Marriage strengthens families, communities, and nations, and the changes to marriage bring both strengths and weaknesses. My textbook has proportions for the different living conditions for children in 1960 to those in 2014.
Two parents in first marriage 75% 47%
Two parents in second marriage 14% 15%
Cohabitating parents ---- 7%
Single parents 9% 26%
No parent 4% 5%
A recent study titled What’s the Plan? Cohabitation, Engagement, and Divorce (2023) by Scott M. Stanley and Galena K. Rhodes has some interesting information. The study found that 50 to 65 percent of Americans believe that cohabitation before marriage will strengthen a later marriage. Yet, statistics show that cohabitating couples who marry have a higher risk of divorce than couples who do not cohabitate prior to the wedding ceremony. Here are the key takeaways of the study.
• Not living together before marriage, or
only doing so after already being engaged to marry, is associated with a lower
likelihood of marriages ending than living together before being engaged.
• Couples might lower their risks of
divorce by having clear intentions to marry before moving in together or by
waiting until marriage to live together.
• Reasons for moving in together also
matter: People who reported that their top reason for moving in together was
either to test the relationship or because it made sense financially were more
likely to see their marriages end than those who did so because they wanted to
spend more time with their partner.
• Having a greater number of prior
cohabiting partners is associated with a higher likelihood of marriages ending.
• Talking about what living together means
and making a decision together about it (rather than sliding into it) might
help lower the risk of marital difficulties for some couples who will live
together before marriage. Clarifying marital intentions may be a particularly
important goal for such discussions.
Although
the percentage of people cohabitating is smaller than those married, the takeaways
listed above show that there are dangers to cohabitation. The myth that cohabitation
is preparation for marriage needs to be debunked because it does not strengthen
marriages. Stronger marriages make stronger families, communities, and nations.
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