A marriage vow is a special and powerful promise — and we need it for many reasons. If you’re living together but you’re not married yet, consider the power of the vow.
Many couples wonder if marriage is really worth it. What is the difference between being married and living together? What can saying wedding vows do for your relationship? And is living together before marriagereally a sin?
If there is no power behind a marriage vow, then there is no point in a marriage. But vows do hold power. The vows you say on your wedding day have the ability to bind you and your partner, protect you, strengthen you and your partner’s trust, and improve your life together.
Table of Contents
Living Without Vow Power
I’d been married less than two years and was already contemplating divorce. Had it really been such a short time since my husband, Jeff, and I stood at a church altar and said our wedding vows? In my fancy ivory dress and with 200 family members and friends watching, I’d vowed “till death do us part” to Jeff. I’d promised to stay with him forever — for better or for worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health.
And yet there I sat with Jeff, dividing our record collection as I planned to move out.
When I married at age 24, I hadn’t surrendered my life to Christ, and God was not part of my life. Consequently, I knew nothing about true love. When I found myself physically attracted to another man, and realized he also had interest in me, I felt confused. Do I really love Jeff if I am attracted to this other man?
I didn’t know the difference between unconditional love and pure physical attraction. Because of my lack of knowledge, I thought I’d made a mistake by getting married. Never mind that I still considered Jeff my best friend and respected him as a person. Never mind that I still loved him.
Unconditional Love
Even though I was obsessed with this attraction to another man, and even though I was accustomed to following my feelings wherever they led me, two things saved me from making a life-altering mistake: a Christian book in our apartment that explained the true meaning of love, and the wedding vow I’d made. And of course, God was reaching out to me through that book and the vow.
I still remember staying up all night reading the book Jeff’s mother had given him. I’d been packing and getting ready to move out of our apartment when I came across it. Its promise to clearly define love appealed to me.
After I’d read it, I looked into the mirror of our apartment’s bathroom and said to myself, I made a vow. It doesn’t matter what I feel at this moment. Feelings come and go. Vows and unconditional love stick around.
My marriage vow kept me from making a grave mistake. Without it, I would have lost a lifetime of love. This special promise is powerful — and we need it for many reasons. If you’re living together but you’re not married yet, consider the power of the vow.