Feb 14, 2014
As one who has given talks at diocesan engagement encounters, led Cana marriage programs at the local parish and personally advised spouses who were in distressed and broken marriages, I have come to learn over the years that fewer people are being prepared for the demands of marriage. What used to be common sense, as far as making relationships work, has become uncommon; something that doesn’t come quite as naturally to us anymore.
After all, Hollywood and the entertainment industry at large so emphasizes and even glorifies the first phases of romantic and sexual love that it completely ignores self-denial and the virtues that are required for a life-long marriage. Perhaps, this is why so many television programs are centered on unmarried or divorced/remarried couples. Hollywood produces these kinds of television shows and movies precisely because this is all they know! Indeed, their lifestyle and values leads to a total disillusionment of that "forever kind of love", the kind of love that comes natural to couples who do really “fall in love.”
This, of course, is not a recipe for success. What is needed, in part, for a happy marriage is to live by a hierarchy of values or priorities: God being the first priority, the spouse being second, children third, parents fourth etc. Married couples make many mistakes when this divinely ordained order is not observed. Some of these mistakes, no doubt, have to do with in-laws.
Inevitably, the in-law factor comes into play in every marriage. In some marriages, in-laws are blessing; yet, in other marriages, they are a burden. And it is unfortunate that many people do not realize before the wedding day that to marry a person is to marry his or her family. Indeed, when man and woman say “I do,” they make a vow to more than just one person.