When one of my sisters a 'born again', and her equally very religious husband, married, if the procreation of children was mentioned once by the idiot pastor who married them, he must have mentioned it about 20 times in his overlong and boring sermon! Funnily enough they only had two kids, whereas I had three birth children, and then went onto adopt two more, another sister of mine had four children. My youngest sister, an Anglican priest, never wanted kids, nor did her husband, so they successfully ensured none were born to them.
My mother who isn't particularly religious always told me marriage was to protect the children, which given the treatment given to children born outside marriage, in the past, it could well be.
She takes the veiw that children want to know who their dad is it gives them a sense of identity.
The thing is, I feel the whole discussion on marriage now takes on a whole new meaning, given the gay debate and gay marriage.
Lots of people feel marriage exists to protect children. Two people committing to each other publicly sets out responsibilities.
Rather than pooh pooing the idea, you could extend it to gay couples, in that it's a declaration of commitment to the idea of family and any children they may choose to adopt.
The trouble is people use the idea of marriage to protect the family as an excuse against gay couples who cannot bear children naturally.
However, it can still be something they commit to, and a public declaration to commitment to their
family I suppose I was just brought up with the idea marriage was to protect children.
It isn't a comment on those who can't or don't want to have children.
Some people I know, have children and don't agree with marriage, they are as entitled to their POV as I am.
But to me it's a commitment to a family unit, it could apply as much to a gay couple adopting as a hetrosexual couple adopting.
Some children do want to know who their dad is though, and I think people need to keep sight of that 🌹