Stay Committed to the Marriage, Not Just the Ring

June 26, 2025

Topic: Marriage

“Isaac brought her into the tent of his mother Sarah, and he married Rebekah. So she became his wife, and he loved her; and Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death” (Genesis 24:67).

 

On December 7, 1941, Kenneth Goesner was a 19-year old seaman in charge of a 40-foot motor launch attached to the USS Raleigh anchored at Pearl Harbor. He had just returned from taking a load of sailors to the pier for a day of relaxation when Japanese planes filled the sky. Then, a torpedo fell from a low-flying plane, slicing through the sea towards the USS Raleigh, which took a direct hit. Unlike the hundreds of other ships that were immediately destroyed, the Raleigh was damaged but remained afloat.

Three days later, Goesner was able to find his way within the damaged interior of the ship to his duffle bag, and from this he salvaged a tiny box which held a gold wedding ring which he later gave to his sweetheart, Alice Forster.

The ring survived the torpedo attack; their marriage survived more than a few hits as well. Wow! Talk about a wedding ring with a history!

Question: Where did the practice of exchanging rings come from anyway? And why bother? In Roman days men bartered for a wife, and as part of the exchange, an engagement ring would be given to the bride as a kind of down payment or security, indicating to her family that he was committed in good faith to the marriage. They further believed that the third finger on the left hand had had a special vein—they called it vena amoris or the vein of love—which was directly connected with the heart. That belief was further established by a line in the 1549 edition of the Book of Common Prayer which designated the left hand as the marriage hand.

Rings were chosen as a symbol of what the relationship was intended to be. Like rings, which are an endless circle, God’s intention was that there was to be no end to marriage apart from death, and rings were made of gold which has always been considered to be the purest, most precious of all metals.

In William Shakespeare’s Richard II, there is a passage which reads, “Look, how my ring encompasseth thy finger, / Even so thy breast encloseth my poor heart; / Wear both of them, for both of them are thine.”

Frankly, a lot of wedding rings today are being crushed by forces more devastating than the torpedo that threatened the ring in Ken Goesner’s duffle bag on December 7, 1941. The vein of love which the Romans thought flowed from the heart seems to wither and run dry quite often, because many marriages today are not withstanding the stress of daily living.

Why the practice of rings, anyway? As far back as history goes, rings were symbols of commitment. In every ancient culture you will find rings with inscriptions which indicate they were wedding rings. Read Genesis 38 and there you see the practice as Judah gives his seal and staff to Tamar. The old Episcopal marriage ceremony from the Anglican church says, “With this ring I thee wed, with my body I thee worship, and with all my worldy goods I endow thee: In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.” That’s commitment—the whole works!

Having worked with couples for many years, I have come to the conclusion that most marriages which fail could have survived had couples only been more committed to the marriage, rejecting the thought that an annulment or divorce is an easy way out.

Studies find that waiting can help you find common ground, cool your temper, and refocus on the future and thus save a marriage. Your wedding ring can survive far more than the force of a torpedo. That’s for sure.

 

Resource reading: Genesis 24:61-67.

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