Grace & Peace!
This is such an important–and often-disregarded–point. The folks who lament that marriage is being redefined have failed to notice that the same-sex marriage debate is about the consequences of a change that already happened a couple centuries ago. The idea that marriage is about committing yourself to the person you romantically love is pretty new (again, only a couple centuries old), but is now deeply entrenched in the culture.
The irony is that this new understanding of marriage is also part of the understanding that “traditional” marriage advocates have. I don’t know that many “traditional” marriage folks would actually be willing to return to a system of arranged marriages, dowries, and all of the socio-cultural changes and challenges (particularly with regard to a woman’s role/place in society) that a true return to tradition would necessarily entail. The level of large-scale cultural undoing that such a shift to tradition would require is impossible at this point.
What’s needed is a clear-eyed recognition of where marriage is right now, followed by the articulation of a compelling vision of the future of marriage that restores to it some of it’s prior social significance and dignity–not a return to an imagined, impossible, or unworkable past, not a movement towards disenfranchisement of one sort or another, but a real vision for moving forward. I do not see anyone on either side of the marriage debate who is actually willing to engage in this work–both sides are too focused on carving out ideological fiefdoms to actually be useful.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!