Tlaloc
Member
I think I can state as a foregone conclusion that marriage is not foundationally about love as in eros, though I believe that eros is a great and necessary part of it.
But I can also say that true love is not the foundation or the reason for marriage. We are outright commanded to love essentially everyone, everyone we know at least, from our neighbors to our enemies and on. Love is much to broad a criteria for marriage, and quite honestly love in marriage doesn't receive any kind of special boost. There are no doubt times when its harder to love your spouse than it is to love your enemy. Of course love is crucial to marriage, but love is crucial to every aspect of a godly life.
Marriage goes beyond love, love is broader, marriage deals with a special relationship that includes love but is much deeper. I don't think I'm at a point where I can describe what I mean other than saying its a little picture of what the Gospel of John described. Early on 'God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son' and yes, God loves the whole world, but in the end Christ says 'I pray not for the world but for those that you have given me, because they are yours.'. Love is for everyone, but marriage is about trust(Faith) and likeness and becoming as one and complimenting one another's personalities. But not just complimenting, that is much to weak a word, in marriage we glorify one another. Just as our glory is in Christ, and we live to glorify Christ, good marriage is a hint of that.
This is just another way in which the common poly objection 'how can you love more than one person?' makes no sense. We had better be able to love more than one person poly or not, if we don't we are failures as Christians and as human beings. Yes, marriage needs love, but it also needs to go way beyond love.
But I can also say that true love is not the foundation or the reason for marriage. We are outright commanded to love essentially everyone, everyone we know at least, from our neighbors to our enemies and on. Love is much to broad a criteria for marriage, and quite honestly love in marriage doesn't receive any kind of special boost. There are no doubt times when its harder to love your spouse than it is to love your enemy. Of course love is crucial to marriage, but love is crucial to every aspect of a godly life.
Marriage goes beyond love, love is broader, marriage deals with a special relationship that includes love but is much deeper. I don't think I'm at a point where I can describe what I mean other than saying its a little picture of what the Gospel of John described. Early on 'God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son' and yes, God loves the whole world, but in the end Christ says 'I pray not for the world but for those that you have given me, because they are yours.'. Love is for everyone, but marriage is about trust(Faith) and likeness and becoming as one and complimenting one another's personalities. But not just complimenting, that is much to weak a word, in marriage we glorify one another. Just as our glory is in Christ, and we live to glorify Christ, good marriage is a hint of that.
This is just another way in which the common poly objection 'how can you love more than one person?' makes no sense. We had better be able to love more than one person poly or not, if we don't we are failures as Christians and as human beings. Yes, marriage needs love, but it also needs to go way beyond love.