Are you ready for self denial & sacrifice in your mysterious Christian Marriage?
Rembrandt's depiction of Samson's marriage feast (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
This becomes abundantly clear when reading the first chapter of Tim and Kathy Keller’s book, The Meaning of Marriage: Facing the Complexities of Commitment with the Wisdom of God. Two things are true about society’s attitudes toward marriage.
First is a growing skepticism over the validity of the institution of marriage. The Pew Research Center found in 2010 that nearly 40 percent of Americans believe that marriage is becoming obsolete. And many, particularly the young, are acting accordingly. There are few examples in popular culturecelebrating the institution of marriage as a means of human flourishing. Rather it is the butt of jokes, just the remaining cultural challenger to the taken-for-granted idolatries of the age: individual freedom, autonomy and self-fulfillment. For many, marriage is a problem, not a solution.
Second is an unrealistic expectation for marriage. This is the flip side of the skepticism. Here a romantic therapeutic consumerism dominates. The common search is for one’s soul mate as the one who loves without question and meets every need. This is the premise behind ABC’s dating game shows “The Bachelor” and “The Bachelorette.” The assumption that placing a random grouping of men and women in exotic locations to pursue romance can lead to the basis for a meaningful relationship is about as far-fetched as a group of chimpanzees launching a NASA rocket. Everything about the show, for all its lust-filled emotional appeal, belies the stated goal to “find one’s true love.” And when the cameras are turned off and the contestants return to reality, the track record for success is overshadowed by the cloud of repeated heartache and failure. The consumer nature of finding a spouse via a game show seems justified—a romantic shopping spree the likes of which are only depicted in the glossy pages of a bridal magazine.
But in fact, this is not how marriage works - or is supposed to work. The Kellers counter, “[A] good marriage is more painfully hard to achieve than athletic or artistic prowess. Raw, natural talent does not enable you to play baseball as a pro or write great literature without enduring discipline and enormous work. Why would it be easy to live lovingly and well with another human being in light of what is profoundly wrong within our human nature?”
Here we come face-to-face with Biblical realism. The Bible calls marriage a “mystery.” Its secret is this: it only works when it is based on self-denial and self-sacrifice rather than self-fulfillment and self-achievement.
The Kellers ask, “Is the purpose of marriage to deny your interests for the good of the family, or is it rather to assert your interests for the fulfillment of yourself?” Marriage only works on the basis of “mutual fulfillment through mutual sacrifice.” This is the only pattern of marriage that works. The pattern of the cross is the shape of a happy home. It’s more than a religious issue, it is simply the way the world works and marriages endure.
This realism has been lost in the public’s imagination. Self-denial and self-sacrifice are not the message of romantic comedies, reality game shows or Oxygen sitcoms. But they are the message of the gospel, of which marriage is an embodied picture. It is time, especially for Christians, to rebuild our lives and relationships on this foundation.