In "From Sacrament to Contract," John Witte Jr. offers a study of five conflicting models of marriage--Catholic, Lutheran, Calvinist, Anglican, and Enlightenment--and their social and political impact over the last thousand years. In so doing, Witte shows how we arrived at the notion of marriage as contract.
The Family, Culture, and Religion series offers informed and responsible analyses of the state of the American family from a religious perspective and provides practical assistance for the family's revitalization.
John Witte Jr. (b.1959) is the Jonas Robitscher Professor of Law and Ethics, Alonzo L. McDonald Distinguished Professor, and Director of the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University (Atlanta, GA).
Professor Witte specializes in legal history, religious liberty, and marriage law.
Witte gave an excellent and clear analysis of how marriage has gone from being perceived as a religious sacrament to what we see as a mere status update. How can Christians work to redeem marriage if we don't know what it is and how we got here?
informative and weighs in heavily on the transformation of our understanding of marriage in the western tradition due to the protestant reformation, as well as the continual stripping of the sacramental and sacred nature in f marriage by enlightenment thinkers
(3.5 stars) The 3.5 stars is to take into consideration how dense it is to get through, often without great stopping points. Going based on informativeness and how interesting it is, it would have a higher score.
Meticulously researched and overall well written. This is not going to be your beach read, or even a regular reread, but it is a significant and very helpful work of scholarship.
A great resource on the history of how the church viewed/views the institution of marriage.
The author shows five views in church history, roughly summarized by the following (from the table of contents):
Marriage as Sacrament (Roman Catholic View) Marriage as Social Estate (Lutheran View) Marriage as Covenant (Calvinist View) Marriage as Commonwealth (Anglican View) Marriage as Contract (Enlightenment View)
It is a complex issue, to be sure, and so there is a lot of overlap between various views. However, the author does a great job of sorting these views out both categorically and historically. This makes it a very helpful read.
It’s a little disappointing (to the heart) as I got the feeling the author does not himself belong to Christ, as he displays throughout the book his satisfaction with the “Enlightenment” (so-called) contractarian model of marriage (which leaves God completely out of the picture).
Yet it was still a terrific resource from a historical standpoint, and one worth reading if interested in the history of the church’s view of the institution of marriage.
I found this book to be extremely informative of how marriage has changed throughout history and the religious views on marriage as well. I was an easy read, with lots of rich information on these multiple perspectives and viewpoints that have shaped the idea of marriage in our current society today.
An extremely clear narrative of theological and legal accounts of marriage in Europe, with a focus on the changes wrought by the different strands of the Protestant Reformation. A second edition (which I have not yet looked at) apparently has stronger Biblical and patristic material as well.
John Witte, Jr wrote an excellent survey of the development of marriage throughout Church history. His incomparable insights into the different perspectives on marriage make this book a must-read for any serious practitioner of marriage.