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As long as the children of any relationship are safe and secure, whether the parents are married or unmarried, it matters not, imo.
I agree with you. So many married people divorce and that is expensive, the court fees alone are more than £4,000.A couple can commit to eachother without a bit of paper - yet marriage is still popular.
An interesting article but I think (on the basis a quick read through it) that it perhaps rather ignores an important point. The primary purpose of marriage - originally - was not to define the nature of the relationship between a man and a woman but to protect the ownership of property. To ensure that the wealth of a family would stay in that family and not be dispersed to heaven know who. This could only be accomplished by ensuring that any child could only be the offspring of an individual man and so ensuring that the mother was only sexually available to that man became institutionalised.Then along came religion and a dash of magic sanctity was added to the mix together with sin (and guilt) ... and "God" became involved.
Evidence? Otherwise I will regretfully have to file this under "bollocks".
Isn't that inherent in the idea of anachronism, HH?
I do not have any formal evidence, but I do recall hearing someone interested in the history of biblical times giving a similar explanation.Why do you say "regretfully"?