Every now and then, I read an article that catches my attention so today I am sharing this Author's thoughts on divorce.
it'll take to divorce-proof your future marriage
When
I was 7 years old, my dad came into my bedroom, sat beside me on the bed, and
told me that he wouldn't be living with us any longer. It was not a total
surprise; he and Mom had been fighting a lot, and Dad had not been home much
the past few weeks and months. But television, movies and children's books had
not prepared me for stories with unhappy endings. My heart had believed that
somehow, some way, it would all work out.
And
so, when my dad finally told me he was moving out for good and that he and Mom
were getting a divorce, I couldn't hold in the tears. I sobbed uncontrollably
and buried my face in a pillow. Nothing my dad could say would be able to fix
it.
And
the worst part of this story with an unhappy ending was that it poisoned all
the other stories for years to come. From playing sports to fixing things, from
learning about girls to learning about God, growing up provides a boy without a
dad no shortage of reminders. For most of my teen years, I felt unfinished —
and the world seemed more broken and jagged than it should for any young
kid.
As
I grew older, one thing was certain: I would never let divorce happen to me. I
promised myself that someday when I got married, no matter what happened — no
matter how hard things got — I would not allow myself to get a divorce. But as
I write this, I do so standing on the other side of my own broken
marriage.
My
former wife and I met at church while serving as youth ministry volunteers. We
knew each other for a year before we began dating. When we decided to get
married, we attended pre-marital counseling sessions with a pastor at our
church. And we talked about everything that could go wrong. After the wedding,
we moved so that I could attend seminary and take a job at a well-known
Christian ministry. We were both committed to the Lord — or so I thought.
A
few years later, after some disappointments and some dreams left unattained, my
former wife announced that she no longer wanted to be married. She said she
thought we'd both be better off single. I told her that I didn't believe in
divorce — that it's not even an option — that no matter what was going on, we
could work through it.
For
months, we tried — or I should say, I tried. She had her mind made up. Nothing
I could say, and nothing our pastors or counselors could say would change her
decision. Finally, one Saturday, while I was drinking my morning coffee, my
former wife came into the living room and revealed that she had committed adultery
and was filing for a divorce. (This is why it takes two to tango.)
I
had tried to love her like I thought Jesus would, but she had decided not to
look back. And so, though I had promised myself I would never be divorced, that
Saturday morning I discovered that divorce is not always something a husband
and wife must agree on together.
The Weed That Chokes a
Marriage
I
share this story not to proclaim my innocence. I certainly was not a perfect
husband. And although I tried to love my former wife the best way I knew how, I
could never do so perfectly. For whatever part was mine, I take full
responsibility.
Neither
do I write this to frighten young married couples or those hoping to be married
someday. Divorce is a scary prospect, and the marriages around us often appear
very fragile. With each year or two that passes, it seems another set of
married friends I've known has called it quits.
Looking
in from the outside, it might appear that divorce is inevitable for some
marriages. But I don't think that's true. I believe that apart from Christ-like
love, divorce is inevitable for every marriage.
I
know what you're thinking: There are plenty of happy non-Christian marriages —
and there are also many folks who know Christ and still get divorced — so allow
me to explain:
The
Bible says that every single person is born a sinner, and without saving faith
in Jesus Christ, our situation is desperate. Paul's letter to the Christians at
Ephesus describes our condition like this:
And you were dead in the
trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this
world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at
work in the sons of disobedience—among whom we all once lived in the passions
of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by
nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind (Ephesians 2:1-3, ESV).
Now
just imagine putting two people like that in a marriage — people who live out
their selfish ambitions while gratifying sinful natures that can never be
satiated. It's a recipe for divorce if I ever heard one. In fact, you may know
some people who live this way, and they're miserable. They manipulate and fight
with each other to get what they want, and each one feels wronged and unloved
by the other. Selfishness is like the centrifugal force that you learned about
in science class: It pulls a couple apart from the center.
In
his book, The Meaning of Marriage,
Timothy Keller writes, "Marriage brings out the worst in you. It doesn't
create your weaknesses (though you may blame your spouse for your blow-ups)—it
reveals them" (139). Later he adds:
And there's the Great
Problem of marriage. The one person in the whole world who holds your heart in
her hand, whose approval and affirmation you most long for and need, is the one
who is hurt more deeply by your sins than anyone else on the planet (162).
That
is why I say that without the love of Jesus Christ, divorce is inevitable. But
there is hope.
The Curse and the
Blessing
In
that same letter to the Ephesians, Paul writes, "Submit to one another out
of reverence for Christ" (5:21),
and then he tells married couples how to do this: "Wives, submit
yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord" and "Husbands,
love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for
her" (vv. 22, 25).
His instructions get at the root of our sinful nature. The different commands
He gives to husbands and wives reflect their different roles in marriage, but
the antidote for selfishness is the same: active, pursuing love.
When
a man puts his wife's needs above his own, he is loving her like Jesus. And
when a woman does the same for her husband, she, too, is showing Christ-like
love. This is true when a couple knows Jesus Christ, but it's also true when a
couple does not know Him. When, apart from Christ, we live sacrificially for
another person, we are imitating Jesus — even if we don't realize it.
In
a marriage where both people are constantly taking, there will soon be nothing
left. But in a marriage where both the husband and the wife are willing to give
up their rights and wants for the other, love will abound. The couple's bond
will only grow stronger over time, no matter what comes.
"I
believe God uses marriage to expose the less desirable parts of ourselves that
can easily stay hidden when single," says Christian counselor Peyton
Knight. I recently had the opportunity to talk with her about divorce and the
issues she sees in her practice. "The more we are able to experience and
receive God's love when those less-than-desirable bits of ourselves are
exposed, the more we are transformed and our ability to be selfless is
increased."
This
world is broken — and so is every last one of us. Marriage gives a husband and a
wife front-row seats to the other's sin. No one gets to know your ugliness
better than your spouse. As we've seen, that can be a tremendous curse. But it
can also be a blessing. No one has the power to show you the love of Jesus
better than someone who, just like Jesus, knows the intimate details of your
sin and loves you anyway. That's grace and mercy lived out in every embrace, in
every hard conversation, and in every kiss goodnight.
The
difference between the curse and the blessing lies in how closely we're walking
with and imitating Jesus. Before we say "I do" or even go out on a
first date, we can take big, bold steps in the right direction by putting our
relationship with Christ above all others, and by looking for a potential
spouse who's doing the same.
Even
with all the pain she sees in her office, Knight tells me, "I
wholeheartedly believe in God's goodness through divorce and the hope of His
redemption for the people who walk through it." As I write this, some
years after my divorce, I am remarried. My incredible bride is sitting across
from me, and my newborn son is asleep down the hall. Our Father is able to
bring the most beautiful flowers up through scorched earth.
Marriage
is a gift from God, part of His good creation right from the start. But
divorce, like death, disease and heartache, is an invader on this planet — a
symptom of the disease of sin. And we must live like citizens of another world
if we're going to avoid falling into one of the most common traps of this one.
Discuss this article and chat with the author over on our blog
post called "The Conversation Killer."
No comments:
Post a Comment