A better set of questions are these?Are non-arranged marriages valid?If a couple get married without the bride's father's permission, is the marriage valid?Question 1 is not as good of a question, of course. A groom could 'arrange' the marriage with the potential father-in-law in Biblical accounts. If the pagan Shechemites knew better than to just marry off Dinah to the heir to their throne. Jacob had to approve for it to be legitimate. The Bible doesn't exactly state this, but the need for bridal consent is a strong Jewish tradition. In the story of Isaac and Rebecca, Rebecca gave her consent.But I suspect that the original readers of the Old Testament would have considered a man taking a woman off somewhere without the father's permission and having some kind of ceremony in which they made promises, instead of covenanting through giving the bride price, to each other to have been the wrong way to go about it. The legitimacy of the marriage might have been in question.The Benjamites did, with the national leaders approval, steal some brides, because the Israelites had put themselves under a curse if they gave a bride to a Benjamite. Since the fathers could not give the daughters in marriage, the men stole their brides. God actually required 'forced marriages' in some cases in the Old Testament. If a man raped or seduced a virgin, he was required to marry her. The requirement was on his side. The father of the girl could refuse to give her to him as a wife, but he still had to pay the bride price for virgins.With a lot of arranged marriages, there is consent by those being married. It may be, for cultural reasons, the kids go along with their parents choices, because that's the way it's done. But they still stand there and go through whatever rituals, and don't run away. In the proverbial shot gun wedding, the groom has the choice to get married and take responsibility for the bride and unborn baby, or risk his chances running and evading the shotgun fire from the bride's father.There are still arranged marriages in Indian, and some modern India young people (could be 20's) are a part of the process along with their parents. Some Koreans practice arranged marriage and the young adults looking for spouses may be asked to approve the choice after a meeting or two, I hear, if the parents agree. India has a very low rate of divorce. When I lived in Korea, I heard that arranged marriages had a lower divorce rate than marriages where couples found their own spouses. When I was there, they separated girls from boys in school from age seven up through high school. In college, girls and boys mixed. Senior classmates would match up freshmen on blind dates. The three of them would meet. They called this a 'meeting.' It was a kind of blind date. I heard a lot of the Freshman would go to several 'meetings' a week. Eventually, many of them settled with girlfriends and boyfriends. So even their dating was 'arranged' in a way. The ones who didn't marry off soon after college or who didn't meet on their own in their early working years had a high expectation to find a wife. At the time, a woman who hit 30 who wasn't married would have faced a lot of pressure from family to marry. When girls got close to 30 and men got a little past the 30 mark, their mother's, aunts, grandmas etc. would go around with pictures of them. Little old ladies would show pictures of their single relatives to each other at the bus stops. I had a Korean grad school classmate whose parents were thinking of trying to set her up with her father's bosses son. He had an advanced degree and a good career. Parents want their children to match on education level.Six year olds girls in Afghanistan may be more like what you have in mind. Muh. ham. mad had a child bride and Mus|ims think it is a good thing to imitate him, and some of the Afghanistan groups may be applying that to marriage.In Indonesia, a lot of people find their own spouses in the city, but parental approval to actually get married is a very important cultural norm. For people who get to old without getting married and in some rural areas, parents can be active in setting up marriages. I've got an in-law who was arranged with a relative that had a relationship with her that, by custom, they were allowed to marry. (Same father's name is forbidden, just like with Koreans.) My wife had a cousin who she heard was arranged. She had a college degree and was good-looking so my wife was surprised to hear that. On the negative side of this, I talked with a maid who was a former Mus|im whose father was trying to set her up from someone of that religion.Ideally, it think it would be good if there were more parental involvement in choice of spouse and the whole dating culture. Maybe a 100 years or so into our cultural trend of letting young people choose their own spouses, the divorce rate skyrocketed. Of course, there was also feminism and the sexual revolution, so we can't blame it all on that. And there was a slow progression toward it. The sexual revolution and divorce rate happened a few decades into the slow introduction of our modern dating culture. Parents having a big say over who their kids court or marry works better in a culture where this is the norm. Individuals accept it better that way. Our constantly being bombarded by images of people who are in the 95 percentile for looks on TV and other media and cultural emphasis on certain concepts related to romantic love, Disney stories about the evil father trying to keep the two young people in love from getting together, and various other influence would work against a return to parents having a bigger say in helping their children in this way.Jeremiah 29:6says,Take ye wives, and beget sons and daughters; and take wives for your sons, and give your daughters to husbands, that they may bear sons and daughters; that ye may be increased there, and not diminished.This was in a passage of instructions for how Judah was to behave in captivity. There is a context to it, of course. But the LORD's words imply the parents had a responsibility to find the husbands and wives for their children to marry. When did the Lord say anything about young people finding spouses apart from their parents' help?I'll admit, this topic is more interesting to me as a father than it was as a teenager. I remember my mother suggesting some teenage girl in church and saying, Don't you think she's cute? when the girl in question wasn't my type. The idea of arranged marriage and parents picking out someone for me would have made me cringe back then. But parents could take children's personal tastes into account as well