Here is a slightly abridged version of the Q and A entitled Living Together from the Diocese of Pennsylvania.
Download the one-page Executive Summary here.
1. What is cohabitation?
"Cohabitation" is commonly referred to as
"living together." It describes the relationship of a man and woman
who are sexually active and share a household, though they are not married.
2. Why is cohabitation such a concern?
Living together or cohabitation is a concern because the practice is so
common today and because, in the long run, it is causing great unhappiness for
families. This is true, above all, because - even though society
may approve of the practice - cohabitation simply cannot be squared with God's
plan for marriage. This may be why most couples who live together before
marriage find married life difficult to sustain for very long.
Our Christian faith teaches that a
sexual relationship belongs only in marriage. Sex outside of marriage shows
disrespect for the sacrament of marriage, the sacredness of sex, and human
dignity.
3. We have good reasons for living together before
our wedding. Why aren't our reasons acceptable?
Jesus' Church cares for you as a parent cares for a beloved
son or daughter. Knowing that cohabitation increases a couples' chance of
marital failure, the Jesus' Church wants to protect you and preserve your happiness.
Besides, most couples don't really evaluate the reasons they give to justify
their decision.
Think about it:
Reason 1: "It's more convenient for us."
"Convenience" is a good thing, but it's not the basis for making a
decision that will affect your entire life. Married life is sometimes
inconvenient and even demanding. Cohabitation for convenience is poor
preparation for that kind of commitment and for making wise life decisions. One study concluded that couples
who cohabit tend to experience superficial communication and uncommitted
decision-making once they are married.
Reason 2: "We're trying to save money for the wedding,
so living together is more economical."
Sure, you might save the price of monthly rent, but you're sacrificing
something more valuable. Engagement is more than just time to plan the party.
It is a time for deeper discussion and more thorough reflection, which are best
carried out in a detached way. Couples who are living together do not have the
luxury of such detachment. So whatever expenses you save, you'll likely pay
more in the end. Dr. Joyce Brothers said it well in an article on cohabitation:
"short-term savings are less important than investing in a lifetime
relationship."
Reason 3: "Because of the high divorce rate, we want
to see if things work out first."
Studies consistently show that couples who live together
before marriage actually have a 50% greater chance of divorce than those who
don't.
Reason 4: "We need to get to know one another first.
Later we'll start having kids."
Cohabitation is actually the worst way to get to know another person, because
it shortcuts the true development of lasting friendship. Those who live together before marriage often report an over-reliance on
sexual expression and less emphasis on conversation and other ways of
communication - ways that ultimately lead to a more fulfilling sexual
union after marriage. Traditionally, the process of dating or "courtship" has led couples
to a deeper appreciation of one another through conversation, shared ideals and
dreams, and a mutual understanding of one another's values.
Reason 5: "The Church is just outdated and out of
touch with its thinking in this matter. Birth control made those old rules
obsolete."
That's just not true. In the early days of the Church, living together outside
of marriage was common among the non-Christians in the Roman Empire - as was
the use of artificial contraception. But these practices were devastating for
individuals, families, and society. Women were treated as disposable objects,
mere toys for sexual pleasure, to be discarded when passions waned. The
Christian vision of marriage and family led to happiness and fulfillment for
individuals and families - and a great renewal of culture and society. Far from
being outmoded, then as now, the Church's teaching is revolutionary - and it
works!
4. Why does the Church interfere in the sex lives
of couples? It's really just a private matter between us.
Sex is intensely private and personal, but it also has deep
moral and social dimensions. Sex works as a primary bonding agent in families
and the family is the building block of society. Sexual rights and wrongs
influence the health and happiness of individuals, families and neighborhoods.
That's why sexual behavior has always been the subject of many civil laws.
The
Church, of course, wishes to safeguard the family and society. But, more than
that, the Church wishes to safeguard your relationship with your future spouse
and with God. Sex is the act that seals and renews the couple's marriage
covenant before God. Sexual sins, then, are not just between a man and a woman,
but between the couple and God. And that's the Church's responsibility. Sex is
not simply a private matter. If it's between you and God, it's between you and
the Church. You need to ask yourself: "When do I stop being a Christian?
When I close the bedroom door? When does my relationship with God cease to
matter?"
5. But, really, how does what we do with our own
bodies affect our relationship with each other and our spiritual relationship
with God?
The gift of your body in sexual intercourse is a profound
symbol of the giving of your whole self. In making love, the husband and wife
are saying to one another in "body language" what they said to each
other at the altar on their wedding day: "I am yours, for life!" God
created sex to be physically pleasurable and emotionally fulfilling. But it is
even greater than all that. It is, above all, the deepest sign of the complete
gift of self that a husband and wife pledge to each other. This mutual gift
empowers the couple to become co-creators with God in giving life to a new
person, a baby.
According to God's design, the gift of sexual union has two
primary purposes: strengthening married love and sharing that love with
children. The only "place" where this total self-giving between a man
and a woman is to take place is in marriage. It is the only "place"
where children can be raised with the secure, committed love of a mother and a
father. So sexual intimacy belongs only in marriage.
Outside of marriage, sex
is a lie. The action says: "I give you my whole self" - but the man
and woman are really holding back their commitment, their fertility, and their
relationship with God.
Before giving your body to another person, you need to give
your whole life, and you need to receive your spouse's whole life in return -
and that can only happen in marriage.
6. Why can't I just follow my conscience if I
believe living together is okay?
People can be wrong in matters of conscience, and people
often are. Where our self-interest is concerned, our capacity for self-deception
is huge. Here, as in everything we do, we need an objective standard to tell us
if our conscience is properly formed and able to make right judgments. Morality
is not a matter of opinion or "gut feeling." Conscience is God's
voice, speaking the truth deep within your heart. It's unlikely - if not
impossible - that God would contradict His own commandments just for your
convenience or desires. You are acting in good conscience when you choose to do
what God intends. The choice to live together outside a marriage is always
wrong and sinful.
7. Why does the Church claim that living together
is a scandal to others? Many of our family and friends are doing the same thing. Just because everyone does something doesn't make it right or any less serious.
A couple's choice to live together is not simply made in isolation. It affects
everyone in relationship with these two people - parents, brothers, sisters,
friends, and even other members of the parish. A cohabiting couple implicitly
communicates that there is nothing wrong breaking God's law. This can be
especially misleading to young children - nieces, nephews, and children of friends
- who are impressionable and whose moral reasoning is immature.
8. What is the best way to prepare ourselves
spiritually for our upcoming marriage?
"A wedding is for a day, but a marriage is for a
lifetime." That can be a long and happy time, but only with good
preparation. The best way to get ready for marriage is to practice your faith.
Catholics do this by faithful attendance at weekly Sunday Mass, by going to the
Sacrament of Penance (confession), by prayer, and by practicing works of
charity. If you haven't been attending Mass regularly, your parish priest will
want to see you back. If it's been a long time since your last confession, your
priest will help you. Confession is a necessary step if you have already been
cohabiting. During the days of preparation, you are strongly encouraged to pray
together as a couple, read Scripture, and lead a virtuous life. For guidance,
look to other couples with strong Christian values.
9. Why should we need to separate now? It's just an
arbitrary rule of the Church.
The Church's teaching on cohabitation is not an
"arbitrary" rule. Living together before marriage is a sin because it
violates God's commandments and the law of the Church. St. Paul lists this sin
- technically called "fornication" among the sins (whether within or
outside cohabitation) that can keep a person from reaching heaven (see 1
Corinthians 6:9) Cohabitation works against the heart's deepest desires and
greatly increases the chances of a failed marriage. If you are honest with
yourself, every practical consideration will tell you that separating before
marriage is the right thing to do. It is a decision to turn away from sin and
to follow Christ and His teaching. That is always the right decision.
But it's
a good decision for other important reasons, too:
-it will strengthen your
marriage
-it will deepen your friendship
-it will foster deeper intimacy and
communion
-it will build up your problem-solving and communications skills
-it
will give your marriage a greater chance for success.
You may think you are
unique and that your passion for each other will never wane. But that's what
most couples think. No one goes into marriage planning for a breakup; yet a
majority of couples today do break up. You want to be one of the exceptional
couples who not only succeed in marriage, but also live together in happiness
and fulfillment.
Some couples who are living together think that separation
before marriage is artificial or meaningless. Some fear that halting sexual
activity will be harmful to the relationship. But this is rarely the case.
Sometimes in marriage, too, a sexual relationship will have to be suspended for
a time due to illness, military service, business travel, or the good of a
spouse. Relationships not only survive this , but actually grow stronger. God
rewards such sacrifices with graces for a good relationship. Abstaining from
sex will also enable you to rely on other means of communication, which
ultimately will empower you to get to know each other in a deeper, lasting way.
10. What good will following the Church's teachings
do for us anyway?
Catholic teaching in this matter brings rich blessings to
those couples who willingly accept it. The Good News of Jesus frees you to
enjoy intimacy even more:
-by appreciating your spouse as a person, not an object
-by living in a stable, secure, permanent, and faithful relationship
-by expressing true, committed love rather than simply satisfying a physical
urge
Married life has a special place in God's plan. Like everything good, it
require sacrifices. But they're small compared to the rewards. Seek first the
Kingdom of God; everything else you desire will be given to you - and more!
TEACHINGS OF THE MAGISTERIUM
God is the author of marriage
"The intimate community of life and love which
constitutes the married state has been established by the Creator and endowed
by him with its own proper laws . . . God himself is the author of
marriage."
- The Church in the Modern World, Vatican II, 48
"At the beginning, the Creator made them male and
female and declared for this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and
cleave to his wife. And the two shall become as one. Thus, they are no longer
two but one flesh. Therefore, let no man separate what God has joined." - Matthew 19:4-6
Why sex should happen only within marriage
"Sexuality, by means of which man and woman give
themselves to one another through the acts which are proper and exclusive to
spouses . . . is realized in a truly human way only if it is an integral part
of the love by which a man and woman commit themselves totally to one another
until death . . .That total physical self-giving would be a lie if it were not
the sign and fruit of a total personal self-giving." - Familiaris Consortio, Pope John Paul II, 11
John Paul II's list of serious consequences of living together:
1. Religious and moral consequences
a) the loss of the
religious sense of marriage seen in the light of the Covenant of God with His
people;
b) deprivation of the grace of the sacrament;
c) grave scandal
2. Social consequences
a) the destruction of the concept of the family;
b) the
weakening of the sense of fidelity, also towards society;
c) possible
psychological damage to the children;
d) the strengthening of selfishness.
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