R
Rau
Guest
That the Church and the State “witness and declare” - they don’t “do” anything to the parties - is true in all cases. The legal position arises as a consequence of the marriage (when it is accepted by the State). Your marriage is not created by the legal provisions that the State applies. After all, these evolve overtime.That might be true as far as a religious ceremony goes. The couple are simply making a public declaration of their commitment. In a church or before a priest. Or in the eyes of God, if you prefer. But the state, as you say below, binds the two together in a legal sense as well.
When there was a one to one mapping between the legal arrangement and the Marriage, using the same term appears entirely natural. It’s when two men (or some other grouping) want to assert marriage that problems arise. For if they can, so can Father and Son, Mother and Daughter, Sister and Sister, 3 best friends, and so on. Now I see no issue whatsoever with groupings such as these - and indeed others - incurring the same/similar legal provisions as the State today applies to people who are Married.And what do most jurisdictions call such a legal arrangement.
In an earlier post I made the point that the essence of marriage is the underlying bond between man+woman, which is a unique sexual bond arising from our very nature, our very bodies even, that no other grouping can replicate. It is clear to me that the potential bonds in the prior paragraph are simply not the same, though the State may see fit to layer on the same or similar legal provisions. But to reuse the existing notion of “marriage” amounts to the State asserting something about the nature of the underlying bond that is absurd.
By the way, from your posts, you appear to regard the use of the term marriage for all these relationship types as a mere convenience, or somewhat arbitrary. I assume therefore you would personally be entirely relaxed if “Marriage” was kept for the “man+woman” relationship and another term used for the others?
If you lean to the pre-eminence of the State’s dictates, “lifetime commitment” is an odd thing to highlight, given divorce is a straightforward State procedure! Far more prominent I would have thought is the idea that marriage connotes an exclusive sexual union of huge significance to future generations. That is the case in the pairing of “man+woman” - but that is the only grouping for which that can be said.I think this point [that the marriage bond is distinct from the legal framework] is the one flying under the radar of most Catholics. Same sex couples would like to use the term marriage because it implies a lifetime commitment – which they feel they are making.