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ChristianGolfer
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So when challenges in marriage come (and they will) what will you tell yourself? That you're unhappy and someone needs to change most likely... That's the inevitable result.
I'll tell myself the same things I've told myself when challenges in life come. I wasn't born the day I got married. I've had to learn how to live with people before this, you know.
That is, I will examine my own heart and see if there's anything I need to do to change. "Am I being selfish? Am I contributing to this? Is there anything I can do to make it better?"
But "challenges" are one thing. My husband being my enemy is a completely different matter.
Even if I'm mad at a my husband because I think he's being selfish or lazy or whatever, I don't think of him as my enemy. He's my partner, remember.
To merit the label "enemy," he'd need to be abusive. And that would be all on him. And I would be gone.
Holiness through the marriage relationship doesn't mean that marriage is a constant challenge and that happiness is a long gone daydream-far from it.
Okay, you mean to say that "when I talk about holiness in marriage, I don't mean...." right?
Because I've heard lots of people talk about holiness in marriage in my life - both online and off. And most of the times I've seen/heard it come up, it was in the context of ongoing unhappiness and strife in marriage. It comes up when someone says "I'm so unhappy in my marriage" and another person (usually a staunchly anti-divorce person) says "well, marriage isn't supposed to make you happy, it's supposed to make you holy, so count it all joy and whatever you do, don't consider divorce."
I've seen it most often as a means of dismissing the real problems in relationships.
But I would suggest that cultivating holiness through the marriage relationship brings a greater depth than merely relying on it to cure our need for a partner in life (although it does meet this need).
What do you mean by "cultivating holiness through the marriage relationship"?
What does that mean in practical terms?
How is different than "cultivating holiness" in other relationships? In other areas of our life?
How is it that "cultivating holiness" is not the job of the Holy Spirit?
What Scriptural support do you have for the idea that the purpose/intent of marriage is "cultivating holiness?"
Now to the bold/underlined part. Your spouse will fail you in this area. It's inevitable. He will do it. Be ready. What will you do then?
Of course he will. He already has. And I have and will fail him too. And we talk about it and apologize to one another and move on, trying not to do it again. The conflict which will be successfully resolved through communication with one another will bring us closer to one another in the end.
That's how relationships work.
But if I wasn't already being sanctified; if I hadn't already learned how to do unto others as I want them to do to me, to love my neighbor, and all the other things that being "holy" is all about, then being married wouldn't have magically taught me those things.
It isn't the marriage that makes me more holy. It is the work of the Holy Spirit in ALL circumstances of my life that does this.
I would suggest that the concept of holiness in marriage applies in EXACTLY these times, when your spouse will fail you and you will see he is a fallen human being who will disappoint you. You will need to demonstrate to him (and he to you) that in times when you fail and show your human-ness to each other the greater goal is to demonstrate Christ to one another. That is holiness in marriage.
Meh. Maybe you'll think it's semantics, but I'm not here to "demonstrate" Christ to my husband. That's not a goal of my marriage.
I am committed to actually loving my husband for who he is - warts and all. I'm not loving him so that I can put on a show in which I pantomime Christ.
It irritates me that people often seem to assume that I'm naive and/or that I am likely to be really selfish just because I say I don't think God's purpose for marriage was to make people holy.
The purpose of marriage is to give us support, provide a stable environment for the raising of children and other very practical things.
Christ's sacrifice and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit have the purpose of making us holy.
Can God use marriage and some of the conflict within marriages to build character? Of course. Does one need to be married for God to build character in us? Of course not.
I think the purpose of marriage is as I stated, and as I believe Scripture states: partnership, shared burdens, shared joys.
God is able to, and does, sanctify and perfect us through the hard times and conflicts in our life. The people we live with are often those we are most likely to have those honing and sharpening conflicts with. So a by-product of marriage CAN be (not will be or must be) increased holiness.
Furthermore, holiness - being loving, self-less, forgiving, etc - will increase happiness in our relationships - especially in marriage when both spouses are increasing in holiness. So, it is a false dichotomy to say that marriage is not about happiness but about God making us holy.
HTH.
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