Thursday, February 08, 2007

Marriage 'an act of heroism' - CofE Primate

Married couples who stay together are unsung 'heroes' according to the head of the Church of England, Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams.

Speaking at the launch of National Marriage Week, Dr Williams said that the institution of marriage was 'for life; and that doesn't just mean life-long, important as that is. It means for life; that is for an enhanced kind of human experience.'

Marriage 'says to the children of that marriage, it's quite possible to live as a human being, not afraid at any moment that you're going to be let down, abandoned,' the Archbishop continued.

This was why marriage was vital in building the trust necessary for the maintaining of a stable society, he said.

The alternative, the Archbishop argued, were 'transient and fraught, intense and violent relationships' which characterised the gang culture which was all too prevalent in some urban parts of Britain.

'If that's the only kind of stable background people know, well we can expect the disasters that we see.'

Marriage, he insisted, had given society a 'moral geography' which had been created by an earlier generation. Many who now downgraded the importance of marriage were 'trading off the inherited capital of a stability and yes, a prosaic heroism that's evolved over generations.'

He added that the 'commentating classes of north London' may not be able to fully appreciate the value of marriage, or the costs associated with its decline, 'but you don't have to go very many miles to see what the cost is for people who can't take that sort of thing for granted.'

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