I agree with just about everything in your post. The reason I can see his side/point is that it used to be mine. I remember how I used to think.
I hope we can all agree to the moral of this story CiK:
Never think like an atheist.
I agree with just about everything in your post. The reason I can see his side/point is that it used to be mine. I remember how I used to think.
I hope we can all agree to the moral of this story CiK:
Never think like an atheist.
I never thought like an atheist, I thought like a spoiled brat that was angry at his Dad for not getting his way. I intentionally thought like a spoiled child as if I could somehow make God angry and hurt Him. I always believed in God, but for all of the wrong reasons. I think that may be worse than being an atheist.
I never thought like an atheist, I thought like a spoiled brat that was angry at his Dad for not getting his way. I intentionally thought like a spoiled child as if I could somehow make God angry and hurt Him. I always believed in God, but for all of the wrong reasons. I think that may be worse than being an atheist.
toldailytopic: Shacking up. Is it wise for a couple to live together prior to marriage? |
I'm saying that it is not the reason to get married.
I believe that love is an action too, but it is not love if someone is only getting married because they want to live together.I will agree with you that it should not be the reason people get married. But, it can be one of many reasons to get married. I'm one of those rare people who don't believe in "falling in love." I believe that love is an action, not an emotion.
I believe that love is an action too, but it is not love if someone is only getting married because they want to live together.
Like I said, wanting to live together can be a reason for getting married, not the reason. :chuckle: Love is proven by keeping your vows to your spouse and to God.
Keeping vows and commitments, we know several couples, friends of ours, who have been living together for a number of years and are in it for the long haul, one couple has been together for 26 years.
My grandparents were in an "arranged" marriage (parents introduced them to each other as suitable mates and they chose to follow their advice) when Nana was 14. They got married when she was 16, in 1923, and were together until my grandfather passed away in 1969. They had 11 children (three girls and eight boys). Nana never remarried after my grandfather passed away. She passed away in the mid 1980s, when I was about 15 or 16.
My grandparents weren't betrothed by their parents, though. Their parents introduced them and they followed their parents' advice.On the other hand, a lady who used to deliver the mail to my house when I was a child was also betrothed by arrangement by her family to a 'suitable mate'. She killed herself so she didn't have to face the prospect of either an undesired marriage or her family's disappointment.
Works for some, not for others.
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I just think it's prudent. Especially if you've never lived with someone before. Co-habiting is certainly an adjustment, and you see a different side of the person that you really wouldn't be exposed to otherwise. Marriage doesn't need to be a complete upending of two lives. To say nothing of the fact that it's convenient and makes perfect sense--why wouldn't two people in love live together?
That isn't why you get married. Those that do end up in divorce. Those that shack up first as this giant idiot is suggesting is more likely to end up divorced.
Now, unless she wants sign on the dotted line, a lady is just a friend I go out with.