Criticism of Marriage - Criticism of Contemporary Views On Marriage

Criticism of Contemporary Views On Marriage

By the 21st century, the nature of marriage in Western countries—particularly with regard to the significance of procreation and the ease of divorce—had begun to change.

John Witte, Jr., Professor of Law and director of the Law and Religion Program at Emory University, warns that contemporary liberal attitudes toward marriage ultimately will produce a family that is "haphazardly bound together in the common pursuit of selfish ends".

In From Sacrament to Contract, Witte has argued that John Stuart Mill's secular and contractarian conceptualisation of marriage, based on Enlightenment presuppositions, provided the theoretical justification for the present-day transformation of Anglo-American marriage law.

Romano Cessario, a Catholic Professor of Systematic Theology, in a review of Witte’s book (From Sacrament to Contract) in First Things, suggests that an answer to Nietzche's pessimism (as echoed by Witte) and one that might address the current state of marriage in the West would be to revive the sacramental view of marriage among Christians.

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    The critic lives at second hand. He writes about. The poem, the novel, or the play must be given to him; criticism exists by the grace of other men’s genius. By virtue of style, criticism can itself become literature. But usually this occurs only when the writer is acting as critic of his own work or as outrider to his own poetics, when the criticism of Coleridge is work in progress or that of T.S. Eliot propaganda.
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    For the marriage bed ordained by fate for men and women is stronger than an oath and guarded by Justice.
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