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A Perfect Match
Matchmaker, Matchmaker, make me a match; Find
me a find, catch me a catch. Matchmaker, Matchmaker, look through
your book, And make me a perfect match. from Fiddler on the Roof
Nobody likes to be forced into a relationship. Being "set up" for
a date, or being
continually hounded about one's romantic life by
sincere but overbearing family members and friends can be unsettling,
to say the least. And even though a person may want to be married
someday, the often awkward process of finding the right person can
seem to be more bother than it's worth. Add to that the risk of
making a life-altering mistake, and the decision-making process
can be paralyzing.
In many parts of the world, a single person does not have a choice
about who to marry. Marriages are arranged by the family (usually
the father), and brides are treated much like family property.
The popular musical Fiddler on the Roof depicted three young Jewish
girls who were afraid of becoming the unwilling partners in arranged
marriages to men in Anatevka, their small Russian village. They
sang of hope that the matchmaker would make them "a perfect match,"
but later in the same song they told the matchmaker not to rush,
please! As the story progressed, they worked to change the attitude
of their father, Tevye, toward marriage selection. Although the
matchmaker was still very active in Anatevka, and even though the
fathers were a powerful force in the family, Tevye's daughters managed
to talk him into giving them permission to marry the boys they loved
except for one daughter who insisted on marrying a young man
outside of the family's faith.
Attitudes toward marriage continue to change. In highly mobile,
urbanized cultures where family clans are not the chief forces (and
fathers do not reign like kings), the decision-making process of
bride and groom selection has shifted to the individual preference
of the single people involved, though usually with the desire for
family approval. But this has not always meant that the single person
has made better decisions.
Single young people and divorced or widowed older people are all
capable of getting married for the wrong reasons. A young person
might enter marriage on the basis of romantic feelings alone or
only cold facts. A divorced person might remarry without having
learned from the mistakes of the pastonly to marry the wrong
kind of person for the wrong reasons. Or a widowed person who feels
desperately alone might rush into a new relationship and marryonly
to regret it later.
The Bible offers helpful principles that apply to young or old,
first-time marriages or second marriages, arranged marriages or
romantically induced ones. Whoever does the deciding should consider
the issues that will be discussed in this booklet.
[Discovery
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©1990,1998
RBC Ministries Grand Rapids, MI 49555 Printed in USA
Used with permission.
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