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It's been a progressive cultural
disaster. We watched it happen before our very eyes. It weakens human culture in many
ways. The implications and the stories
could not be recounted. What am I talking about? I'm
talking about our walking away from God's plan for marriage. It's everywhere around us. My children were raised in Christian
school. One evening, we were talking
about the families of their friends at school. And we were shocked
at how many of their classmates were from divorced or separated
families. As I was thinking about this
this week, I thought of that proverb that says, there's a
way that seems right unto a man, and therein thereof are the ways
of death. There is a tendency for us to
actually think that we're wiser than God, that our way is better
than God. more practical than God's ways,
that it would lead to a better life than God's plan. There's
a way that seems right to a man, and therein thereof are the ways
of death. I don't do this very often, but
I want to give you instructions on how to listen to this sermon
tonight. Some of you, we are going to
be talking about marriage, will be very tempted, because you
are married, to sit here thinking, I'm glad my husband or wife is
here. They need to hear this. And I
want you, literally I'm asking you to do this, throughout this
message, pray for the help of the Spirit of God to keep attentive,
to keep an open heart for yourself. That may be a bit of a spiritual
war for some of you. this evening. Some of you may
be so immediately filled with regret that it'll be hard for
you to hear the words of this sermon. And I would encourage
you, remember that the one who ordained these words to be written
is a God of glorious forgiveness and restoration. And he has you
here for a reason. Some of you may just get angry. I'm used to people being angry
at me, so I'm not worried about that. But you don't want that
anger to get in the way of hearing what God would want you to hear
from this evening's sermon. And I would pray that you would
Pray throughout the sermon for a tender, humble, open heart. Some of you are here and you're
single or you're a young person. You think, this sermon has nothing
to do with me. I can tune out. Well, I would
say again to you, God has a reason for you being here. You don't
know where your life is going. And in all of these specific
applications of the gospel, there are bleed-overs to other areas. There's not a gospel for the
single, and a gospel for the married, and a gospel for the
young, and a gospel for the old. There's really only one gospel.
And when I learn the will of God for one area of life, I learn
applications that bleed over to other areas of life. I'm going
to stop right now and pray that God would give us open hearts
as we hear his word this evening. Let's pray. Lord, because of where our culture
is, this is a very important topic. But also it is, for many
of us, a hard topic as we have been influence maybe in ways
we haven't understood by the philosophy of the surrounding
culture. We pray that by your spirit,
you would open our hearts, that we would love your way more than
we love our way, that we would glory in your wisdom more than
we glory in our own, and that rather than feeling judged and
constricted by you, we would celebrate the protection of your
wisdom. Thank you. We pray these things
in the name of Jesus. Amen. Well, we have spent our
time in Mark. It seems like months since we've
been in Mark. It probably hasn't been that long. Examining Jesus's
Galilean ministry, we now find him in Judea. And that's worth
noting because the thing that initiates this discussion of
marriage is a question by the Pharisees. The reason that's
important is you remember that the Pharisees were outraged by
the ministry of Christ. They were outraged for three
reasons. First of all, they were outraged by his self-declaration,
that he was actually saying he was the Son of God. They were
outraged because of his teaching. that was very different from
anything that had been heard. And they were concerned because
of the vast crowds that were following him. And so the Pharisees
were out to expose Jesus, to trap him, to demonstrate that
he was in fact a fraud. And so the question that initiates
this conversation that Christ has with them and then with his
disciples is not actually asked by needy, hungry men who are
seeking to understand the will of God. No, no, no. These are
men with malignant interest who are out to trap Christ. And although their question is
a question about divorce, Christ's answer is really a discussion
of marriage. This is much more a marriage
passage than it is a divorce passage, although it touches
on both topics. Well, Jesus answers their question
with a question. And he knows exactly what the
Pharisee's answer is going to be. He says, when they ask the
question, is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife? Jesus answers,
what did Moses command you? And he knew what they would say.
He knew what they would say. Moses allowed a man to write
a certificate of divorce and to send her away. They were celebrating
this existence of divorce. And in Palestinian culture, divorce
had become way too permissive and way too regular. And Christ
knew exactly what they were going to answer. Now, here's the principle
I want to give you this evening. Before I look at what Christ
says next, it's this, that protection of marriage, and defense against
unbiblical divorce is rooted in the worship of God. Let me say that again. Protection
of marriage as God designed it and defense against unbiblical
divorce is rooted in the worship of God. Worship of God as lawgiver,
worship of God as creator, worship of God as sovereign, and finally,
worship of God as savior. What Jesus does next is rises
as the lawgiver. This is his law. And whatever
the command of Moses was, Christ, as lawgiver, rules that command. And so he alone has the right
to interpret it. And what he says is this, because
of your hardness of heart, he wrote you this commandment. Christ
says, no, no, no, no, no, you must understand that divorce
was never part of the original plan. God's original plan, as
we will see, is that a husband and wife would live together
in this committed, unified, faithful, long-term relationship. But because of the sadness and
destructiveness of the entry of sin into the world, and the
capacity of sin to blind and enslave and harden people's hearts,
there is this permission of divorce. I'm going to say more about that
more specifically later. We must understand that that
permission of divorce was not a loosening or a weakening or
a backing away from the created plan of marriage. Rather, It
was an acknowledgment of the slavery and the destructiveness
and the hardness of sin. And a gracious God who gives
us a way of dealing with how sin can destroy the bonds of
a marriage. What Jesus does next is go back
to creation. If you want to, live in a marriage
as God designed it. You must worship God as creator. Hear these words. But from the
beginning of creation, God made them male and female. Therefore,
a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his
wife, and they shall become one flesh, so they are no longer
two, but one flesh. The whole structure and plan
of marriage was God's idea. You need to wake up in the morning,
if you're married, and say, my marriage is God's idea. My marriage
is God's creation. And if my marriage is God's creation,
my marriage does not belong to me, it belongs to the Lord. and everything about it, all
the structure that surrounds it, all the plans and purposes
and ideas of marriage, everything that involves marriage has its
source in the mind of God. God created marriage. That's very, very important to
understand. Now, it starts with this. It was God's idea to have
two sexes, male and female. If you would look at Genesis
1 and 2, there are actually two accounts of creation. Genesis
1 that leads to the institution of the Sabbath and Genesis 2
that leads to the institution of marriage. God looked down
and reasoned in his wise mind that it was not good for Adam
to live alone. Now there are many things written
about this moment that there aren't scriptural proof for.
There's no biblical proof that Adam was walking around lonely
saying, I need someone, I need someone, I need someone. That's
not what scripture says. Scripture says God looked down. God knew
the being he had created. He knew the purpose he had for
this man. He knew that he had made him
a social being. And so God knew that he needed a companion similar
to him to live in this relationship. The existence of two sexes is
all about God's plan for those two people and the relationship
that they would enjoy and their plan, their place in the creation. It's all God's idea. And then Jesus says this, therefore
a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his
wife. Here's the plan. that this man
and this woman, having lived under the authority structure,
their family of origin, would commit themselves to come together
in this new relationship called marriage that would establish
a new familial authority structure that they would hold fast to
throughout their lives. What a beautiful plan. And that
commitment would be that lifelong, hold fast commitment. You say,
well, how do you know that? Notice what it says there, and
they shall become one flesh. That their relationship would
be so committed and so unified and so intimate that the only
words you could use for it would be one flesh. That statement,
one flesh, is not just talking about the sexual relationship,
it's talking about the comprehensive, 24-7, lifelong nature of their
unity. That's marriage. That's how intimate,
that's how committed, that's how long-term, that's how faithful
it is meant to be. That literally, the words would
be used, one flesh. Now in case you didn't understand,
Jesus says this, this capstone is very, very important. So they
are no longer two, but one flesh. Oh my. Once I've entered into
this relationship, I can never look at my life in an individualistic
way. because a husband and wife are
no longer two separate individuals who happen to be cohabiting.
That's not a biblical view of marriage. That's the cultural
view. Danger, danger, danger. Now this means if I'm in marriage,
I must not view my life in a mystic way. That means my highest commitment
is to my happiness. I shop for somebody who I think
will make me happy. I try to win them, not so much
because I love them, but because I love me and I think they'll
do things for me that will make me happy. And I stay with them
in that relationship as long as they make me happy. But when
they no longer are delivering happiness to me, I forsake the
relationship. No, no, no, no, no. You cannot look at this relationship
this way. You cannot be in marriage thinking
in that individualistic sort of way. Once you commit yourself
to that other person, once this person leaves their home of origin,
and this person leaves their home of origin, and they commit
themselves in this lifelong relationship, I must have a weistic way of
looking at life. My thoughts are from the vantage
point that I am bound together with this man or this woman.
That's the way I make decisions. It's the way I approach the use
of my money and my resources and my free time. It's the way
that I invest my life. I'm always thinking, whether
I'm with this person physically or not, At that particular moment,
I'm always thinking from a we and us perspective. Everything
I do is a statement of my commitment to this person and this marriage. That's biblical marriage. 24-7, it is a comprehensive commitment. That's what Jesus planned. That's
what God planned. I'm not free. to think in a way that's driven
by my individual happiness, my individual desire, my individual
need. I can't use my resources or my
time or my energy or my money or make decisions in that way. Because the plan of God is once
that union takes place, we now live as a unit. We decide as a unit. They are no longer two, but one flesh. Now, I would ask you this evening, if you're married here this evening,
do you live that way? Are your thoughts and desires
Your day-by-day plans, the way you talk to one another, the
way you make decisions, the things you think about the future are
the expression of we-ism. I know these terms are driving
some of you crazy. I sort of like that. Or me-ism. See, I think our culture has
gone way, way over to the other side. Marriage has been reduced
to a temporary vehicle for momentary happiness. That's what it is. And I make a temporary commitment. I ask you to sign a prenup because
I don't want any further commitment than after the moment when I
decide I don't want to be with you anymore. It's a disaster. And the implications of that
and their weakening of the culture around us are innumerable. I must worship God as the lawgiver. He gives and interprets His law. I must worship God as creator.
Marriage is His idea. Everything from the existence
of two sexes to the nature of this relationship to the nature
of the living commitment He has called us to are all his creation. But there's a third area. This
is very, very important. This gets even more individual.
I must worship God as sovereign. Look what it says next. What
therefore God has joined together, let not man separate. Jesus is not just repeating himself
here because The first point he's talking about the institution
of marriage. In this second thing that's being
said, I'm deeply persuaded that Jesus is talking about your individual
marriage. That your marriage exists because
of the sovereign plan of God. I think of my own relationship
to Luella. I would like to say that I was
smart enough to know that there was a little girl being raised
in Placetas, Cuba, while I was raised in Toledo, Ohio, that
would be worth marrying. I had no idea of her existence.
I had no idea of Luella's existence till a sovereign God had wrote
our stories in such a way that Paul Tripp from Toledo, Ohio
and Luella Grace Jackson from Placetas, Cuba would be standing
next to one another in a lunch line in college. Some of you
have heard me say this. For me, it was love at first
sight. For Luella, it was first sight. It was God who worked all of
that together. It was God who created attraction
and interest. It was God who birthed desires
in our hearts. It was God who controlled all
the circumstances and influences that ended up bringing us together. Our marriage is an expression
of the glory of his individual sovereignty. Paul says in Acts
17, he determines the exact place where we will live and the exact
length of our days. Now, why is this important? Well, I will say it this way.
It's important to recognize God knew exactly what he was doing.
He knew the rather wild and difficult mix of Luella and Paul. Luella being raised in the exotic
islands and Paul being raised in the white bread confines of
Toledo, Ohio. Not very exotic. I don't think
there's anything exotic in Toledo. God knew. God was not shocked. and dismayed that it was a sinner
married to a sinner. He didn't think, oh, I didn't
know that was going to happen. He knew exactly all the circumstances
that would press in on us that would make us struggle at points. God knew all the weaknesses of
heart in both of us. God knew all the places where
we needed to grow. God knew, God knew, God knew,
God knew. There was not one surprise in
all of this. He's sovereign. And the minute you say that marriage
is rooted in God as Creator and God as Sovereign, hear this.
You have to say, marriage is part of something bigger than
you. Marriage is part of something bigger than your happiness. Marriage
is part of a bigger plan. And if you don't see marriage
as connected to that plan, you will never live in marriage the
way God intended you to live in it. It's not all about you. It's
not all about your comfort. It's not all about your definition
of happiness. It's not all about the meeting
of your self-defined needs. Marriage is part of something
bigger. It's part of a grand redemptive
plan that spreads through all of history and through the whole
universe. Marriage is a piece of God's
sovereign plan. Yes, even your individual marriage
is part of something that God is doing. In many ways, that's
a mystery to us. You see, the minute you say that,
you have to ask the question, why would this wise God put this
comprehensive relationship, so demanding, so heart-exposing, right in the middle of the world's
most important incomplete process, sanctification. Wouldn't it have been easier
to get us sanctified first? who hasn't dreamed of being married
to a fully sanctified person. I always say this, and if God
could throw in self-parenting children, that would be helpful.
Because, you see, we tend to view life not from the vertical
perspective, what has God designed and what is God intending. We
tend to view life from the horizontal perspective, what is comfortable
and predictable for me. Danger, danger, danger. Why has God put this difficult
relationship, this long-term relationship, this demanding
relationship, unparalleled in its call to commitment to any
other relationship in life, in the middle of this incomplete
process of sanctification? Because this marriage is not
an end in itself, it's a means to an end. And the end is holiness. God intends marriage to take
you beyond your wisdom and beyond your strength. He intends that
to happen. He knows there are times when
you'll feel weak and incapable of loving. He knows there are
times when you'll face discouragement and those moments and those moments
of weakness, you are ready to reach out for the grace that
can only be found in Him. That is the purpose of the relationship. God's joined this together. He
brings us together not just for our happiness, oh, there is wonderful
joy in marriage, but for something profoundly more important than
that and more beautiful than that, that this would be a vehicle
in His gracious hands of forming us into the image of His Son,
the Lord Jesus Christ. See, our problem is not, first,
the prevalence of divorce in our culture. Our problem is that we failed
in our marriages to worship God as lawgiver, to worship God as
creator, to worship God as sovereign. And when we do that, we are very
susceptible to an unbiblical perspective
on divorce. We're very susceptible to quickly
break the bonds of this relationship. Well, in verse 10, Jesus is in
the house with the disciples, and they're quite astute. They
say, you didn't directly answer the question. He didn't. And they want an answer. And the disciples say, OK, well,
what is the answer? Is divorce permissible? And Jesus
says this, whoever divorces his wife and marries another commits
adultery against her. And if she divorces her husband
and marries another, she commits adultery. Now, this is very, very important
with these words that we recognize that Scripture is meant to interpret
Scripture. And so we must do that. In two
particular passages, it is made clear that there are two situations
where in God's eyes, albeit sad, divorce is permissible. In the face of adultery and the
abandonment of an unbelieving spouse. All other reasons for adultery
or for divorce followed by remarriage are viewed as adultery in God's
eyes. Maybe you're sitting here thinking,
Paul, that's so hard. All the ways of the Lord are
right and true. This is the epitome of wisdom. God is wisdom. He is the creator
who knows everything about us and what is best for us. He is
sovereign. He orders our lives in a way
that is best. We must bow before him and say,
God's way is always the right way. I want to end by this. If you've heard what I've said
this evening, I don't think there's anyone
in this room who would say, I'm independently capable of living
in this relationship this way. Marriage really does expose our
pride. It exposes our selfishness. It
exposes our impatience. It exposes our vengeance. It exposes our envy. It exposes the fickle nature
of our hearts. So the hope for marriage is not
just worship of God as lawgiver and creator and sovereign, but
also as Savior. Jesus came, and he lived on our
behalf, and he died for us, and he rose again so that we would
have, hear the words of 2 Peter 1, verse 3, everything we need
for life and godliness. For some of us, that means seeking
the grace of forgiveness. For some of us, that means seeking
the grace of enablement. We'd have the strength to live
where we are living at this moment. For some of us, that means the
strength, the grace of wisdom. But His grace is sufficient.
It really is made perfect in our weakness. Your Savior knows
your needs. He knows what you're facing.
He knows the struggle with which you have heard these words this
evening. Jesus is Emmanuel. I've said this before, I will
continue to say it. Not just because He came to earth,
but because He makes us the place where He dwells. The hope of marriage is found
in His grace. Let's pray. Lord, how tempting it is for
us in little mundane momentary ways or in the grand decisions
of life, to think that we're smarter than you, that our way
is better than your way. And so, Lord, we pray that you
would produce in our hearts by your grace worship of you as
lawgiver and as a creator and sovereign as Savior. that we
would live joyfully inside of your boundaries, believing that
there you will give us the grace that is necessary. In Jesus'
name, amen.
What Is Marriage?
Series Series on the Book of Mark
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| Sermon ID | 117112128124 |
| Duration | 34:34 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Mark 10:1-12 |
| Language | English |
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