
WHY MARRIAGE IS FOR LIFE |

Today we have a real problem with marriage. Half of our marriages now end
up in a divorce. This indicates that something is very wrong
with the way we view marriage. We are not reaping the
benefits of a stable relationship where the couple has
lifelong security and the children have a place to grow up
in a normal family with their own father and mother.
There are many advantages that flow from a marriage-for-life
mentality. There are many serious disadvantages coming from
an easy divorce mentality. Have you noticed that every young
couple, when they are preparing for marriage, wants their
marriage to last forever? They are deeply in love, and they
want that love to endure for the rest of their lives. No
couple takes the attitude: “This is a five year arrangement,
and then we split.”
Children and family go together. A marriage is not complete
until the love of a husband and wife ripens into fatherhood
and motherhood. (Sterility is a real consideration today,
but even then many of these couples opt for adoption.)
Children are the natural fruit of marital love. But it takes
at least 18-20 years to bring a child to that level of
maturity when he or she is prepared to face life on his or
her own. The child is God’s greatest gift to a couple and
their marriage, but the child also requires unwavering
commitment from his parents. For their emotional stability,
children need parents whose marriage is tightly bound
together. Children learn about the rich complimentarity
between men and women by watching their parents as they pass
through their growing up years. Children discover what
committed love and marriage look like by the example their
parents give. Indeed, it is in a strong, committed family
where young boys and girls acquire all the natural and civil
virtues they will need to become useful citizens.
The family antedates the state and society. The family
arrived on the scene first. Only later did such human
inventions as the governing state or community arrangements
appear on the scene. Society and the state depend upon
strong marriages and healthy families to provide them with
resourceful and well-balanced citizens. Indeed, the health
of a society depends upon the well being of its families and
family life. Thus, society and the state have a natural
interest in promoting an environment where strong marriages
and healthy, happy families can flourish. The state exists
for the family; the family does not exist for the state.
We see that everyone wants strong, committed marriages: the
couples, the children, and society. Everyone wants this, but
it is not happening. What is frustrating these natural
desires?
Many things could be mentioned here: a turn towards absolute
autonomy, a reluctance to deal with problems in a
relationship and the temptation to run from them; self-love
in preference to self-sacrificial love; lack of support from
the churches, the secular media and the government …
We need to concentrate our attention more on why marriage,
by its very nature, is for life and why it requires an
unbreakable commitment between a man and a woman.
First off, we need to realize that we did not design
marriage. The institution of marriage is greater than any of
the couples who enter it. We do not design marriage;
marriage designs us. Marriage has endured over the many
centuries of human history, and it will continue on when we
are gone. This is because God designed it, when He decided
to create the human race, composed of men and women, as
bodied persons, who are both sexual and fertile. Marriage is
God’s plan for the vast majority of the human race.
This means that marriage has certain features, recognizable
contours, a discernable nature that can be described by laws
and principles. God has a plan for marriage, and that plan
can be known, put into practice, and his plan can produce
its benefits for everyone who abides by it.
Why is marriage a lifetime commitment between one man and
one woman? The simple answer is that it takes a lifetime to
fully realize the potential of a marriage. You cannot
exhaust a marriage in only 10 to 20 years. At their silver
anniversary, a couple should be entering into the best years
of their relationship.
The more complex answer is that a permanent, irrevocable
commitment is the only place where two entirely different
people, a man and a woman, can pursue the tasks that every
marriage contains. Any relationship presents problems. The
deeper the relationship, the greater the potential there is
for more complicated problems. Marriage is the most
profound, and all-inclusive relationship we know. Two
completely different persons, a man and a woman, with their
unique personalities, their different set of talents, likes
and dislikes, strengths and weaknesses, set out on a journey
of life where there are no guaranteed outcomes. Marriage
draws each partner into all the network of relationships
associated with the other spouse. This is the perfect
formula for guaranteed problems, challenges and
frustrations. This is real life. This is what every marriage
involves.
To live is to change, Cardinal Newman once said, and to be
perfect is to have changed often. Every life sees many
changes. In marriage, the couple multiplies that by two,
because now they are involved with the “other self” as well
as their own. A new problem, an unexpected change of events,
a new pregnancy, a shortfall of income, successes, failures,
… all these require patience and persistence.
When a husband and wife are deeply committed to each other,
to their marriage, and to their family, then they function
in a framework where they can consistently and successfully
address their problems. They know they can rely upon the
other. They need not face the world alone. They draw upon
each other’s strengths and protect each other’s weaknesses.
They do not know exactly how the problem under consideration
will be resolved, but they are certain that together they
can handle it.
Marriage forces a couple to mature, to remove themselves
from the center of the universe, and to find their true
position in the human universe. They discover that real love
means to serve, and not always to be served. They discover
the true role that sex plays in their relationship. They
progress away from an erotic, self-grasping love, and move
towards an agapaic, self-sacrificing love. They soon learn
that they have to make sacrifices, die to self, for the
benefit of something greater than themselves, which is their
marriage and their family. They learn that true happiness
comes only from pursuing what is best for others, especially
for their loved ones, instead of doing what is most
satisfying for themselves.
Marriage and family are the schools where everyone deepens
in their humanity. No one is exempt from the demands of
these schools. If they do exempt themselves, then they stunt
their development as full persons, develop bad habits which
become flaws in their character, and then carry these
immaturities with them wherever they go for the rest of
their lives.
It is a good thing for couples to experience real problems
in their relationship. Having a problem is a signal that
something important is missing from the relationship, and it
must be addressed and corrected. Real love does not demand
perfection in the other; it only demands that a person tries
his or her best to address the problem. In a successful
marriage, couples do not defend their inadequacies, or
pretend that they do not exist; rather, they address them
and work with them. That is the normal way we grow into the
natural virtues, which give meaning and satisfaction to this
life. Problems force us to move beyond our present comfort
zones, and aspire to higher levels of maturity.
Marriage is an irrevocable, indissoluble commitment.
Marriage requires a lifetime for its completion. It is until
death do us part. This is God’s plan for marriage, right
from the beginning (Mt 19:4). Once a couple enters into a
relationship with God and themselves, then that relationship
continues for the rest of their life together. The love they
first discovered in one another was meant to continue
throughout the marriage. People do not fall in love, and
then fall out of love. If there was authentic love there in
the beginning, then it can be rediscovered and sustained, if
both parties work at it.
When you talk to couples married for 50 years, and ask them
for the secret to their happy marriage, they will inevitably
tell you things like: “Place your trust in God and the grace
of the sacrament.” “Take each day as it comes, and keep
working at it.” “Marriage is not a 50-50 proposition;
usually it seems to be a 90-10 proposition. Learn to be very
generous.”
Doesn’t everyone want a strong marriage, and a happy,
healthy family? Well, that is what God wants for all of us
too. And this is possible for every couple who is willing to
work with marriage as God designed it to be. In addition to
the natural helps and aids to making a marriage work, God
gives us additional spiritual helps. These are the
sacraments, especially the Holy Eucharist and the Sacrament
of Reconciliation. Couples draw upon the grace of their
special sacrament of Marriage. Other divine helps are
prayer, the Gospels, and the teachings of the Church on
marriage and the family.
NFP is another great help, both on the natural and the
supernatural levels. Contraception is the great enemy of a
successful marriage. In contraception, a woman soon
discovers the difference between being loved and being used.
In contraception, the emphasis is upon release of sexual
tension and orgasm, not on self-surrender and total gift of
self. In contraception there is a fear of the child, a
rejection of the child instead of a welcoming embrace of the
child. The child is perceived be an unwanted, uninvited
intruder into his parent’s lives, instead of being God’s
greatest gift to them. In contraception there is a refusal
to sacrifice one’s self for the betterment of the marriage
and family. It is a selfish focus upon my immediate wants
and needs, here and now. Contraception does not regard our
fertility as a great gift bestowed upon us by God. Rather,
our fertility is an obstacle to our immediate gratification.
Contraception attempts to reduce our fertility to something
subpersonal, something subhuman, over which we have total
control. Contraception and sterilization are our attempts to
redefine human nature, to destroy a perfectly healthy and
normal functioning organ of our bodies.
If you want to take out a good marriage insurance policy,
then learn NFP, which is God’s way and nature’s way of
planning your family. If you want to play Russian roulette
with your marriage, then allow contraception to work its
devastation upon your relationship. With the arrival of the
Pill in the 60’s, divorce rates began to skyrocket. By
contrast, the divorce rate of NFP users is less than 5%.
God designed marriage to be permanent, irrevocable and a
source of great happiness and completion. He knows what is
best for us. He never asks the impossible. He always gives
us the means we need to live by his wonderful plan for us.
Jesus is the model for all husbands in unlimited self-giving
love (Ephesians 5, Philippians 2). The choice is ours.
Choose to have a strong committed marriage, and a healthy
happy family.
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