Perhaps this
is not the best place to discuss marriage, having had only one ceremony and
that over five decades ago in another world.
It was a village
Church ceremony, to avoid
the need for conveyances and a journey into town for the Registrar. It was the second of the day and almost
closer in time never mind in form to the one pictured above.
This
enabled our congregation to enjoy the splendid flower arrangements made for the
previous couple. They wished to get it
over early as they were off to an exotic location in Devon
by first class rail, we were headed for somewhere closer and less costly. Begin as you mean to go on.
In those
days, despite all the assiduous romantic propaganda of the media of the time,
as well as writers and necessarily the commercial interests involved it was
common for people marrying to have a strong practical outlook on the
business. But time has moved on.
The
essential problem in all the recent howling and raging in Parliament and the
media is words and their meanings. Clearly,
what people see as marriage and the purpose of it differs between groups and
too often there is a lack of clear understanding of what it means, never mind
the history.
The
original intention was to try to give a longish outline about what marriage has
been and what it meant down the ages in the various elements of our society and
how it worked in practice. This would
have taken a full scale essay so the point is made simply that the past may not
have been what we think or assume from much of what we read in books.
The detail
matters and having trawled around a very large number of families of all
classes and different faiths, later census returns and the rest and with both
social and economic structures in mind of the periods in question, the past is
not what it is claimed to be and we should not assume too much from it.
What is
striking and this has been mentioned before is that there two distinct
elements, that relating to law and that to religion. To be certain in law there had to be a contract
or settlement, signed, sealed and delivered.
Then to fulfil the higher purpose and sanctity there was a religious
ceremony.
Unluckily,
given ordinary human frailties, there was a lot went wrong which led eventually
to State intervention with rules and regulation to ensure State law was
complied with and to provide a common structure.
All this
proceeded on the basic assumption that “marriage” was between an adult male and
an adult female and was likely to involve producing children. As well as social laws bearing on this a
great deal of probate law related to it as well.
Those
concerned still had to proceed with care.
Once you were in you were in and it was made hard to get out. If you had other arrangements then you were
not covered in law or by the state.
During the 20th Century all this began to change.
By
definition this form of “marriage” was restricted and then never intended to
apply to other types of partnership or personal arrangements of any kind. There might be some of these where those
concerned regarded themselves as good as married for practical purposes but
they were still outside its scope and legal applications.
What has
now happened is that we have a muddled set of compromises where “marriage” now
legally assumes that it is the ceremony that matters in defining arrangements
that are normally sexually based no matter who is involved.
The effect
of this has been further discrimination in that all the other pairings of
people living together, for whatever reason and in whatever form, are excluded
from the legal benefits and advantages allowed to legal marriage, however
socially useful or personally beneficial they are to the people involved.
To raise
the question of “care in the community”, we have the strange situation that if this
kind of care is carried out by State or private agencies there are ways and
means of supporting it. But if two
relatives or friends come together for some form of support they can be
excluded and in fact discriminated against at the present time.
Essentially,
this is a complete nonsense. What is
needed if “marriage” is no longer confined to the earlier form of male plus
female life or long term co-habitation or partnership is a wholly new basis of
contract. This would allow all forms of
these to be State registered and acknowledged as part of our essential social and
contractual personal arrangements.
So what is
needed is something like a Mutual Arrangement Long Term (MALT) that adheres to
an agreed form and meets certain simple but defined criteria. A MALT might be a life contract or for a set
period or related to set circumstances.
This can be
between anyone, including all those adult categories at present excluded from
marriage. It would have particular
advantages where care might be needed or in many small business
arrangements.
A traditional
form of ceremony might be an additional extra option. The basic duty of the Registrar would be to
make sure the MALT was correct and the people involved knew what they were
signing up for. If a complicated
contract was involved then legal advice should be involved.
As for
religion, if a pairing was consistent with whatever faith group, denomination,
religion, chapel, church or meeting hall they might belong to, that would be
entirely up to those involved in relation to the ceremony to be held. If such a group had its own definitions as to
what “marriage” might be that is up to them.
Now, to
check the diary, the anniversary must be soon.
This year we hope to be at a performance of “Alice In Wonderland”.
At least it
will have more logic than what is going on in Parliament.
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