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Peter_Plato
Guest
What makes you think marriage is an either/or kind of proposition?I understand your view but disagree profoundly. I’m currently re-reading H G Wells A Modern Utopia, where amongst other things which raised eyebrows at the time he proposes the State cancels any marriage which is still childless after two or three years, and punishes the spouses. This is one of the logical conclusions of the State dictating how best to produce and raise children. Civil marriage is, thankfully, free of this socialist agenda. I think it would be a big mistake to go down that road.
You are ignoring romantic love. Civil marriage is primarily about love, we expect the spouses to be in love, otherwise we’re unhappy about it and call it a marriage of convenience or an arranged marriage, or say that he got a trophy wife or she’s a gold digger and so on.
As the old song has it: Love and marriage, love and marriage / Go together like a horse and carriage / This I tell ya, brother, you can’t have one without the other.
Indeed. And since you forgot all about love in marriage, you better put on your bib.![]()
It need not be only about romantic love and it need not be only about procreation. It can and should be about both but why stop there?
You seem to think it is only about romantic love and when that diminishes, the marriage is no longer appropriately called a marriage. A good marriage could have many facets. It might begin as a romantic relationship, then blossom into a much deeper and more profound union of being that brings about the “incarnation” of the relationship in new human beings, aka, offspring. It is that depth of relationship that can only be attained between a man and woman that is to be properly called a “marriage.”
You might protest that pretty well any heterosexual couple might produce biological offspring, but I am not speaking primarily of making biological babies, I am talking about whole human beings. The moral issue is about following through in the “creative” part by understanding that the process of creating human beings does not end when they are born in a biological sense, but in the entire process of becoming a whole human being.
If the creative love between a man and a woman is understood in the shallow sense of physical unity, then their offspring are going to be seen by the couple as mere physical entities. The depth of being of the couple will result in deeper, more profoundly formed human beings as offspring.
Perhaps the problem is that many people, like you seem to, have a very one dimensional view of marriage as romantic or sexual, when those aspects may be only phases in a greater reality that embodies divine aspects of love. It would be this profundity that is an even more crucial aspect of the marital unity in creating offspring.
Many relationships and families may go sour precisely because the individuals involved do not pass through these more preliminary stages into deeper love. Christ became incarnate, but the love he had for humanity passed through a refiner’s fire involving passion and perseverance to demonstrate to us a process required of us that will form us into holy and divine creatures. Human love becomes incarnate in offspring, but continues on in relationship through passion and perseverance towards sanctity. Our end is not simply to become romantic beings, it is to become divine beings and carry out the process of divinizing our offspring. Marriage is the ordinary means for that to come about. However, a couple would necessarily not understand nor experience that if they live out a shallow notion of the ends of marriage as romantic entanglement.