Who can't be determined by the people making the choice, which is why most of them fail and it's a bad idea.
Anyone who thinks they can choose a mate without God isn't ready for marriage and they can count on their arrogance to lead to failure.
I prayed and let God literally pick my mate. Like Gideon, I used multiple signs as divine confirmation of approval. I also discussed it at length with elders and spent my youth praying and prepping for marriage with my pursuit of goals.
I was an intellectual, not so much playful, youth. Spent my teen years training to be a missionary and reading up on being a good wife/mother.
I don't agree with your assumption about those whose marriages fail, because their limitations are shared with the fewer who succeed.
What limitations? What are you talking about?
I've met too many good women whose marriages failed because of very bad men.
Abraham's servant chose based on God's leading. He looked for signs and got a worthy mate to bring home for Isaac. Isaac was 40, yet his father sent an even older, wiser man, that he trusted to do the picking. So if I look at the Bible I can see that not only was what I did sound, by going on a spiritual choice; if you consider the Bible, some of us shouldn't be picking even if we are 40! Doesn't mean we shouldn't marry at all, though.
Everyone, prior to the sufficient development of their pre frontal cortex is encumbered by poor judgment, arising more from the areas of the brain that are emotional and less from the areas of the brain suited to actual judgment and are demonstrably subject to poorer impulse control. A cumulative disaster enhanced by a relative lack of life experience.
Unless we are talking marriage while drunk in Vegas, it's not impulse that leads to marriage. It's typically months of courting and counseling. It was for me.
Same with people who eventually divorce... months of struggle and considerations before the knot can be untied.
Young adults do possess intelligence, and you make them sound like biting toddlers.
But instead the problem that leads to their divorce is a hard heart. Maybe not for both parties. But the tenderhearted one should have let God do the picking.
I'll finish my post later... so stay tuned.
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And over a half hour later....
What I'm saying is that at 17 or 18 and on for a bit you're capable of enjoying company, of whatever intensity appeals to you, but not likely ready for more. The numbers bear that out and science gives us insight into why.
The Bible and our biology actually points in the other direction. Just like with animals that are bred, humans have a window that it's best to breed by and after that the health and fertility of the breeding stock diminishes.
If the Lord builds the house, do the laborers labor in vain to build it? If the two live in submission to the Lord they will be able to continue in the relationship that was built on love in the first place.
I think you think that because you never grew out of it and into something else, didn't give yourself a chance to experience that... I didn't "need" my wife. I wanted her. Different thing. I appreciated her, desired her, but I didn't need her to complete me. Life was good before her. It's better with her. Life was good with her. It's better with Jack.
To say you don't need your wife is pretty cold. Ever tell her you could be happy and have a good life without her? Or Jack? I don't think it works that way now, and I don't think it worked that way when you married. I don't think it's very nice to say "hey, I'd have a good life without you, but it's better with you here." "I don't need you but I like having you around."
Don't marry a person unless you really need them. They could go on to be with someone who couldn't do without them, and feels that they are completed by becoming that special someone to someone.
Especially since you could easily live your whole life happily alone and others don't do so well. Marriage isn't a little upgrade.
We are creatures of impulse and desires. But we are also something more and that more should rule them. When and to the extent it doesn't we tend to invite misery in ourselves and for others.
Marriage isn't an act of impulse unless you make it that. Most states insist on counseling and a waiting period for their residents to avoid just that.
Some on this board claim I sound like a 15 year old with no judgment. Those are the same ones who claim the only reason an older man would marry a younger woman is for lust and manipulation of her.
Ironically, this whole thread long we've been acknowledging how women can so easily take their men to the cleaners with the way laws are set up these days.
and you don't seem to understand what I'm saying to you on this point because that isn't it at all. Everyone gets hungry and everyone (or nearly everyone) has the same essential urges. It's what we do with them and how we address them or failing let them rule us that defines us. That's not deprivation, it's maturation.
I used my biological imperative as one point of information but not as the sole point of information. Isaac had a need for companionship and comfort while grieving the loss of his mother so Abraham sent a godly man to go find the right woman to fill that need and make him happy again.
That's not the comparison. I'm noting that a need isn't in and of itself a virtue and sating a compulsion isn't necessarily the road to happiness or the good. In fact, it can be the road to a sort of hell, paved with the best intentions.
The need isn't a virtue but by virtue of that need people are born into this world, even when the marriage fails. I'm so glad that my husband's mother had him even if her young marriage failed while producing him. I don't think that was a bad gamble. It was harder for his mother because she didn't let God choose her mate and they were both, from the sounds of it, a little hard-hearted. God could have totally fixed what was wrong with them.
The numbers and science say I am.
The numbers and science don't point to universal failure. If the numbers and science say most 8 year olds can't swim, do you keep good swimmers out of the water just because they are under 8 or do you just accommodate them like you would an older child who can also swim?
Few things are inevitable, but most things are generally predictable. For instance, most people who get married before their brains are functioning fully will fail in their effort.
Only if a hard heart is involved.
So you think God can send you a mate, but not those same children in a few years more...that's a curious theology.
If God sent me a mate earlier in life, maybe that's because He wants me to have more children. If I fritter away that time with my fertility folded up in a napkin and buried away, so I can be homogenized like the rest of the world, I don't get the same number of kids anymore. I lose a blessing, even if the world doesn't if God gives some other woman what would have been MY kids, my blessing.