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Relationships

June 18, 1997

What is a relationship?

How do we establish a relationship and keep it going?

What is a legitimate relationship?

© Rev. Dr. Curtis I. Crenshaw 1997

(This was a letter to someone many years ago. The names
have been taken out.)

Thank you for coming to see me. I really enjoyed getting
to know you. I came from a very poor Southern home, where
we did not have air conditioning or a car until I was a
senior in high school. My grandfather, with whom I lived
until I was 11 along with my mother and grandmother, was an
alcoholic. My dad died from cirrhosis of the liver, having
drank himself to death. (I hardly knew him as my parents
divorced when I was about two years old.) My wife is also
from a divorced background. The minister who married Ruth
and me said that the statistics were against us since both
our parents had been through divorces, but that the grace
of God would make the difference. Sometimes I give people
this riddle: I have been married twice, never divorced, my
first wife did not die, and I’m not a bigamist. The answer
is that on our 25th wedding anniversary, my wife and I
publicly renewed our vows and then took a cruise. Our son
was the best man, and our daughter the maid of honor. I
said all that to say this: the reason we have beaten the
odds is not because we are better than others — indeed, we
are not — but solely the grace of God. Let me briefly
explain.

The basis for all human relationships is a vital
relationship with Almighty God, Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. The hope we have for any change is bound up in the
Gospel of Jesus Christ. I do not mean by that just Church
attendance, though that is certainly critical, but one must
have a vital relationship with God through Christ. The
institutional Church has been a failure the last 100 years,
though the fault lies not with the Church per se but with
the lack of the old Gospel that has been taught the last
century. Since ministers tend not to take God and His Word
seriously, neither do the people. They think that they can
come and go to Church as they please and certainly do not
have any accountability to God through His Church, which is
false. The Reformed Episcopal Church is seeking to change
that in her churches.

The main point of this letter is to emphasize how the
Gospel applies to human relationships, that our
relationship with Him necessarily determines our human
relationships. More specifically, I shall discuss the
relationship of marriage, though the biblical model could
be applied to other relationships, such as work,
government, and so on. A marriage is defined in Scripture
as one male and one female committing themselves to one
another for life by vows in the presence of the appropriate
witnesses. The witnesses should include a representation
of God (minister, or justice of the peace in a civil
marriage) and of man (parents in the case of a first
marriage and/or other witnesses). This relationship
between the man and the woman is based on their commitment
to the Triune God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, is
sustained by using the means of grace in the context of the
Church, the terms are God’s Word, especially the Ten
Commandments, the goal is producing holiness in the lives,
and its fruit is to continue the covenant through godly
children. I shall briefly explain each of these.

This definition of marriage I have given is pretty much
standard theology, and could be proved from various
passages of Scripture, especially from Ephesians 5:22-33.
Another way to say the same thing is that marriage is a
covenant, an agreement between two heterosexual parties in
which they commit themselves to one another for life. This
is not the modern practice of consenting adults, but is
really the opposite. In my opinion, it is this point that
has reaped much havoc in the lives of many, for perhaps
they have not understood what constitutes a relationship,
have never thought about it and assumed that what our
culture does is normal and acceptable, or in the extreme
did not care what constitutes a relationship, thinking they
can easily get out if they decided they did not like it
(for whatever reason).

The biblical view of marriage (or relationship) is not an
experiment to see if the parties can get along nor a test
of compatibility. At this point, our relationship with God
is foremost and determinative. When one comes to God for
forgiveness of sins, he comes just as he is, sins and all,
trusting in the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ
for forgiveness of sins. Indeed, the only thing we can
contribute to our relationship with God is our sins; He
gives the grace based on what Jesus has done. The sinner
surrenders unconditionally to Jesus, asking for His grace
not only to forgive his sins but also to make him/her a
better person. Similarly, when two people come to be
married, they come just as they are, unconditionally
surrendering themselves to one another, depending on the
grace of God. The reason they know it will work is that
God has promised His grace.

Such a relationship is not a compatibility test. Marriage
is based on our spiritual marriage to Christ, and that is
not a guess but what the Apostle Paul stated in Ephesians
5:22-33. When we consider that our human marriage is based
on the divine marriage of Christ to His Church, notice the
contrast of that to the consenting adults model of
relationships. The consenting adults model says, “I am
first; you exist to serve me; you must make me happy and if
not then we shall part ways; love is not in my control, you
control my love; if you are lovely then I can love you
otherwise I will leave; I want the fruit of marriage (sex,
money, and sometimes children) without the commitment, we
will experiment to see if our relationship will work and
then consider marriage, etc.”

By contrast, God’s model is specifically stated to be based
on Christ’s love for His Church (Ephesians 5) and is this:
“You are first; I came through the Virgin Mary to die for
you; I unconditionally love you; I have done everything to
make the relationship work; love is in my control and I
will always give it because it is not dependent on who you
are but who I am, but I have chosen to love you; you do not
have to perform for me to love you,” and so on. Christ’s
love applied to the human relationship of marriage is like
this from the man to his wife: “Based on Christ’s
unconditional love for me, I extend the same to you; you do
not have to perform for me to love you; I surrender all
that I am to you and my time is yours; I will do all in my
power to make you happy; love is in my control and I am
always responsible to give it because it is not drawn
passively out of me; you do not have to perform for me to
love you; you do not have to give me your body before our
public vows to prove your love to me,” and so on.

If I may make an observation, women are very sensitive to
commitment. They tend rightly and innately to define love
as commitment, and this in turn gives them tremendous
security (Ephesians 5 again). Security has little to do
with finances. Without this they feel unloved, something
to be used for a while and then discarded, regardless of a
man’s words to the contrary. (Actions speak to the real
intention.) This is one reason why the consenting adults
model is wrong, namely, the commitment is reserved for
later, if she is worthy. Christ did not do this with His
Church. He gave Himself freely, completely,
unconditionally, and without reservation to His Church, to
die for her, to raise Himself from the dead for her, to
love her without conditions. But one enters this
relationship with Him by a covenant, not by trying Him out
first, and this covenant is in baptism in His Church by
vows in the presence of witnesses, in unconditionally
surrendering to Him. After one enters His covenant the
Church, only then can he/she have Holy Communion. The
analogy would be that only after one has made the marriage
covenant by vows can he/she have the communion of sexual
union.

When we came to Christ for forgiveness of sins, we came
unconditionally. He loved us not because we were lovely,
not because His love was drawn out of Him by some
irresistible force, but because He chose to love us by vow
in the covenant of grace. In the consenting adults model,
love is an emotion that someone else elicits from us; we
are passive and “fall in and out of love” according to how
the other person treats us. The biblical model says that
by the grace of God I will love you, and we will make this
relationship work. We can see that true love need not be
tested to see if it is compatible by observing that we had
no choice in our parents or siblings, and yet we made these
relationships work. We love our parents. How much more
should we make a relationship work in which we have a
choice! The biblical model says that we are in control of
our love. Indeed, we are so much in control of our love
that we can even love our enemies, as the Lord commanded us
(Matthew 5:44).

Therefore, for one to say I have to leave this relationship
because I’m not happy anymore is to engage in selfishness,
to give an excuse for a lack of commitment and for not
wanting responsibility to love unconditionally. It is a
total misunderstanding of the nature of love. Marriage is
a commitment whereby the vowing partners voluntarily limit
their freedom for the benefits they will receive and for
the glory of God. They are not “wedded” to the idea that
freedom means no responsibility but that true freedom is
enslavement. Just as freedom from our sins comes from
enslavement to the Lord by an unconditional surrender to
Him, so true freedom in marriage derives from enslavement
to our spouse, only doing good for him/her. A commitment
easily made is easily broken, but one done according to
God’s Word and through public vows is to be taken
seriously.

One keeps himself faithful to his wife by honoring his
vows. If his love wanes (it should not since it is being
sustained by the grace of God), he is still obligated to
honor his vows. He has vowed to God to be faithful, and
marriage is God’s institution, not mankind’s, and the terms
are His, not ours to remake as one wishes. The Lord
Himself stated: “What God has joined together, let not man
separate” (Matthew 19:6). God will hold us accountable for
His vows that we made.

But someone will object that he/she did not agree to such
stringent terms in his vows that he/she took, but that is
to assume that marriage belongs to man, that it is his
institution to remake as he/she wishes. Regardless of the
particular words spoken, the institution is God’s, and once
the vows are said, one is bound by His definition of
marriage.

It is conceivable that a couple could mock God with vows
that specifically deny true commitment, such as, “We will
not commit ourselves to one another except for sex,” or
some other farce. Or they may take private vows with no
one present but themselves, thus deliberately avoiding any
accountability. In both cases God would not recognize that
a marriage has taken place.

Let us now consider that marriage is sustained by using the
means of grace in the context of the Church, and that the
terms are God’s Word, especially the Ten Commandments. The
means of grace include attending worship together at the
same Church, praying together, reading the Bible together,
making frequent use of the sacraments, and especially
subjecting ourselves to the authority of God in the
institution of His Church. In America, we like to pretend
that we are autonomous individuals, “masters of our own
fates and captains of our own souls,” as Henley put it in
his horrible poem Invictus. If God agreed with us, He
would not have given us so many restraints in His various
covenants, such as family, Church, employment, and
government. The robust individualism that has
characterized so much of the USA is rebellion against God.
As Robert Bork has so eloquently stated in his piercing
book, Slouching Towards Gomorrah, modern radical
individualism (and egalitarianism) is destroying what used
to be a Christian culture. Thus when I say “in the context
of the Church,” I mean that we consciously submit to the
authority of God’s Church, knowing that such submission is
really submission to Him.

The terms of all covenants, whether by atheists or by
Christians, are the Ten Commandments. Indeed, since this
is God’s world and He created it, the only moral law that
exits is His. Any moral “law” enacted by man, whether the
Congress or by a particular church, is either an
application of God’s law or an act of rebellion. Satan
told Eve in the Garden that if she ate the fruit (we do not
know what kind of fruit it was) that she would be like God
“knowing good and evil.” The Hebrew word for “knowing”
(remember, I teach Hebrew in seminary) in this passage
means “determining.” In other words, the lie of the ages
has been that man is “free” to determine his own so-called
“values.” (“Values” really do not exist. God has
sovereignly imposed His Ten Commandments on the world, not
His Ten Suggestions.) Man is allegedly free to make up his
own moral code as he pleases, thus being a law-giver and
like God. But of course that was Satan’s lie.

In light of all this, the terms for any covenant, whether
the government, an employer, a church, or especially
marriage, is God’s holy Law. As the Apostle Paul stated by
the Holy Spirit,

Owe no one anything except to love one another, for he who
loves another has fulfilled the law. For the commandments,
“You shall not commit adultery,” “You shall not murder,”
“You shall not steal,” “You shall not bear false witness,”
“You shall not covet,” and if there is any other
commandment, are all summed up in this saying, namely, “You
shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Love does no harm
to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfillment of the law
(Romans 13:8-10).

Here we have a definition of what love is. It is basically
volitional (thus we control it), being obedient to God’s
Law regarding others. It is not an emotion that controls
us, but a choice that we control. If one loves his wife
according to these commands, she will not normally leave
him. In other words, he does not commit adultery but gives
himself to her alone; he does not steal but provides for
her; he does not tell others about their problems who are
not part of the proper covenants (especially he does not
tell all his “friends”); he does not torture his soul with
covetousness; and he does for others what he would want
them to do for him (within the limits of how Scripture
defines that); he puts God first and does not worship false
gods such as money, job, friends, and so on. The other
commandments from the Ten are implied. Such is love. One
can usually tell what the real god in a person’s life is by
observing what he loves to spend his time doing. What one
does, not what one says, reveals his true god.

Another way to define love is that it gives itself for the
other person self-sacrificially, unconditionally,
continually, overlooking his/her faults, seeking only to do
good. This necessarily involves an enormous time
commitment, without which it is not possible to love
biblically at all. It is especially common for the man
after marriage to take the relationship for granted, and
then spend his free time with his friends, leaving the wife
alone. Then he comes home and wants sex, wondering why she
is not responsive. Love without a time commitment is
quickly compromised.

The goal of marriage is holiness of life, which means being
ever more conformed to the moral character of Christ. This
is a slow and painful process, but the godly husband seeks
such in his wife and children. The only way to obtain this
is by using the means of grace mentioned above. God has
made the husband the head of the family, and he must
exercise this responsibility by leading the family in
worship by taking them to Church, not sending them; by
reading the Bible at home, not by leaving that to the
preacher only; by teaching his children about God, not
leaving that to the Church only; and especially by being an
example himself.

Finally, the fruit of marriage is having sexual union that
produces children. This is an enormous responsibility.
One of the worst sins of our culture is the irresponsible
attitudes towards sex and then nullifying the product of
such a union by abortion. (God can forgive abortion if the
person repents, confessing such to Him, asking for the
cleansing blood of Christ.) The parties must not want the
fruit of sexual union without the permanent commitment and
especially without the responsibility that such commitment
entails, such as rearing children. But having children in
God’s covenant of marriage is one of the greatest blessings
that God has given us.

Everything we have said so far leads to the conclusion that
pre-marital sex is sinful. We must not partake of the holy
communion of marriage without first entering the binding
union and commitment by vows. In the analogy of Christ and
the Church, we cannot have Holy Communion with Christ until
we have been baptized, cannot have His fellowship and love
in His Church until we have made a binding commitment to
Him. If we can take our relationship with Him casually,
then we can take our relationships with the opposite sex
casually. If we can know God outside the marriage covenant
in the Church, we can have casual relations with others
outside the human marriage covenant. Furthermore, God
specifically legislates against those who have sex outside
the marriage commitment.

If a man finds a young woman who is a virgin, who is not
betrothed, and he seizes her and lies with her, and they
are found out, then the man who lay with her shall give to
the young woman’s father fifty shekels of silver, and she
shall be his wife because he has humbled her; he shall not
be permitted to divorce her all his days (Deut. 22:28-29).

Observe that she is not his wife by virtue of the sex they
had, and observe that it is consensual sex since the text
says “they are found out” (rape demanded the death
penalty). The principle is that if they looked at the
relationship casually as consenting adults then God
required that they consider the relationship so seriously
that now no divorce was allowed. Again, God states
regarding sex before and after marriage:

Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed undefiled; but
fornicators and adulterers God will judge (Hebrews 13:4).

From this passage, on the one hand we see not only is sex
in marriage “undefiled,” which means not sinful but
righteous, but on the other hand that God will judge
“fornicators” and “adulterers.” Obviously, an “adulterer”
is one who is married who has sex with someone who is not
his/her spouse, which means that a “fornicator” must be
someone who has sex while unmarried. And those are the
consistent meanings of the words “adulterer” and
“fornicator” in Scripture, the two words being used about
90 times.

In conclusion, what sustains godly married couples is not
some mystical magic or spark or chemistry, all of which are
virtually indefinable, but their commitment to God, to His
Word, to His vows, to using the means of grace in the
context of the Church, and to obedience to God’s terms of
the marriage covenant, the Ten Commandments. The “spark”
will be there, but it is the caboose and not the engine.
The engine is their commitment to God and His vows in their
marriage covenant. Indeed, the vows are His.

So what constitutes a marriage relationship? It is an
unconditional commitment of one male and one female to one
another for life in a covenant by vows in the presence of
the appropriate witnesses, depending on the grace of God in
Christ in His Church to make the relationship work.

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