The number of unmarried couples living together has increased tenfold from 1960 to 2000 in America. The U.S. Census estimates that about 10 million people are living with someone of the opposite sex. That totals about 8% of U.S. coupled households. Most unmarried partners who live together are between 25 and 34 years of age. It was once stigmatized as "living in sin," or "shacking up," but now cohabitation has replaced dating. It has become mainstream as a way to discover if
a person is a suitable partner for life. While marriage as an ideal is not dead, it does seem to be staggering and falling into the ropes. According to USA Today, more than two-thirds of married couples in the USA now say they lived together before marriage. The number of unmarried, opposite-sex households is rising dramatically.
A crisis of confidence exists among younger Americans, not just in the institution of marriage, but in the process of finding a suitable life mate. The most divorced generation in history is struggling to trust the traditional courting process, choosing instead to dive right into the most intimate aspects of a relationship. Thus, logic states that since divorce is a reality, it makes sense to measure compatibility, and what better way to discover compatibility than to do a trial run at marriage. There is great confidence today in this new found process, but the question is, does it work?
In a groundbreaking study that examines the effects of cohabitation on the long-term quality of marriage, the Alabama Policy Institute (API) conducted a study of more than 1,300 married couples. The results are eye opening. The study shows that the longer a couple cohabits before marriage, the less satisfied they are with their marriage. Dr. John Hill, API's Director of Research, states, "Specifically, couples who cohabit before marriage tend to be more depressed, more dependent and
are more likely to believe their relationship will end as compared with married couples who did not cohabit." In times of stress and conflict, the API study indicates that they are more likely to handle their conflicts with heated arguing, hitting and throwing. According to USA TODAY, couples live together about two years and then either marry or break up.
Marriage is more than who you sleep next to and with whom you may shares expenses. It is the deepest sharing of the most intimate part of your life. This is not easy to graph on a chart, but every human soul longs for it. God created us for intimacy and He built an environment in which we can experience it. Cohabitation has all the powerful elements that make up intimacy but lacks one major ingredient - commitment. Commitment is the fence that protects, the lock that guarantees, and the alarm system that insures that vulnerability is not easily compromised. Marriage is a covenant of mutual protection,
devotion, sacrifice and love. It is binding for this very reason. It is not only safe for our most vulnerable moments but also for the most vulnerable people in the world - children.
When we remember what marriage was designed to do and who designed it, the contorted, sophomoric logic of those who conclude that living together is a good choice evaporates. It is not inconsequential that the loss of confidence in marriage coincides with a loss in confidence in God and the Bible. The children and grandchildren of the sexual revolution need to examine what that revolution has caused: a skyrocketing divorce rate and a frustrating loss of intimacy. The best experiment may be to experiment with the ancient writings of a timeless God who loved us enough to construct a safe place called marriage in which to flourish.
Ed Litton
2 comments:
Marriage does seem to be losing some of its "sanctity." Here are three examples... "Lurking just over the horizon are liabilities for three Republicans who have topped several national, independent polls for the GOP's favorite 2008 nominee: Sen. John McCain (affair, divorce), former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (affair, divorce, affair, divorce), and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani (divorce, affair, nasty divorce). Together, they form the most maritally challenged crop of presidential hopefuls in American political history." http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2006/0607.benen.html
Amen, Pastor Ed!
I'm preaching a series of sermons now on the Song of Solomon.
In the 25 years I have been a pastor, I find the issue of cohabitation has become a greater and greater challenge. I have learned that if I will lovingly tell people why it is a sin from scripture, and why it is harmful, some couples will end their cohabitation.
We are standing against a tide of popular culture, but God did not call us to go with the flow of culture!
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