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If you have your Bibles, turn
to 1 Corinthians chapter 7. We'll be looking at six verses
right in the middle of the chapter, verses 10 through 16. In some ways, we'll be looking at
the topic of marriage and divorce and remarriage. All those topics
we'll be touching upon. But principally, this passage
is dealing with what God thinks about divorce. And if you're married and this
is addressing those who are married, this text is addressing those
who are married to believers and those who are married to
unbelievers. If you're married or you're engaged. Use this message,
even if you're not on the verge of divorce. Use this message
to push you towards clinging, clinging to your spouse. It's not just a matter of, hey,
I don't want a divorce. May we be pushed and motivated and encouraged
to cling, to run after, to pursue our spouse. so that we can represent
the Gospel well. Start reading with me in verse
10. To the married I have this charge, not I, but the Lord. The wife should not separate
from her husband, but if she does, she should remain unmarried
or else be reconciled to her husband. And the husband should
not divorce his wife, To the rest I say, I, not the Lord,
that if any brother has a wife who is an unbeliever and she
consents to live with him, he should not divorce her. If any
woman has a husband who is an unbeliever and he consents to
live with her, she should not divorce him. For the unbelieving
husband is made holy because of his wife and the unbelieving
wife is made holy because of her husband. Otherwise, your
children will be unclean, but as it is, they are holy. But
if the unbelieving partner separates, let it be so. In such cases,
the brother or sister is not enslaved. God has called you
to peace. For how do you know, wife, whether
you will save your husband? Or how do you know, husband,
whether you will save your wife? Now, the basic outline is twofold. One, he's instructing those who
are married to believers. And he refers to the teachings
of Christ. And secondly, he's referring
to those who potentially could be married to unbelievers. And
imagine you're a first generation Christian and you were saved
out of idolatry as a married person. And though you're saved,
your wife or your husband happened not to be saved. So you're married
to an unbeliever. You have a, if you would, a mixed
marriage. You're unequally ill. And so
this is the basic outline of this text. And in these verses,
we see a textual difficulty. R.C. Sproul says this ranks in
one of the top five most difficult passages in all of scriptures. because Paul in verse 10 says,
this is what the Lord says. And then verse 12 says, the Lord
did not say this, but I say this to you. And what does he mean? Well, even one of my favorite
theologians, John Calvin said that he thought maybe this is
referring to the Paul speaking in inspired language and then
kind of taking a time out from inspiration and said, now, what
I have been saying and communicating to you is authoritative, inspired,
but I'm about to give you some counsel and advice. I think it's
good advice, but it's not necessarily of the Lord. It's just my good
counsel. And that's what some would say
that this means, but I don't think it means that at all. So
to clarify this up front, I think what Paul is doing, clearly he's
referring to the teachings of Jesus when he taught the disciples
not to divorce, and now he is teaching through inspiration. In both cases, it's inspired
and authoritative, but one is a reference to the teachings
of Christ that is recorded and that we have in the Scriptures,
in the Gospel, and then what he is speaking. through inspiration. In other words, every bit of
this is the inspired authoritative Word of God. But in this text,
we learn what God thinks about divorce in particular. And we
need to have a robust, especially us young married, the young married
couples need to have a robust understanding of God's perspective
of divorce. What does God think about divorce? How should we think about divorce?
And we're living in a day, and I think this has been true probably
through all history, it's not just our day, but divorce is
pretty rapid, rampant. Even in the first century, the
reports of divorce was quite common. And it's still common
in our day. In fact, it was so common by
the time of Christ that no longer did they have to go through a
court system to divorce their spouse. It was so common that
as long as they had seven witnesses to verify this, they could make
their intent known to seven people at one time without a court hearing,
and then they could separate or divorce. This was how common
and easy it was to walk away from marriage in the first century. But what does God think about
this? What does God think about divorce? Well, we see in our
text that God disapproves, that God hates divorce. Malachi 2.16 tells us, for the
Lord God of Israel says, I hate divorce. The word divorce means
to separate, or to sever, to cut, to break apart. He hates
divorce for at least five reasons. He hates divorce, one, because
it's the consequences of sin. The Bible says the wages of sin
is death. And one picture of death is separation. It separates us from God. And
separates us from one another. In fact, sin brought the first
divorce, if you would, where man was expelled from the presence
of God and expelled, if you would, from the garden sanctuary. And
from that sin, you have the first domestic fight. The first argument
in the marriage took place because of sin. God hates it because
God loves unity, reconciliation. He loves peace. This is why He
came into this world. To reconcile us to Himself. To
secure Himself a bride for Himself. He loves reconciliation. And
hates separation. Marriage is to represent the
Gospel. It's to represent the covenant relationship that God
has made with us. Thus, when there is a divorce, it's a marring
of that Gospel testimony. Third, God hates divorce because
marriage is a lifelong covenant relationship. Malachi 2.15 defines
marriage as a lifelong companionship brought about by covenant. It's
not just an agreement between a man and a woman saying, hey,
we're going to live together and potentially have children.
It's more than that, it's a covenant commitment, a legal arrangement
that even God himself notifies. When you're married in any court
system on earth, God is in above writing down the marriage and
says now they are officially, legally brought together. And it's a lifelong covenant.
Romans 7 tells us, for the woman who has a husband is bound by
the law to her husband as long as he lives. But if the husband
dies, she is released from the law of her husband. So then,
while her husband lives, she marries another man, she will
be called an adulteress. But if her husband dies, she
is free from that law, so that she is no adulteress. though
she has married another man." That is, you're married until
one of you dies. And if your spouse dies, then
you're free to remarry. But as long as your spouse is
alive, according to the law of God, he sees you as married. We'll see this a little bit.
Just because people get divorced on earth doesn't mean God says
you're divorced in heaven. What God joins together Man can't
put asunder. Now, God might recognize a divorce,
we'll see in a couple of occasions. There are some exceptions. But
just because you want to get a divorce because you don't like
one another anymore, doesn't mean that God validates that
divorce. He'll still view you as a married
couple. Because you have to go before
God, not just before man. And God says this is a lifelong
arrangement. You've got to remember God hates
divorce because He's the one who brings couples together. Matthew 19 tells us in verse
3 through 6, the Pharisees came to Him, testing Him and saying
to Him, is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for just
any reason? And he answered and said to them,
have you not read that he who had made them at the beginning
made them male and female? And he said, for this reason,
a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his
wife, and the two shall become one flesh. So then they are no
longer two, but one flesh. Now listen to this. Therefore,
what God joined together, it doesn't say what you joined together.
He didn't say what the state brought together. He didn't say
what your parents brought together. He says what God Himself has
joined together. Let no man separate. To divorce or to separate is
to go against the Word of God, is to fight God Himself. You
see, bottom line is divorce needs to be viewed as sinful, as wrong. Matthew 5 32 I say to you that
whoever divorces his wife for any reason except for sexual
immorality Causes her to commit adultery and whoever marries
a woman who is divorced commits adultery and this is why our
text going to verse 10 says To the married I give this charge,
not I, but the Lord. The wife should not separate
from her husband. Then in verse 11, it says, and
the husband should not divorce his wife. So this is the word
of the Lord on the matter. Should you get divorced? Can
you get divorced? The answer is no. You're bound
by covenant and by God's own union to stick with your wife,
to stick with your husband. to love your spouse. You say,
well, what about separation? What about if maybe I don't have
to legally get divorced, but I just don't want to live with
my spouse any longer? In verse 10, 11, maybe it's given
an exemption for a separation clause. Look, it says, the wife
should not separate from her husband. Verse 11, but if she
does, she should remain unmarried or else be reconciled to her
husband. And so we see a changing of the words from divorce. Husbands
don't divorce your spouse. Wives don't separate from your
husband. And someone might argue from
this text that there is a distinction between divorce and separation.
And you might could argue back in this fourth, fifth, century
BC, prior to the first century, it was true in Roman law that
a man could divorce his spouse, but the spouse or the wife couldn't
divorce her husband. She had no legal grounds. The
man could get out, but the woman couldn't. The man could just
hand his wife a certificate of divorce, leave the relationship,
marry someone else according to Roman law. But the wife, the
spouse, had no legal rights to do that. So what women would
do was just leave. They would abandon their husbands
and just go back to the mother and father's house or just go
somewhere else where it would take them. And they would just
separate. And so maybe this is what Paul is talking about, but
I don't think so. I think this word separate is
just another word or synonym for divorce. Because in verse
11, it says, if a wife separates from her husband, let her remain
unmarried. It's saying that one who separates
is no longer married, implying here that separation is essentially
divorce. It's simply leaving your spouse. And so there's no biblical category
in scriptures for separation. Now, pastorally speaking, if
your marriage is in such a disarray, maybe you caught your spouse
cheating on you, or there's some form of abuse, or there's some
form of real difficulty you're dealing with, and you're saying,
Pastor Jeff, am I gonna be stuck in this terrible situation? Well,
there is some pastoral counsel to work through that, and maybe,
Maybe separation could be helpful if the goal is reconciliation. Let's pull back for a little
bit to gather our thoughts, collect where we're at, so that we can
work on reconciliation. And so maybe you could possibly
say separation is permissible, but only if reconciliation is
the objective of the separation. Nowhere in scriptures do we have
the permission just to walk away from our covenant commitments. Now, there will be a couple exceptions.
We'll get to that in a minute. But without those exceptions,
we're to work out our problems. We're to cling to our spouse.
We're to do what we can to keep our covenant vows to death. Now, let me give you some advice,
especially for the young married couples. When you get married, just put
it in a way that divorce is not a word to be used. It's not an
option. That's just not part of the vocabulary.
Just put that away. And what I love about marriage
and why marriage is such a beautiful thing. Now, God never, ever dislikes
us in the covenant relationship he has with us. He's never going
to divorce us. He's never going to get angry
with us. He's never going to get, oh, I wish I didn't make
this covenant arrangement. He knew what he was getting into
before he got in a covenant relationship with us. So our sins doesn't
take him by surprise, nor does it cause him to want to divorce
us, thankfully. But what I love about marriage
being a covenant relationship is because every marriage is
going to face difficulties and hardships. Every marriage will
face moments where you say, did I actually marry the right person?
Was this really what God wanted for my life? And what I love
about that is that you have this covenant commitment that you
don't have to wonder the will of God anymore. I remember six months after marrying
my beautiful wife, who I've always loved, Never not love my wife. But I remember after six months
thinking to myself, oh, we got married quickly. And we did. She was beautiful. I loved her
and I asked her to marry me. And after six months of being
married, I was like, whoa, did I rush into this? You know, that thought,
did I actually not evaluate the scenario properly? And I remember
thinking to myself, I don't know if I rushed into it or not, but
I do know now that she's my wife. And I have the word of God that
I'm to love her and be committed to her. And see, that covenant
commitment stuck with me. And this is what will help you
in your marriage. You say, well, and this is a,
this is a valuable thing and a beautiful thing. I don't want
us to think, well, divorce is so ugly and divorce is all this
sermon, just be negative. I want you to see the beauty
of a covenant commitment, the beauty of this, because it keeps
the relationship together. It's the reason that so many
people get divorced is because they've dated so much before
they got married And what do you do when the marriage and
the dating relationship gets tough and rough and what your
girlfriend or your boyfriend? Hurt your feelings. It's over.
Oh, there's other fish in the sea and off they go Jumping around
jumping around jumping around because that's what you do when
things get hard But when you get married, there's no more
My feelings got hurt. I'm out No, I've got this commitment. I've got my promise. And it's
before the living God. And thus we should work not just
to stay married, but to stay lovingly married. Not just to
not keep from divorcing, but we should cling close to our
spouse every day. Now, this is if you're married,
you're you need to stay married. That's the basic counsel. But
think about maybe you're married to an unbeliever. Maybe you thought
they were a believer when you got married, but six months in,
a year in, you find out, man, they don't even like church.
They don't like God. I'm married to someone that's not a helpful
father to my children, definitely is not a good spiritual leader
to me. I want out. And that might be one of you
are in that position or you know someone in that position. I mean,
the Corinthians, think about that. Many of them were converted
and the husband or the wife was converted, but the spouse had
not yet been converted. And so now they're in a mixed
marriage and it's difficult. And the Bible tells us, do not
be unequally yoked because God knows that such a relationship
is going to be very difficult. We're told not to marry someone
if we're unmarried who's not a Christian. That's not an option
for us. But what if you are married to
an unbeliever? And so the Corinthians had this
struggle and they really thought, well, maybe it's good to divorce
an unmarried spouse. I mean, a non-Christian spouse.
And I think they were afraid of this for a couple of reasons.
One, Paul had already said for us not to be unequally yoked.
And so they're thinking, hey, am I in sin because I'm unequally
guilty? Am I living in sin? Is my marriage
unholy? Does God sanction my marriage
to an unbeliever? They may be thinking that. that
he had already written a previous letter to them telling them not
to associate with sexual immoral people. He commanded them not
to have sexual intimacy with prostitutes because such activity
is a defilement of their own bodies. It's a sin against their
own bodies. And it brings the temple of the
living God in connection with a prostitute which is a sin against
Christ. And so maybe they're thinking,
hey, I'm a believer. I'm the temple of the living
God. I have Christ dwelling in me and I'm married to my spouse
who's an unbeliever. Every time I have sexual intimacy
with my unbelieving spouse, am I defiling the body? Am I sinning
against Christ? And so they're thinking such
thoughts. And it would be natural for them to wonder if their marriage
is actually holy before God. Third, they were afraid that
maybe their children of these mixed marriages were not legitimate
children. Maybe they're illegitimate. In
the book of Ezra, not that I think these Corinthians knew the book
of Ezra too well, but in the book of Ezra we learn that those
Jewish people who married the Assyrian settlers Even though
they had children, they were to divorce their foreign spouses. And their children from those
offsprings were illegitimate heirs. And so maybe the thought
is that if I'm a Christian and I'm being, I'm married to an
unbeliever, maybe this marriage is not holy before God. It's
not legitimate. And it's sinful marriage. And
therefore maybe God is looking at my children as illegitimate. So is my mixed marriage holy
or unholy? Is our sexual union holy or unholy? Or is it defiled in some way?
And are our children legitimate? For these reasons, they're asking
the Apostle Paul, should we divorce our unbelieving spouse? And Paul
says, for four reasons, no. Stick with your unbelieving spouse
for four reasons. One, because the marriage remains
holy. Look at verse 14. For the unbelieving
husband is made holy because of his wife, and the unbelieving
wife is made holy because of her husband. You see, this marriage,
even though you're married to someone who's not a believer,
it doesn't mean the marriage is not sanctioned by God. God still looks at this marriage
as a marriage in His courtroom. The second reason is to stay
married to an unbelieving spouse is because The believing spouse
sanctifies the unbelieving spouse. We see that in verse 14. Again,
for the unbelieving husband is made holy because of his wife,
and the unbelieving wife is made holy because of her husband.
Now, what is interesting in the Old Testament, you had some things
in certain circumstances that a holy thing was made impure
by tasting something that was impure. For instance, A holy
man who's a Christian sins against his body when he touches a prostitute. And so in that case, that brings
defilement to the body. But other cases in the Old Testament,
there's examples of something that's holy touches something
that's unholy, and the unholy thing becomes purified by the
holy thing. In other words, although a sexual
relationship with an unbeliever defiles the believer outside
of marriage, marriage, which is God's holy institution, brings
the unbeliever into a holy state. So you become unholy when you
have sexual intimacy with a prostitute, but your unbelieving spouse becomes
holy as she's having intimacy with you. In other words, it's just another
way of saying God looks at the sexual intimacy as pure. He sees
it as holy. This is not something impure.
This is not something to be ashamed of. You don't have to worry that
your spouse is an unbeliever in this regard. The third reason
to say married is because the sanctification process of the
sexual intimacy brings legitimacy to the children. we see that
at the end of verse 14, otherwise your children would be unclean,
but as it is, they are holy. Now, a lot of people will wanna
use this text, and I don't understand why, but they wanna use this
text to justification for infant baptism. And they wanna say,
if you have one believing spouse, then you should baptize your
children because the believing spouse brings that child, that
covenant child into some type of relationship with God. And
so they're using this text for justification of covenant children
and covenant children's baptism. But there's a couple of reasons
I don't hold to that position. One, what God says about these
children, he says about the unbelieving spouse. So we're not going to
baptize our unbelieving spouse. But they are holy in the same
way the children are holy. Secondly, notice that the purity
of the children is not based upon the purity of the believing
spouse alone, but the purity of the children is based upon
the unbelieving spouse being purified by the believing spouse. In other words, because of the
purity of the sexual intimacy is pure and in the right setting
of marriage. God says, your children, they're
not saved. by the consequence of this. They're
just legitimate. They're pure. They're holy. They're
nothing. They're not a byproduct of sin,
but they're a byproduct of a right marriage. This is what he is
saying. And then the verb here is in
the perfect tense, saying the unbelieving spouse has already
been purified, and that purifies the children. Or otherwise, your
children would literally be illegitimate or unholy. So in other words,
you should not divorce your unbelieving spouse because your marriage
is legitimate. Your children are legitimate. And the fourth
reason to not divorce your unbelieving spouse is because you may be
the very means of their true salvation. Look at verse 16. Now we'll skip verse 15 for the
second, but verse 16 says, for how do you know, wife, whether
you will save your husband? Or how do you know, husband,
whether you will save your wife? Now, I know it can be very difficult,
and some of you are likely married to an unbeliever, and it can
be very difficult. And you say, man, it'd just be easier just
to separate. It'd be easier just to not work on this marriage.
It's tough. It's hard. It's exhausting. But here's a
word of encouragement that God has set you into their life.
1 Peter 3, 1 tells us, wives, in
the same manner, submit yourselves to your husbands so that Even
if they refuse to believe the word, they will be won over without
words by the behavior of their wives. I've said this story a
couple of times in my sermons, but it's so impactful because
it's true. It's a true story. And it was a lady in China who
was forbidden by her husband to go to church. And she was
very respectful to her husband and sought to to honor him in
every area that she could. But this was one command she
could not obey. And one particular Sunday, she
took off and left that morning and had to walk an hour to go
to the assembly and left early and took off and went to worship. And then on the way back, she
came back and found the door to her house locked. And her
husband was so mad at her. He wouldn't let her in the house.
So she stayed outside on the porch and slept the whole night
with no covers or anything. And then the next morning, her
husband, her unbelieving spouse, come out, open the door. She
walks in, goes straight to the kitchen and cooks him breakfast. And there he's eating breakfast.
from his hands of his wife, and he breaks down in tears. And
asked her, how could you treat me such a way? After all that
I did to you, how can you love me like this? And she said, this
is the love of Christ. And that led to him going to
church and eventually to his salvation. You may be married
to a difficult man, You may be married to a difficult woman, but God has set you in that man
or that woman's life for a reason. Don't run from this. It might
be years of prayer and a good example, but you never know that
you may be the very means that God has ordained to lead your
spouse to himself. So don't run from this. The second question that we have
here in verse 15 is, what if my spouse leaves me? Implying
what if the unbelieving spouse departs and separates? What do
I do under the circumstances where they're leaving me? Am
I going to be in habitual sin if I'm abandoned? Look at verse
12. To the rest I say, I, not the
Lord, that if any brother has a wife who is not an unbeliever
and she consents to live with him, he should not divorce her.
If any woman has a husband who is an unbeliever and he consents
to live with her, she should not divorce him." Notice the
word, if your unbelieving spouse is willing, consents to live
with you, then don't be the one that initiates divorce. If they
are willing, then you are willing. And verse 15 says, but if the
unbelieving partner separates, let it be so. In such a cases,
the brother or sister is not enslaved. God has called you
to peace. That is, if you're in a scenario where your spouse
is really not a Christian, and they abandon you, and they file
for divorce, and you're under all this guilt. Divorce is so
wrong. What's the world going to think about it? What are my
parents going to think? What's the church going to think about this
divorce? No, you're not under any guilt.
You can't do anything about this. And you shouldn't feel guilty
if you're abandoned. You shouldn't feel condemned
by the church or by your parents or by your conscience when you
did all you could to live peacefully and your spouse says bye to you.
You're free to let him go without any condemnation, without any
guilt. See, God, he loves you and he's
not binding you or enslaving you to something you can't keep.
There's real liberty here. And so if your spouse leaves
you, don't overly condemn yourself. In fact, don't condemn yourself.
No, I know, listen, I know you and I know myself. In every dispute,
there's two ways in it. And you weren't perfect. You
never were perfect in every area of your life. You said some things
you shouldn't have said. You did some things you shouldn't
have done. Of course. But does it mean you
want a divorce? It didn't mean you're guilty
of separating with your spouse just because you weren't perfect.
Of course you have some blame in the marital problems. Of course.
There's all of us who are married would raise our hands and I have
a lot to blame for the problems in my marriage. But does it mean
that you're responsible for the divorce? Especially if you did
all that you could to live peaceful with your unbelieving spouse.
See, I hold to what is called a modified, permanent view of
marriage. I do believe there are two exceptions. Adultery. and abandonment. But I actually believe that what
God joins together is permanent until death, unless there's these
two exceptions. J. Adams says, let us be clear
about the fact that neither is the Bible silent on the subject
of divorce, nor does it always under all circumstances for everyone
condemn divorce. So there are legitimate reasons
for divorce. and abandonment. Now, we ought to do what we can
to remain married, but we're under no restraint or obligation
or guilt if our spouse leaves us. Now, my last question, and
this is coming closer to an end. What does the Bible say about
remarriage? Let's say you are divorced. What does it say? Are you free to remarry? Well,
that is, depends. If your divorce is legitimate,
then you're free to remarry. But if it's illegitimate, that
is, if you are the one that separated from your spouse for an unbiblical
reason, this is why the Bible says if the woman separates from
her husband, you know, that's a sin, but if you commit that
sin, then you can't remarry, remain unmarried, unless you
seek reconciliation with your first husband. So if you're divorced
and you're the cause of the divorce and you say, hey, I know I shouldn't
have divorced. And then I think you should remain single. Except, well, that's hard. What's
hard? Well, this is what the Lord Jesus
says. Matthew 5.32, whoever divorces his wife for any reason except
for sexual immorality causes her to commit adultery and whoever
marries a woman who is divorced commits adultery. Why is that? If I get remarried to a divorced
person who wasn't legitimately divorced, why should I not marry
them? Because the Bible says when you
marry that person and you go to have sexual intimacy even
as a married couple, you're committing adultery. Well, why are you committing
adultery? I thought we got married. No,
God says that person is still married to the first wife or
the first husband. Just because the courts dissolved
it, didn't mean God dissolved the marriage. And this is how
important marriage is to God. Now, on the other hand, if your
spouse leaves you, abandons you, you're free. You're free and
you're free to remarry. Now, here's one last difficult
question. What if you're here and you say,
hey, I divorced my spouse unlawfully, unbiblically, and I'm already
remarried? Am I living in habitual adultery? And I think you're not. I think
initially, yes, it was adulterous. Activity, but God is a forgiving
God And so you seek God's forgiveness in that You rely upon God's graciousness
to you and now that you're remarried the second time Do all you can
to love your wife For this marriage exemplify the gospel in this
marriage exemplify the love that Christ has for you and I and
And remember, let us all remember this. This is a, it might seem
like a hard teaching, but it's actually a glorious teaching
because it is reflection of God's love for us. And remember, remember,
Christ will never divorce you and I. We give him calls for
divorce. We are very difficult. We're ungrateful, but God loves
us steadily and consistently, and He will not put us away.
He will never hand us a certificate of divorce. In conclusion, let
me give us five encouraging words of exhortation. One, we see here
that God loves marriage. That's what we should take away
from this. Yes, God hates divorce, but that should cause us to see
how much he loves marriage and how important this union is to
him. Second, we should take away from
this that we should unselfishly draw closer to our spouse. I really believe this. I've given
hundreds of marriage counsel, I say hundreds, probably hundreds
over the 25 years of pastoral ministry. People, couples before
me, And I can say marriage is very difficult. It's hard because
the selfishness is so entangled in us. But you never, ever get, and
this is where us men, especially us men, we fail. We never get
where we don't need to pursue our spouse. To draw near to our
spouse. I mean, it's not just, I don't
want to go further away from my wife. To really obey this
command here, to obey the spirit of what the Bible teaches us
about marriage, is not just like, I'm not gonna get divorced, that's
fine, I'm just gonna live with my, no, the spirit is I'm going
to go after my spouse. I'm going to pursue my spouse.
I'm going to love my spouse. And I know some of you, this
is what you may feel. I don't feel like it. Not today, I don't feel like
it. Here's another bit of counseling
that I say a hundred times. When the Bible in Ephesians 5
tells us to love our wives, and it tells the wives to submit
to their husbands, it doesn't say, if your wife is submitting
to you, love her. It doesn't. It doesn't say honor
your husband if your husband loves you. It doesn't qualify
your responsibility. Sometimes we think that we're
exempt to obey and love our spouse because they don't love us back.
We're exempt from pursuing our spouse because they're not pursuing
us. You know, it's hard to hug a porcupine, a cactus. No one wants to embrace a cactus.
And you say, well, my wife's a dripping faucet. My husband's
a porcupine. Every time I get close to him,
he pricks me. And I just rather not see him. I'd rather not hang
out with him. I just want to be away from him.
It's not easy to love someone that's hard to love, a difficult
man. And some of us men can be very
difficult to love. But God says, love them not because
they love you. Love them because God loves you.
And love them because you love God. Your obedience in pursuing
your spouse is not contingent upon them pursuing and loving
you. Amen? I mean, amen? If you could, especially young
Mary, if you could get that, I'm going to understand that.
I'm going to love my spouse regardless if they love me. I'm going to
honor my husband regardless if he loves me. I'm going to love
my wife regardless if she's good to me or not. Because God, I can find the energy
and the strength I can find the love not from them. Where do
I get this love? How can I love if I'm not loved?
You are loved. You're greatly loved by one who's
never hurt you, one who has never done you wrong, one who always
cares for you tenderly and gently. And so you focus upon the love
of Christ and gain your strength from him and said, by the love
that I'm loved with by Jesus Christ, I can love this difficult
person. And I can care for them and I
can be tender to them because God is tender to me. So my last word is for us as
we leave and think about this message. Of course, we don't
want a divorce. I don't expect many of us are
thinking about divorce today. But don't just not think about
divorce. Think about running after the one God has joined
you to. Amen.
Marriage and Divorce
Series 1 Corinthians
| Sermon ID | 21124180235562 |
| Duration | 43:34 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | 1 Corinthians 7:10-16 |
| Language | English |
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