A betrothal period is not merely waiting for a wedding day. It is a serious season of preparation, testing, instruction, and covenant formation before a man and woman begin building a household together.
Betrothal is a formal promise of marriage. It is more serious than casual dating and more structured than engagement as commonly practiced today. It marks a couple as intentionally preparing for marriage, while still leaving room for counsel, growth, examination, and final readiness. it allows you to test your Foundational Concord, and make changes before you both commit for life.
Betrothal announces that this relationship has a destination. That you are not merely exploring feelings; you are preparing for marriage, family, and household order.
The year gives both people time to mature into the responsibilities they are preparing to carry. Love is tested by discipline, patience, and practical preparation.
Betrothal gives seriousness without rushing into marriage unprepared. It creates structure, accountability, and expectations before the household is fully joined.
A year is long enough for patterns to appear. It allows the couple to pass through holidays, family pressures, financial decisions, conflict, stress, joy, disappointment, and ordinary life. The goal is not perfection. The goal is readiness.
Foundation and counsel. The couple clarifies beliefs, family vision, finances, expectations, boundaries, and the kind of household they intend to build.
Training and observation. The man practices leadership through planning, responsibility, and decision-making. The woman practices household wisdom through order, stewardship, and preparation.
Testing and refinement. The couple addresses conflict, family input, practical weaknesses, and areas where immaturity still needs correction.
Confirmation and final preparation. The couple reviews readiness, household plans, vows, responsibilities, and the marriage agreement before the wedding takes place.
The betrothal year should have clear expectations.
Without structure, the couple simply waits. With structure, the couple grows.
The betrothal period should include honest conversations that are often skipped until after the wedding. These topics help reveal whether the couple is ready to build one household together.
Who carries which responsibilities? How are decisions made? What does leadership look like? What does support look like?
How many children are desired? How will they be taught, disciplined, protected, and raised?
How will income, debt, savings, generosity, purchases, and emergencies be handled?
How will disagreements be handled? Who gives counsel? What happens when one person is wrong?
What kind of atmosphere should the home have? How will guests, relatives, neighbors, and community be treated?
What does this family stand for? What habits, beliefs, and traditions will be protected and passed on?
Is your family going to be about service to other, building a large family, going on adventures, making money? These should, must be decided during betrothal, with time to change tracks if needed.
Do you want to retire on the coast or the Bahamas? Live in a B&B in Alaska? Have a three story house where every night someone yells, “Goodnight Johnboy!” This is your Life Goal, and it should be established early on.
A betrothal should be serious, but not careless. Boundaries protect the couple from pretending they are already married before they have actually completed the covenant. We will get into that more, later.
Marriage should not begin with confusion. A one-year betrothal gives the couple time to define the household, assign responsibilities, receive counsel, practice discipline, and enter marriage with sober joy clear on responsibilities and expectations. With this program, the transition should be seamless, rewarding, and put you on the path you’ve chosen to your own personal House on the Hill.
The Betrothal Planning Course is designed to help couples understand leadership, household responsibilities, communication, finances, expectations, family structure, conflict resolution, and long-term vision before marriage begins.
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