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Father God, thank You for this good news. Please continue to strengthen marriages and families.
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“Stressful” doesn’t really begin to describe a year like 2020. Between the pandemic, the lockdowns, canceled classes, lost jobs, and an election to rival trench warfare, you would expect a heavy toll on marriages and families. But A recent piece in the Washington Post offered some of the best news we’ve gotten in quite a while. Divorce rates in the United States have declined, and marriages have grown stronger–during the pandemic.

Predictions of a COVID-induced divorce surge never materialized. And according to Dr. Bradford Wilcox, director of the University of Virginia’s National Marriage Project, divorce filings are down between 10 and 20 percent since last year.While Wilcox admits that these numbers may also reflect “deferred” divorces, unhappy couples unable to get to the courthouse during lockdown, more and more data trickling in suggests trends more surprising and encouraging than initially assumed.

Last year, according to the American Family Survey, 40 percent of married Americans surveyed reported their marriages were in trouble. This year, that number is down to 29 percent. According to the same survey, 58 percent of married people between the ages of 18 and 55 report that their appreciation for their spouse has increased during the pandemic. 51 percent report a deepened commitment to their marriage during COVID, while only 8 percent report a weakened commitment to their marriage. . . .

As counterintuitive as it may sound, marriages tend to benefit during times of historical stress, such as during the Great Recession a decade ago. This is partly financial, since divorce is both expensive and stressful. In other words, some choose to stay with a spouse they’d rather leave to keep from breaking the bank. . . .

during the pandemic, fathers have spent more time at home and have helped out more with household chores. The marital benefits of a father’s presence go far beyond the division of labor. Wilcox believes that the increased time men spend engaging in home life makes an incredible difference relationally with both spouse and children. Even more, for many during this pandemic, the home became the center of work, play, meals, and even worship, a trend far more significant than it sounds. In effect, COVID has at least temporarily reversed a long-term trend in which the home has been largely de-centered from modern life.

As Aaron Renn, a researcher with the Institute for Family Studies, pointed out back in March, pre-industrial families organized shared lives around shared labor, shared meals, shared recreation, and shared education. During the pandemic, however, families were forced to stop treating their homes as nothing more than shared bunk space and food repository. As Renn predicted, many families have now rediscovered what he calls “the productive household.”  And as Wilcox believes, a backyard garden, renovations, cleaning the garage, family projects, and even board games can re-center families. . . .

The good news Wilcox shares should also be taken as a challenge. When things go back to “normal,” our marriage habits shouldn’t. When it comes to family, the most important things are cultivated, not felt. Love, loyalty, gratefulness, growth, depth…these are things chosen and habitually formed. Not to mention, the home is ground zero for fulfilling the creation mandate: to be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth and subdue it.

This pandemic has exacted significant costs from us. Wouldn’t it be something if the forced investment of our time and attention to our marriages and households paid dividends for years to come?

(Excerpt from Christian Headlines. Article by John Stonestreet & Shane Morris. Photo Credit: Unsplash.)

Why do you think divorce rates are lower during this time? Let us know in the comments!

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Cole
November 18, 2020

We give thanks Lord for this trend. We ask that it will continue and that once again Lord, you will be restored as the king of our hearts, families and homes.
We humbly repent of allowing the things that are and we’re not important to be a substitute for your lordship over our lives.
In Jesus name we pray amen.

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Missy
November 18, 2020

Praise God. I once read in the 80’s that families that camped together were the strongest. It wasn’t the camping but more so the working together. This would be true with the lockdowns. We all worked together and spent more time together. What a wonderful consequence! Happier marriages🥰

5
Hope
November 18, 2020

What great news! I also heard another benefit to all this is that our high school and college age students are begging for in person classes. They have “electronics and Zoom fatigue” and are seeing the downside of the virtual communication style that has dominated this generation. What the enemy meant for evil, God always means for good.

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