5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Thorough, December 31, 2009
This review is from: Marriage: An Orthodox Perspective (Paperback)
Fr. John Meyendorff's Marriage: An Orthodox Perspective offers overviews of the major themes that Orthodox couples are likely to come across in marriage as well as explanations of the meaning of the Orthodox wedding ceremony and its history and development. Following are some of the highlights of the book:
1. Wedding as a Separate Rite
Section VI, "The Contemporary Rite of Betrothal," offers one example of how the form of marriage developed over the centuries in the Orthodox Church. "The new responsibility given to the Church by the laws of Emperors Leo VI and Alexis I--that of giving formal legitimacy to all marriages--required the adoption of new liturgical forms. These new forms, on the one hand, were to be separate from the Eucharist and, on the other hand, had to reflect the eternal and unchangeable teachings of the Church about the meaning of marriage" (p. 29). Although the Orthodox Church views herself as having preserving certain truths since the days of the Apostles, it cannot be said that the form of the marriage ceremony has been remained unchanged since those days. "Orthodox Byzantium, with its remarkable ability to interpret Scripture, to relate it to the central mystery of Christ, to use signs and symbols in expressing the meaning of the Christian faith, produced in the tenth and eleventh centuries the two present-day Orthodox services of betrothal and crowing" (p. 29). The betrothal service takes the place of the marriage contract. In it, the bride and the groom each promise to one another faithfulness. "It was originally a civil ceremony. By assuming responsibility for it, the Church did not suppress the legal and moral obligations imposed by the Old Testament law, by roman law and still maintained by our own contemporary society. She rather provided them with a new Biblical and spiritual meaning" (p. 30).
2. "Mixed" Marriages
Fr. John recognizes the reality of "mixed" marriages between Orthodox Christians and non-Orthodox Christians in a pluralistic society such as ours. "It is certainly possible," he writes, "without being members of the same Church, to enjoy friendship, to share interests, to experience a true character compatibility, and, of course, to `be in love' with each other." Yet Fr. John cautions against these relationships: "the question is whether all these human affinities can be transformed and transfigured in the reality of the Kingdom of God if one does not share the same experience of what this Kingdom is, if one is not committed to the same and unique Faith" (p. 51). For Fr. John, one's faith is not merely "Christian," but rather, "Orthodox Christian," or "Protestant Christian," etc. I would contend, however, that one's faith is not in a denomination; rather, it is in Christ. Two Christians who have encountered the living Christ and who have been transformed by His love do share the same faith, and the potential for a love relationship between them knows no limits, even if they belong to separate denominations. Fr. John later concedes this point, writing that we all know of some mixed marriages that "lead to the creation of happy families, and it would be unwise and utopian to discourage them all. Actually, it may well be that some of such marriages end up being more durable and happier than those contracted by nominal Orthodox who never heard about the meaning of Christian marriage and who never accepted personally and responsibly any true Christian commitment" (p. 52). Despite this fact, Fr. John considers the act of blessing the marriage outside of the Orthodox Church to be an obvious "betrayal of the sacramental grace received from [the Orthodox Church] at baptism and is, in fact, inconsistent with Church membership" (p. 53).
3. Family and Family Planning
a) Overview
Fr. John begins by offering an overview of the Christian meaning of marriage and sex. "[O]ne of the essential differences between the Old Testament Judaic conception of marriage and the Christian one was that, for the ancient Jews, marriage was a means for procreation only, while, for Christians, it is an end in itself--a union of two beings, in love, reflecting the union between Christ and the Church" (p. 59). For the Orthodox, sex and marriage, in addition to the function of procreation, offers the husband and wife a union that reflects God's love and is thus unto their spiritual edification.
b) The Question of Birth Control Presented
I expected Fr. John to come across harshly against the use of artificial birth control, since it frustrates one of the ends of the marital relationship--procreation. Rather, he poses a series of difficult questions and then states that the Church has no one official rule that is to be applied across all couples. He begins by discussing the issues that have led couples to consider family planning: "if the `life' given by parents to their children is to be a fully human life, it cannot involve only physical existence, but also parental care, education and decent living. When they beget children, parents must be ready to fulfill all these responsibilities. There obviously are economic, social or psychological situations where no guarantees can be given in this respect. And there is something even a near certainty that the newly born children will live in hunger and psychological misery. In those situations, various forms of family panning, as old as humanity itself, have been always known to men and women" (p. 61-2).
Fr. John goes on to discuss the various options available to couples, including total continence, which "the New Testament and Church tradition consider [to be] an acceptable form of family planning" (p. 62), periodic continence, as taught in the Roman Catholic Church, and "artificial" contraception, such as the "pill." He then presents a series of questions as to the ethics of selecting one form of birth control over another: "is there a real difference between the means called `artificial' and those considered `natural'? Is continence really `natural'? Is not any medical control of human functions `artificial'? Should it, therefore, be condemned as sinful? And finally, a serious theological question: is anything `natural' necessarily `good'?" (p. 62). "Straight condemnation of birth-control," he concludes, "fails to give satisfactory answers to all these questions" (p. 62). Fr. John instead suggests that each couple may experience the right answers in a different way.
c) The Case Against Birth Control
I understand that, as Fr. John states, the Church as a whole has not pronounced a universal teaching on contraception. Yet its seems clear to me that artificial birth control is a wrong that should be avoided. One of the chief purposes of marriage is procreation; to thwart this end or to limit the size of family seems to me to undermine the very institution of marriage. Certainly, there are times when limiting the size of one's family is prudent, such as when a couple lacks the means to care for a child. Yet even in these situations, to do so using artificial contraception counters nature and is detrimental to the spiritual and physical health of the partners. The "barrier" methods of birth control prevent the act from becoming what it was intended to be: a complete fusion of man and woman. Many of the drugs, such as the pill, have serious adverse health effects on the woman's body. Other methods, such as spermicides, give the message that one accepts the spouse fully, but rejects his fertility. The complete giving and receiving in the sexual act is undermined by such methods and the natural end of the sexual act is undermined.
Natural family planning, in contrast, is able to obtain the same ends as artificial birth control, but in a way that is in keeping with nature. When the couple is able to practice periodic continence when the woman is fertile, nature is not thwarted, for sexual intercourse during the female's infertile period does not have the natural end of conception. Furthermore, the couple learns the virtue of self-control by limiting sexual intercourse to such times and the spiritual and physical health of the partners is not threatened.
The comparison of artificial birth control to the use of medicine seems to me to be apt. Whereas medicines seek to restore God's intent of blessing man with good health, birth control thwarts His intent for partners to be fruitful and multiply. Whereas medicines curing people of illness are in accord with the natural end of man to live a long life and prosper, artificial birth control counters one of the natural ends of sexual intercourse: procreation. Medicine seeks to correct an evil that is not within God's divine intent; artificial birth control seeks to throw off course a good that God intended.
4. Appendices
The book concludes with five appendices that deal with: (I) the New Testament's references to marriage; (II) the tradition of the Church, as recorded in the writings of the Fathers; (III) the Church's Canon Law based on the Ecumenical Councils, local councils, and writings of the Fathers endorsed by the Councils; (IV) an explanation of the liturgical tradition of the marriage ceremony; and (V) a reproduction of the marriage ceremony, including both the service of betrothal and the crowning.
Among the most moving accounts of marriage are those of Fr. Alexander Elchaninov (1881-1934), which are reproduced in Appendix II. Fr. Alexander writes: "Marriage is a revelation and a mystery. We see in it the complete transformation of a human being, the expansion of his personality, fresh vision, and new perception of life, and through it a rebirth into the world in a new plenitude (p. 96).
"Marriage, fleshly love, is a very great sacrament and mystery. Through it is accomplished the most real and at the same time the most mysterious of all possible...
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