Amen.Not dismissing it. Thats an example of it being implied. I actually agree with you. The marriage is a covenant wether or not it is expressed, written, or implied. The intention needs to be there. The passage in question gives specific steps that are to be followed and those steps indicate intent to make her a wife. Then the sex seals the deal. In that case the husband was also the master and he made the decision to enter into the covenant for both himself and the woman.
My point is that sex alone does not make them married. There has to be intent to marry...
So, reading this this morning I was struck that we (I?) are missing something simple but important here.
It has ONLY EVER been about intent.
Covenants, spoken or not, sex, etc... it all comes back to intent. It always has. Hence the 'looking at (another man's wife) with (intent to commit adultery with her) is the same as actual adultery'. The actions (saying the words, doing the deed, etc...) are largely irrelevant. Probably because it looks so different from person to person. What matters is the heart intent, which is what God sees and judges by