The “sexual revolution,” brought
on by the invention of the birth control pill, has uncoupled the triad of sex,
marriage, and babies that has held the family together for thousands of years. Now,
young people do not see the point of getting married in order to have sex. They
see living together as a viable alternative to the way things were before. They
see marriage as an encumbrance to their desired style of living—this attitude
is especially prevalent in young men, who shy away from taking the
responsibility of caring for a wife and child. Both men and women seek
self-expression and fulfillment; and they see marriage and family as a
roadblock to attaining those goals.
The high road says, “Marriage is
such an important thing in life that I do not want to make any mistakes by
marrying the wrong person. So…I will make sure of our compatibility by living
together for a time; if we prove to be compatible, we will certainly get
married. If we do not like one another after living together, then we will just
split; and nobody will be hurt by all the well-known pain of a divorce. It’s
just as simple as that!”
People on the low road of
rationalism say, “There is nothing about a piece of paper that should obligate
us to stay together. If we love one another, then we will live together in just
the same way as if we had been married in front of a church altar. Cohabitation
will allow the warmth of love, not cold legalities to regulate our relationship
to one another.”
There is a myth afoot that
cohabitation before marriage decreases the divorce rate. Studies in Canada,
Sweden, New Zealand, and the United States show that those who cohabit before
marriage have substantially higher divorce rates than those who do not. In
fact, the recorded differences range from 50-100% higher. Sociologists have
found that cohabitation is associated with greater marital conflict and poorer
communication. Their studies showed that the longer the premarital
cohabitation, the more likely will divorce follow marriage. Studies at the
University of Nebraska in a nationally representative sample found that
“cohabitation is not related to marital happiness, but it is related to lower
levels of marital interaction, higher levels of marital disagreement and
marital instability.” In other words, cohabiters tend to fight a lot and do not
frequently have a lasting relationship with one another. A joint study conducted by three Canadian
universities found that of all couples married less than ten years, 31% of
those who cohabited before marriage divorced, compared to a divorce rate of 14%
for those who did not cohabit before marriage. It has been observed that those
who cohabited before marriage and later divorce are more likely to move back
into a cohabitational situation after their marriage dissolves—nearly
extinguishing their chances for a more successful subsequent relationship.
Many young women think that if
they have sex with a boyfriend, he will marry them in the near future. Sadly,
this is usually not true. Young men who can get sex from a woman without
assuming the responsibility of marriage very often will not marry her.
Cohabitation flies in the face of
biblical admonitions. Nothing is more clear in the Bible than the fact that
having sex with a person to whom one is not married is adultery and punishable
by loss of one’s eternal life in Christ. (Rev 21:8; Heb 13:4)
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