What if we paid you $25,000 to set them up on some fun dates in beautiful locales, and we film it?
(Sorry for answering for you,
@Lynx, but I'm pretty sure I already know the answer. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.)
1. Lynx's mother is happily remarried, so the only one she'd be going on dates with is her husband now.
2. You'd have to come up with another bribe other than $25,000 (and to be honest, I can't think of one that he'd be tempted by.)
Lynx, as well as a few other people I've met here on CC, are among the least likely people I've ever met to be swayed by money. The only value they see in money (aside from normal living costs) is how it can be used to help other people. And even then, they would rather earn it by themselves rather than take part in what they would see as coercion.
As for my own parents, I stopped counting when they hit their 50the anniversary. My grandparents reached 64, and it was only death that parted them.
My parents have been very blessed but there have definitely been some rough times.
I think some people look at long marriages and assume they have been wedding-day bliss all the way through, every single day, which usually just isn't true. While my parents were spared from all this, most of the other long-term Christian marriages I have been around have gone through things that almost broke them up (affairs, "not being in love anymore," death of a child, stress over health issues, loss of jobs, etc.) or led to being separated (sometimes more than once.)
I don't want to rain on anyone's parade, but I think that when we hear about people being married for several decades, we're often unaware of all the hard work and heartache that went on (and may still be going on) behind the scenes.
Staying, or getting back together, does not always equal happiness -- sometimes it's also out of obligation or Christian duty.