Friday, April 17, 2009

faith, money, the GOP, and marriage

What makes for a great marriage? I'm sure the usual suspects of commitment, respect, shared values, mutual attraction, and love are still the major ingredients that blend together to create a great love story. But without regard for the quality of the union, what makes for a marriage that lasts?

A recent Barna Group study (March 31, 2008) indicates:

* 78% of U.S. adults have been married at least once and 33% of those have been divorced at least once
* 84% of born-again Christian adults have tied the knot
* 74% of people aligned with non-Christian faiths
* 65% of atheists and agnostics

Who has the highest divorce rates?

* 39% of downscale adults
* 38% of Baby Boomers
* 38% of those aligned with a non-Christian faith
* 36% of African-Americans
* 37% of people who define themselves to be socially and politically liberal

The lowest likelihood of divorce?

* 28% of Catholics
* 26% of Evangelicals
* 22% of upscale adults
* 28% of those who deem themselves socially and politically conservative

The difference between those most likely and least likely to divorce is 17 points and a 45% swing, which is significant. But without running cross-tabulations and looking at these numbers over time it's impossible to draw any rational or emperical conclusions.

But that's never stopped me before!

My modest suggestion for giving your marriage a stimulus package is more focus on your career and your faith - and strongly consider voting Republican in the next election.

2 comments:

  1. Or you can just be "unhappily married ever after" like most of the conservative catholics we all know. You know the old you have your bed and I have mine, loving, we haven't kissed in 20 years but still here because divorce is a sin happy household. ;)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Most? Hope not! ;-) As noted in the blog, was addressing longetivity not quality. That said, I suspect commitment has some rewards of its own.

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So what do you think?