Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Marriage and the State

A few days ago I wrote a post called "Choices". At the end of it I made the statement that the government will take over any sector we allow it to. That post made me wonder when the government took over marriage. In the Bible you have no evidence that the civil magistrate or even religious officials are necessary to be married. All of the examples of marriages or engagements leaves me with the feeling that God originally designed marriage to be in the authority sphere of the family/couple. I am not sure when the church got involved in performing marriage, but I did find an interesting article at http://www.rhinotimes.com/ about how the civil magistrate got involved in marriage. Here is a relatively long quote from the article by Jeff Katz.

For thousands of years, it was understood that marriage was an institution ordained by G-d. A sacrament. A blessing. A thoroughly and completely religious ritual, much like a Christening or a Bar Mitzvah. So why then would any government official have any standing on how it is to be conducted?

Should the county clerk tell you that you could only christen your child on a Thursday at noon? Does the local bureaucrat tell Jewish families that boys should actually celebrate their Bar Mitzvah on their sixteenth birthday instead of the prescribed thirteenth? The answers to both questions are, of course, no. With the exception of marriage, no religious rite requires a permission slip from the government to perform.

In the 1500s, John Calvin led the effort to institute The Marriage Ordinance (of Geneva), which called for joint "state registration and church consecration" for any marriage to be considered valid. Instead of fighting against this initial governmental intrusion on religious practice, this idea was embraced and advanced. As with all government services, a fee was imposed.

The need for religious involvement in marriage was effectively ended when England established the concept of state sanctioned, or so-called civil marriage in 1837, and this concept was further supported when Otto von Bismarck instituted civil marriage in Germany in 1875. Seizing on this momentum, local hacks and flacks here in the United States began to demand that people tithe to the state for the privilege of receiving a government-issued marriage permission slip in the early twentieth century.

Instead of men of the cloth protesting loudly that the government ought to tend to the business of securing borders and raising armies, they seemed to go along for the ride and began to cooperate.

So now that the state is firmly in control of the institution of marriage, what can be done by private citizens? Easy, exercise our actual rights and demand that our representatives start representing us again. Once you understand the history of the situation we have now, you can see the way clear to rectifying it. Since it is obvious that left-wing judicial activists wearing black gowns are anxious to legislate from the bench, it is more important than ever that the legislative and executive branches assert themselves and reflect the true will of the people.

-snip-

A federal constitutional amendment defining marriage as the union of one man and one woman would provide the means to keep activist judges from forcing same-sex marriage down the throats of the people. But this should be a major lesson for all. The government is never involved in anything in a small way. We would not be in this situation if people of faith had fought more forcefully against what seemed like a minor governmental foray into the institution of marriage by simply demanding a small fee for the "privilege" of conducting a religious ceremony.

Perhaps we'd all be well served to be on guard against those who promise great rewards, if only we'd give up a small piece of our freedoms. Once you have given up your liberty, be it for reasons of convenience or comfort or perceived security, it is virtually impossible to get it back. The only reason that the government now has to fix this problem of defining marriage is because government created it a little more than 100 years ago.

I encourage you all to support the 2008 Federal Marriage Amendment. A great resource site is http://traditionalwedlock.blogspot.com/.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great post, I have been watching Focus on the Family's "Truth Project" - You may like to know you are not alone in your belief that the government is overstepping it's authority.

You may find so of the links from http://www.protectmarriagesd.com/ that have been added today June 25th Wake Up Call to Church on Marriage

Frances Clements said...

My husband and I are facilitators for the Truth Project. I would really recommend it.

Papa T said...

I find this confusing.

Is it not contradictory to decry the silence of believers in allowing "the state" to usurp God's intent and applied authority, and then to ask people to support the passage of a law (by a corrupt and immoral government) that defines marriage?

I am not disagreeing with your premise regarding Godliness and marriage. I just do not understand the logic here.