Agreed, but Catholics who marry only receive a little bit of prep: a pre-Cana seminar, perhaps, and an interview with a priest or deacon. On the other hand, priests and religious receive years of formation and discernment before they are ordained or profess perpetual vows. That kinda raises the bar, doesn’t it?
(I’ve heard some commentators on Catholic radio make the claim that, if couples received the extent of formation regarding marriage as priests / deacons / religious do for their vocation, we’d likely have fewer marriages and far fewer divorces. That’s neither here nor there, but it does point to the general notion here.)
I’ve been saying for almost 6 years that if the prospective bride & groom have time to find the best wedding dress, best tuxedo, DJ, caterer, etc then -
in addition to Pre-Cana - they should be able to meet with the priest
at least once a month (ideally every week) to learn what the Church teaches re marriage and the family. You can’t expect a couple to learn 2000 years’ worth of Catholic teaching in one weekend.
Example: The prospective bride and groom are both Catholic. They haven’t had any catechetical formation since their teens when they received Confirmation (or if not confirmed, since their First Holy Communion). So that’s at least a 5-10 year gap.
In the Eastern Catholic Churches, we get confirmed when we’re babies. So there probably hasn’t been any catechetical formation since preparing for First Confession and/or First Holy Communion, which would make at least a 10-15 year gap (presuming both are in their 20s when they want to get married).
The Ukrainian Greek Catholic Metropolia (Archeparchy of Philadelphia and the Eparchies of Stamford, Chicago, and St. Josaphat in Parma) is getting serious about adult catechetical formation but I still haven’t seen anything re UGCC marriage preparation. There’s only
one weekend a year for Pre-Cana in the Archeparchy of Philadelphia. Imo, it should be offered at least twice a year (but then again, I’m single so I guess I’m not qualified to give an opinion).