Marriage and the Problem of Brokenness -- Part 2
In his words about divorce, Jesus takes us beyond what the
law allows, to what we might call the ideal for marriage. Looking back to
Genesis 1 and 2, Jesus says, "from
the beginning of creation `God made them male and female'." And, "for
this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife,
and the two shall become one flesh."
But what does it mean to be
one flesh? Well, it could mean that the
man and woman are exactly alike, duplicates of each other, or it could mean
that one spouse controls the marriage.
These are possible definitions, but there is no mutuality in them. Then there is the popular fifty-fifty
marriage, but as Walter Wangerin points out, when we think of ourselves as
fractions we will discover that "these
two halves don't fit perfectly together."
There is, however, another possible definition. Wangerin suggests that in a marriage, there
are three complete beings: the couple
and the relationship between them. Both
partners serve this relationship, benefit from it, and yet neither of them is
exactly like the relationship.
This relationship is itself very much like a living being--like a baby born from you both. It has its own character. It enters existence infantile, when you speak vows to one another. It comes cuddly and lovely, but very weak and in need of care and nourishment. As time goes on, as this baby-relationship grows up, it becomes stronger and stronger until it serves and protects you in return. This `being', this living thing, this relationship which needs you both (the whole of each of you), but which is not you (it is not the two of you added together, because it is distinct from either one of you)-- that is your "oneness."[1]
This relationship is God's gift to us, and this is why Jesus says to
us: "What
God has joined together, let no one separate." Don't let your brokenness destroy this
union. Instead, nourish your
relationship, respect it, and invest yourself in it. Marriage brings with it great blessings, but
the relationship between the human partners is always a fragile thing because
we come into it as two broken people.
Yes, we are
hardhearted people. Remember, Genesis 3
follows Genesis 2, and in Genesis 3 sin enters the picture. The relationship crumbles as these two people
– in this case husband and wife – find themselves divided against each other. They blame each other for their mistakes. The man seeks to rule over the woman,
oppressing her. In spite of this, the
woman still seeks out a relationship.
What was once wonderful becomes broken and unattractive. Therefore, the law allowed a man to divorce
his wife. It does not allow a woman to
divorce her husband.
While this might not have been what God
intended for humanity, it reflects the reality of human experience. I know about this reality; I am the child of
divorce. I have seen how sin can destroy
a marriage and disrupt a family. I have
seen how painful it is for a relationship to die, to see promises
violated.
When Cheryl and I were
married we promised to receive each other joyfully as partners, "to love and to cherish from this day
forward -- in times of poverty and times of prosperity, in times of sickness
and times of God health -- to love and
to enjoy until death shall separate us." When we made that promise, we didn't leave
any room for divorce. We made the
promise to live together and love each other until the time of our deaths. Of course, it hasn't always been easy to keep
this promise. We have argued and we have
fought and there have been times of silence between us. I say this to my own shame, and yet, we have
remained true to our promise, "till
death shall separate us."
Every day we depend on
God's grace and God's forgiveness, to help us stay on this path of faithfulness. Every couple that has stayed together for the
long haul, has had to work through times of brokenness, whether that be sickness,
poverty, disagreement, and perhaps even unfaithfulness. Yes, it is only by God's grace that we can
forgive each other.
Walter Wangerin writes
of a period in his marriage, when his relationship with his wife, became
broken. As he tells it, it wasn't that
he had been unfaithful or become a bad person, he had just neglected his
relationship. In his attempt to be
faithful to his duties as a pastor, he had forgotten his wife. As time passed she became angry and bitter,
and a wall of separation appeared between them.
Not only did they stop talking, but his wife, Thanne, would recoil at
his touch. After months of carrying
this bitterness within her, Thanne finally let her husband know the reason for
her pain, but that did not end the silence.
They continued to live together, but they did so without love and
without forgiveness.
He writes movingly of
this time of distress in their marriage:
I didn't so much as brush her back when I crawled into bed. And once in bed I lay stone still for fear of shaking the mattress and waking her. Did she sleep then? I don't know, though she looked sallow and sick in the daylight. For my own part, my heart hammered all night long. Sometimes she rose in darkness to pace the house; and then I cried because the bed was empty and because I could not help her in her hurt: I didn't have the right even to try. I restrained myself in silence. I played with the kids. I preached, a purple hypocrite, the poet of the pulpit. And always the tears trembled just behind my eyes, even at church. But I could live without love.[2]
Wangerin tells us that Thanne couldn't forgive him because his "sin was greater than her capacity to
forgive, had lasted longer than her kindness, had grown more oppressive than
her goodness." His sin, he
writes, was the "murder of her
spirit, the unholy violation of her sole identity -- the blithe assumption of
her presence, as though she were furniture."[3]
Although Thanne could not forgive
him, Jesus could and one day that forgiveness did work its way through her and
it restored her love for him. I know of
what he speaks, for I too have on occasion murdered Cheryl's spirit. I have
taken her for granted and I have tested her ability to forgive, but I am
thankful for God's forgiveness that has allowed her to forgive me.
Unfortunately, there
are times when a relationship becomes so distorted that there is really no other
option but divorce. When this happens, a
death occurs, not the death of the two people, but of the relationship that
existed between them. If such an
occasion comes about then we must mourn the loss of something precious and
allow God's grace to heal us.
While the divine
intention is that marriage should be for a lifetime, human reality, with its
brokenness, can lead to divorce. I do
not want those who have been divorced to hear my words as words of
condemnation. Instead I hope they are heard
as an invitation to experience God's healing grace and reconciliation, for in
Christ all things become new (2 Corinthians 5:17).
The ideal for marriage
– whether one is gay or straight – is to nourish the relationship, by giving
one’s self completely to the other. When
the flame begins to die out, then if at all possible, rekindle it. If one is contemplating marriage, and seeing
it as a daunting calling, it is important to recognize that a couple’s journey
together is not easy. At the same time,
it can be a wonderful journey. Because
of the growing numbers of divorces, there is an increasing tendency to go into
marriage assuming that it won’t last until “death do us part.” Quite often that assumption becomes a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
Moses,
Jesus said, provided the option of divorce as a recognition of brokenness. Jesus points us back to the ideal. The question then, for us today, concerns how we experience the reality of broken relationships, especially those relationships that are beyond restoring to their earlier place. For some it is simply necessary to let go of what was and move forward into a new reality. Jesus doesn't speak in this space about this option, but his over all message is one of reconciliation and newness of life. He continually offers a word of healing and hope. The gospel brings grace. And such is the reality that we take hold of here.
Jesus upholds the ideal. The reality is that not every couple will find it possible to continue
the journey together. Divorce is a legal
remedy that allows two people to make the necessary arrangements so that can start new lives. Of course, once
married, one’s lives are always entangled, especially if there are children
involved. Nonetheless, if we see divorce not as a legal remedy but as the spiritual death of a relationship, then there would seem to be the opportunity for making a new life that might include a new spouse and a new family.
Part two of emerging chapter on marriage and divorce in Marriage Study Guide
Comments
There is a covenant with God based on trust that God will provide. That trust leads us to a confidence that at all times and in all circumstances God is most deeply interested in what is best for us. The covenant that we make is that at all such times, and in the moments of greatest urgency, we will rely, we can rely on God to be with us, to care deeply for us, not to work against us, and two be with us in our efforts to survive and to thrive.
When Adam and Eve breached the covenant and begin to explore the possibility that God would do them harm and that God was less than committed to their well-being they begin to sin and brokenness entered the world.
In relationships, in covenantal relationships, the same circumstances operate. When we cease to trust our covenantal partner our relationship becomes broken. Our struggles to survive and thrive become solitary and our erstwhile partners become enemies and sources of threat rather than support. We begin to work against each other instead of for each other.
If we do not find a way to heal the brokenness and recover the trust then divorce is not far away. Once brokenness enters the relationship, then the search for trust becomes the avenue of healing. At that point the question is: how do we rebuild that trust.
Even before our relationships become broken we must find ways to nurture the trust between us and our covenant partners. If our trust is not routinely fed and nurished it will most certainly fail and usually at the worst moments. The building of trust is a process - and while it can be delayed and even destroyed, it is never completed.
I suggest that the source of healing as well as the source of nurture has to be in our relationship with God. We need to hear the message that we can have confidence in God and in God's love for us. We need to hear and know that the covenantal partners we have were provided to us by God with the intention that these partners would help us survive and to thrive and that we are intended to support them as they seek to survive and to thrive in God's world.
Our partners are as human as we are and as prone to doubt and mistrust and failure as we are. When we fail it is our responsibility to recover and repair the damage we have done. And it is our responsibility as covenant partners to recover the trust that we have in our partners when they fail and when they seek to repair the damage that their actions have caused to us. And Jesus came into the world to offer us support and a model for the trust we so desperately need to recover in our broken relationships with our covenantal partners - Forgiveness. Our partners cannot repair the trust between us without our forgiveness and cooperation nor can either of us succeed in the task of rebuilding our broken relationship without bringing God into our relationship and sharing the forgiveness and love of God with each other.
We live, and we live best when we are in relationships with God and with one another.