Indian Marriages

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gene77

Guest
#1
This is a question mainly for Indians. Just out of curiosity, does your family expect you to get an arranged marriage, or are you free to marry the person you fall in love with? Also, are you expected to marry within your culture, or can you marry someone from a different State or rather a different country?
As for me, I'm given the complete freedom to marry the person I fall in love with (whether he's Indian or not). Though, I would like my family's approval, because I'm close to my family, and I'd like them to get along well with the man I'm going to marry.

That being said, here's a video that one of my British cousins came across [he shared it on our FB family group]:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=PNeOS8xXjyk

- Gen

P.S - I'm not against arranged marriages. Some of my best friends have had arranged marriages and they are extremely happy.
 

RoboOp

Administrator
Staff member
Aug 4, 2008
1,419
666
113
#2
Gene I think it's cool if you have Christian parents and they try to help you find a godly lifetime partner.

So I kinda like the Indian way (if it's loving Christian parents). And actually many Asians also help their children in this way.

I had a good friend who was Indian, working abroad in Asia, with his parents. When he was at a good age to marry, they went back to India for the summer, and introduced him to some different girls. Well he ended up courting one of them, with his parents and the other parents totally involved. Then later they were married and we got to know the girl some. She seems to be a godly lady and they seem to be happily married, and they have kids now. It's nice that he had that help from his parents. Many singles are praying and praying to find a spouse and go on for years like that, with no one to help them, and many make a bad choice on their own. Nice to have help and guidance from godly parents.

(I realize there is a dark side to the whole thing, as with everything, but I'm talking about in general, with godly parents.)

Anyway I hope non-Indians like me don't hijack your thread. I just felt like adding a positive comment here.
 
Jul 25, 2005
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#3
And I'll add a negative one to hi-jack it. My parents tried to help me once. Bothered me to date this girl for months because she would be the "perfect match."

They were both very godly, but it was still a foolish idea.
 
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gene77

Guest
#4
RoboOp, yes, I have seen this happen with some of my friends. And, they're really happy, which is a good thing. However, there has been a few cases that turned out to be tragic. One of my friends married this man, her parents had chosen for her. Turned out he was impotent. He never even slept with her once. Neither he nor his family even thought of mentioning this to my friend. And, they hail from a very "respectable" family.
I'm happy that my parents are willing to help me find my partner if I ask them too. They'd be more than happy to help out. Haha. However, they've left it up to me. They would never force me to get married if I didn't want to.
I was just wondering if arranged marriages among Indian Christians are quite dominant still. Also, was curious to know if Indian Christian families were against their sons/daughters marrying someone from a different country, state, or even "caste."

Non- Indians are more than welcome to hi-jack my thread. =D
 
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gene77

Guest
#5
And I'll add a negative one to hi-jack it. My parents tried to help me once. Bothered me to date this girl for months because she would be the "perfect match."

They were both very godly, but it was still a foolish idea.
Hahahaha... You never mentioned this before. Well, unless she's the girl you told me about.
At least your parents are cool with dating and stuff. I know many Indian Christian parents who are completely against the whole dating thing.
 

RoboOp

Administrator
Staff member
Aug 4, 2008
1,419
666
113
#6
RoboOp, yes, I have seen this happen with some of my friends. And, they're really happy, which is a good thing. However, there has been a few cases that turned out to be tragic. One of my friends married this man, her parents had chosen for her. Turned out he was impotent. He never even slept with her once. Neither he nor his family even thought of mentioning this to my friend. And, they hail from a very "respectable" family.
I'm happy that my parents are willing to help me find my partner if I ask them too. They'd be more than happy to help out. Haha. However, they've left it up to me. They would never force me to get married if I didn't want to.
I was just wondering if arranged marriages among Indian Christians are quite dominant still. Also, was curious to know if Indian Christian families were against their sons/daughters marrying someone from a different country, state, or even "caste."

Non- Indians are more than welcome to hi-jack my thread. =D
:D well thanks Gene..

Umm yikes, yah, that's one of the dark sides of it. I heard a similar story from an Indian man. So Indian families cheat each other in this way huh? :)

But yah that's interesting. When it's singles going out on their own, that certainly happens a lot (one deceiving the other or not disclosing something). I thought it's "safer" with families involved but that's interesting that it happens on the whole family level as well, in India.

But if both families are godly (not just deemed "respectable"), then they won't cheat each other and deceive each other.
 
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gene77

Guest
#7
I agree, RoboOp. =) And, when God has already arranged a partner for those who let Him choose for them, there's nothing to worry about. So, I've never worried about marriage. Both, my Father up above and my earthly father, take good care of me, and I've lacked nothing.
 

sanglina

Senior Member
Jul 28, 2012
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#8
By the way, Gene, what do you mean by "Indian marriage"? Just curious about it.
 
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gene77

Guest
#9
By the way, Gene, what do you mean by "Indian marriage"? Just curious about it.
An Indian marriage = an Indian getting married. What else could it mean? o_0
 

sanglina

Senior Member
Jul 28, 2012
857
4
0
#10
This is a question mainly for Indians. Just out of curiosity, does your family expect you to get an arranged marriage, or are you free to marry the person you fall in love with? Also, are you expected to marry within your culture, or can you marry someone from a different State or rather a different country?
As for me, I'm given the complete freedom to marry the person I fall in love with (whether he's Indian or not). Though, I would like my family's approval, because I'm close to my family, and I'd like them to get along well with the man I'm going to marry.

P.S - I'm not against arranged marriages. Some of my best friends have had arranged marriages and they are extremely happy.
^^did not give me the impression that "Indian marriage"= Indian getting married. And since your OP and subsequent responses were directed at Indian Christians and not "Indian Hindus", was quite curious.. Anyways, carry on with the discussions... :)
 
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gene77

Guest
#11
^^did not give me the impression that "Indian marriage"= Indian getting married. And since your OP and subsequent responses were directed at Indian Christians and not "Indian Hindus", was quite curious.. Anyways, carry on with the discussions... :)
That was a P.S note and that definitely does not imply that an Indian marriage = arranged marriage. My curiosity is based on the fact if Indian Christians are still focused more on arranged marriages, and if it's an issue to marry someone from a different state or country. I haven't generalized at all. In fact, I was asking for individual and personal opinions.
 
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SHINY707

Guest
#12
Hi gene77!

Marriage is a very crucial stage in every ones lives. Marriage between two individuals effect not only their lives ; but it leaves an impact in the lives of children they will have after marriage. Its an important decision. And I feel personally it would be good if I take counsel from my family and trusted friends before making a decision to marry a person .

Personally I believe God has chosen a person for me and I think as Lord said the Shepherd comes from the gate and the watchman opens the door for him but the thief doesn't come from the gate and I believe that when God sends my man He would come from the gate and the people who have been watching and caring for me will recognize him as the right person for me.

I believe in arrange marriages , but I would like to marry a person who can give me the respect and place of a wife in his life and who takes marriage seriously.And of course I should also feel he is right for me.

Arrange marriages have turned as an old tradition even in India, but still I know couples who are happily married and they had arrange marriage.I am not against love marriages , but I believe more in arrange marriage.
 
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gene77

Guest
#13
Hi gene77!

Marriage is a very crucial stage in every ones lives. Marriage between two individuals effect not only their lives ; but it leaves an impact in the lives of children they will have after marriage. Its an important decision. And I feel personally it would be good if I take counsel from my family and trusted friends before making a decision to marry a person .

Personally I believe God has chosen a person for me and I think as Lord said the Shepherd comes from the gate and the watchman opens the door for him but the thief doesn't come from the gate and I believe that when God sends my man He would come from the gate and the people who have been watching and caring for me will recognize him as the right person for me.

I believe in arrange marriages , but I would like to marry a person who can give me the respect and place of a wife in his life and who takes marriage seriously.And of course I should also feel he is right for me.

Arrange marriages have turned as an old tradition even in India, but still I know couples who are happily married and they had arrange marriage.I am not against love marriages , but I believe more in arrange marriage.
Thank you for your opinion, SHINY07. =) I do believe that God works in ways we cannot comprehend. And, personally, I am open to both, love and arranged marriages, if God brings the man into my life that way. It's just that arranged marriages are not common in my family. I think the last arranged marriage was my great- grandparents. Everyone else has found love. I'm definitely not against any way, at all.

My best friend was against arranged marriages. However, she did trust her parents decision, even though she barely met the guy once. To be honest I was concerned for her. Because, she just saw him once for a few minutes. And, he lived in another country at the time. However, she fell deeply in love with him, over the next 6 months, and she seems happy with her husband now. So, yes, I've seen love being formed both ways. Either falling in love and then getting married, or getting married and falling in love with your husband later. However, I do feel that the second option could be risky at times, because I know people who are married who have never passionately loved their spouses. But they do learn to have mutual respect and care for each other.
 
Oct 22, 2011
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#14
well, i do prefer the guidance of my parents in finding a life partner too :) , i m from a villege in india , well i hv seen soo many of my friends got into troubles and they went behind love marriges( lol i m not agianst of it ) well, love marriages work best some time but it seems hard task for to find a chance to really know about the person some one's loving , and the world has changed a lot especially i mean in india more than we can think about some one . so i would preffer a help from my parents to seek that . i belive ,if we hv a loving parent, and if they do some thing for us that would happen for good in our life .and above all the will of GOD is there, cos he is the one who knows everything and hv already made planns for our life so,lets wait on him :) be blessed all!
 
Feb 3, 2013
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#15
praise too the lord.
when we seek god and his kingdom all things are added unto thee.. so when we pray to god abt marriage or any other things god wil make right way and pass through. with out god, no decision should not make by own..when we give first prefrence to god then no worry no sorrow any matter belongs it
 

Savy29

Junior Member
Jun 17, 2007
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#16
Heres an article written by Barry Creamer i found online..hmm... a little lengthy but worth the read ..def spoke my mind... Hope it helps.. peace !

Worldwide, more than half of marriages are arranged. Some people automatically assume the practice to be a violation of human rights—something of a barbaric throwback to the cave where the terms “swinging” and “the club” were joined together directly rather than with the word “at”. The good side of arranged marriages is that the divorce rate is extremely low and self-reported happiness (in broad strokes) is at about the same level as it is for those who select their own mate. The bad side of arranged marriages is that they seem to exclude the idea of love. While I have no urge to advocate for arranged marriage, I do wish we could get something straightened out about love.

One of the best-known “love stories” in scripture is about Isaac and Rebekah, both because of their introduction in Genesis 24 when Eliezer brings Rebekah from Haran, and the apparent enthusiasm they have for each other in Genesis 26 while staying with Abimelech in Gerar. The odd thing is that their love story—specifically what is probably for most people the most compelling part of it as a love story—begins with an arranged marriage. After all, neither Rebekah nor Isaac know who their spouse will be until it’s all done. Now it’s not a forced marriage. (Forced marriages and arranged marriages can be different things.) Rebekah’s family asks her if she is willing and she voluntarily goes. But she commits to the marriage with Isaac sight unseen.

The point is not about Isaac and Rebekah, nor really even from their story. From a hermeneutical standpoint, describing their relationship in terms that sound like a 19th Century romance is wrong-headed. But seeing that a person can commit her life sacrificially to a husband she has not met (not even for whom she’s seen an eHarmony profile) does help establish a fact lived daily around the world, that love is not something into which a person has to fall. That is, it can be active rather than passive. It can be chosen, worked at, kept, and, at the same time and as the evidence demonstrates, still fulfilling.

I should restate here: I’m not advocating for arranged marriage. I am advocating for active love rather than passive love.
Modern love is romantic love. It is the urgent and usually momentary but intense psycho-glandular event of knowing that a proximate object of affection is “the one”, or at least the one to be with for now. It is what people mean when they say they fall in love. I’m not advocating against modern love, at least not as an experience. But I am advocating here against the idea that “falling in love” is the basis of what a Christian brings into marriage.
One more and I’ll be done with the caveats: I’m also not advocating against Christians bringing modern love into marriage. I think it’s beautiful and powerful in many ways.

But it is passive. It happens to a person. He does not jump in; he falls in. Of course as a result of falling, he might hop, skip, jump, and kneel into the relationship. But it is because of what happened to him, not because of what he did. What’s the problem? As often as not, after it happens and motivates that flurry of activity, it unhappens, removing all the previous motivation. He “falls out of love.”

An active love is entirely different, regardless of whether it finds an initiation in arrangement or infatuation. When a man chooses to live the rest of his life for his wife instead of himself, he has chosen love, not simply had love happen to him. When a woman chooses to put away what was a perfectly good life and give it to her husband instead, she has jumped into love, not fallen into it.

I believe the love we ought to care about as followers of Jesus is active. So when a husband says to the wife, “I just don’t love you anymore,” I explain that what he is actually saying is, “I have now decided to stop caring more for my wife than for myself,” or, to be slightly more precise, “I have now stopped deciding to care more for my wife than for myself.”
That is, all it takes for a husband to love consistently and faithfully is for him to wake up every morning and choose to care more for his wife than for himself. Then, when a man says to his wife, or a wife to her husband, “I love you,” it really is beautiful. It’s not simply lottery-luck or serendipity-fate, but deliberate sacrifice and commitment.

Beautiful and deliberate sacrifice and commitment—Now that's a nice arrangement.
 
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paulr

Guest
#17
Well we may be Indian family but ours is a God led one. No disrespect to my Indian culture, but we value what God's will is.My family to begin with was influenced by Indian culture where arranged marriages have a huge success rate theory. But with growing God's experience in our lives we have understood that if marriage is arranged or love, it will be successful only If God leads it. So now either option is open, because in either case we know in my life God will work out His plan.
 
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savedNblessed

Guest
#18
This is a question mainly for Indians. Just out of curiosity, does your family expect you to get an arranged marriage, or are you free to marry the person you fall in love with? Also, are you expected to marry within your culture, or can you marry someone from a different State or rather a different country?
As for me, I'm given the complete freedom to marry the person I fall in love with (whether he's Indian or not). Though, I would like my family's approval, because I'm close to my family, and I'd like them to get along well with the man I'm going to marry.

That being said, here's a video that one of my British cousins came across [he shared it on our FB family group]:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=PNeOS8xXjyk

- Gen

P.S - I'm not against arranged marriages. Some of my best friends have had arranged marriages and they are extremely happy.
First of all, that video was hilarious. I mean no offense to anyone, but that was just plain humor to me.
Okay, now on a more serious note now, this "matter" is the highlight of my life right now. My parents think I am at the age of getting married (I agree with them) and they've already started "searching" for a groom for me :D But see, arranged marriages work very differently in my family. Like my parents had an arranged marriage, 26 years ago to be exact, but they had a choice in whom to marry. They were brought to attention couple of "potential" spouses by their parents, but the final decision was left between them and God. So it's the same way with me. They've brought couple of guys to my attention. I have been praying about it and this summer we are going to India, to meet them (Exciting!). But the only reason my parents are looking for my "guy" is because I told them. I told them I wanted an arranged marriage. They are completely okay if I find someone for myself because they do trust me and most importantly they trust the Lord.
On the other hand, my sister fell in love with this guy, who is a Christian but he is from a different part of India. But still, they agreed to their relationship (at first they didn't but once they got to know him and his family, they did) and my little sister got engaged this past Christmas :)
So I would say it solely depends on parents how they handle this matter with their children or how much children want their parents involvement.

*Just a little insight - since this whole process has started with me (about year and a half now), of searching for a groom, I have gotten much more closer to God and my family (my parents and my siblings). We've learned so many new "interesting" things about each other that I don't think would've ever be known under any other circumstances :p It's been a blessing.

Much love in Christ,
Disha
 

Jeshuvan

Pastor
Staff member
Apr 15, 2012
221
2
0
#19
Hi Gene 77 and 2 all,My wife is from India.I am from USA.I truly believe as in our marriage we both fasted and prayed intensley 4 Gods perfect will 2 unfold.God arranged our marriage first, then it was presented 2 her family.How one calls it a love marriage is still beyond me,because even an arranged marriage has 2 have love in it or it probably wont workout.Im so grateful that God didnt just bless me with a wife,he gave me a treasure.there is nothing like a woman or man 4 that matter that is totally and truly sold out 2 Jesus,and the marriage be Christ centered. GBU John
 
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Iluv_Jesus

Guest
#20
I believe Indian marriages are still arranged and many don't complain about it. It's still the best way to get married in India. It's tradition. Roughly about 60% of the populace go for arranged marriages nowadays. Unless the person is really in love and doesn't want to give up on love, this is the way. India is very diverse. As an Indian, I feel inclined to say that India is a nation of many nations. With such a diverse populace, a lot of marriages take place between all ethnic, social and even religious groups. Marriages in India, especially arranged ones have their pros and cons. There are also new trends. It's a big topic to talk about.

Since you, Gene77 had asked this with a more individual tone. I think marriage would depend upon the individual. What he or she is looking for out of a marriage determines the partner. More often in India, the spouse's compatibility with their families are always considered in most cases. In my case, I would. So, it's all about the families and where one comes from. But one can never say for sure what God has in store for His people except to pray and wait for Him. For Jesus provides for His people. Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and you shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you, Matthew Chapter 7:7. Just felt like sharing though no one had shared anything here for a while.