage license is . . . not necessary" makes of no effect the words in Romans 13 and Titus 3 about obeying the governmental authorities. Throughout all history, some kind of ceremony and defining act has declared a marriage to have taken place. In those societies that have written methods of record keeping, some type of written document or license has also been part of the process. Based on the teachings of Scripture, IF the government under which you live has a license requirement, then you are duty bound - as a Christian - to obtain it prior to marriage. The observation that marriage is a covenant between man, woman, and God is true - but we cannot toss out the civil duties attached with it and claim obedience to God's Word. Click here to reply to this post
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