| Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | The Church - Ekklesia |
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Marriage as a Lifetime of Suffering

by Fr. Stephen Freeman
Source:
https://glory2godforallthings.com/2025/10/12//
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This article first appeared in 2015. I have thought it worth
re-publishing in honor of mine and my wife’s celebration of 50 years of
marriage, joined this past weekend by my children and grandchildren and
a host of friends. The service (a molieben with additional prayers
appropriate to the occasion) had many of the prayers from the wedding
service, with changes as needed. It’s very different to look at marriage
from the vantage point of 50 years versus the wedding day of youth. My
beloved wife lovingly tolerates my description of marriage as a
“lifetime of suffering.” The priest who presided at this service for us
quoted liberally from this article. I can only pray for the many
marriages out there – that whatever you endure in this sacramental life
will abound to your salvation and the salvation of all around you. I
would eagerly do it again and again! God grant you many years!
When couples come to ministers to talk about their marriage ceremonies,
ministers think it’s interesting to ask if they love one another. What a
stupid question! How would they know? A Christian marriage isn’t about
whether you’re in love. Christian marriage is giving you the practice of
fidelity over a lifetime in which you can look back upon the marriage
and call it love. It is a hard discipline over many years. –
Stanley Hauerwas
No issues in the modern world seem to be pressing the Church with as
much force as those surrounding sex and marriage. The so-called Sexual
Revolution has, for the most part, succeeded in radically changing how
our culture understands both matters. Drawing from a highly selective
(and sometimes contradictory) set of political, sociological and
scientific arguments, opponents of the Christian tradition are pressing
the case for radical reform with an abandon that bears all of the
hallmarks of a revolution. And they have moved into the ascendancy.
Those manning the barricades describe themselves as “defending
marriage.” That is a deep inaccuracy: marriage, as an institution, was
surrendered quite some time ago. Today’s battles are not about marriage
but simply about dividing the spoils of its destruction. It is too late
to defend marriage. Rather than being defended, marriage needs to be taught and lived.
The Church needs to be willing to become the place where that teaching
occurs as well as the place that can sustain couples in the struggle
required to live it. Fortunately, the spiritual inheritance of the
Church has gifted it with all of the tools necessary for that task. It
lacks only people who are willing to take up the struggle.
Marriage laws were once the legal framework of a Christian culture.
Despite the ravages of the Enlightenment and Reformation, the general
framework of marriage remained untouched. The Church, in many lands,
particularly those of English legal tradition, acted as an arm of the
State while the State acted to uphold the Christian ideal of
marriage. As Hauerwas noted in the opening quote, marriage as an
institution was never traditionally about romantic love: it was about
fidelity, stability, paternity and duty towards family. The traditional
Western marriage rite never asked a couple, “Do you love him?” It simply
asked, “Do you promise to love?” That simple promise was only one of a
number of things:
WILT thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife, to live together after
God’s ordinance in the holy estate of Matrimony? Wilt thou love her,
comfort her, honor, and keep her, in sickness, and in health? And
forsaking all others, keep thee only to her, so long as you both shall
live?
And this:
I N. take thee N. to be my wedded wife, to have and to hold from this day
forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness, and
in health, to love and to cherish, until we are parted by death;
according to God’s holy ordinance, and thereto I plight thee my troth.
Obviously, the primary intent of these promises was faithfulness in all
circumstances over the course of an entire lifetime. The laws that
surrounded marriage existed to enforce this promise and sought to make
it difficult to do otherwise.
Divorce was difficult to obtain – long waiting periods were required and
very specific conditions had to be met for one to be granted. Churches
made remarriage quite difficult, to say the least. Obligations to
children were very well-defined and grounded in parental (biological)
rights and obligations. Indeed, there was a large complex of family laws
that tilted the culture towards marriage at every turn.
Of course, none of this would have represented any benefit had it not
also reflected a cultural consensus. Contrary to popular sayings,
morality can indeed be legislated (laws do almost nothing else). But
moral laws are simply experienced as oppression if they do not generally
agree with the moral consensus of a culture. The laws upholding marriage
were themselves a cultural consensus: people felt these laws to be inherently correct.
Parenthetically, it must be stated as well that the laws governing
marriage and property were often tilted against women – that is a matter
that I will not address in this present article.
The moral consensus governing marriage began to dissolve primarily in
the Post-World War II era in Western cultures. There are many causes
that contributed to this breakdown. My favorite culprit is the rapid
rise in mobility (particularly in America) that destroyed the stability
of the extended family and atomized family life.
The first major legal blow to this traditional arrangement was
the enactment of “no-fault” divorce laws, in which no reasons needed to
be given for a divorce. It is worth noting that these were first enacted
in Russia in early 1918, shortly after the Bolshevik Revolution. The
purpose (as stated in Wikipedia) was to “revolutionize society at every
level.” That experiment later met with significant revisions. The first
state to enact such laws in the U.S. was California, which did not do so
until 1969. Such laws have since become normative across the country.
These changes in marriage law have been accompanied by an evolution in
the cultural meaning of marriage. From the earlier bond of a virtually
indissoluble union, marriage has morphed into a contractual agreement
between two persons for their own self-defined ends. According to a 2002
study,
by age 44, roughly 95 percent of all American adults have had
pre-marital sex. For all intents, we may say that virtually all
Americans, by mid-life, have had sex outside of marriage.
These are clear reasons for understanding that “defense of marriage” is
simply too late. The Tradition has become passé. But none of this says
that the Tradition is wrong or in any way incorrect.
Of course, there are many “remnants” of traditional Christian marriage.
Most people still imagine that marriage will be for a life-time, though
they worry that somehow they may not be so lucky themselves. Pre-nuptial
agreements are primarily tools of the rich. But all of the sentiments
surrounding life-long commitments are just that – sentiments.
They are not grounded in the most obvious reasons for life-long
relationships. Rather, they belong to the genre of fairy tales: “living
happily ever after.”
The classical Christian marriage belongs to the genre of martyrdom.
It is a commitment to death. As Hauerwas notes: faithfulness over the
course of a life-time defines what it means to “love” someone. At the
end of a faithful life, we may say of someone, “He loved his
wife.”
Some have begun to write about the so-called “Benedict Option,” a notion
first introduced by Alasdair MacIntyre in his book, After Virtue.
It compares the contemporary situation to that of the collapse of the
Roman Christian Imperium in the West (i.e., the Dark Ages). Christian
civilization, MacIntyre notes, was not rebuilt through a major
conquering or legislating force, but through the patient endurance of
small monastic communities and surrounding Christian villages. That
pattern marked the spread of Christian civilization for many centuries
in many places, both East and West.
It would seem clear that a legislative option has long been a moot
point. When 95 percent of the population is engaging in sex outside of
marriage (at some point) no legislation of a traditional sort is likely
to make a difference. The greater question is whether such a cultural
tidal wave will inundate the Church’s teaching or render it inert – a
canonical witness to a by-gone time, acknowledged perhaps in confession
but irrelevant to daily choices (this is already true in many places).
The “Benedict Option” can only be judged over the course of centuries,
doubtless to the dismay of our impatient age. But, as noted, those
things required are already largely in place. The marriage rite (in
those Churches who refuse the present errors) remains committed to the
life-long union of a man and a woman with clearly stated goals of
fidelity. The canon laws supporting such marriages remain intact.
Lacking is sufficient teaching and formation in the virtues required to
live the martyrdom of marriage.
Modern culture has emphasized suffering as undesirable and an object to
be remedied. Our resources are devoted to the ending of suffering and
not to its endurance. Of course, the abiding myth of Modernity is that
suffering can be eliminated. This is neither true nor desirable.
Virtues of patience, endurance, sacrifice, selflessness, generosity,
kindness, steadfastness, loyalty, and other such qualities are
impossible without the presence of suffering. The Christian faith does
not disparage the relief of suffering, but neither does it make it
definitive for the acquisition of virtue. Christ is quite clear that all
will suffer. It is pretty much the case that no good thing comes about
in human society except through the voluntary suffering of some person
or persons. The goodness in our lives is rooted in the grace of heroic
actions.
In the absence of stable, life-long, self-sacrificing marriages, all
discussion of sex and sexuality is reduced to abstractions. An eloquent
case for traditional families is currently being made by the chaos and
dysfunction set in motion by their absence. No amount of legislation or
social programs will succeed in replacing the most natural of human
traditions. The social corrosion represented by our over-populated
prisons, births outside of marriage (over 40 percent in the general
population and over 70 percent among non-Hispanic African Americans),
and similar phenomenon continue to predict a breakdown of civility on
the most fundamental level. We passed into the “Dark Ages” some time
ago. The “Benedict Option” is already in place. It is in your parish and
in your marriage. Every day you endure and succeed in a faithful union
to your spouse and children is a heroic act of grace-filled living.
We are not promised that the Option will be successful as a
civilizational cure. Such things are in the hands of God. But we should
have no doubt about the Modern Project going on around us. It is not
building a Brave New World. It is merely destroying the old one and
letting its children roam amid the ruins.
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Article created : 13-10-2025
Last update on: 13-10-2025