7-10-3 Some Christian Myths About Marriage
This section will consider the down side and myths about marriage. But
be warned, the next chapter discusses the down side of the single life.
There's something in our nature that yearns for the grass on the other
side of the fence. Believers are either married or single. The married
think of the benefits of singleness, and the single long for the perceived
advantages of marriage. If our marital status frustrates us, we need to
be especially aware of this. Many marrieds will reason: " I wouldn't
be what I am now spiritually if I hadn't married" , or " I could
be so much more spiritual if it wasn't for my wife and family" ;
and many singles lament: " I'd be so much stronger spiritually if
I were married" - forgetting, of course, that God wants us to be
spiritual, and He arranges our situation to that end. But we simply can't
argue from the counter-factual situation (i.e. speculating what might
have happened if X or Y had or hadn't happened). The single brother, for
example, doesn't know he'll be stronger if he marries. It seems
true that many married believers (especially when faced with 1 Cor. 7!)
magnify the benefits of marriage to rationalize their own position. They
can't conceive of the possibility of consciously choosing the single life;
to them, marriage was so obviously the right and only choice. They can't
imagine what life might have been like if they had consciously decided
to be single and live for the Lord. Love Isn't Marriage Many singles will tend to equate love with marriage, forgetting
that many get married from an obsession with the idea of marriage
and the marriage process rather than true love. This is one of the
biggest single-Christian myths about marriage. Because of this,
some will marry a unbeliever because they so want to get married
at all costs. But marriage in the world is an endless search for
the end of the rainbow; nobody has really arrived, despite their
pretensions. As psychologists probe deeper and deeper into the human
needs and experience, they continually arrive at the conclusion
that there is something insoluble and insatiable within our human
psyche that marriage and usual human relationships, unaffected by
anything super-human, cannot affect. C.G. Jung concludes: "
Human thought and relationships cannot conceive any system or final
truth that can give the patient what he needs in order to live:
this is, faith, hope, love and insight" (1).
But we shouldn't need a psychoanalyst to tell us this. The Almighty
explicitly and implicitly prohibits marriage out of the Faith.
Being aware of this, some single believers become convinced that if only
they can marry a believer, almost any believer, their marriage
will be wonderful. Again, they tend to equate love with marriage. They
forget that love, joy and peace are fruits of the Spirit, developed in
us by the word, irrespective of our marital status. And they need to remember
that Paul had to encourage married brothers and sisters to love each other
(Col. 3:18-21), he had to tell brethren not to get bitter with their wives
because of the restrictions they gave them. He had to tell wives to submit
themselves to their husbands rather that getting on with their own agenda.
This is the reality of married life in Christ; it's a struggle, just
as the single life is. For example, sexual self-restraint is still required
even within marriage (1 Cor. 7:3-5). The world's view of marriage is that
such an intimate relationship, coupled with parenthood, will help a person's
self-discovery and self-fulfilment. Yet surely Biblical marriage
is about self-sacrifice, submission of one's personal and sexual desires
to the will of the partner, putting another before oneself. Brethren so
desperate for marriage should consider the implications of Eph. 5:25:
" Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church,
and gave himself for it" . It's that last phrase, in the
Greek, which is the hard thing; because it's the same as used concerning
Christ giving up His final breath on the cross. He died as an act
of the will, He gave His life up, He controlled the very moment of His
death as a huge act of the will; no one took His life from Him, He gave
it up of His own will (Jn. 10: 18). This should make any brother
think more than once about marriage. And it should make all of us think
twice about encouraging any brother to enter into this relationship. Marriage
isn't just a legitimate way of expressing our sexuality- although many
will admit that this is really why they got married. And it isn't just
a God-designed cure for loneliness. Marriage in Christ is a " mystery"
, something extremely deep (Eph. 5:32). Christian Myths About Marriage
When it comes to marriage, there is amongst us what I'd call the
happy ending syndrome. We can somehow feel that the young couple
walk off into the sunset, to live happily ever afterwards in their
cosy Christian world. But now, as a community, we're starting to
see that this really isn't the case. Couples split up, or their
relationships become dead, some concealing this more than others.
Sadly, I'm a realist. It often makes me unpopular, but I can't live
in a cotton-wool, Mickey Mouse world. I attend many baptisms, and
of course I rejoice; but I can't ever stop my awareness that one
in three baptized leave the faith (2) (and
many others grow passive and indifferent). I can't forget
all the fine friends I've had in Christ, who now no longer walk
with us. I can't escape what I call the " Where are you tonight?"
syndrome. And it's getting the same with Christian marriage. I rejoice,
but I see the statistical realities very clearly. Those under 30s
who marry in the world only have (at best) a 50% chance of keeping
together; one in two break up. Within the Evangelical Churches,
one in eight break up (3). And within the 1000-strong
church of my youth, I once calculated something similar. And (realist
again!) it has to be said that all these figures are worsening.
Of course, this wasn't true until the 1970s. What is fast becoming the
Christian myth about marriage was absolutely true until then: Get
married, have your children, you'll find great spiritual help for
yourself, you'll help your partner to the Kingdom, you'll be a solid,
reliable member of an ecclesia, your children will come into the
church if you bring them up properly, take them to Sunday School
and church gatherings, do the Bible readings together. Then they'll
get married, look after you when you're old, and you'll be discreetly
wiping the tears away from your eyes as you watch your grand-daughter
baptized. This was the theory, this was all true, more or less.
But not now. There's scarcely a Christian family without the emotional
scars of marriage break up, of many children who've rejected the
Gospel, or whose commitment is self-admittedly minimal. What was
such a grand theory and what worked down through the generations
simply isn't working now. Children don't come into the Truth so
easily, do what you will for them. Marriages often don't
hold together. Some of us sat down one evening and made a list of
all the married brethren and sisters we knew. We came to the conclusion,
from a total of around 450 married Christian couples, that on average
between one in two and one in three raised Christian children are
baptized (4). Yet our aim in having children is
to produce saints, not church members. Of those who are baptized,
one in three give up their interest in the Kingdom- with all that
may entail at the judgment. So having children with the hope they
will come to the Kingdom is a risky business; a one in four chance
in the UK, or worse as the last days progress. I'm sorry to say
all this. I can almost feel the passive resentment of those who
have sacrificed great things for the sake of having a family. But
how many times can a man turn around, and pretend that he just hasn't
seen? For how long can we hear what we want to hear, and disregard
the rest? Perhaps what I'm saying is ahead of its time; if the Lord
doesn't return imminently as we hope, it may be that the full shattering
of the Christian myth concerning marriage and children will only
be seen in the next generation. This isn’t to say that the Biblical
theory of homebuilding and child-rearing is faulty, or that we are
wrong to attempt to follow it. Every generation has been increasingly
morally bankrupt, and yet the power of Divine principles is such
that successful family life is possible; of course it is.
But I am simply pointing out that increasingly, our community is
painfully failing in it; and when ruefully considering the road
of family life, the single believer should bear this in mind. It’s
not a reason not to get married; but it may help dispel
some of the myth that marriage is the less painful road than that
of the single life.
One other observation is that many parents go through great turmoil in
their own faith as a result of their children rejecting the Gospel. Thus
some will end up saying things like " Perhaps they weren't called..."
; with the terrible implication that the Gospel, the knowledge of the
cross of Christ and the Kingdom this made possible, is not powerful
enough of itself to call a man to salvation. Those who have been called
out of non-Christian backgrounds repeatedly find it difficult to believe
that someone can hear the true Gospel from childhood, do nothing about
it- and walk away scot-free. Having children and teaching them the Faith
therefore creates a large emotional problem for the parent if they refuse
it. All this said, it must be emphasized that there is nothing wrong with
marriage in itself. There is a God-given beauty and comeliness to it which
the failure of man mustn’t obscure. The faithful have always lived in
times when the surrounding world is collapsing morally, and taking many
of the ecclesia with it. But for those who held to God’s way, family life
was and is always possible. I’m simply saying that the Christian experience
of marriage isn’t as positive as it once was, and those who long for marriage
as the panacea for all problems would be naive to ignore this.
" But this I say, brethren..."
But put all these statistics, all these observations of Christians, on
one side for the moment. It's clear from 1 Cor. 7 that in the very
last days, the believers will be " happier" if they remain
single, because " the time is short" (1 Cor. 7:29). The problem
is, deciding whether we are actually in that very last period. There is
good reason to think that in some ways we are; and yet there are also
some prophecies which as I write these words just don’t seem to have had
the scale of fulfilment which their contexts suggest. " The time
is short" . This can't really be argued with. " It is good for
the present distress" (1 Cor. 7:26) uses the same word as
in Lk. 21:23 concerning the distress of the last days. Some of us have
no hesitation in proclaiming that the time of " distress" of
Lk. 21 is upon us. But if it is, then we need to adjust our marriage attitudes
accordingly. The above statistical analysis seems proof enough that the
last days are truly coming upon us; no longer is marriage and family life
working as it once did. Some who chose marriage are ending up, exactly
as Paul predicted, with " trouble in the flesh" (1 Cor. 7:28).
The obvious reaction to what I'm suggesting is that there are many examples
of happy marriages. This is true; but it doesn't disprove my point, that
if we are truly in the last days then marriage won't work well now
as well or as easily as it did in the past. And the problems our
young couples are facing is proof of this.
The True Satisfaction
Although married, David’s family life was a source of grief to him. He
comments that the men of the world “are satisfied with children”, but for
him, the only satisfaction would be when he resurrected to behold God’s
face and to be turned into that same image: “As for me, I shall behold thy
face… I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeness” (Ps.
17:14,15 RV). This was his satisfaction; the satisfaction of men of
the world was simply in their children, and to “leave the rest of their
substance to their babes”, i.e. their grandkids. And David’s perspective
must be that of us all.
Notes
(1) C.G. Jung, Modern
Man In Search Of A Soul (London: Ark, 1984), p.261.
(2) An analysis of numbers
of baptisms against numbers of departures over the past 40 years
of the Dawn magazine actually gives a worse figure.
(3) Figures from Helena
Wilkinson, Beyond Singleness (London: Marshall Pickering,
1995), p. 103. However, the effect of legalistic Christianity may
well make these figures even worse. “Pollster George Barna discovered
that born-again Christians in modern America have a higher rater
of divorce (27 %) than non-believers (23%); those who describe themselves
as fundamentalists have the highest percentage of all (30%). Indeed,
four of the six states with the highest divorce rates fall in the
region known as the Bible Belt” (quoted in Philip Yancey, The
Jesus I Never Knew, Harper & Collins, p. 263). These figures
I find hard to believe (especially the low rate of divorce for non-believers)
but they are worth meditation.
(4) Our analysis revealed
a distinct feature: there tends to be a much higher 'conversion
ratio' of children in some churches compared to others. This might
suggest that there is strong peer group pressure affecting the decision
to be baptized, rather than young people making the decision of
their own volition.
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