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The Case for Getting Married Young
 
By Karen Swallow Prior
 
March 26, 2013                                                                       Issue 1,065           

 

Summary of this article

 

This is a good article with some excellent points about gettng married young. The point is to grow up together and grow together, not to accomplish everything externally and then try to marry.

 

God bless your family and your marriage.

 

Jim  

The Case for Getting Married Young
 

By Karen Swallow Prior
 

It can be beneficial to make marriage the cornerstone, rather than the capstone, of your adult life.

A compelling case can be made for the advantages, particularly for college-educated women, of delaying marriage until after the mid-twenties. As a math-phobic English professor, I'm not one to wrestle with statistics, but I believe a robust case can be made, alternatively, for young marriage.

There are costs to delaying marriage, a phenomenon that has reached a new threshold, with the average age of marriage for men reaching the historic high of 29 and women 27. New research from Knot Yet, a project that explores the benefits and costs of delayed marriage in America, points to some of the risks of waiting so long to marry.

Unmarried twenty-somethings are more likely to be depressed, drink excessively, and report lower levels of satisfaction than their married counterparts. For example 35 percent of unmarried men say they are "highly satisfied" with their lives compared to 52 percent of married men; among the women that report being "highly satisfied" with their lives, 29 percent are cohabitating, 33 percent are single, and 47 percent are married.

 

There is now less economic incentive to marry than ever before. The religious framework for marriage is also crumbling. Marriage has become, therefore, "hedonistic," based on the exponential amount of pleasure - material, emotional, sexual, familial, you name it - that can be derived from the coupling of two individuals.

Under the hedonistic model of marriage, it makes sense to stay single long enough to accumulate the things that can be brought into an eventual union as a kind of experiential dowry. Knot Yet's study confirms this: Young adults are taking longer to finish their education and stabilize their work lives. Culturally, young adults have increasingly come to see marriage as a "capstone" rather than a "cornerstone" - that is, something they do after they have all their other ducks in a row, rather than a foundation for launching into adulthood and parenthood.

Interestingly, in a 2009 report, sociologist Mark Regnerus found that much of the pressure to delay marriage comes from parents who encourage their children to finish their education before marrying. But such advice reflects an outdated reality, one in which a college degree was almost a guarantee of a good job that would be held for a lifetime. This is no longer the case. Furthermore, with so many students graduating from college with knee-buckling debt, they have worse than nothing to bring into a marriage.


Looking back over a marriage of nearly three decades, I am thankful that I married before going down that road. Now as a college-educated, doctorate-holding woman, I can attest that marrying young (at age 19) was most beneficial: to me, to my husband, and to the longevity of our marriage. Our achievements have come, I am convinced, not despite our young marriage, but because of it.

Our marriage was, to use Knot Yet's terminology, a "cornerstone" not a "capstone." Once that cornerstone was set during the semester break of my sophomore year of college, I transformed from a party girl into a budding scholar. I earned my college degree then two graduate degrees. My husband made music, built things, earned a teaching certificate, and became a teacher and coach. We lived in several towns, two states, countless apartments (and-for six long weeks, a relative's basement), owned a junkyard's worth of beat-up cars, and held down numerous jobs on our way to financial and social stability. We were poor in those early years. Not food stamps poor, but poor enough to be given groceries by our church without having asked. We held down terrible jobs and then got better ones. Like all couples, we worked and played and worshipped and prayed and travelled and fought together.

It was not the days of ease that made our marriage stronger and happier: it was working through the difficult parts. We learned to luxuriate in the quotidian (i.e. ordinary), to take wonder in the mundane, skills that have become even more valuable in our prosperous years. We invested the vigor of our youth not in things to bring into the marriage, but in each other and our marriage.

The research cited here, as well as the example of my marriage and many others, points to a model of marriage that is more than the sum of two selves, and at the same time advances both individual and societal good by transcending procreative, economic, and hedonistic purposes.


Marriage actually works best as a formative institution, not an institution you enter once you think you're fully formed. We learn marriage, just as we learn language, and to the teachable, some lessons just come easier earlier in life.


It's important, of course, that people enter into marriage with some level of maturity and self-possession, for one's own sake and that of the other person. But the greatest gift of marriage - even beyond financial security, children, or career success (because for some, these may never come) - is the formation that occurs through the give and take of living in lifelong communion with another.

                       

 

Announcement
After 3.5 years I have decided to stop publishing these Marriage Tips as of March 31.  
 
It has truly been a labor of love and the amount of information I have read and shared has been gigantic. But it's time for me to move on to other things and other ways to serve. 
 
I sincerely thank you faithful subscribers who have stayed with me all this time. 
 
After doing my taxes, it turned out that I was almost losing money with the costs of this service and website. So I had to decide if I still wanted to keep fitting it into my life each week. 
 
I feel God has other plans for me. 
 
Do check out my blog: 101 Proofs for God which is still going. 
 
And may God richly bless all you do.
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