Grace & Peace!
Duty is love; it is the natural response to love. Duty and sacrifice only finally make sense in reference to love.
We shouldn’t caricature ancient marriages as devoid of love, especially Medieval Christian ones.
I think Joie is being blunt in order to make certain that his/her point is made, not in order to deny the existence of nuances to the argument.
But I don’t know that I agree with your characterization of duty, here. It is possible to do one’s duty without love (because of coercion or fear, or out of a sense of obligation or expectation). To do one’s duty is not always to love: after we have done what is required of us, we should, indeed, expect to be called unprofitable servants should love not draw us to doing more.
But you are right that duty and sacrifice are part of love. Love can lead us to more completely fulfill our duties, and can make their fulfillment a joy, however onerous they might be. Personally, though I would replace “duty” with “responsibility” where love is concerned. That may just be a semantic quibble that changes nothing of the argument, but I find it more meaningful.
But the expectation was that the couple would dutifully love, serve and honour each other. The idea being that just about any two people, putting in a reasonable effort, could learn to. Christian habit and formal custom most certainly tended toward authentic love of the other. The New Testament is rather clear that husbands must love their wives, no doubt in opposition to the temptation to treat wives as mere property or instruments (means to an end) but rather as ends in themselves.
Yes, I think that was the ideal–putting self aside, learning to love the other for their own sake. But that’s precisely where we’ve gone wrong with respect to marriage: we put the cart before the horse. We expect the fruit of marriage to be present at the start. We insist that this love be there first and then assume that it is–and when we discover it actually isn’t there, we get divorced instead of learning self-sacrifice and acting accordingly. Consequently, we become unable to discern a mature love from a fleeting fancy–now, either will do where marriage is concerned.
The idea that romantic love was the ideal and eventually normative prerequisite for marriage is a fruit of Christian doctrine and belief in regards to marriage, human nature and God’s intention.
But again, this romantic love was not something assumed from the start. The idea that romance is a prerequisite for marriage is not a Christian concept, but reflects a pre-occupation with individualism typical of “enlightenment” thinking. The idea is this: “I shouldn’t be bound by what my culture, my social status or my family think of what my duty is–I should pursue what I feel is best for me. I will marry whomever I desire, the one I love.” And with the collapse of traditional culture following the American and French revolutions, this sort of thinking obtained more and more. It’s not Christian thinking at all.
That being said, the homosexualist ideology is and always has been radically opposed to marriage as an institution.
I think you’re confusing “homosexualist” with “individualist”. I don’t know of any normative “homosexualist” ideology, so can’t really argue one way or the other until I’ve seen what it is you’re referring to, but I do know that the root of the concerns of most special/partisan interests is a devotion to individualism and individual identity concerns that are disguised as a concern for the tribe. For what it’s worth, homosexual folks that I know are not radically opposed to marriage as an institution–the idea that marriage is a burdensome shackle on individual ambition is a post-enlightenment sort of invention, not a “homosexualist” one.
The concept of consummation is part and parcel of marriage and traditional marriage logic, culture or thinking. Consequently I expect homosexualists will want and probably demand the concept be removed from the law altogether.
It
used to be part and parcel of marriage, but is no longer. As has been pointed out with respect to civil marriage, consummation is only an issue when divorce is on the table. Otherwise, whether or not a marriage is consummated has no effect on the validity or legal reality of the marriage in the eyes of the state.
Not knowing any homosexualists personally, I can’t really respond to your inference regarding their demands. But I don’t know any homosexuals who devote any of their time to thinking about consummation issues, let alone any homosexuals who would be interested enough to articulate a demand concerning those issues. But since consummation is already
not an issue with the state with regard to the day-to-day validity of a marriage, I don’t imagine that many homosexuals will see it as an issue for them either.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!