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I think you make a good point. If I understand you correctly, you're trying to say that marriage without legal recognition is just as valid as one validated by the state. You are correct.
The legal document produced by the state known as a marriage certificate does not usually involve placing vows because it is received from a courthouse. This legal document is simply for tax purposes and other legalities that can arise. It isn't a requirement.
A marriage without the documents and legal red tape is still a marriage, it just isn't legally binding by the state; God still recognizes marriage.
I think some states have what is known as "common law" where if you're living with an alleged spouse for X number of years then they are a defacto husband or wife for legal purposes.
So you're right.
The legal document produced by the state known as a marriage certificate does not usually involve placing vows because it is received from a courthouse. This legal document is simply for tax purposes and other legalities that can arise. It isn't a requirement.
A marriage without the documents and legal red tape is still a marriage, it just isn't legally binding by the state; God still recognizes marriage.
I think some states have what is known as "common law" where if you're living with an alleged spouse for X number of years then they are a defacto husband or wife for legal purposes.
So you're right.
If you google 'what is a common law marriage' you will discover that it was first set up to recognize couples who met on the frontier and were living as husband and wife and had children and were settling the frontier where there were no ministers or justice of the peace for many miles around so that it was determined that such women in particular should not be ostracized or considered as living in sin by the married women of the towns that were developing and treated as immoral sinners, so they created the law that they should be considered married as common law. Nevertheless they still had to apply for this through letters to the court.
You have to apply for this from the court. You can't say me and my girlfriend are common law married because we have been living together for x amount of years and the common marriage laws do not state that. You might decide this is not working out and ask your girlfriend of 10 years to leave and she could sue you for half your record collection and say she is your common law wife but the courts do not recognize this without it having been applied for and agreed upon by both parties. One person cannot declare common law without both parties applying for and agreeing to this.
In Ancient Israel as far back as you can go marriage was a contract that WAS WRITTEN and recorded. It has always included witnesses, vows, covenant contract agreements. These records were recorded in the Temple and so up until 70 AD these records could be researched and this is why you have the genealogy of Jesus in Matthew and Luke recorded, as the authors were able to record documented evidence from temple records.
NEVER in ancient history of the Jews or in Christian history has a marriage been recognized by shacking up and the couple saying "we believe God sees us as married because we are planning to make it official later in the future but just have not yet gotten around to it." If you are doing that, and I am speaking to anyone who reads this post, or if you know anyone who is doing that (and there are many today even in our churches) they should repent of fornication, separate from each other and plan their wedding and not come together again until after they have made their marriage "official" or covenanted with vows, certificates, legal and documented etc.
This is what all good pastors will tell such couples though it should be said with love, patience and kindness it nevertheless should be said. We cannot compromise on these issues.
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