Evangelicals and Catholics Together–The Two Shall Become One Flesh: Reclaiming Marriage

arriage is in crisis throughout the Western world. The data from the United States alone tell an unmistakable””and unmistakably sad””story. Fifty years ago, some 70 percent of American adults were married; today the figure is just over 50 percent. Then, close to 90 percent of children lived with their natural parents; today fewer than two-thirds do. The birth rate has declined, and the abortion rate has climbed from less than 1 percent of live births to over 20 percent.

Everyone suffers from the current crisis in marriage, but some suffer more than others. A growing class divide is becoming alarmingly clear. College-educated men and women marry and are unlikely to get divorced. The less educated are less likely to ­marry, and those who do so are three times more likely to get divorced. Rates of illegitimacy are even more striking. A very small percentage of college-educated women have children out of wedlock (6 percent). Nearly half of women without a college education now have children out of wedlock.

In considering the demise of marriage culture and the decline of the institution of marriage, we are profoundly aware of the challenge posed by the Lord, that “whatever you did to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me” (Matt. 25:40). The effects of the decline of marriage on children are dramatic, unequal, and deeply disturbing. Among the well-educated and economically well-off, the traditional family remains the norm. This is no longer true for children born to less educated and less affluent women. By age fourteen, nearly half of these children no longer live with both parents, posing dire consequences for their futures. Young men raised in broken families are more likely to go to prison. Young women in these circumstances are more likely to become pregnant as unwed teenagers. The dramatic decline of marriage is a major factor in the misery of many in our society.

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3 comments on “Evangelicals and Catholics Together–The Two Shall Become One Flesh: Reclaiming Marriage

  1. MichaelA says:

    Great to see many Evangelical and Catholic teachers and leaders joining publicly on this.

  2. Todd Granger says:

    Marvelous. And that’s an impressive list of signatories.

  3. Br. Michael says:

    We are in for a long and cold winter of Christian persecution if all the believing Christians, Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox don’t put aside their familiar quarrels and pull together. If we don’t then the secularists will pick us off one by one. And I would add believing Jews who will also refuse to bow to secularism.