What Chris Rock Can Teach Us About Marriage
— Tuesday, January 15th, 2013 —
Most Christians don’t look to Chris Rock for marriage advice, and that’s probably a good thing. The comedian is known, after all, for his sexually-explicit, profanity-laced humor, which is geared to shock more than to enlighten. Even so, I think, at least on one point, he has something we should hear.
In the January 2013 issue of Vanity Fair, Rock is interviewed by fellow comedian (and the magazine’s guest editor of the issue) Judd Apatow about how his comedy has changed over the years. Apatow asked Rock whether having a wife and kids alters his comedy, since Rock is no longer a young single man anymore, but a guy with family responsibilities moving toward middle age.
Rock said his family transformed his comedic instincts, “but only in the best way” since his life as husband and father gives him “weight and authority” and makes him “closer to the audience because the audience is married and has kids.” But, most interestingly, Rock declares that now that he is married he knows more about women than do single men.
“Single guys have girlfriends,” Rock said. “Girlfriends are always auditioning, always on their best behavior. Wives are like Supreme Court justices; they do whatever…they want.”
On the one hand, this is a standard comedic trope, reaching back to Henny Youngman’s “Take my wife, please” or Rodney Dangerfield’s “Don’t get no respect” or “The Honeymooners” episodes. But, behind that, there’s something true, and even beautiful.
Rock identifies that there’s something fundamentally different between a “relationship” and a marriage, and that difference is, among other things, permanence. Why does the wife, unlike the girlfriend, in Rock’s joke “do whatever she wants”? It’s because she has the security of knowing her relationship isn’t tenuous. She’s here to stay.
Comedian/essayist Ben Stein, in one of his advice books, recommends that one see his or her marriage as a campaign for a dream job, with the spouse as the one vote needed to elect. That’s good advice, I suppose, but I like Rock’s image better, if we’re going to find political metaphors.
The Supreme Court, after all, can do some things that puzzle or even outrage people. Think of all the fury summed up in words of Supreme Court cases behind culture wars in America, from the founding until now. And yet the Supreme Court abides. Even when the Court outrages the populace, we don’t legislate it out of existence, because we can’t. To do so would be to walk away from the Constitution, from the Republic itself.
Marriage is indeed like that. A president goes through exhaustive research to “vet” a potential Supreme Court justice, and the stakes are high when the U.S. Senate takes up its role in confirming the justice. The stakes are high because the appointment is for life. Speak now, or forever hold your peace.
Bracket for a moment our convictions about sexuality. Even on its own terms, cohabitation doesn’t “prepare” couples for marriage. Without the security of permanence and fidelity a “relationship” is wholly different from a marriage. As a matter of fact, “dating” isn’t a preparation for marriage either, beyond the level of discovering whether this couple have a reason not to marry.
Moreover, the Supreme Court metaphor makes sense of one of the clearest truths of marital wisdom. A marriage in which either husband or wife hold the nuclear codes of divorce, just in case, is a marriage in which the couple cannot psychologically give themselves to one another as “one flesh.”
That’s what is most sad about the divorce culture in Western civilization. In previous days, what drove a man or woman crazy about the other person would be taken into account before the marriage, to be sure. Can I live with his messiness? Can I wake up every morning to her voice?
But once married, the thought for most people was “what are you going to do?” You lived with all the peeves and annoyances, and eventually learned to ignore them because, well, what are you going to do? You’re married for life, and so you can live happily or unhappily, but you’ll do it together. That doesn’t lead to misery but to contentment and the cultivation of love.
There are, of course, times when a marriage traumatically is ripped asunder, by unrepentant immorality or abandonment or abuse, just as there are times when a Supreme Court must be impeached. But that’s a constitutional crisis, not the normal state of affairs.
For a man to really know a woman, and for a woman to really know a man, they must be given to each other, with nothing held back. That requires the security and permanence of “till death do us part.”
Christians have spent a lot of time talking about how communication can lead to permanence. And that’s true. When a couple speaks freely and honestly, and cleaves to one another, a marriage is stabilized. But we need also to speak about how permanence leads to communication. When a couple has nothing to fear from one another, including the fear of leaving, they open up with their secrets, their doubts, their frustrations, their lives. They are, emotionally, naked and not afraid. They’re not campaigning for anything, but are confirmed to each other for life. Chris Rock is right, about that.





The main idea that I see in this blog post is the beauty created by the permanence of marriage. There’s beauty in the make-it-work moments when couples learn to love their partner; when they bring each other along; when sacrifices are made for the betterment of the other. Accepting the permanence of the marriage vow fosters these things even though those paths seem to be and sometimes are more difficult than giving up on the marriage.
It is right and good to strive for this ideal for yourself. It is fine to create a positive pressure towards marriage within the church. Also, I think people have a duty to help preserve marriages and respect their boundaries and their permanence.
Yet, I see the flip side. I’m single and will always be single. I’m probably the only one, but I think the kind of beauty described in this blog post can be and *ought* to be found outside of marriage. There needs to be true commitment within the church community. This commitment can foster these same kind of things between unmarried people, too. It will build a stronger church. Focusing only on marriage is a determent to everyone – especially single people within the church who also need the benefits of stable, committed relationships.
Dr. Moore,
Could you speak to the blessing of singleness and the opportunities for permanence that a single person has. Mr. Cesal brought it up in the comment above and I wondered how the believer should rightly think about it. Could you give some counsel, please?
Interesting perspective Dr. Moore, thanks for the post. I always find your writing sticks with me for awhile. You give me lots to think about!
Agreement to replies #1 and #2.
Chris Rock said that he understands more about women than single men do. Agree there too .. but applying that logic in reverse, how much do men who were married at 25 understand what it is like to be a permanent single like Nathan - and especially in a Christian culture which deems single men to be by-definition immature?
Dr. Moore
This message is a good one. But it is inconsistent with others, and with the way things play out in church, and in how the church handles divorce.
I watched you speak in Memphis yesterday, your talk on Ephesians as metaphor for the whole gospel was excellent from a high view. The devil is however in the details of the ground war that is happening. Divorce doesnt just persist, it increases.
You laid out a message that fits the conclusions one can derive by reading this short post “Do Women Sin”
http://www.drurywriting.com/keith/Do.Women.sin.htm
You admonished men for porn, cheating, abuse, heavy handedness…..all sinful things that men indeed tend towards, and you admonished women for low self esteem. (you frames this as women “submitting” to all men, worrying over how they look etc etc) I say that is a problem.
You have to consider not only what you say, but what people hear, then look at the overall effect over time. Do you disagree that culture encroaches the church? Of course you do. Then why is it that feminism is not encroaching? Because, of course it is. Its just very well concealed, its a new form….evangelical feminism hides behind a veil of tradition and you threw them another layer of camouflage.
Your message, outside the excellent metaphor, summed up “men step up”…..and “women stop submitting to other men you are wonderful as you are” Men, after hearing these messages for 40 years, and still the church thinking we need “more cow bell” have to be either stupid, spiritually inferior, or there is a problem with the message, because the divorce rate grows.
Men do not primarily file divorces though. Women do, at 70% plus rate. I ask you to investigate statistics that drill into this and see that these women are not, in the main, victims of infidelity, physical abuse, or addiction. Primarily the word abuse is meaningless these days and used as an empathy generator for divorce even when its merely arguing and unhappiness.
Dr Moore, you are eloquent and I am sure very well intentioned. But the drumbeat of men step up and poor little darlings have too much expected of them is part of what is CAUSING divorce. You have a form of truth salted just enough with lies. You need to consider the the whole body should feel conviction on the matter, and telling women they need to improve their self esteem is anything but.