M
maryjk
Guest
99% of the time I disagree with you.A husband is the head of the family.
Certainly the way names work varies from culture to culture. As an American, living in the American culture, I would be very hesitant as a man to marry a woman who wanted to keep her last name or hyphenate. In fact I was so hesitant, I married a woman who took my name (for many other good qualities along with her preference for names).
Fear of “losing my identity” or a desire to “maintain my independence” may be grounded in sincerely held beliefs, but I think they are very often also grounded in feminist ideology.
At the same time, I do not dismiss the importance of preserving a woman’s family history and honoring her lineage.
I think one reasonable solution is for a woman to make her maiden name her middle name. So if Miss Sue Emily Brown marries Mr, Joe Henry Ross…she could be Mrs. Sue Brown Ross, and would go by Sue Ross unless she was using her middle name for some reason, which is much differnet than going by Sue Brown-Ross or Sue Brown.
Of course, last names were not very common at all in Christendom until after AD 1000. So I can agree that there is not a moral absolute at issue here, there can simultaneously be moral issues involved to consider.
On a similar note, I generally disapprove of the title “Ms.” which seeks to blur the line between “Miss” and “Mrs” and promotes marital ambiguity.
Pax Christi and God bless
This time? I agree.
The husband is the head of the household.
It brings me back to a key chain my mom had. “God said it, I believe it, that settles it.” Now, God did not say that I had to take my husband’s name. BUT he did say that the husband is the head of the household.