
Living
Theology in the Metropolitan Chicago Synod
Volume 12, Number 1
Pentecost 2007
Hispanic-Latino Theology and Ministry
As I See It:
The Social Dimension of Marriage
Frank
C. Senn
“Many
lands, many customs,” wrote Martin Luther at the beginning of his Order of
Marriage for Common Pastors. He
advised pastors not to tamper with local custom since these customs were deeply
entwined in the culture of the people.
He left many medieval customs intact in his own Order of Marriage,
including the announcement of the banns on three successive Sundays, the
betrothal on the church porch, and the procession with the bride and groom to
the altar. The abolition of the nuptial
mass would not have been noticed since most ordinary people did not have a
nuptial votive mass celebrated at their wedding. Nor did they always have the benefit of
clergy; others could serve as witnesses of a union.
In
my recent book, The People’s Work: A Social History
of the Liturgy (Fortress Press 2006), I surveyed many medieval and
Reformation practices in the chapter on “The Ecclesiastical Captivity of
Marriage.” In this chapter I detailed
the process by which the Church gained control over the institution of the
marriage rite at the time of the Reformation in an effort to curtail
clandestine marriages of young people who, like Romeo and Juliet, went
privately to a priest in cases in which their parents would have disapproved of
the union. The Protestant Reformers insisted on the public celebration of
marriage, usually in church buildings, and the Catholic Reformers at the
Council of Trent followed this same path, compromising only to the extent that
in any event priests had to notarize the marriage.
If
I were to pursue the social history of marriage beyond the Reformation Era I
would note the influence of the Puritans in Great Britain and North America,
the effect of the French Revolution on the separation of the religious and
civil aspects of marriage, the example of Queen Victoria on subsequent brides,
and the twentieth century idea that weddings concern primarily the bride and
the groom. Let me take each of these
developments in turn.
The
Puritans objected to having weddings on Sunday (the usual day off from work for
ordinary people) because of their sabbatarian ideas.
The festivities associated with weddings were deemed incompatible with a sober
attendance on God’s Word. As a
consequence, most of our weddings occur on Saturday and are separated from the
Sunday Eucharist of the congregation.
The
French Revolution separated the religious and civil aspects of marriage. The consequence is that in Europe today
marriage is almost always a civil event, although some couples may opt for a subsequent
religious ceremony after the civil ceremony.
In the U.S.A. marriage is also a civil arrangement, regulated by fifty
sets of state marriage laws. However,
this is hardly noticed by most people since most weddings still take place in
churches or under the auspices of religious leaders who serve as the state’s
magistrates for such occasions.
The
example of Queen Victoria processing down the aisle of the church in a white
dress has dictated a style that no self-respecting bride today would abjure.
In
the second half of the twentieth century brides and grooms have participated in
the planning of their own wedding ceremonies and have largely been allowed to
design weddings that reflect their personal taste. In this connection one might analyze the authorized
worship books of the churches to discern the extent to which these worship
books reflect this cultural development but also stand against it in their
effort to promote a more communal understanding of marriage and wedding rites.
A
complete social history of marriage, especially in modern times, is provided in
Stephanie Koontz, Marriage, A History: From
Obedience to Intimacy or How Love Conquered Marriage (Viking Press Penguin
2005). The subtitle gives away
Dr. Koontz’s thesis (she is a social psychologist). While her history is wide ranging, the last
two hundred years in the West are pivotal to her argument. So, for example, she claims that “The
Victorians were the first people in history to make marriage the pivotal
experience in people’s lives and married love the principal focus of their
emotions, obligations, and satisfactions” (page 177). Whereas marriage had been
largely an economic or political arrangement in earlier times (every family
was, in effect, a business and a political entity, not just royal families),
during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, under the impact of
industrialization and urban migration, it became common for middle class as
well as upper class wives to stay at home and manage the household while
husbands worked outside of the home.
(Tradesmen resisted this for a long time since their shop was on the
ground floor of their house.) There was
an interruption in this caused by the Second World War and the need for women
to do manufacturing jobs while their husbands served in the armed forces. But after the war, women returned to
domesticity and the veterans resumed their previous jobs.
During
the 1960s, however, some women began to return to the work force. Koontz suggests that when marriage did not
live up to the ideal of profound intimacy and personal satisfaction, women
began to look outside the home for fulfillment.
The return of women to the work force transformed gender roles, and
marriage took on a new meaning under the impact of women’s movements,
especially as women completed college and graduate degrees. The passage of the Equal Employment
Opportunity Act of 1972 reinforced legislation to protect women’s rights. The 1970s were also a time when divorces
began to multiply. Koontz sees a
connection. “At the same time traditional family arrangements became more
difficult to sustain in the new economy.
And new sexual mores, growing tolerance for out-of-wedlock births, and
rising aspirations for self-fulfillment changed the cultural milieu in which
people made decisions about their personal relationships” (page 262).
The
result of these cultural and social changes is that marriage has come to be
about love and intimacy, and issues of fidelity and community are of secondary
concern. Koontz raises the question of
whether the ancient institution of marriage is able to bear this burden. The high rate of divorce in North America,
and the sheer number of people living together and raising families out of
wedlock in Western Europe, provides statistical evidence that the institution
of marriage cannot bear the expectations of intimacy that are laid upon
it. At the very least, especially in a
economy in which both spouses need to work to make ends meet, marriage might
also be seen as a family business in which both spouses share financial
responsibility.
If
the church has any role to play in addressing the genuine crisis of marriage in
our society, it should offer counter-cultural resources. Pastoral counseling needs to alert couples
that marriage cannot deliver many of their expectations unless their
expectations change. Wedding rites need
to highlight the social dimension of marriage (as many have striven to do) in
the choice of readings, hymns and songs, the scope of the intercessory prayers,
and the celebration of Holy Communion where appropriate. Marriage does not concern only the bride and
groom. It affects the wider family and,
at least in the economic consequences of marital breakups, the wider
society. Brides and grooms, husbands and
wives, have social as well as personal responsibilities.
Frank C. Senn
Evanston, Illinois