I think I have already dealt with this in previous posts. Where civil society and religion were synonymous an institution such as marriage is still a societal institution as well as a religious one.
So it is possible for marriage to be both a societal and a religious institution, it is possible for marriage to be purely an institution of civil society with no religious involvement (as is the case for most marriages in the UK today) - I am struggling to see how the reverse is possible - marriage being purely a religious institution with no societal component. It makes no sense.
It does, because in a small community everyone knows who is married.
Once societies got bigger then they needed to keep records, which were centralised.
At one point, I'd have said ALL valid marriages were religious ones, because they were the only ones on offer.
As time has moved on, and more people have become less religious, the two have separated.
Now they are totally separate.
Society has changed to suit the people in it.
Many years ago the only people to get married in a registry office were either of a different faith or unacceptable to God for some reason ( divorced, pregnant etc) it was almost " shaming" to get married in a registry office.
People who got married in a registry office ...... Were
dodgy in some way.
I got married in a registry office, back 30+ years ago, and up to a point I was aware of this attitude, because then it just about still existed, in that some people kept trying to find
dodgy reasons I had to have a registry office wedding.
It was unconventional then....... Mainly used by
divorced people and other such deviants
However, I can be a deviant all on my own
But even 30 years ago, it caused a few raised eyebrows.
It was, I think something set up to cater for those who were considered not either good enough or of a different religion.
Nowadays it's considered more normal, no one thinks you are a bit
dodgy because you get married in a registry office.
I noticed the attitude, 30+ years ago though.
It seemed to almost be considered not a " proper" wedding.
Attitudes have changed so much in the last 30 years.
I can believe people in the past thought the only valid ones were religious ones, because the attitude of society was very different in the past.
The further back you go, the more pronounced I reckon the attitude was, in society, that only
dodgy people got married in a registry office.
Any one else have a registry office wedding 30 years ago, and did you find the same prejudices I found?