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Member since Oct 18, 2009, follows 0 people, 0 public groups, 968 public bookmarks (971 total).

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  • About | Outside the Building on 2009-10-29
  • Mark Regnerus -- Freedom to Marry Young - washingtonpost.com on 2009-10-22
    • The fault lies less with indecisive young people than it does with us, their parents. Our own ideas about marriage changed as we climbed toward career success. Many of us got our MBAs, JDs, MDs and PhDs. Now we advise our children to complete their education before even contemplating marriage, to launch their careers and become financially independent.
    • But our children now sense that marrying young may be not simply foolish but also wrong and socially harmful.
    • 1 more annotations...
  • The Case for Early Marriage | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction on 2009-10-22
    • The importance of Christian marriage as a symbol of God's covenantal faithfulness to his people—and a witness to the future union of Christ and his bride—will only grow in significance as the wider Western culture diminishes both the meaning and actual practice of marriage. Marriage itself will become a witness to the gospel.
    • If a young couple displays maturity, faith, fidelity, a commitment to understanding marriage as a covenant, and a sense of realism about marriage, then it's our duty—indeed, our pleasure—to help them expedite the part of marriage that involves public recognition and celebration of what God is already knitting together. We ought to "rejoice and delight" in them, and praise their love (Song of Sol. 1:4).
  • The Case for Early Marriage | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction on 2009-10-22
    • In other words, our freedom to serve as singles or our submission as married people is never intended to be about us. It's about God.
    • The abstinence industry perpetuates a blissful myth; too much is made of the explosively rewarding marital sex life awaiting abstainers. The fact is that God makes no promises of great sex to those who wait. Some experience difficult marriages. Spouses wander. Others cannot conceive children.
  • The Case for Early Marriage | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction on 2009-10-22
    • naïveté may actually benefit youth, since preferences and habits ingrained over years of single life often are not set aside easily. Let's face it: Young adults are inexperienced, but they are not intrinsically incompetent at marriage. So they need, of course, the frank guidance of parents, mentors, and Christian couples.
    • Weddings become expensive displays of personal and family status
    • 2 more annotations...
  • The Case for Early Marriage | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction on 2009-10-22
    • Most young Americans no longer think of marriage as a formative institution, but rather as the institution they enter once they think they are fully formed. Increasing numbers of young evangelicals think likewise, and, by integrating these ideas with the timeless imperative to abstain from sex before marriage, we've created a new optimal life formula for our children: Marriage is glorious, and a big deal. But it must wait. And with it, sex. Which is seldom as patient.
    • Yet the mentality that we need to shield young adults from the usual struggles of life by encouraging them to delay marriage until they are financially secure usually rests on an unrealistic standard of living.
    • 3 more annotations...
  • The Case for Early Marriage | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction on 2009-10-22
    • The answer is pretty straightforward: While our sexual ideals have remained biblical and thus rooted in marriage, our ideas about marriage have changed significantly. For all the heated talk and contested referendums about defending marriage against attempts to legally redefine it, the church has already ceded plenty of intellectual ground in its marriage-mindedness. Christian practical ethics about marriage—not the ones expounded on in books, but the ones we actually exhibit—have become a nebulous hodgepodge of pragmatic norms and romantic imperatives, few of which resemble anything biblical.
    • he answer is pretty straightforward: While our sexual ideals have remained biblical and thus rooted in marriage, our ideas about marriage have changed significantly. For all the heated talk and contested referendums about defending marriage against attempts to legally redefine it, the church has already ceded plenty of intellectual ground in its marriage-mindedness. Christian practical ethics about marriage—not the ones expounded on in books, but the ones we actually exhibit—have become a nebulous hodgepodge of pragmatic norms and romantic imperatives, few of which resemble anything biblical.
    • 3 more annotations...
  • Diigo Blog » Tip of the day: Use Diigo + Del.icio.us Simultaneously on 2009-10-18
  • Blogger Template Xtremeblogg | BTemplates on 2009-10-18
  • Protonema on 2009-10-18

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