Yes, she can assert it, but does that assertion constitute a true marriage?
I believe that in a true marriage, the husband and wife earn for the family, and that the property is the family's--belongs jointly to the husband and wife.
True marriage is a union of soul with soul, a blending of two in one, without mastership or helpless dependence.
But a true marriage is not effected by the betrothal, but by the wedding.
But if this was a true marriage, Joseph was truly her husband.
What becomes of the sanctity of marriage and the institution of the family when respectable gentlemen talk of something called "True Marriage," as non-existent in relation to a lady who is already the mother of four children?
If he generalized at all from these persuasions it was in the direction that in the interest of "true marriage" there should be greater facilities for divorce and also a kind of respectable-ization of divorce.
It is the same with a husband and wife between whom there is a true marriage love; they are two in respect to their bodies but one in respect to life; consequently in heaven the married pair are not called two angels but one.
From this it is clear that the Lord's conjunction with a man of the church is the very origin of true marriage love; and how that conjunction can be the origin shall be told.
Did she explain what she understood by a true marriage?
Of conjunctions of soul in true marriages, and of disjunction and disgust where no true marriage exists.
It was pride that banished Lucifer from Heaven," said Mrs. Denison, "and I am afraid it will keep you out of the heaven of a true marriage here.
What, then, is the duty of the husband in ‘true marriage’?
That the natural fruitage of true Marriage is peace and blessedness is a pleasing fact which we can not contemplate but with delight, and for which we can not be too grateful.
Without this unity there can be no true Marriage; no real happiness or utility in the married life.
The secret of true Marriage is in mutuality of character, harmony of sentiment and action, congeniality of spirit.
Without these, or, surely, without the first, there can be no such thing as true marriage.
True marriage is based on mutual love; and mutual love can never be traded upon, or made an item of formal agreement and contract.
About married people who cannot have children--A guide to happiness--Chief facts of true marriage.
They should hope to unite in their views on the main doctrines of religion; but even this is not indispensable to a true marriage.
A true marriage must be Free, contracted by the preference and choice of the parties.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "true marriage" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.