(L, P)br...
Illustration
(L, P)
Some Pharisees came up to Jesus and as a test, asked him whether it was permissible for a husband to divorce his wife ...
Anyone who takes Scripture seriously can hardly contest that the New Testament speaks against divorce. Divorce is wrong! It is a sin! Jesus denounced it! It is against everything I know and have read in the Bible. But so is any sin wrong! At the risk of sharing personal pastoral theology you never solicited, I'll take the risk without being asked. Is it not possible that two human beings -- yes, two sinners -- who have taken their life-long vows before God and joined their hands and said, "I'll not leave you till death parts us" -- is there not a possibility that that relationship will not "make it"? Yes!! If you've been in the ministry two weeks, you know the answer is yes (even forgetting all the negative stats about how many marriages are ending in divorce.)
But what do we do with these people! Do we take them out and shoot them? Do we line them up on the bridge and tell them to jump off -- because of the "hardness of their heart ..." as our Lord puts it in this text?
Do we tell them God's grace is sufficient; that God will forgive sins for the sake of Christ; that that is his grace? then, do we add -- "However, we didn't mention it, but there is one sin this unconditional grace does not cover. It is the failure of two sinners to maintain a life-long relationship -- even when they vowed they would!" It's just a thought.
-- Schroeder
Some Pharisees came up to Jesus and as a test, asked him whether it was permissible for a husband to divorce his wife ...
Anyone who takes Scripture seriously can hardly contest that the New Testament speaks against divorce. Divorce is wrong! It is a sin! Jesus denounced it! It is against everything I know and have read in the Bible. But so is any sin wrong! At the risk of sharing personal pastoral theology you never solicited, I'll take the risk without being asked. Is it not possible that two human beings -- yes, two sinners -- who have taken their life-long vows before God and joined their hands and said, "I'll not leave you till death parts us" -- is there not a possibility that that relationship will not "make it"? Yes!! If you've been in the ministry two weeks, you know the answer is yes (even forgetting all the negative stats about how many marriages are ending in divorce.)
But what do we do with these people! Do we take them out and shoot them? Do we line them up on the bridge and tell them to jump off -- because of the "hardness of their heart ..." as our Lord puts it in this text?
Do we tell them God's grace is sufficient; that God will forgive sins for the sake of Christ; that that is his grace? then, do we add -- "However, we didn't mention it, but there is one sin this unconditional grace does not cover. It is the failure of two sinners to maintain a life-long relationship -- even when they vowed they would!" It's just a thought.
-- Schroeder