| PiNkfAiRy ( @ 2008-11-05 22:38:00 |
i liked this.
Tradi tiona l Marri age Perve rts the Tradi tion of Marri age
by Jeff Goode ( Calif ornia n)
About a decad e ago, as a young playw right , I was hired to write a scrip t for the Renai ssanc e Festi val of Kansa s City. It was a perio d piece about knigh ts and joust s and intri gues of the court , build ing up to a lavis h royal weddi ng betwe en a princ e and a princ ess, resto ring peace to the troub led land.
This was one of my first profe ssion al writi ng assig nment s, so I was reall y excit ed about doing all the resea rch and makin g sure that every thing was histo rical ly accur ate, espec ially the royal weddi ng which neede d to follo w all the tradi tions exact ly.
Over a summe r of resea rch, I learn ed a lot of surpr ising facts about the histo ry of marri age and weddi ngs, but by far the most shock ing disco very of all was that the tradi tion of marri age- as- we- know- it simpl y did not exist in those days. Almos t every thing we have come to assoc iate with marri age and weddi ngs -- the white dress , the holy vows, the fancy cake and the birds eed -- dates back a mere 50 or 100 years at the most. In many cases less.
And the handf ul of tradi tions that do go back farth er than that are, frank ly, horri fying . The tossi ng of the garte r, for examp le, evolv ed from a 14th Centu ry tradi tion of rippi ng the cloth ing off of the bride 's body as she left the cerem ony in order to " loose n her up" for the weddi ng night . Weddi ng guest s fough t over the choic est bits of under garme nt, with the garte r being the great est prize .
Savvy bride s got in the habit of carry ing extra garte rs in their bodic e to throw to the male guest s in hopes of escap ing the cerem ony with some shred of modes ty intac t!
It turns out that marri age, in days of old, was a barba ric custo m which was littl e more than a crude excha nge of lives tock at its most civil ized, and a littl e less than ritua lized abduc tion at its worst . That' s why you' ll find no refer ence to white weddi ngs in the Bible , or the union of one man and one woman . Becau se up until fairl y recen tly, there was nothi ng relig ious about it.
You will of cours e find plent y of bibli cal bigam y, pract iced by even the most godly of heroe s-- Noah, Abrah am, David , Solom on -- becau se that' s what marri age was in those days. Even in more enlig htene d New Testa ment times , the only weddi ng worth menti oning (the one at Cana) is notab le only for the mirac ulous amoun t of wine consu med.
In the 21st Centu ry, we' ve heard a lot about the sanct ity of marri age, as if that were somet hing that has been aroun d forev er, but in reali ty the phras e was inven ted in 2004. Googl e it for yours elf and see if you can find a singl e refer ence to the " sanct ity of marri age" befor e the Massa chuse tts Supre me Court legal ized same- sex union s in that state . The prove rbial Sanct ity of Marri age spran g into being becau se oppon ents of gay marri age neede d a logic al reaso n to overt urn an estab lishe d legal prece dent. And the only thing that trump s the Const ituti on is God himse lf.
Unfor tunat ely, God is still prett y new to the whole marri age game (or he might have made an hones t woman out of the Virgi n Mary, am I right ? Try the veal! )
The truth is that marri age has alway s been more a secul ar tradi tion rathe r than a relig ious one. Up until the early Renai ssanc e, in fact, coupl es were tradi tiona lly marri ed on the churc h's front doors tep, becau se weddi ng cerem onies were consi dered too vulga r to be perfo rmed insid e the build ing: After all, there was impli ed sex in the vows and shame less publi c displ ays of affec tion. No clerg yman in his right mind would have allow ed such an unhol y abomi natio n on the premi ses.
But as times chang ed, ideas and attit udes about marri age also chang ed. So when peopl e becam e relig ious, matri mony becam e holy. When peopl e becam e nudis ts, cloth ing becam e optio nal. And so on throu ghout histo ry.
And the wonde rful thing about the insti tutio n of marri age -- the reaso n it has remai ned stron g and relev ant throu gh thous ands of years of ever- chang ing times -- is its uniqu e abili ty to chang e with those times .
Marri age is, and alway s has been, a const antly evolv ing tradi tion that never fails to incor porat e the lates t shift s in cultu re and clima te, chang ing socia l habit s, fashi ons and even fads. ( Becau se, serio usly, that chick en dance is not in the Bible .)
Thus, in the 1800s when the sole purpo se of marri age was procr eatio n and house keepi ng, marri age betwe en an older man and a hard- worki ng tween girl was consi dered perfe ctly norma l. Today we call it pedop hilia .
For thous ands of years marri age was essen tiall y a busin ess trans actio n betwe en the paren ts of the bride and groom . But in the last centu ry or so, we' ve final ly seen the trium ph of this new- fangl ed notio n that marri age shoul d be about a lovin g relat ionsh ip betwe en two conse nting adult s.
Follo wers of the Mormo n faith can tell you that the tradi tions of their foref ather s inclu ded a devou t belie f that polyg amy was appro priat e and sanct ified . But moder n Mormo ns gener ally don' t suppo rt that visio n of happi ness for their daugh ters.
And durin g the Civil Right s era, when oppon ents of inter racia l marri age tried to pass laws makin g such coupl es illeg al, we came to reali ze that they, too, were wrong in tryin g to redef ine marri age to preve nt those newfo und relat ionsh ips.
Alway s marri age has trium phed by becom ing a timel y celeb ratio n of our socie ty, rathe r than a backl ash again st it. It's stran ge, then, to see " tradi tion" used as a weapo n again st chang e, when chang e is the sourc e of all its great est tradi tions .
Just ask the white dress : In 1840, Queen Victo ria of Engla nd marri ed Princ e Alber t weari ng a beaut iful white lace dress -- in defia nce of tradi tion -- in order to promo te the sale of Engli sh lace! The image was so power ful that pract icall y overn ight the white weddi ng gown becam e de rigue ur for the well- heele d bride . And then it becam e de rigue ur for every bride .
By the dawn of the 20th Centu ry, the white dress had also inexp licab ly come to symbo lize chast ity. ( Even thoug h blue was tradi tiona lly the color of virgi nity - - " somet hing borro wed, somet hing blue. ..")
And the new equat ion of white with virgi nity event ually achie ved such a rigid ortho doxy that older reade rs may remem ber a time when weddi ng guest s who happe ned to know that the bride was not perfe ctly pure would have felt a moral oblig ation to deman d that she chang e into somet hing off- white befor e walki ng down the aisle .
Fortu natel y, as cultu ral norms eased durin g the Sexua l Revol ution , a sort of " don' t ask, don' t tell" polic y took hold where all bride s were requi red to wear white regar dless of their virtu e and the less said about it the bette r.
In recen t years , as a gener ation of divor cees have remar ried and a gener ation of young peopl e have enter ed wedlo ck with some degre e of " exper ience ", the prete nse of a conne ction betwe en liter al virgi nity and the brida l gown has becom e entir ely obsol ete. A color ful journ ey for a custo m which has alway s seeme d iron clad, even as it was evolv ing over time.
And not all tradi tions have to do with chang ing sexua l stand ards. The long- time custo m of pelti ng the newly weds with birds eed did not exist befor e the 1970s when anima l- lover s reali zed that songb irds were bloat ing on dried rice that they found on the groun d after the forme r custo m.
Econo mic times have cause d famil ies to rethi nk the age- old conve ntion of the bride 's fathe r payin g for the entir e cerem ony -- a last vesti ge of the days of dowri es when a young man had to be bribe d to take a free- loadi ng daugh ter off her paren ts' hands -- that well- estab lishe d custo m has gradu ally given way to a more human e appro ach to shari ng the finan cial burde n.
Even relig ious tradi tions of marri age have exper ience d const ant metam orpho sis over the years . As more inter faith coupl es have wed, we have seen the emerg ence of multi - disci plina ry cerem onies where coupl es have chose n not to follo w the out- dated tradi tion of rejec ting one or both of their faith s as a prere quisi te of holy matri mony.
One of the most beaut iful weddi ngs I ever atten ded was betwe en a young Jewis h fello w and his Catho lic fianc é, whose mothe r was born in Franc e. The cerem ony was perfo rmed by both a rabbi and a pries t with inter twini ng vows in Engli sh, Latin , Hebre w and Frenc h. A perfe ct expre ssion of the union of their two famil ies, yet one which would have been unthi nkabl e just a gener ation befor e.
But, again , marri age has such a long histo ry of chang ing with the ever- chang ing times , that the last thing we shoul d expec t from it is to stop growi ng and chang ing. We know today that marri age is not a rote ritua l hande d down by God to Adam & Eve and prese rved verba tim for thous ands of years . It is, rathe r, an expre ssion of how each commu nity, each cultu re, and each faith , choos es to celeb rate the joini ng of loved ones who have decid ed to make a life toget her.
Chris tians do not expec t Jesus to be centr al to a Buddh ist weddi ng, nor do Jews refus e to ackno wledg e Luthe ran union s becau se they didn' t inclu de a readi ng from the Torah . Marri age is what we each make of it. And that' s the way it alway s shoul d be.
Perha ps the great est irony of the tradi tiona l marri age argum ent is that it seeks to prese rve a singu lar tradi tion that has, in fact, never exist ed at any point in histo ry.
Becau se, hones tly, which tradi tiona l defin ition of marri age do we want our Const ituti on to prote ct?
. . .The one from Book of Genes is when famil y value s meant multi ple wives and concu bines ?
. ..Or the marri ages of the Middl e Ages when women were trade d like cattl e and weddi ngs were too bawdy for churc h?
. . . Since this is Ameri ca, shoul d we prese rve marri age as it exist ed in 1776 when arran ged marri ages were still commo nplac e?
. ..Or the tradi tions of 1850 when Calif ornia becam e a state and marri age was custo maril y betwe en one man and one woman - or- girl of age 11 and up?
. ..Or are we reall y seeki ng to prote ct a more moder n visio n of tradi tiona l marri age, say from the 1950s when it was illeg al for white s to wed black s or Hispa nics?
. ..Or the tradi tiona l marri age of the late 1960s when coupl es were routi nely excom munic ated for marry ing outsi de their faith ?
No, the truth of the matte r is, that we' re tryin g to prese rve tradi tiona l marri age the way it "was and alway s has been" durin g a very narro w perio d in the late 70s / early 80s - just befor e most of us found out that gays even exist ed: Betwe en one man and one woman of legal age and willi ng conse nt. Regar dless of race or relig ion ( withi n reaso n). Plus the chick en dance and the birds eed. Those are okay.
But there 's somet hing profo undly distu rbing about amend ing the Const ituti on to defin e anyth ing about the 1970s as "the way God inten ded it."
Tradi
by Jeff Goode
About
This was one of my first
Over a summe
And the handf
Savvy
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You will of cours
In the 21st Centu
Unfor
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Just ask the white
By the dawn of the 20th Centu
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Chris
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