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Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Dennis Prager :: Townhall.com Columnist
Five non-religious arguments for marriage over living together
by Dennis Prager
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I have always believed that there is no comparing living together with marriage. There are enormous differences between being a "husband" or a "wife" and being a "partner," a "friend" or a "significant other"; between a legal commitment and a voluntary association; between standing before family and community to publicly announce one's commitment to another person on the one hand and simply living together on the other.

But attending the weddings of two of my three children this past summer made the differences far clearer and far more significant.

First, no matter what you think when living together, your relationship with your significant other changes the moment you marry. You have now made a commitment to each other as husband and wife in front of almost everyone significant in your life. You now see each other in a different and more serious light.

Second, words matter. They deeply affect us and others. Living with your "boyfriend" is not the same as living with your "husband." And living with your "girlfriend" or any other title you give her is not the same as making a home with your "wife." Likewise when you introduce that person as your wife or husband to people, you are making a far more important statement of that person's role in your life than you are with any other title.

Third, legality matters. Being legally bound to and responsible for another person matters. It is an announcement to him/her and to yourself that you take this relationship with the utmost seriousness. No words of affection or promises of commitment, no matter how sincere, can match the seriousness of legal commitment.

Fourth, to better appreciate just how important marriage is to the vast majority of people in your life, consider this: There is no event, no occasion, no moment in your life when so many of the people who matter to you will convene in one place as they will at your wedding. Not the birth of any of your children, not any milestone birthday you may celebrate, not your child's bar-mitzvah or confirmation. The only other time so many of those you care about and who care about you will gather in one place is at your funeral. But by then, unless you die young, nearly all those you love who are older than you will have already died.

So this is it. Your wedding will be the greatest gathering of loved ones in your life. There is a reason. It is the biggest moment of your life. No such event will ever happen if you do not have a wedding.

Fifth, only with marriage will your man's or your woman's family ever become your family. The two weddings transformed the woman in my son's life into my daughter-in-law and transformed the man in my daughter's life into my son-in-law. And I was instantly transformed from the father of their boyfriend or girlfriend into their father-in-law. This was the most dramatic new realization for me. I was now related to my children's partners. Their siblings and parents became family. Nothing comparable happens when two people live together without getting married. Continued...

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About The Author
Dennis Prager is a radio show host, contributing columnist for Townhall.com, and author of 4 books including Happiness Is a Serious Problem: A Human Nature Repair Manual.
 
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Fascinating thread
Someone posting here said people are living longer, so marriage rules should change, and asked what we would do when people are regularly living to 150 or so.

As someone married once and who celebrated 34 years in that relationship as of last July, all I can say is I hope that we both live to 150 and enjoy the rest of our life together as much as--or more than--we have so far.

This is not to say it's been a marriage full of happiness and joy. It's been painful at times, frustrating at others, but always a learning experience, and with enough good times to make up for the bad ones.

We do happen to be a childless couple, partly because major depression runs in my family (along with a few other genetic issues), and partly because my husband had mumps as a teen. At this late date, it's impossible to say if our lack of children was because of my use of contraception for the first ten years of marriage or not. Lack of financial stability was also a factor because neither of us wanted to try raising children if we couldn't be reasonably certain of our ability to provide for them. So call us fearful and immature, if you like. We served many times as aunt and uncle to the children of friends.

Five years ago (almost), we took in a young woman who had been badly abused as a child, first by her mother, then by her stepmother, then by her first and second husbands. This has been quite a learning experience for us, me in particular--to have to deal with someone else's child and attempt to provide a safe haven for her to come to terms with the pain and anger she feels about what was done to her.

As boomers, my husband and I have managed to avoid the "If it feels good, do it" mentality. On the other hand, as I observe and listen to our "foster" daughter, I have to sigh over how much our generation did to ruin the lives of so many children.

Yes, there is a HUGE difference between making the lifetime commitment of a marriage and being content just to shack up. A lifetime commitment means exactly that--and it means you have to be willing to work out your differences, preferably by listening to each other.

As for the two posters complaining about how the divorce laws favor women, too true. A good friend of mine is in his third marriage. Two children from his first marriage have finally grown up to where he no longer needs to pay child support for them, but his son by his second wife is still a burden, expecially because his ex-wife has him in therapy for the "crime" of being a boy.

Plus, my friend also has two children by his current wife. As he is the sole support for them (they are pre-school aged), he and his current wife have had financial difficulties since they got married. I feel for them, though all I can do is, from time to time, be a shoulder to cry on and sometimes to provide suggestions for ways to deal with their financial problems.

Life is hard, and we all have to get used to it--and learn how to help each other, something not easy to do in a society becoming as fragmented as ours.

Just a thought.

marriage
This is just an attempt to write about non-religious reasons which is totally saturated with religous assumptions. There are obvious problems with all these points even if you do think marriage is mostly positive so this is obviously only meant to preach to the converted.

1. Unless of course you make a public commitment to a partner but don’t marry them. Duh!
2. Statement, yes. But positive or negative depends on what marriage means to that particular person.
3. Ever heard of contracts? Those are legal commitments too.
4. If they only turn up for the free food and entertainment at a wedding are they really that close to you? If they cared they would be there to greet your children and other important markers in you life all the really important people do.
5. If you need a piece of paper to work out that the parents of your grandchildren are related to you then what happens when divorce hits or there isn’t a wedding. (a) Will they still think of you as family when divorced or (b) will the non-married partner keep their distance because they know to you they aren’t proper family?
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