Informed Consent
I am
continually both amazed and dismayed by how little
most couples know about what the change in their
status from
not married to
married means,
despite spouses having legal rights and duties that
are different from those of unmarried individuals,
rights of inheritance changing on marriage, and
married couples being treated differently for
purposes of social welfare and immigration.
I am also dismayed by how frequently what marrying
couples think they know is inaccurate or way out of
date. Yet, despite the fact that marrying couples
are required to give unconditional consent to marry,
the term
Informed Consent does not seem to
have made it into celebrant vocabulary.
In Australia, celebrants are required to give
marrying couples copies of the government pamphlet
Happily
Ever … Before and After. This publication
outlines the process for legal marriage, very
briefly touches on selected legal consequences of
getting married (health and welfare benefits, name
change, citizenship, wills, and taxation). It also
vigorously promotes relationship support services,
including pre-marriage education.
But it is incomplete and inadequate. It omits
any mention of a fundamental difference in
Australian law compared with that in other
countries, the lack of any requirement for a
marriage to be consummated. Many decades before
forcing a spouse to have sex became a crime, our
legislators decided they wouldn't make consummation
a requirement of marriage as there is no way to make
sure that the sex is consensual. Yet very few
couples appear to be aware of this or of how
recently wives were given the legal right to say no
in the bedroom. As a result, I feel obligated to
explain to marrying couples that
- they are not legally required to consummate
the marriage (cue lots of laughter, and
exchanges of meaningful glances)
- the only way to end the marriage is to apply
for a divorce, annulment being reserved for
registered marriages that were unlawful.
Informed Consent also applies to the marriage
ceremony in one particular sense.
Personal
Promises. Personal promises constitute a
couple’s commitment to how they will treat one
another within the marriage. So the widespread
practice of celebrants encouraging couples keep
their personal promises as a surprise from one
another, rather than negotiate those promises as a
shared agreement, is problematical.
Personal promises usually follow the contractual
promises that create the marriage. Surprise promises
result in one party (whoever goes first) legally
committing to the marriage in ignorance of what the
other is prepared to commit to. Ninja vows, an
emerging fad, where party writes the other’s
promises and they have no idea what they are until
they are directed to read them out loud during the
ceremony, are even more disturbing. Hardly informed
consent.
A Brief History
A quick overview of what marriage used to mean and
why I feel celebrants should ensure that couples are
aware of basic information about what it means
today, may clarify why Informed Consent is
important.
In 1066
Two became one was introduced to
England as a literal, legal truth. Thanks to a legal
fiction, the principle of
coverture, by
which a wife was subsumed into her husband’s
identity Married women lost the rights they had
enjoyed in Anglo-Saxon England under Nordic and
Germanic law and became pretty well invisible to the
law.
While hard-won battles have progressively returned
property and other rights to married women, the idea
of coverture continues to be reflected in the
widespread practice in English-speaking countries of
a wife assuming her husband’s surname without a
legal name change (change of name by marriage). It
is also, I might add, reflected in the vigorous
push-back one often sees when the notion of a woman
keeping her maiden name on marriage is discussed!
On a broad brush basis, the above applied in
countries with legal systems based on English Common
Law. In other countries, regardless of the specific
legal system, the effect was remarkably similar. In
Scotland, for example, both the wife’s moveable
property and person was subsumed into the husband’s,
while Roman-Dutch law rendered a wife a legal minor
under the guardianship of her husband through the
marital power doctrine.
How. and when. and to what extent. married women
have gained property and other legal rights differs
from legal jurisdiction to legal jurisdiction. What
is common to all of them, is that it has required
the reform of multiple laws, over more than a
century, to replace both the supremacy of the
husband and legal regulation of married women with
legal equality of the spouses. Marriage Acts tend to
cover only the process of getting married. For
information about the legal effects of marriage
itself, we have to look elsewhere.
All of which brings us to Criminal Law, the Bible
and sex, discussions of which are relevant because
our ceremonies, in common with those conducted by
Registrars/Registry Office personnel, are based upon
Western Christian norms and many accepted wedding
traditions trail older beliefs in their wake.
Until very recently (1991 in England, 1980s in
Australia) criminal law took the view that, by
marrying him, a wife gave irrevocable consent to her
husband having sex with her whenever he wanted it.
Something that is regrettably (though hopefully
unwittingly) to some extent reinforced in most
wedding ceremonies as we know them even today.
I’m sure I’m by no means the only person who has
cringed at gender role stereotyping in a wedding
ceremony nor the only celebrant to whom a bride has
said, “Do I have to promise to obey?” or words to
that effect.
Put outdated but persistent beliefs together – that
it is the duty of a wife to obey or submit to her
husband (ref: Genesis and Paul’s Letter to the
Ephesians) and that consent to marry is irrevocable
consent to sex, and consider also the role these
play in the sense of entitlement and ownership that
underpins domestic abuse, and the importance of what
is said and done in a wedding ceremony is thrown
into high relief. Something that is being
acknowledged in some, though not all, mainstream
religious circles.
What happens in church circles is not irrelevant to
civil ceremonies or to long-held beliefs about what
a “proper” ceremony must include.
When Prince Harry and Meghan Markle married in 2018,
there was much discussion in the media about the
fact that she did not promise to obey. It apparently
came as a surprise to many that in the 1928 Church
of England revision of the marriage service made the
bride promising to obey optional, as did the 1977
revision. The Church of England Archbishops Council,
in Responding Well to
Domestic Abuse: Policy and
Practice Guidance (2006, updated 2017)
acknowledges the problematic nature of the promise
to obey as an expression of outmoded “
theological
ideas such as headship and submission”,
noted that “
a mutuality expressed through the
marriage … offers a better opportunity for both
partners to grow and flourish”, and recommends
that those who offer marriage and wedding
preparation should have attended some training on
issues of domestic abuse.”
The Sydney Diocese of the Anglican Church decision
in 2012 to change the wording of the optional vow
from
obey to
submit raises an issue
that is applicable to every person who is “licensed
to marry” in Australia. Both clergy and authorized
celebrants are, in a sense, agents of the state in
that they carry out the solemnization of
state-sanctioned marriage. As such, neither should
be party to validation of the submission of one
spouse to the other as that is contrary to law.
Which brings me to my particular bugbear.
Intimate
Consent
Or
lack thereof.
"
You may kiss your bride", expresses the
giving of permission that effectively denies the
right of the bride to withhold consent, in that
moment. Marriage no longer makes consent by the
bride irrelevant, nor does it include ongoing and
irrevocable Intimate Consent, or grant a husband
conjugal
rights (which basically meant he owned his
wife's body and could do with it what he wished,
except, apparently put her eye out or kill her or
beat her with a stick thicker than his thumb).
Imagine the confusion of young children, perhaps
attending a wedding for the first time.
For argument’s sake let’s call them Andrew and
Amelia. They are both 8.
Amelia is thrilled to be present, Andrew not so
much. Amelia is revelling in being dressed up.
Andrew is not impressed with his outfit. At both of
their schools they have been exposed to discussion
about the importance of intimate consent. They’ve
done role play. The children’s programming they
watch on TV reinforces this. Both sets of parents
have reinforced the message in age and
gender-appropriate ways. And then, without any by
your leave or thank you, the celebrant, a stranger,
turns to the groom and gives him permission to kiss
his bride. And he does. And everyone cheers and
applauds.
What do you imagine is going through Andrew and
Amelia’s heads?
Time for a rethink on that one.
Related
Information
Thanks for reading!