I can report that my jeans are definitely a little tighter this morning. The indecent seasonal consumption of chocolate continues apace, and even slight increases in running mileage have failed to counteract the effects of this onslaught. For all of its joys, marriage will not help this process, according to a report this morning from the National Center for Health Statistics:
Married people are healthier than other adults, although husbands have a tendency to pack on extra pounds, the National Center for Health Statistics said Wednesday.
Well, I know I’ve always lost weight when I’ve been single and lived alone. Something to do with eating cans of Spaghetti-Os over the sink, I’m sure. I also know that whenever I was single, I was much more likely to catch colds and have bouts with the flu.
I don’t believe marriage is for everyone; I am not one of those neo-cons who is convinced that marriage is the cornerstone of healthy civil society. But I do think it important to point out that, slight weight gain aside, this study suggests what previous studies have claimed: men derive tremendous benefit from marriage.
Much of the rhetoric of the men’s rights movement suggests that marriage is bad for men. Here, from the website of the United Kingdom Men’s Movement:
-
for a married man continuing to live with a partner, marriage is not a distinguishable condition, as there are no benefits over cohabitation;
-
for a married woman continuing to live with a partner there are marginal benefits over cohabitation, but only obtained on the death of the man;
-
for a married man whose marriage ends in divorce, there is usually more serious damage to his life than if he had cohabited. For those married fathers with children, the damage is very serious;
-
for a married woman whose marriage ends in divorce, there are considerable benefits compared with cohabitation, and these benefits are obtained due to damage to a man’s life.
Approximately 50% of marriages end in divorce in the UK in the 1990s, with outcomes based on the ‘no fault’ principle. Marriage for men therefore usually constitutes a more damaging condition than cohabitation, whether children are involved or not, but is especially damaging for the man with children, and the man contemplating marriage must base his decisions on this fact.
It’s odd, isn’t it, how for radically different reasons, both pro-feminist men and the men’s rights movement have real reservations about the institution of marriage? While the men’s rights movement often focuses on the aftermath of divorce, it also (as the above quotation makes clear) regards marriage itself as fundamentally harmful to men. On the other hand, some pro-feminist men worry about the ways in which traditional marriages limit women’s autonomy and reinforce suffocating gender roles.
The wing of the men’s movement most likely to support marriage is one we haven’t heard from in the recent debate: the Promise Keepers. For PK (and similar Christian men’s groups), marriage is an essential vehicle for personal spiritual growth. "It is not good for the man to be alone" is an essential component of PK teaching. PKers and the men’s rights movement fellas are both distrustful of feminism and pro-feminist men, but with some crucial differences.
The single most important difference between the men’s rights movement and conservative groups like Promise Keepers is that the latter emphasize the importance of male self-control. The men’s rights movement (as seen in the comments section below the Manpower post) seems to have little interest in encouraging men to be strong and humble disciples! The men’s rights movement worries about men being "trapped" into marriage by women who mislead men about using birth control; PK suggests if we all practiced biblical abstinence until marriage, that wouldn’t be a problem.
In a very real sense, there is much more to admire about conservative Christian men’s groups than there is in the men’s rights movement. However flawed their theology, Promise Keepers and its affiliate organizations are vehemently opposed to a culture that sexually exploits women and girls. Indeed, when it comes to an issue like pornography, pro-feminist men and Promise Keepers can find much on which to agree. While we may differ as to the fundamental reasons as to why we find pornography so destructive, we are in agreement that it does colossal damage to the lives of men and women alike. Furthermore, groups like PK provide men with spiritual tools to fight against porn — tools that may well be useful even for pro-feminist men troubled by patriarchal theology.
In my own men’s work, I’ve been influenced by Promise Keepers as well as by NOMAS — and by the work of mytho-poetic men’s groups like those inspired by Robert Bly. But sad to say, I’ve found little worthy in the reactionary writings of the men’s rights/father’s rights movement.
The UK men’s rights quotes above are in conflict with US figures which show that custodial-parent women take a much larger financial hit after divorce, while non-custodial-parent men take a temporary small hit and recoup quickly.
Yes, I should make it clear that I am not defending the stats used by these UK fellas — merely that I wanted to note their overall hostility towards marriage.
I’ve been to several PK events, and have a lot of time for them in general. To many man, particularly ethnic minorities, but also Pakeha men, they have been a God-send.
The problem I have with the Promise Keepers is their man-is-head-of-the-family philosophy. It’s great that they’re encouraging men to fulfill their responsibilities, but I’d prefer that they ask the men to be equal partners, not lord and master.
It’s not Lord and Master at all. Love does not lord it over another, and PK puts (in fact more) emphasis on the next verse: “Husbands, love your wives even as Christ loved the Church, giving Himself up for her”. Headship is balanced with love and the mutual submission also commanded by God. “The husband is not the master of his own body, but the wife, and the wife is not the master of her own body but the husband. Submit yourselves one to another”. Not popular, but in my opinion, Theologically justified, and quite beautiful.
As you can probably tell, I have issues with the idea of submission, mutual or otherwise. Shared commitment, shared dedication, pursuit of a common goal, yes. Submission, no.
Yeah, but back to the first part of the post: Denise Denton. Great news! I heard denton talk recently in LA and she is really a powerful speaker. She was talking about recruiting women in STEM (sci, tech, Engg, Math) and pointing out that if universities are motivated, they can recruit whoever they want and get the best women possible….but they have to want to do what it takes and not be snooty on their high horses. Shoulda seen the male administrators squirm at that one, since maintaining the status quo is the speciality of the university.
that’s why we need more women with tenure, to get in there and shake them up!
and good for UCSC and for Hugo for the “by the way” on her sexuality. And good for her not to be pushed into the closet and to succeed anyway.
Yeah!
Oops, posted this in the wrong thread. Too many windows open at once…. My bad.
There’s nothing wrong with submission per se, when it is dictated by love. I submit to God because I love Him. Submission isn’t about making yourself less, but being more truly yourself in partnership with someone else. It’s a form of radical giving and total love, on both sides.
Submission between people is wrong in my book. But luckily, I am free to choose relationships with men who agree with me. Yea, freedom!
That said, unlike the men’s rights people, I do find that the PK men generally mean well. But many of them are blinded to the harm it does to the women in their lives to ask for this submission, being taught by the Promise Keepers that submission is beneficial for women. They would do better to ask their wives what they need instead of go ask other men what their wives need.
Amanda, what’s wrong with being responsive to each other’s needs, doing what’s good for the relationship instead of only looking out for yourself, showing each other respect, stressing the positive virtues of the other (instead of blaming and critizing), being committed to the relationship, meeting each other’s needs instead of being selfish? - Because that’s basically what it means to be submissive to each other.
Read the Bible, swan. Men are to be submissive to the Lord, and women to their husband. It’s pretty clear–there is no language about men submitting to women. Yes, there is language about respecting and loving your wife, but that’s not submission. If the authors of the Bible intended men and women to be equals in marriage, don’t you think they would have spelled that out clearly? I do.
There’s nothing wrong with submission per se, when it is dictated by love
Then it’s perfectly OK if the husband chooses to submit to the wife and she takes leadership of the family, yes?
Submitting to God is one thing. I mean, um, God. Duh. Submitting to my husband? Ridiculous. I wouldn’t expect him to submit to me, either. Mutual dependence, loyalty and consideration is not “submission” of the sort PK is talking about.
(I am always tempted to get my husband one of those T-shirts that says “My Wife Thinks I’m At Promise Keepers.”)
Well, Amanda, it depends on how you read Ephesians 5:21. Like most progressives, I think it does mean that men are to submit to their wives. See also 1 Corinthians 7:4. Paul is tough, of course, and proof-texting is a bad habit!
Mind you, the whole thing falls apart when you either don’t believe in a God to submit to, or you reject the Bible as the product of a certain place and time which is no longer in existence.
Amanda, what’s wrong with being responsive to each other’s needs, doing what’s good for the relationship instead of only looking out for yourself, showing each other respect, stressing the positive virtues of the other (instead of blaming and critizing), being committed to the relationship, meeting each other’s needs instead of being selfish? - Because that’s basically what it means to be submissive to each other.
Up until that last sentence, I would agree with you. There’s nothing with valuing the relationship more than yourselves, particularly when you’ve created a family together. But submit? Submit? You gotta be kidding.
I mean, it’s easy enough to fall into sex roles even outside of marriage — hell, back when I had a secretary and shared her with a man, somehow it fell upon me to do the social stuff and buy her gifts for Secretary’s Day (which she accepted with good grace, given that she was a Jehovah’s Witness and didn’t do holidays, but it was expected at the firm). And it was disturbingly seamless.
But I’ve also had someone try to make me submit to him; at first I thought he was kidding, but when I realized he was serious, that this was how he expected me to live, I left him. It’s one thing to kind of fall into a societally-prescribed role, quite another to actively submit.
At first I had the same reaction as some of you have. I didn’t like what I thought submission meant. But then I took a closer look.
I would argue that everything up to the last sentence in my previous post is a description of what submission is, so if you agree with everything except the last sentence, then you agree with what I understand to be a biblical view of submission.
I want to make it clear that submission doesn’t mean that you let the other person control you. This is very important. And yes, I did read the Bible. The Bible and a couple of Christian books about relationships that helped me in getting an understanding about this issue.
I can’t back this up at all, but I seem to recall some statistics (for the UK, IIRC) that suggested that single women have, on average, the best mental health, followed by married men, married women, and single men. Which implies that (from a mental health perspective) being married is better for men, but being single is better for women.
Of course, you always have to remember that correlation doesn’t imply causation!
I would argue that everything up to the last sentence in my previous post is a description of what submission is
But you are arguing for mutual submission. Not some kind of hierarchical setup where, a la the Lowells and the Cabots, the wife submits to God and her husband but the husband submits only to God.
I would suggest that we not forget that only women vow to “obey” in most wedding ceremonies.
I can say I’ve never heard “obey” in any wedding I’ve gone to, even the Catholic ones (and since marriage is a sacrament, you can’t just go writing your own vows). Things may be different among Southern Baptists, since they’ve adopted the wife submitting to the servant leadership of the husband thing as an official position.
Who are the Lowells and the Cabots?
I’ve also never attended a wedding where the woman alone vowed to obey (though I’ve heard of it), and it’s not in any current liturgy that I’ve read. Maybe Amanda’s perception is different because she’s been to a bunch of rural Texas Southern Baptist weddings? It’s certainly not the norm in New York or California.
Swan, the Lowells and Cabots are a reference to an old rhyme about Boston:
And this is good old Boston,
The home of the bean and the cod,
Where the Lowells talk only to Cabots,
And the Cabots talk only to God
This is from the bible. Try to argue around it all you want. It still won’t change what it reads.
Genesis 3:16-17 Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee. 17 And unto Adam he said, Because thou hast hearkened (obeyed) unto the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree, of which I commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it: cursed is the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life.
1 Timothy 2:11-14 Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection. 12 But I suffer not (do not allow) a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence. 13 For Adam was first formed, then Eve. 14 And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression.
1 Corinthians 14:34-35 Let your women keep silence (to hold their peace) in the churches: for it is not permitted (given liberty) unto them to speak (preach, speak); but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law. 35 And if they will learn any thing, let them ask their husbands at home: for it is a shame for women to speak in the church.
1 Corinthians 11:3 But I would have you know, that the head of every man is Christ; and the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God.
Titus 2:3-5 The aged women likewise, that they be in behaviour as becometh holiness, not false accusers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things; 4 That they may teach the young women to be sober, to love their husbands, to love their children, 5 To be discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God be not blasphemed.
You can believe what ever you choose to believe. Just because you are troubled about what the Bible says does not mean you can just re-interpret the message to feel better about yourself. Personally if you are troubled about anything the Bible says you are misunderstanding it. God did not say these things to create chaos in the world but to do just the opposite. The more society strays away from the real meaning just to feel better or so they don’t hurt anyones feelings the more society loses it’s moral fabric. The Bible was not written to give man dominance over women. If you research the historical role of women they have been given a great gift. Women are our mother’s and our grandmother’s. Women are are daughter’s and our sister’s. They give life and they nurture the world. That to me is a lot of power in that respect. It is stated in the Bible that man and woman are “Spiritual Equals”.
“Do not rebuke an older man harshly, but exhort him as if he were your father. Treat younger men as brothers, older women as mothers, and younger women as sisters, with absolute purity.” (1 Timothy 5:1-2)
A woman in this world clearly has an important role and is to be treated with total respect. Jesus clearly defined how important a woman is and how much they should be cherished. Also a man has his roles to perform.
Goal #1: To pass on a living relationship with the Lord God (Deuteronomy 6:4-9; Jeremiah 9:24; Philippians 3:8-10).
Goal #2: To help your children know the joy of obedience and the value of character (Genesis 18:19; Philippians 2:19-22).
Goal #3: To see your children trained for life, i.e. skills for getting along in the world (Proverbs 22:29).
Goal #4: To prepare your children for marriage.
Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her to make her holy, cleansing her by the washing with water through the word, and to present her to himself as a radiant church, without stain or wrinkle or any other blemish, but holy and blameless. In this same way, husbands ought to love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself. After all, no one ever hated his own body, but he feeds and cares for it, just as Christ does the church— for we are members of his body. “For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.” This is a profound mystery—but I am talking about Christ and the church. However, each one of you also must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband (Ephesians 5:25-33).
Anyone who uses the Bible as a control tool over a woman is an evil person. I have met many husbands who will quote Bible verses to their spouse in an argument to say that the husband has dominance over his wife. What a horrible thing. In my opinion this would only lead a woman away from God because she would think she was just and inferior sex toy at her husband’s control. I also feel that this kind of control has been going on for centuries and with today’s liberal ideas has lead to modern Feminism. Clearly everyone needs to wake up and see things for what they are. Just a thought. Does anyone care to debate? BTW….I am a conservative if you have noticed. But I am more moderate and I do have an open mind. Not all of us are right-wing nut jobs.
See, newbie pretty much made my point for me. The original wedding vows only have “obey” for women, but since the rise of feminism, some people have struck the word and some add it for men. But traditionally it’s there only for women.
You can believe what ever you choose to believe. Just because you are troubled about what the Bible says does not mean you can just re-interpret the message to feel better about yourself.
Of course, one can also reject the Bible out of hand as a work of fiction. No muss, no fuss, no re-interpretation necessary.
“Of course, one can also reject the Bible out of hand as a work of fiction. No muss, no fuss, no re-interpretation necessary.”
I guess if that is the case then I just typed a bunch of Bible verses for no reason.
In that case though if one were to reject the Bible as a work of fiction they would at least in the United States be up against a majority population of 79% that do believe.
I know you can find any statistic to point to anything you want. Since I am trying to make a point let’s find one that slants my way.
“Posted on MSNBC
Dec. 5 - Seventy-nine percent of Americans believe that, as the Bible says, Jesus Christ was born of the Virgin Mary, without a human father, according to a new NEWSWEEK poll on beliefs about Jesus.”
Ok, there it is. There is one that slants my way. So 79% believe in the Bible in the United States. So if you thought it was a work of fiction. That would put you in the 21% range. I’m sorry. My conservative brain would tell me that you are in the minority. Majority rules. Sorry no exceptions.
But it does not work that smoothly. That 79% could live good lives and believe in and follow that Bible and have happy marriages. Now the 21% can not tolerate this one bit. No, of course not. It is not fair. So, that 21% creates a rogue idea(s). Let’s take one idea for example and label it feminism. Then let’s take that idea and inject it into the populous. The 79% does not except the idea at first. But the idea spreads using different pretenses and causes. Then people rally around the idea and reinvent it. It becomes manipulated. The majority population becomes manipulated. Soon the idea becomes absorbed into the current mainstream way of thinking. Oh, wait. The 79% has just become 65%. Over time it is slowly widled away to become the minority. Then the Bible becomes the rogue idea and the situation is reversed. And maybe I have no clue of what I am talking about. The latter probably being the case.
I guess this really has nothing to do with your comment. For a while I really thought I was going somewhere with that……..
Ok, there it is. There is one that slants my way. So 79% believe in the Bible in the United States. So if you thought it was a work of fiction. That would put you in the 21% range. I’m sorry. My conservative brain would tell me that you are in the minority. Majority rules. Sorry no exceptions.
Well, considering that exactly 0% of any of the verses you quoted have anything to do with the laws regarding marriage, your quoting them is irrelevant.
Besides, I’m 50% of any marriage I would enter into. I wouldn’t marry someone who didn’t share some fundamental beliefs with me, such as “My life is not dictated by the Bible.” So that would make 100% of the people involved in my marriage rejecting those verses as having any bearing on my marriage.
“Well, considering that exactly 0% of any of the verses you quoted have anything to do with the laws regarding marriage, your quoting them is irrelevant. ”
Not so. I don’t recall quoting Bible verses in my last post. I only quoted them the post prior to that one. In that case they were relevant to what I was saying in that instance. The second post only had relevance to the excerptation you took out of my post in which you replied..
“Of course, one can also reject the Bible out of hand as a work of fiction. No muss, no fuss, no re-interpretation necessary.”
In which I tried to expand on with my own ideas. Yep, I just looked back through that post and it contained 0% of any Bible quotes. You shouldn’t be so quick to rebuttal someone because you might confuse yourself and then look foolish.
“Besides, I’m 50% of any marriage I would enter into. I wouldn’t marry someone who didn’t share some fundamental beliefs with me, such as “My life is not dictated by the Bible.” So that would make 100% of the people involved in my marriage rejecting those verses as having any bearing on my marriage.”
While that is true in a sense. There are more than 2 people populating whatever country you live in. That is to say more than you and just your spouse. So I would have to say that you can create the rules of your own marriage environment in the confinement of your own life. Society being the majority and being religious may however disagree with your athiest views and the traditional Biblical sense of marriage would be status quo. That being said then do whatever you want in your marriage. Society might not like your views and you might not like societies view. But don’t try to convince the rest of us to become athiest because you are in the minority and we hurt your feelings. The majority believes in the Bible and the majority is going to reflect that in it’s culture. I know it’s really hard for liberal’s to understand that concept. I think that this was the point I was trying to get at before. Thank you for rousing it out of me.
BTW zuzu.
When you stated the following…
“Well, considering that exactly 0% of any of the verses you quoted have anything to do with the laws regarding marriage, your quoting them is irrelevant.”
You were also wrong in another aspect. Even though you were answering two post at the same time and you confused them both together. I thought I might correct you on another matter. The Bible has almost everything to do with “the Laws regarding marriage”. Yes, I do believe it was religious men who wrote the marriage laws we have today. Oh, I wonder where oh where did they get their template from. I’m going to have to take a wild guess and say maybe the Bible. It’s pretty amazing how similar man’s law and God’s law stands together on the marriage issue. Now that may not be all together the case these days. Perverse judges seem to think they know more than the religous majority does these days. Pretty soon I am sure you will see homosexual circus animals marrying quadropalegic midgit’s with no thumbs in the near future. But through out history and I do beg you to find me any proof to the contrary, that whenever a society destablized it’s marrital values it was near the end of that societies rule.
Newbie, please leave the circus animals out of your argument. They are oppressed enough as it is.
Newbie, the majority of white southerners strongly supported segregation — and found plenty of biblical verses to support them. (In the 19th century, they were especially fond of Ephesians 6, and Philemon). Where were they wrong?
But don’t try to convince the rest of us to become athiest because you are in the minority and we hurt your feelings. The majority believes in the Bible and the majority is going to reflect that in it’s culture.
Surely if we don’t like our own society, we have a right to try to change it? You appear to be objecting to the entire concept of a minority ever trying to become the majority, or even a larger minority, by any method. That’s a very odd thing to do. Perhaps you could clarify your position, before we all start talking past one another?
Newbie, you do not have the authority to revoke anyone’s “Christian card”. You have every right to believe and interpret Christianity and the Bible as you do, but keep in mind that the majority of United States Christians would disagree with you.
Regardless, we have a separation of church and state in this nation because it’s a great way to avoid civil war and oppression of religious minorites. Live and let live, you know? And civil marriage and religious marriage are two different things…not to mention that Christian marriage (the many different varieties, that is) is not the only flavor to choose from in this great diverse nation of ours!
Let me get this straight–we’re not to make our arguments because there’s the off chance that we might convince people to change their minds?
While that is true in a sense. There are more than 2 people populating whatever country you live in. That is to say more than you and just your spouse. So I would have to say that you can create the rules of your own marriage environment in the confinement of your own life. Society being the majority and being religious may however disagree with your athiest views and the traditional Biblical sense of marriage would be status quo.
Ah, but “the traditional Biblical sense of marriage” has nothing to do with legal, civil marriage. The state wants to know that I am of a certain age, am not married to someone else, am marrying only one person who is not related closely by blood, and, in some cases, that that person is not the same gender as me. Really, the state isn’t much interested in how I conduct my marriage after they issue the license and the deed is done unless there’s violence, neglect or the marriage falls apart. You may choose to live your life according to a book written thousands of years ago and not necessarily accurately translated into English. I do not, because I do not recognize the authority of this book even as I can appreciate some of the wisdom it contains.
That being said then do whatever you want in your marriage. Society might not like your views and you might not like societies view. But don’t try to convince the rest of us to become athiest because you are in the minority and we hurt your feelings.
You may not realize this if you’re an evangelical, but most people who don’t share your views *aren’t* trying to convince anyone else to convert to anything. In fact, most other people leave other people alone about their private religious views. You must not have a very firm grip on your own faith if it can be shaken by the statement of someone else that they don’t believe.
Just as an aside to the current conversational thread… I wonder if there’s a difference between divorced men and never married single men. I’d imagine there must be.
For the most part the MRA crowd says marriage is bad because of the risks associated with divorce for men (such as a substantially higher rate of suicide) not because of marriage per se.
Oops, my mistake. It does break down for never-marrieds. Hmm…
“All adults aged 18 or over: 11.9 percent reported they were in fair or poor health…
“Men: 11.4 percent overall, including 10.4 percent of married men, 18.5 percent of widowed, 16.1 percent of divorced or separated, 12.4 percent of never married and 13.8 percent of those living with a partner.”
–Source
Seems like the risk factor for men is not remaining unmarried, but being in a marriage that *ends*.
Never married men are doing better then unmarried co-habiting men, divorced men and widowed men. Marriage — according to this data — confers only a minor benefit in exchange for a major risk.
newbie, use a spellcheck program, please.
Conservatives tend to focus in on the pseudo-pauline letters (Timothys and Titus) when discussing women’s roles. Note that those letters date later than the true Pauline letters (Romans, Corinthians, etc) not least because they refer to more elaborated church structures (eg, qualifications for a bishop, as opposed to itinerant evangelists). It seems likely that a desire for respectability took hold of the early churches, who wanted to evangelize among the well-bred as well as the prostitutes and landless folk. Those early churches had to contend with non-Christians pointing out that their leader hung out with women not related to him (definitely not done by respectable Jews), defended an adulterous woman, said shocking things about family such as saying in front of his natal family that his true family members were his followers and not his blood relatives, reversed hierarchies by praising children over adults, and to top it off got executed as a common criminal. Definitely NOT RESPECTABLE, and not “family values”. So many theologians see the pseudo-Pauline letters as an attempt to prettify the new Jewish sect, make it fit into existing societal norms about family and hierarchy.
Oh, and there is that bizarre bit in Titus about how men are saved by faith in Jesus and women are saved by childbearing. Well, if I were a literalist, I would have no interest in pursuing Christian belief because there you have it, I am damned because childless. And so are all the nuns, schoolteachers, etc.