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Religion Newswire 202-546-0054
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Persuading Cohabiting Couples to Move Apart
-- Can it be Done?
Contact: Melissa Teutsch, 318-396-3122 ext. 144 MEDIA
ADVISORY, March 19 /Christian
Newswire/ -- Final Briefing (#3) on the book, "Living Together: Myths,
Risks & Answers" will be Thursday, March 20th at 2 p.m. ET. Call (641)
715-3200, Dial in Access Code 640718# In the first
briefing, Mike McManus noted that the number of cohabiting couples soared
12-fold from 430,000 in 1960 to 5.4 million couples in 2006. With only 2.2
million marriages, cohabitation is the dominant way male-female unions are
formed. Yet few realize that cohabitation is a double cancer of marriage.
First, it’s diverted millions from getting married. There were 21 million
never-married Americans in 1970, but 60 million in 2006 – a tripling while
population grew only 48%. It is also a killer at the center of marriage.
Couples who live together before marriage are 50% more likely to divorce
than those who remained apart. "Living
Together" outlines five Answers, three of which were covered in Session #2: 1. Give
couples a premarital inventory 2. Train
couples in healthy marriages to mentor couples preparing for marriage. 3. Teach
communication and conflict resolution skills Answers #4
and #5 will be addressed in this final briefing. Answer #4:
Move Apart The most
important step a cohabiting couple can take to increase their odds of a
lifelong marriage, is to move apart. However, how can they be persuaded to
do so? The McManuses have found these arguments work with some couples: 1. Moving
apart will solve some problems. They frequently argue about the fair share
each contributes to household expense. Moving apart ends that debate. 2.
Separation offers a new beginning, a chance to take a fresh look at each
other. 3. It aligns
their relationship with God’s will, to live apart till the wedding. 4. It also
offers time, space and hope, if they take rigorous marriage preparation. Answer #5:
Remain Chaste Until the Wedding In an
exercise called “The Optional Premarital Sexual Covenant,” we offer data
showing that sexually active couples are two-thirds more likely to divorce
than those who remain chaste. Therefore we ask couples to consider signing a
pledge to stop having sex. If they sign and fall short, they have to tell
their mentors. Of the 58 couples the McManuses have personally mentored,
only nine were chaste when they came to them. Of the 49 others, 43 signed
on. None of the couples they mentored divorced. To request a review copy of "Living Together," email melissa.teutsch@howardpublishing.com. |
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