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But I would challenge you: if love is so important, then why not make a commitment to it and make it legally binding? Why not go ahead and make that lifetime commitment? Think about it: "I love you, honey, but not enough to actually commit to spending my life with you."
I actually think you missed the point. You can have a life partnership with someone without going through the marriage process. The idea of marriage is strictly social. You can spend your whole life with someone without marrying them. Plus, with the way most of society looks at marriage, it actually almost seems pointless. But, I digress yet again.
Plus, you don't have to have it be legally binding to have it be genuine. If you love someone enough, you don't have to get married. Marriage, in the way that many view it, is merely a social construct.
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And I don't think you're assessment that it is "merely a word" is adequate, because that word carries with it a host of both legal and spiritual ramifications. In other words, you would have an extremely difficult time proving that it is only a word and has no real meaning. Love may be the root, but marriage is what makes that love binding.
Love doesn't always mean having to get married. You can love someone in that way and still be with them for the rest of your life without getting married. I've known people that have been together exclusively for years (10+) without getting married.
Now that you think about it, people not getting married would cut into your paycheck.
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Let me clarify what I'm saying: people do make mistakes. If a woman ended up pregnant with a guy she really wasn't committed to, I wouldn't suggest she marry him just for the sake of the child. I would suggest she do whatever she can within her power to care for that child to the best of her ability. What I'm saying is, why go through that headache? Why not just wait until you find someone you can make that sort of commitment with?
Well, you can be committed to someone without being married. Just because a couple isn't married does not mean that they are not committed to eachother as a married couple would be. It is their choice.
The idea of marriage has been so ingrained into the social consciousness that it seems that it is the only option for expressing ones love for another and desire to be with them until the end. But, no, it isn't. We have free will.
In the course of child rearing, if both are still together, marriage doesn't matter. Most don't these days anyways.
Being a romantic at heart, I will get married. But not by the conventions that christianized culture has imposed. Nor do I think I will have it be a marriage sanctioned by the state. I don't feel obligated to have it sanctioned by the state. You don't need a tax form to show how much you love someone. Bureaucracy is no way to express love.