HOMILY
ON COHABITATION
January 2011
Fr. Matthew Habiger OSB
www.nfpoutreach.org
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This is
a homily that is long overdue. It deals with a problem that
is all too prevalent among Catholic young couples today, and
that is the problem of cohabitation. It is estimated
nationwide that 80 percent of young couples who ask to be
married within the Church are already living together.
There are still others cohabitating who never ask to be
married.
This
is not God’s plan for young couple; far from it. Young
couples feel strong pressures from their peers and from the
dominant culture to begin their sex lives early. Some say
they did not intend for this to happen, but they were caught
in the current that pulled them in this direction. That is
where they drifted.
There
is a vast difference between God’s plan for marriage,
spousal love and family and what our contemporary culture
thinks. We all know that morality is not determined by
opinion polls, trendsetters, or cultural elites. Wrong is
wrong, even if everyone is doing it. Right is right, even
if nobody is doing it. One, on the side of the right, is a
majority. God alone determines the moral order, what is
right and what is wrong. God alone designs such basic human
realities as human nature, marriage, spousal love and
family.
If our
young people think that cohabitation is morally acceptable
because everyone is doing it, and they have not heard
anything to the contrary from the pulpit, then I want to
correct that. As an ordained priest, God demands that I
teach His plan for marriage, spousal love and
family. As my parishioners, you have a right to hear clear
and unconfused teaching from this pulpit about God’s plan
for us. And I hope that you will help bring this message to
cohabitating couples.
What
is wrong with cohabitation, and why save sex for marriage?
The best way to answer this is to explain what marriage is,
because that is what most young people are preparing
themselves for. Marriage is God’s plan for the vast
majority of people.
Marriage is a lifetime commitment. When a man and a woman
fall in love, and want to share their lives completely with
one another, then they begin to move towards an engagement
and then to the sacrament of marriage. Marriage requires
total commitment, total offering of self to the other, and a
willingness to share together whatever the future holds for
them. It is “until death do us part.” And marriage demands
total fidelity. Jesus’ love for his bride, the Church, and
the Church’s love for her spouse, is the model for all
Christian marriage.
If you
are not married, then you are not ready for the great act of
marriage, called the marital act, or the spousal act.
Outside of marriage you can have a sexual act, but you
cannot have a marital act. Outside of marriage we call sex
fornication or adultery. These are serious violations of
God’s plan for sex. They are serious sins against the Sixth
Commandment that must be repented of and confessed.
Why is
the marital act reserved only to husbands and wives in
marriage? What I say here about a man can be said equally
of a woman. Because marriage transforms, or changes, the
man from being a single and unattached bachelor to become a
husband who is totally committed to the woman who has become
his wife. A husband is a man who has vowed to love his
wife all the days of his life, in good times and bad times,
in health and in sickness, for better or for worse. This
marriage vow is irrevocable. It is a bond upon which God
has placed his blessing. This is God’s plan for marriage.
The
husband and wife begin a new life together, which is their
marriage. Their relationship is uniquely theirs. They
share themselves, their love, their hopes for the future,
and their disappointments at a depth they cannot share with
anyone else. They enter into what are called the goods
of marriage: 1) total fidelity in their relationship as
a married couple throughout their lives; 2) the gift of the
child; and 3) a special access to God’s grace, called their
sacrament of marriage.
Only a
man and a woman who have capacitated themselves, who have
made themselves suitable, by their conscious choice of
making an irrevocable commitment to marriage, are capable of
entering into the marital act. Only spouses can share fully
in the various goods of marriage: fidelity, children and the
sacrament. Unless and until you have become a spouse, you
cannot act as a spouse. If you are not married, it is wrong
to pretend that you are married.
The
marital act, as God designed it, has a predetermined
meaning. In the spousal act the couple open themselves
totally to the goodness of love and to the goodness of
life. This is what the marital act expresses and what it
accomplishes, as God designed it. Each spouse makes the
total personal gift of self to the other. This is a total
personal gift of self: no conditions, no reservations, and
nothing held back. This, of course, includes their
fertility. The marital act is a renewal of their love for
each other, a renewal of their marriage covenant and an
affirmation of their family.
The
marital act is always open to the goodness of life, to the
great gift of the child. Love and life always go together.
Love is never sterile. Love is always open to the goodness
of life. In their marital love, the couple reflects
something of the Love of God, something of our God who is
both the Author of all love and of all life. A married
couple must never deliberately choose to turn against the
goodness of life, to consider their fertility to be a curse
instead of a blessing. That is the great evil of
contraception and sterilization.
If a
married couple does not have children within a couple of
years, they begin to feel that something very important in
their relationship is missing. They are missing the
precious gift of a uniquely new human being, their son or
daughter, who is the fruit of their love. But every child
has a right to be conceived by an act of love between his
father and his mother, to be called into existence by
dedicated parents who will love him or her, and be committed
to provide a secure home for the next twenty years.
Children rely upon committed parents. The well being of
children rests upon the strong marriage of their parents,
and the strength of their loving relationship.
In
simple language, sex and babies go together. If you are not
ready for babies, then you are not ready for sex. And today
it takes at least 18 to 20 years to bring a baby to his or
her adult life.
This
is God’s plan for marriage, spousal love and family. It is
a magnificent plan, and it is within the grasp of everyone
who chooses to accept that plan and draw upon all the helps
God provides to make it possible.
Save
sex for marriage. That is its only proper home. Outside of
marriage, having sex is pretending to be someone you are
not. Fornication does not build a strong relationship.
There is so much missing from a relationship built upon
cohabitation. Cohabitation is a very flimsy construct.
Many of them fall apart. Many cohabiters who marry fall
into divorce. Their sense of commitment has been crippled.
Women deserve men who are deeply committed to them.
Children deserve parents who are deeply committed to them.
There
are many natural reasons why cohabitation does not work,
does not bring lasting happiness. You should already know
these. I am concentrating upon the most important reason
why cohabitation is wrong. It is wrong because it directly
violates God’s plan for marriage, spousal love and family.
Now,
if you are caught in the trap of cohabitation, what can
be done to correct the situation and repair the damage?
Let me briefly set out some sound recommendations.
1) Start learning about God’s plan for marriage,
spousal love and family. Ask your pastor for some good
literature on this. Read what the Catechism of the Catholic
Church teaches about marriage. Strengthen your prayer life,
and use the Sacraments regularly, especially the Sacrament
of Reconciliation and the Holy Eucharist.
2) Begin to acquire the virtue of self-possession,
of self-control, the virtue of chastity. This is a task
that everyone must master, and there are no exceptions.
Even in marriage you will need to draw upon this virtue.
Periodic abstinence is part of natural family planning,
which is the only morally acceptable way of spacing
pregnancies.
3) Make separate living arrangements with you
partner. Since you are not married, it is wrong to pretend
that you are married.
4) If you plan to marry each other, then go through
the normal steps that lead to making a permanent commitment
in marriage. This means taking a full marriage preparation
course. It means learning the basic dynamics that go into
building a strong relationship between two imperfect, and
very complex, persons of complementary sexuality.
5)
I strongly recommend that you take the full course
in Natural Family Planning. More and more dioceses are
mandating this for all couples taking marriage preparation.
When
you have done all these things, then you will be ready for
marriage, ready to enjoy all the various goods of marriage,
and ready to shoulder the serious responsibilities that
accompany this vocation in life.
God
wants all couples, including cohabitating couples, to
discover his wonderful plan for marriage, spousal love and
family. He wants them to enjoy the greatly rewarding goods
that are to be found in authentic marriage and spousal
love. That is also what I, your pastor, want for you. And
that is what this worshiping community, your families and
friends want for you.
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