[s4e9] A Defense Of Marriage Apr 2026

The Altar of Ambition: A Defense of Marriage in "Church and State"

The most poignant defense, however, lies in the fractured reconciliation between Shiv and Tom. Throughout the final season, their marriage has been a theater of cruelty. Yet, amidst the grief and the high-stakes political maneuvering of the funeral, they gravitate toward one another. When Tom is too exhausted by work to attend the service and Shiv is reeling from the emotional weight of her father’s death, their brief interactions are stripped of their usual bite. [S4E9] A Defense of Marriage

In "Church and State," marriage is not defended as a fairy tale. Instead, it is presented as a gritty, resilient alliance. It is the choice to stand next to someone when the pews are full of enemies, proving that even in a world governed by "succession" and "strategy," there is a primal, undeniable value in having a witness to your life. The Altar of Ambition: A Defense of Marriage

The defense begins with the widow, Caroline Collingwood. Her presence at Logan’s funeral, seated alongside his various wives and mistresses, serves as a cynical yet profound testament to the endurance of the marital bond. In the Roy universe, marriage is a transaction that never truly expires. By gathering the "wives club" in the front pew, the show suggests that marriage creates a permanent shared history that outlasts the legal dissolution of the union. It is a defense of the institution as a shared trauma—a pact that ensures you are never truly alone in your history, even if you are alone in your life. When Tom is too exhausted by work to

This essay explores the themes of commitment, sacrifice, and the evolution of partnership within the context of the Succession episode "Church and State" (S4E9), centered on the funeral of Logan Roy.