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rgod -> RE: Rushing down the altar (7/15/2008 11:07:59 PM)
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I apologize in advance for this being long. I also don't think that time matters that much, although for myself, I personally would want to date for about 1 to 2 years before marriage. I think that is because I want to have time to get to know him well, for him to know me well, and I think that is enough time to have seen him through different "changes" in life - through dissapointments, hurts, happiness, anger, everything. Why do people rush to be married? I think this is varied and depends on the couple. But I think that as believers, one of the things that we should be striving to do is to follow God in all things, including the timing of our marriages and the ultimate selection of our mates. I think if we ask God for wisdom in this area, He will give it to us, just like it says in James. I can't say though that a shorter time leads to divorce. My mom and dad dated for three months before my father asked her to marry him. They were from two different cultures, two different countries, but they loved each other. When he asked her to marry him, he was leaving the country in six months and he wanted to take her with him back to the United States. He couldn't see marrying anyone else, and he always maintains that if she had said no, he wouldn't have gotten married. That was 34 years ago and they are still going strong. They take fantastic care of each other and are so affectionate, sweet, and loving to one another. Now, they weren't always like this (which should give those who are going through rocky periods in their marriage a lot of hope) but they've had to grow into this oneness - and now they are almost like newlyweds in their love and devotion to one another. I'm not sure what is causing the high divorce rate, although I think the answer isn't so simple. I think that there are spiritual and natural causes. Spiritually, I think that satan uses his weapons of selfishness, pride, and probably more than anything else - unforgiveness to magnify faults and break up marriages. I've heard that spouses who pray together, have a much lower divorce rate (I think it was lowered by something like 85% - but I can't tell you where I got that statistic). A lot of Christians don't believe in spiritual warfare - but really - even if you don't believe in it - doesn't mean it won't affect you or your family. We see in Ephesians 6 there there is a premium placed on prayer - where Paul asks that we pray always for the saints. And of course, putting on spiritual armor each day and seeking the Lord in all things will help keep your marriage strong. I think that the natural causes are pretty varied. I think that women having more opportunities has a lot to do with it. In the past, women put up with a lot of things - such as infidelity or horrific types of abuse because they knew that they couldn't support themselves or their families otherwise. While I don't agree with divorce, I'm certainly not one to say that a woman should be stay in a relationship where she and/or her children are beaten, where their lives are in danger. This happens more than one would think. I'm glad that women have opportunities, but I do think that it makes divorce possible when in another era it might have been unthinkable - or at least not feasible. Remove the social stigma from divorce (there only seems to be a stigma if you've been divorced three times or more during the present day) and it becomes a good option for many. Another part of it I think, is the romanticization of marriage. I think about my own parents and the fact that there were a lot of difficult times they went through before the beautiful sweetness that they have now. I didn't think that they'd make it several times. But, I'm not sure if people are always willing to go through the times when the feelings are gone - I think people are too quick to say - "We just don't love each other anymore. We've grown apart." when in actuality, this can be an opportunity to learn how to love in a new way. I think too that things that people would have worked through in the past, out of necessity - like a person who has some sort of illness or has an issue, like an addiction that shows up after the marriage, or a communcation or financial issue, people are sometimes less willing to work out. I think that this goes back to the feeling that marriage is a lot about personal fulfillment, then about it being a commitment. I was watching a program today about Islam, Judaism, and Christianity. It was quite interesting that they pointed out that in Judaism and Islam marriage was seen as a contract. The show misrepresented Christianity, saying that we thought that marriage was all about love - and it is in a sense - but there is a contractual sense - or rather the sense of the covenant too. I think one of the main reasons that divorce happens more often than it did in the past - besides what I've said before, is the fact that the concept of covenant - of keeping your word - of a contract that cannot be violated - is basically lost. Everything in our society is negotiable - even things that at one time were absolutes (like our physical genders for example). I think that this way of seeing the world has impacted the way in which we see covenants and frankly - I don't think that people see marriage as being that serious anymore - "till death do you part" is just something you say.
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