Title

Covenant Marriage And The Sanctification Of Gendered Marital Roles

Keywords

Covenant marriage; Evangelicals; Gender; Mixed methods; Traditionalism

Abstract

This study contributes to research on the deinstitutionalization of marriage and changing gender ideologies by focusing on a unique group of marriage innovators. With quantitative and qualitative data from the Marriage Matters project (1997-2004), this study used a symbolic interactionist perspective to compare covenant- and standard-married couples. Findings reveal that covenants are more traditional than standards across religious, marital, and gender attitude indices. Qualitative analyses suggest that covenants see their marital status as a powerful symbol to publicly display their beliefs about the benefits and necessity of traditional religious marriage. Covenant-married couples defuse the stigma of gender subordination by casting it as a service to God and by crafting a hybrid form of gender traditionalism that incorporates emotional ethics of egalitarianism. Conversely, standard-married couples view gender, marriage, and religion as diffuse, privatized, individualized matters. Implications are discussed in light of further research on contemporary marriage and shifting gender roles. © 2009 Sage Publications.

Publication Date

2-1-2009

Publication Title

Journal of Family Issues

Volume

30

Issue

2

Number of Pages

147-178

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1177/0192513X08324109

Socpus ID

57849166311 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/57849166311

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