Betrothal: Should We Kiss Courtship Goodbye?
I read this article about two weeks ago (you can click HERE to learn more about the author), and it really convicted me and helped me understand courtship/betrothal, and how I believe betrothal is more biblical. I hope this article speaks to you as it did myself, and my family!
Enjoy!
By Israel Wayne
Courtship is taking the nation by storm. It seems any homeschool convention of substance has an “expert” on marriage preparation who usually explains how courtship is a wise and even “Biblical” alternative to dating. Even the secular media is jumping on the bandwagon, talking about the newest hair-brained scheme of these radical homeschoolers. “What will they think of next?!”
This may come as a surprise to many, but I don’t believe courtship is Biblical. In fact, I don’t even think it is pragmatically wise. >From the beginning, I’ve had reservations about it, but now that I’ve had a chance to observe the “courtship movement” for a while, my fears are confirmed. It has created some problematic situations.
Don’t misunderstand; I’m not in support of dating! I believe the promiscuous American dating scene is definitely preparation for divorce, not marriage. The consequences of giving your heart to one person after another, only to have it sent through the meat grinder and handed back to you, is a practice that should have died out with the dinosaurs. Non-committed romantic relationships ought to be absent from a young person’s life. We all need to “kiss dating goodbye.”
The question is, however, “Is courtship the solution to America’s dating crisis?” From what I have observed, I feel I can say emphatically, “No, it is not!”
Chapter And Verse On Courtship
First of all, nowhere in Scripture do we find the term, “Courtship.” It doesn’t exist in the Bible. Actually, neither does the concept. As hard as you may look, there are no “courting couples” in the Bible. That should be our first clue that this is not a completely “Biblical” idea.
The method of getting married found in the Bible is based on covenant relationship, with commitment as the key element. I believe the return to courtship is the result of wanting to turn back the hands of time to a better, more wholesome age. In my mind, it is much like those who wish we could just get the Bible back in the government schools. Sure, that would be nice, but that doesn’t make governmental education a Biblical notion.
In the same way, going back to a simpler time may be refreshing, and certainly it is better than what we are currently seeing, but we shouldn’t settle with what is old; we should desire what is right. Let’s not fall short of God’s best.
One of the main arguments against dating is that it is emotionally damaging to give your heart to someone you aren’t going to marry. I agree completely. Yet, this can also be a problem in a courtship situation. Let me explain.
The Definition Of Terms
As with anything, we have to be clear what we mean when we use certain words. We must be sure we are speaking the same language.
Dating
Dating is a non-committed form of emotional promiscuity, where one is romantically involved with someone whom they have no certainty (and often no intention) of marrying. In most homes, it does not require the blessing or permission of the parents, and it is often unsupervised and unchaperoned. Dating most often includes “going with” and breaking up with numerous people. This is done supposedly to help the young person become accustomed to romance and relationships with the opposite sex. It is supposed to be a psychological necessity for a healthy long-lasting marital relationship. One pastor went as far as to say that dating was needed because it causes emotional pain, and pain builds character. I feel sorry for this man’s children! Life hands us enough legitimate pain without inflicting unneeded agony on ourselves.
Courtship
Courtship is much more conservative than dating, and almost always mandates the blessing of the parents. The young couple usually meets at the parents’ home, or with a group. There is little physical contact, and usually you would never court anyone who wouldn’t be a serious candidate for marriage. Courtship is considered the interim between just being friends, and being engaged. During the courtship stage, the family tries to determine whether the relationship should progress into an engagement. The parents are usually heavily involved with each stage and often have complete say as to when and if the relationship moves into engagement.
Courting means “wooing, or seeking the affections of another person.” One dictionary even uses the term “flattery.” Unfortunately, if you are trying to gain someone’s favor (as you do in courting and dating), you may put on a false front, and not really act in a normal way. Therefore, couples who have no commitment for marriage, often have a difficult time getting to know the true personality of the person they are courting. This provides many surprises after the honeymoon has ended!
I know many young couples who have been brought together, by the Lord, through courtship (or even dating for that matter). I don’t want to imply that their relationships aren’t legitimate or God-ordained. God can choose to bring two people together using any one of these options, but some are more risky processes than others.
Courtship Gone Wrong
When it works, courtship is better than dating. When it flops, however, it is much more painful. You see, in dating, no one has false expectations. You go into the relationship knowing there is no commitment to marriage. At any time, the other person is free to break up with you. You expect it.
What makes courtship so dangerous is that the young people go into the relationship assuming that they have the parent’s blessing and that they can move forward into marriage if they want to. They also assume that the other young person is serious about getting married, and there is little chance that the young man will get turned down when he proposes. Oftentimes, these assumptions prove to be dreadfully false.
Let me tell you about a courtship gone wrong which occurred not long ago.
A young man went to the father of a certain girl and asked, “May I court your daughter?” The girl’s father knew that the homeschooled young man was a Godly and respectable fellow, so he gave his consent. One evening after dinner, the two fathers of the young courting couple were reclining in the living room.
“Won’t it be wonderful if my daughter and your son get married someday?” exclaims the one father to the other.
“Yes, that will be great.”
“Can you imagine us both being grandfathers? Won’t that be great?”
“Oh yes,” declares the young man’s dad, “They will make great parents.”
“Won’t it be beautiful to see our grandbaby baptized and dedicated to the Lord in the church?” said the girl’s dad, who happened to be a Presbyterian. The other father, a Baptist wasn’t so sure this was such a great idea.
“My grandchildren will make a confession of faith when they are older, and receive a believers baptism!”
“But, what about the covenant?!” retorted the Presbyterian. The two men began to angrily shout at each other until one of them declared, “This isn’t going to work! Our children simply cannot be married. They aren’t compatible!”
The two fathers determined that these two young people, whom they had blessed to enter a courtship together, were never to see each other again.
Can you imagine how devastated this young couple was? They thought they had the blessing of the parents. They assumed the fathers had prayed about the relationship and had only given the go ahead after determining that it was the Lord’s will for these two to be married. This was not the case. This courtship turned out to be a carnal way for these two dads to determine whom their children dated (or courted as the case may be). It had nothing to do with the will of God; it was regulated by the will of the parents.
Parental control in a relationship, apart from the anointing of the Holy Spirit will bring death and destruction to the beautiful plan of God.
Betrothal
In a betrothal model, there is no intermediate courtship stage. There is friendship and then there is betrothal or engagement. The two young people initially get to know each other as friends, in a non-romantic setting. They may do this at family get-togethers, or in church or group functions. Ideally, in a betrothal setting, a young man will evaluate a potential wife based on an objective set of Biblical standards and criteria, and if he feels God wants him to marry a certain young woman, he submits this idea to his parents.
If his parents affirm that he should propose to a certain young lady, he then talks to her father. You may have heard the archaic term “pledging your troth.” It sounds funny, but it means that you are pledging your “loyalty, faithfulness and devotion.” Thus the young man makes a binding commitment to the young woman, and pledges to be faithful to her as long as they both shall live. If the father rejects the young man’s offer, the young man should have the integrity to move on with his life, and not hurt the emotions of the young lady. She may not need to know he has even proposed.
If the young woman’s father feels that this young man is the one who should marry his daughter, he and his wife talk to their daughter, and the decision is left with her. Her reply to the young man must be one that is approached with sobriety and prayer. If she says no, the father tells the young man, and he respects the young lady’s wishes. (A betrothal is not in any way a prearranged marriage that leaves the young people with no choice in the matter of who they marry. Even the Biblical Rebekah was asked if she would go away and marry Isaac. The decision was hers.) If she is in agreement, they become betrothed, or engaged, and set a date for the wedding.
During the betrothal stage, they have the freedom to become emotionally bonded with each other, since both have committed to marriage. Betrothal is similar to courtship in that it insists that the young people must avoid inordinate physical contact. In fact, my wife and I kissed for the first time at the wedding altar.
In Biblical times, a betrothal was legally binding and in order to break off a betrothal the young man had to give his betrothed a certificate of divorce. They were considered legally bound and committed to marriage.
Prepare For Marriage, Not Divorce
You may wonder why anyone would go through this much trouble to prepare for marriage. Well, that is exactly the point. We want to prepare for “marriage” not divorce. Anytime you give your heart to someone with no commitment for marriage, you will be devastated when you break up. If a conflict of any kind comes up during a courtship, the tendency is to back out of the relationship or to withdraw emotionally. Who wants to go deeper into a relationship where you can’t get along? The reason so many courtships break up is because it is a trial relationship, not a committed one. In a betrothal, if friction occurs (which is almost inevitable as two lives merge toward one), the young couple must work out the problem, just as they will for their whole married life. Therefore it develops skills they will use for the years to come, and breaks the cycle of backing away from relationships when the going gets tough.
Do You Eventually Fall In Love?
Well, my wife and I have “fallen in love,” and so has every other betrothed couple I have known. Because there is security in knowing the other person accepts you as you are, you can be yourself. That allows your fiancée the freedom to “fall in love” with the “real you,” not the “pretend person” you become when they are around. The betrothal is a wonderfully romantic time, because there is safety in knowing where you stand with the other person. After marriage the relationship can be very romantic, because you have avoided all of the pain and hurt that usually comes with dating or emotional manipulation. The couple is free to give and receive love, rather than artificially “winning” their spouse’s affections. Yes, you fall in love. The difference is, your emotions follow you, you don’t follow your emotions. If the romantic feelings begin to wane during marriage, it doesn’t shake you. You have built on commitment, rather than a feeling. By being committed to each other you don’t divorce when the going gets tough. The good news is, if you hang in there, the feelings come back around. In fact, they grow deeper because of serious love and covenantal commitment.
As someone who is happily married as a result of following a betrothal pattern, I highly recommend it to anyone who desires a long lasting, and, yes, romantic relationship with their spouse.
Israel Wayne is married to Brook and they have two beautiful children. Israel and Brook have written a testimony of their betrothal entitled, “What God Had Joined Together.” It is available as a 24-page gift booklet available from Wisdom’s Gate. Wisdom’s Gate, P.O. Box 374, Covert, MI 49043. This article is reprinted by permission from the HOME SCHOOL DIGEST V11#2.
Now that you have finished reading this, can you see how Betrothal shows more commitment, and biblical understanding when it comes to sacred relationships as these!? We really need to be in God’s word, and pray with our parents about these decisions that are so very important for our future, and the decisions we make will be glorifying to Him! (1 Corinthians 10:31)
Grace and peace,
Miss. Antoinette
Filed under: Christian Living, Family, Practical, Random, Scripture on December 16th, 2009
















Very interesting Annie
I will have to do some more research on this. Although, the one part in this writing that talked about the courtship not working out (one was baptist, other presbytarian) That wouldnt be the correct way to even start off with a courtship. Would you not get to know that persons family, and find out where they stand on doctrine before you even made a step towards courtship? I still believe that courtship is a very wise way to go about marriage, since it is a stage at which the man can find a house, etc. and the couple can get to know eachother at a more intimate level, asking more personal questions, than if they were just “friends” The heart-break can be awful in a bethrothal if you went directly to the engagement and during the engagement you find that you and your “special someone” have a large disagreement on something.
Although courtship seems proper in my opinion (especially since i get to witness one first hand.) You definately make a good point that courtship is NOT mentioned in the Bible, nor do we see anyone doing anything like it. Anyway, thank you for the write up, gives me something to think about.
Forgot to ask…What is the name of this book?
Hello Kim dear!
You have some wonderful questions concerning betrothal and courtship! I am still thinking things through, so bear with me!
it really does make you think about a lot of things!
My intent on posting this article was to share what I am learning, I did not think I would be answering questions already! lol Mmmm… maybe next time I will make sure I know lots more about something before I post about it!?
I am not against courtship, and I know of good Christian couples who have found their mates that way and in most cases, it is completely fine and there are no problems in the courtship (such as the problem stated in the article), but it still does happen! Yes, I would personally want to know a bit about the family and potential mate beforehand and I believe their is a way to do so before being betrothed to that person and making such a big commitment! The name of his booklet is “What God Has Joined Together” and I am thinking about buying it to listen to (they only have the book on CD right now) and you can find it on the link at : http://www.biblicalbetrothal.com/resourcestext.htm
Ultimately we need to look in God’s word and pray earnestly about these questions to find biblical answers and trust in the Lord in everything!
This article has really spurred me to look into it allot more to find out what is a biblical way of finding my future mate (Lord willing)! I am so glad it is for you as well!
Blessings Dear friend,
Miss. Antoinette K.
Thank you dear Annie for posting this. Even before I could explain to one the differences between Courtship and Betrothal I knew that Betrothal is the way I would like to enter into a relationship. My older sister is currently courting, but even with my parent’s consent and careful guidance it still seems a bit too much like dating for me. People think that two young people cannot get to know each other unless there is a romantic inclination, and this is just not true. With no thoughts outside of friendship it is very possible to get to know a person, just by observing their interactions with others. Thank you again for posting this, I hope you too find the answers you are looking for.
Hello sweet Tabitha!
Yes, I am really learning so much, I am glad I posted this article to hear opinions on this subject!
Thanks for all your sweet comments!
Blessings,
Miss. Antoinette
Thanks for posting this article, Miss Antoinette! It raises some very good questions.
Blessings,
Kate
Annie! Whoa, it’s been a while.
Wow, I really appreciated this article. I personally, have never agreed with the idea of courtship and I will lay it out for you one day.
However, I have chosen to refrain on this matter publicly, as many do not agree with me and neither do I wish to cause strife.
As long as my life is a blessing!
But it’s great to see that someone thinks similar to me and speaks out about the dangers of courtship. (By this, like you, I do not imply that courtship is wrong. I believe our faith should be based on convictions.)
Hope we can talk again soon.
Lots of love.
Dear Miss. Antoinette,
Thank you for posting my article. For those who have further questions, I wanted to recommend: http://www.BiblicalBetrothal.com
You can hear our story on this CD:
http://www.wisgate.com/betrothalcd.htm
and I have given a 4 1/2 hour MP3 seminar on this topic which you can obtain here:
http://www.wisgate.com/prepformarriage.htm
Please visit feel free to email me from our website if you have any further questions.
God bless,
Israel Wayne
http://www.IsraelWayne.com
http://www.WisdomsGate.org
Thank you Mr. Wayne!
I will have to look at those links you recommended! My father shared this article with me, and I felt led to share with my fellow readers what my family and I have been thinking on this subject, and this article explained a lot! I will be looking at those links with my father soon! Thanks again for this wonderful, unexpected comment!
Grace and Peace,
Miss. Antoinette
PS. I will definitely e-mail you if I or my family have any questions! Thank you so much!