I agree with the year or so of dating AND knowing each other as friends ahead of time. I think this really helps avoid a lot of reciepes for disaster. However, why is it then "common sense" to get married? Why is delaying setting a couple up for a huge failure? And why is it obedience to the Lord to get married? If they are not sleeping together and there's some reasons for them to delay, if even to just "make sure" they are the one, why must they get married just because these things fall into place? Also, as I said, I do agree with dating for a year, but, a year in the grand scheme of things really isn't all that long...
So you're saying that if a couple is truly committed to one another, understanding the biblical grounds for marriage being a covenant... has known one another for at least 2 years (friends for the first, dating the second) they shouldn't get married just because of a few immature young couples? I agree that there are droves of immature young Christian couples out there, but instead of criticizing them I think the church needs to assist them. I firmly believe all couples seeking marriage need to have proper pre-marital counseling. I haven't been around long, but all I know is that 50 years ago divorce was unheard of and now it's commonplace, and Christians are almost as likely as non-believers to divorce.
To assume two people who have been dating over a year are not struggling sexually is quite a stretch. It doesn't matter how spiritual they may seem, 9/10 at least one of them is fantasizing regularly about the other: ie: sinning. It's obedience to the Lord because the Bible instructs us that it is better to marry than to burn with passion. So much as thinking about having sex with someone who isn't your spouse is sin, and given the right circumstances, counsel, and maturity, the couple shouldn't wait
too long to marry. It sets them up for failure (sexual sin.) I'm not saying couples who are immature marry... that should easily be visable in counsel with others, especially pre-marital counseling. The church simply just doesn't care enough to place enough effort into building foundations for strong marriages today.
This is where I disagree with you. I think a lot of couples, in this day and age especially, lack the emotional and spiritual maturity to distinguish between "the one" and just the hormonal response of "being in love". 50% (some statistics show that the number is as high as 60% in Christian society) of FIRST marriages end in divorce. The majority, I will bet, are mostly people married in their early 20's or younger.
I agree with you and never said otherwise. I don't believe there is a "one" person you can marry. I think that is utterly rediculous and silly. I do believe in a firm standard believing that you must commit to
one and only one for life. I think the moral fabric of at least the United States has declined so fast it will make your head spin. Before, regardless of the couple being "in love" they still stuck it out... and I'm sure those feelings they may have had in the beginning eventually returned. It's about commitment, which this age knows very little about.
The term a "sex saturated society" is a bit relative, and I don't think this notion can be floated as the sole reason why people should marry young. Roman and Greek society were far more immoral and sex saturated towards their decline. And what do you mean by "properly educate"? Educate them to marry young because they are horny?
I don't think EVERYONE who marries young is bound to have a bad marriage, on the contrary, I hope they have a great marriage. However, bad experiences (the key word is EXPERIENCES) gives people the absolute right to not necarrily criticize, but point out things to THINK about!
And what do you mean by young couples mentoring? After they've been married a year, two years, less? In my opinion, unless you've been in a HAPPY, STABLE marriage for 10 years or so, you shouldn't be "mentoring" anyone. You know too little and have not experienced enough as a married couple. And why do those who marry young have an edge on those who wait until later? My experience is it is the opposite. Couples that wait until later, as a general rule, tend to be a lot more level headed about things and tend to think things through. I think a lot of "young" couples headed toward marriage are more in love with the romantic notion of "marriage" than they really are with each other. That tends to blind them to red flags and problems older couples are more willing to see, admit, and deal with rather than ignore and blisslfully figure that "We're the will of God, therefore everything will work itself out..."
I think you're misunderstanding me. I am far away from telling people to marry because they have sexual desires alone, and further, I did not say that it is the primary reason Christians should marry young. I know there are circumstances and situations that cause people to delay which are acceptable and right. I just don't see any excuse for two individuals who, with godly counsel and maturity believe they are ready for marriage because they are committed to one another, who are also struggling physically, to delay marriage. That is my point. I'm not speaking of young foolish sexually driven people. I'm speaking of mature, sexually healthy individuals.
Please do not misread me, Sir, you have done it several times. I never said that young couples should mentor young couples. That is simply absurd. I was stating that older married couples who have married young (gee, I don't know... in their 60's or 70's) with godly and healthy marriages mentor those who married young as they have. They've been married a lot longer, have gone through a lot more, and know the struggles, joy, and hard times in a marriage. What you are seeming to suggest is that people wait until their late 30's as you have to get married without any godly counsel or instruction because you assume they are automatically mature enough to handle marriage. Age does not equal maturity.
30 is not some magical number that automatically makes you a mature, responsible adult. The current divorce rate is for many factors that have nothing to do with marrying young in and of itself. Again, I point to times past where this seemingly wasn't a problem. Divorce was virtually unheard of in the early 20th century... and we know most married in their early 20's, and even earlier.
The Bible instructs us to do things with godly wisdom, and I believe that marrying because you are lusting is a valid reason... it's biblical. God hates divorce, and those who do so do it because they want to... because they do not exhaust spiritual help and godly counsel. There is only one reason that is acceptable... infidelity, and even then, it's a very last resort. Not even someone who is married to a non-Christian has an excuse to divorce. It's unacceptable. Christians need to be counter-cultural which they aren't being in so many aspects, not just marriage.
You want everyone to follow your conviction. If Christian ministers refused to marry anyone under 30, you know what would happen? I think it's obvious, and for GOOD reason. Your arguments are based on your experience alone. I agree with you that too many immature Christians are getting married, but, since it's not about being in love and about TRUE
commitment, I don't think it matters what age you marry. If you understand what marriage MEANS, you will not get divorced. Young Christian couples need to be instructed firmly into understanding that divorce is not acceptable... and Christian ministers need to be firm in their counsel to them.
I am sorry for your experience.
The Church needs to grow beyond adapting flashy 'praise' bands, Purpose-Driven nonsense, and weak sermons into becoming the Bride of Christ. It's no wonder Christians are just as likely to divorce. With such a weak foundation in the pew, it's bound to wreak havoc in the home... and it already has.