.
GOD’S
DESIGN FOR SCRIPTURAL ROMANCE – Part 1 (Chapters 1-5)
About the author:
John Thompson is on
the staff of the National Center for Family-Integrated Churches (NCFIC.org),
founder of Family Shepherd Ministries, church pastor, and home-schooling father
since 1983. John has taught extensively on the family-integrated church, the
busy father as family shepherd, and the benefits of home education and home
business. A graduate in biblical counseling under Dr. Jay Adams at Westminster
Seminary, he has been a keynote speaker at numerous state and national
home-school conventions, Christian camps, and other conferences since 1985. As
a contributing writer to The Teaching Home, Home School Digest and Patriarch
Magazine, he is the author of several acclaimed articles including
"College at Home for the Glory of God" and "God's Design for
Scriptural Romance." John and his wife Dawn live in Asheville, North Carolina.
John
welcomes your comments and contacts.
Email:
JT@FamilyShepherd.org
All
scripture is quoted from the New American Standard Bible
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
Chapter
Page
1. Rediscovering
the Timeless
Truths
5
The Philosophy behind
Dating
5
The Fruit of
Dating
6
Evaluating the Relevant
Passages
7
Significant Relationships to
Study
8
Significant Concepts & Words to
Study
8
God’s Four Truth
Forms
9
Interpreting Culturally Related
Scripture
10
Biblical Betrothal is
Transcultural
11
Identifying God’s Principles for
Romance 13
Taking every thought
captive
16
2. Dealing
with the Dating
Dilemma
17
Dating
Defined
17
Distinguishing Characteristics of Dating and
Betrothal
18
Dating’s
History
19
Comparing Dating With
Scripture 20
Victory over a Dating
Spirit
21
Spiritually Renewing your
Mind
22
God’s Commands against
Dating
22
How to Acquire a
Wife
23
Discarding the Myths of
Dating
24
Discerning the Dangers of Dating
25
How can Parents Resist?
27
How can Young People
Resist?
27
God’s Solution to the Dating
Spirit
28
3.
Preparing Your Children for Biblical
Betrothal
30
Courtship vs.
Betrothal
30
Your Children’s
Example
31
Your Children’s Encouragement
32
Your Children’s
Equipping
33
Essential Training
Topics
34
4.
Choosing a Spouse by Faith, not
Feelings
36
Quiz on Choosing a
Spouse
37
What God’s will
Means
37
Testing God’s Individual
Will
38
Circumstances do not Guide Us
40
Neither Doors nor
Fleeces
41
Impressions do not Guide
Us
43
What about
Peace?
44
How God Guides
Us
45
5. Talking
Biblically about
Feelings
48
Sense
Perceptions
48
Our
Emotions
49
Beliefs, Attitudes,
Thoughts
49
Our
Desires
50
6. How to
Marry – The Friendship Stage
51
Worldly Relations vs. Biblical
Relations
51
Whether to
Marry
52
Three
Factors
53
Whom to Marry
54
Only in the
Lord
55
Understanding
Friendship
56
Applying
Piety
57
Applying
Patriarchy
57
Applying
Purity
58
Applying
Preparedness
60
Applying
Patience
60
7. How to
Marry – The Courtship
Stage
62
Understanding Courtship
62
Wisdom
Guidance
64
Applying
Piety
65
Applying
Patriarchy
67
Applying
Purity
68
God’s Fences of
Protection
69
Applying Preparedness &
Patience
70
8. How to
Marry -- Courtship
Questions
72
Questions about
Courtship
72
Questions during
Courtship
78
Phase One – The
Inquiry
78
9. How to
Marry -- The Betrothal
Stage
83
Purposes of
Betrothal
83
Applying
Piety
84
Applying
Patriarchy
86
Applying
Purity
87
Applying
Preparedness
89
Applying
Patience
91
10. How to
Marry -- The Wedding
Stage
92
Biblical Wedding
Examples
93
Applying
Piety
94
Applying
Preparedness
95
The Procession
96
The
Ceremony
97
The Celebration
97
Applying
Patriarchy
98
Applying Purity
101
Applying Patience
102
11. The
Marriage of Jonathan and Zoie -- A marriage based on
courtship 105
I.
Prelude
105
II.
Procession
106
III.
Ceremony
107
IV. Signing of the Covenant
109
V.
Celebration
110
Chapter 1
Rediscovering the Timeless Truths
Several years
ago a missionary related to our church how three ominous inroads from Western
culture are destroying the morality of families in India — even families in
Bible-believing churches. These pernicious intrusions are Western television,
Western rock music, and Western dating and romance. We were familiar, of
course, with the corrupting influences of Western television and rock music.
These plagues of post-Christian culture are ruining many families in America too. But dating and romance? What could possibly be harmful in this?
Our missionary, a prominent Bible teacher and counselor in India, explained his startling observation from many years of marriage counseling. He noted
that marriages in India which are begun through traditional betrothal (pursuing
a relationship for marriage, not recreation) enjoy a near zero divorce rate. By
contrast, marriages that are commenced through Western dating have the same
divorce rate as America — over fifty percent! All other factors being the same,
the dating vs. betrothal issue seems to have a dramatic impact on a marriage's
happiness, stability and longevity.
Such an observation strikes a responsive chord among a growing number of
Christian families in America today. Not only homeschoolers but conservative
believers of all sorts are rediscovering God's timeless truths about romance
through an assortment of new literature (I count over thirty books and tapes in
my own collection). Yet if these virtues are to become uncompromised convictions,
they must be personally investigated from their original source, the Bible.
This, of course, is the nature of a conviction — it is a belief we are
convinced is God-ordered and non-negotiable. Thus, the mission of my writing is
not to entertain you (though I think you will find this study stimulating) but
to lead you into scriptural truths which are vital for the preservation of your
family.
THE PHILOSOPHY BEHIND DATING
Before we explore the specific passages in Scripture that deal with romance,
let's begin with the big picture, the issue of one's life philosophy which will
then undergird everything he or she believes and practices in life. The Bible
teaches that your life philosophy is either man-centered or Christ-centered,
either man-pleasing or Christ-pleasing (1 Th. 2:4cf; Gal. 5:16ff). These
are the only two options. And whatever life philosophy you truly embrace will
show in your beliefs and in your behaviors.
Notice what the Apostle Paul reveals about this in Colossians 2:6-8. In
verses 6-7, Paul exhorts the Colossians to walk out their Christian life in the
same way that they put their faith into Christ, namely, through the instruction
of the Word of God, producing an abundantly joyous, thankful life. But is this
the typical fruit we encounter in modern dating? Is it possible that we have
unwittingly been deceived by our culture and have departed from God's truth in
this matter of romance, dating and finding a spouse?
Keep that possibility in mind as you read Paul's caution in verse 8: See to it
that no one takes you captive through philosophy and empty deception according
to the tradition of men, according to the elementary principles of the world,
rather than according to Christ. Beware; says Paul, here is a very real danger,
the threat of being kidnapped away from truth and into the mental, emotional
and spiritual bondage of error. By what conspiracy might you and I be captured
into error? Through philosophy and empty deception, answers Paul. The Greek
word for philosophy means a love of wisdom, and here it refers more
specifically to the appeal of worldly wisdom. Further, we are warned that the
world's teachings are empty deception. That is, although they are made to look
appealing, in reality they are barren, unfulfilling lies.
Well, how do these barren, unfulfilling lies of the world take us captive? By
two means, declares Paul: according to the traditions of men and according to
the elementary principles of the world, rather than according to Christ. The
traditions of men refer to worldly practices; the elementary principles of the
world denote worldly beliefs. So, Paul is sternly warning Christians to beware
and to avoid worldly practices and beliefs that would displace the practices
and beliefs of Christ through His Word.
What we are hearing in Paul's admonition is the necessity of Christian
separation, Come out from their midst and be separate, commands the Lord in 2
Corinthians 6:17, and do not touch what is unclean. In order to have a joyous,
meaningful and effective Christian life, says God, we must be a separated
people — separated from the sinful philosophy of the world, which is propagated
by the sinful people of the world, stimulated by the sinful pleasures and
places of the world, and proliferated through the sinful principles and
practices of the world.
THE FRUIT OF DATING
The philosophy of the world is commonly known as humanism; and it views man and
his desires as supreme. Some of the practices of this philosophy are clearly
wrong, such as abortion, homosexuality and adultery. The world practices these
sins because they view man and his desires as supreme, and most Christians
recognize these sins as clearly wrong. Yet, other practices of the philosophy
of humanism are not clearly wrong but are subtly wrong. They are just as wrong
because they are rooted in man and his desires being supreme, but their
wrongness is not so obvious. Could it be that one of these subtly wrong
practices of humanism is recreational romance (dating)? Jesus declared that you
will know a tree (whether it's good or bad) by its fruit (Luk.6:44.). As
we asked earlier, what is the typical fruit we encounter in modern dating?
Several interviews with parents revealed these fruits from their teen dating
experience:
1. Self-centeredness
2. Macho pride
3. Improper thoughts
4. Sensual focus
5. Immorality
6. Promiscuity
7. Fear
8. Distrust
9. Covetousness
10. Jealousy
11. Insecurity
12. Heartache
13. Bitterness
14. Revenge
15. Violence
16. Depression
17. Thoughts of suicide
18. Tensions among youth
19. Independent spirit
20. Hindered spiritual growth
21. Strained relationship with parents
22. Feeling of being used
This last fruit of the dating game — a feeling of being used — is more than
just a feeling, it's a fact. When you date, you become used merchandise, used
at least emotionally and often physically, from one romantic entanglement to
the next. This fact can be graphically illustrated by passing around a piece of
unwrapped chewing gum from person to person until it has become very grimy,
possibly dropped and trampled on, maybe even chewed. Now, who wants it? Anyone
with mature thinking will quickly reject this chewing gum as undesirable,
defiled merchandise. Young children, of course, will happily eat this dirty gum
because they don't know any better, which is why God gave them parents.
Likewise, God gave your children parents to guide them in this serious area of
pre-marital relationships — so they don't become like used chewing gum or pawed
over merchandise on the bargain table.
Yuk, this dating game looks pretty rotten. That's right, God intends for rotten
fruit — the corruption we reap from sowing to the flesh (Gal.6:8) — to
drive us back to His Word for divine direction. We are to use Scripture as a
mirror, James says, for carefully evaluating what needs to be changed in our
life (Jam. 1:23-25). What, then, has God revealed about His philosophy
of romance? And how do we unearth His life-changing principles?
EVALUATING THE RELEVANT PASSAGES
The study of any topic in Scripture begins with locating the relevant passages
by using such tools as an exhaustive concordance, a topical Bible, a Bible
encyclopedia, cross-references and a good thesaurus (the new computer versions
of these tools are even more effective). A narrow search of our topic would
look up such key words and phrases as betrothal, engagement, wedding, marry,
covenant, bride, groom, take a wife, give a daughter, etc. A broader study
would include words like dowry, protect, touch, kiss, caress, embrace, defraud,
virgin and so on. Once located, these Bible passages must not be merely read
but must be deeply probed by asking Who? What? When? Where? Why? and How? in a
dozen different ways. The answers to these six crucial questions will enable us
to define and describe God's Design for Scriptural Romance.
But we must be sure to frame the questions in light of our topic. For example,
Who? might ask about the role of father, mother, son and daughter. What? might
inquire about the outcome of the relationship. When? might probe the proper
time for romantic emotions or touching. Where? might investigate whether
romance should be public or private. Why? might question the reason something
is done — is it normative or cultural? How? might explore the way a courtship,
betrothal and wedding is carried out.
My own study following the above method uncovered over sixty relevant passages
(not counting duplicates and immaterial references). Several of these were
extensive, others were sketchy. But even some of the brief ones yielded highly
crucial information. In this series of articles, we'll be making reference to
many of these Scriptures, so let me list them for your firsthand study.
SIGNIFICANT RELATIONSHIPS TO STUDY:
Gen. 2:18-25 Adam & Eve
Gen. 6:1-5 Sons of God & Daughters of Men
Gen. 21:21 Ishmael & Wife
Gen. 24:1-67 Isaac & Rebekah
25:20; 26:8
Gen. 26:34-35 Esau & Judith, Basemath
Gen. 28:1-9 Jacob & Leah, Rachel
29:1-30
Gen. 34:1-31 Shechem & Dinah
Gen. 38:6 Er & Tamar
Gen. 41:45 Joseph & Asenath
Exod. 2:16-22 Moses & Zipporah
Josh. 15:16f Othniel & Achsah
Jdg. 14:1-20 Samson & Philistine, Delilah
15:1-6; 16:1-31
Ruth. 2-4 Boaz & Ruth
1 Sam. 18:17-29 David & Merab, Michal
1 Sam. 25:39-42 David & Abigail
2 Sam. 11:1-27 David & Bathsheba
1Ki. 11:1-8 Solomon & Many Wives
1Ki. 11:19 Hadad & Wife
2 Chron. 24:1-3 Joash & Wives
Est. 2:7-17 Ahasuerus & Esther
Pro. 31 King Lemuel & Virtuous Wife
Sol.1:1-3:11 Solomon & Shullamite Woman
Hos. 2:19-20 God & Israel (Wife)
Eze.16:8
Matt. 1:18-25 Joseph & Mary
Luk.1:27;2:5
2 Cor. 11:2-3 Christ & Church (Wife)
Eph.5:22-33
Rev.19:7-9
SIGNIFICANT CONCEPTS & WORDS TO STUDY:
Betrothal, Engagement — Exod. 22:16-17; Deut. 22:23-29; 2 Sam. 3:14; Matt.
1:19f
Covenants — Gen. 21:27-31; 31:48ff; Num. 30:2; Deut. 23:21-23; Josh. 9:18-20;
Zech. 8:17; Mal. 3:5; Gal. 3:15
Dowry/Bride Price — Gen. 34:11-12; Exod. 22:16-17; 1 Sam. 18:25; 2 Sam. 3:14
Patriarchal Protection — Num. 30:3ff; Deut. 22:21; Ps. 36:7; 2 Cor. 11:2
Father Giving Bride — 1 Cor. 7:36-38; Lk. 20:34-35; Exod. 22:17
Romantic Emotions/Touching — Gen. 20:4,6; 26:8; Exod. 22:16f; Deut. 22:23f;
Ruth. 2:9; S. of Sol.1-3; Matt. 5:28; Rom. 13:14; 1 Cor. 7:1; 1Thess. 4:6; 1
Tim. 5:1-2
Wedding — Ps. 45:13ff; S. of Sol. 3:6-11; Mal. 2:14; Matt. 22:2ff; 25:1ff; Jn.
14:2f; Rev. 19:7ff
Why is it that many people — even some Christians — don't earnestly want to
know what the Bible says on certain subjects? It is because such an
understanding would require a change in their lifestyle and comfort level. This
is decidedly true for the topic we are presently studying, scriptural romance.
Since most young people are so intertwined in emotional relationships with the
opposite sex, there will be a strong motivation to latch onto one of the
popular excuses to avoid submission to God's truth.
For example, non-Christians avoid God's truth simply by claiming the Bible is
not inspired (cf. 2 Tim.3:16). Since it's not really God's revelation to
guide His creatures, we need not obey it. Likewise, neo-evangelicals assert the
Bible is not inerrant (cf. Matt. 5:18). It is full of mistakes by the
faulty men God used to write it, so how do we know for sure what's true in it?
With quite a similar outcome, modern evangelicals argue the Bible is not
relevant (cf. Matt. 28:19-20). Many of its truths are culturally bound
and therefore not applicable to our present society, they claim.
In his enlightening book The Sufficiency of Scripture, Dr. Noel Weeks puts this
last excuse in perspective: Those who charge that the teaching of biblical
authors was culturally bound generally make selective use [of it]. They find
something in Scripture which challenges [their] contemporary ideas or
institutions, and they try to find a way to set aside that element of Scripture
(pp. 79-80). The descriptive vs. prescriptive argument is often stretched
beyond its intent. God's unalterable truths are eternal, even though certain
applications of them may change culturally. What, then, must we know in order
to accurately extract God's timeless truths about Scriptural romance, and then
effectively apply these principles to our lives?
GOD'S FOUR TRUTH FORMS
First, we must recognize the four forms of biblical truth by which God has
communicated to us — principle, precept, practice and prudence — in a variety
of literary styles (like narrative, poetry, prophecy, wise sayings, epistles).
We might parallel these four truth forms to the four food groups in that our
spiritual diet is not properly nourishing if we are missing any. Just as our
physical health is dependent upon our eating regularly from each of the
essential food groups, so also our spiritual health is dependent upon our
feeding regularly from each of these four truth forms. To omit any from our
spiritual diet will promote malformed and diseased spiritual lives.
Principle is the first truth form and is defined as a fundamental, primary or
general truth or reason by which God has ordered His creation. Speaking of the
elementary principles of the oracles of God, Hebrews 5:12 suggests that God's
principles stand behind all the precepts, practices and prudence which make up
His oracles, or revelation. Our responsibility, of course, is to discover and
apply them. That's relatively easy when the principle is directly stated as the
justification for a command or practice and is introduced by such words as for,
since or because (e.g., 1 Tim. 5:17-18). Other times, however, the
principle is only implied and must be unearthed through biblical research and
spiritual reasoning. For example, the requirement in 1 Timothy 5:19 for two or
three witnesses implies the underlying principle of impartiality (see verse
21) as taught in Matthew 18:16 (and ultimately Exodus 20:16). Because
biblical principles are an expression of the very character of God (who is
Truth), all principles are by nature applicable to all cultures. Don't let that
last statement escape you: as an expression of the very character of God, all
principles are by nature applicable to all cultures. Sounds like the Bible is
very relevant after all!
A second truth form is precept, a direct command of God which is rooted in
principle, such as pray at all times (Eph. 6:18). To uncover the
underlying principle behind a command, simply ask the question Why? Why are you
to pray at all times? Because you are in a dependent, loving relationship with
God — that is the intrinsic principle. And unless there is clear evidence to
the contrary (see below), you should normally assume that a biblical command is
applicable to you and your culture. The conclusion, when all has been heard is:
fear God and keep His commandments [precepts], because this applies to every
person (Eccl. 12:13).
The third truth form, practice, is a biblically defined implementation or
exercise of a principle. Many Christians wrongly assume that the practices in
Scripture are generally culturally bound, yet Paul declares just the opposite
when he explains, [Timothy] will remind you of my ways [practices] which are in
Christ [principles], just as I teach everywhere in every church (1 Cor.
4:17; cf. Phil. 3:17; 4:9). Old Testament scholar Dr. Richard
Pratt, in his interpretational guide titled He Gave Us Stories, puts it this
way: In many cases a sharp distinction between form [practice] and meaning
[principle] cannot be justified. The New Testament does not merely insist that
believers affirm abstract theological principles; it also requires us to follow
forms and structures in the church. In many cases the forms and the principles
are largely inseparable. We do not need to contextualize the biblical teaching;
we need to teach and explain the requirements of Scripture (p. 373). Thus, we
should usually understand that a biblical practice is relevant to all cultures
unless there are sound reasons to the contrary.
Prudence is the fourth and final truth form by which God has communicated to us
in His Word. It is the wise personal application of a principle. Does this make
prudence optional? No, Solomon tells us that to rashly ignore prudence is sin:
He who sins against me [Wisdom] injures himself; all those who hate me love
death (Prov. 8:36). Once you have concluded that a particular path would
be prudent, to do otherwise would be sinful since the motive could only be to
please self rather than Christ.
INTERPRETING CULTURALLY RELATED SCRIPTURE
In addition to embracing all four forms of biblical truth, we must next
understand how to interpret culturally related truth, if we are to unearth
God's essential elements about scriptural romance. But did you know that ALL
Scripture is culturally related because it was written to a specific people and
culture? However, that does NOT mean all Scripture is culturally bound. Indeed,
some precepts and practices are exclusive to a culture, while others are
normative for all time. How do we know which is which? To determine if it is
cultural, we must ask whether the precept or practice is …
1. Chronologically limited? E.g., a mode of transportation, such as
donkey power, changes as
civilizations progress.
2. Theologically limited? E.g., Old Testament animal sacrifices were
fulfilled by Christ at
Calvary (Matt. 5:17).
3. Culturally
limited? E.g., the holy kiss (same gender on the cheek) was a custom of
greeting
like our handshake.
4. Historically limited? E.g., urging singleness in view of the present
distress (1 Cor. 7:26) is
confined to times of adversity.
5. Personally limited? E.g., Paul making tents rather than accepting
financial support for his
ministry is described as a personal preference (1 Cor. 9:12).
Likewise, there are some ways to evaluate if a precept or practice is
transcultural (i.e., normative for all time). For example, ask if it is …
1. A departure from cultural practice? E.g., for a woman to learn
anything was contrary to first
century culture (1 Cor. 14:35).
2. A Christian tradition? These, such as women's headcovering, we are
instructed to hold firmly
to (1 Cor. 11:2).
3. A creation ordinance? Both Jesus and Paul pointed to God's original
design in creation for
normative truths (Matt. 19:4-6; 1 Tim. 2:13-14).
4. An appeal to a timeless principle? E.g., Christians have the wisdom to
judge the future world
(1 Cor. 6:1-3) How much more, then, matters of this life?
5. An appeal to a different culture? E.g., Paul appeals to Israelite
culture for the Corinthians to
follow (1 Cor.
9:9).
6. Repeated in different cultures? E.g., Betrothal is found in all
cultures from Creation to
Christ's marriage to the church (2 Cor. 11:2).
BIBLICAL BETROTHAL IS TRANSCULTURAL
A typical response to biblical betrothal says, Wait, aren't all the Scriptures
about betrothal simply descriptive of Jewish culture and not really applicable
to Christians today? No, if you examine them more closely, that is not the case
at all. By biblical betrothal we mean an approach to the man-woman relationship
which involves a binding commitment to marry and careful oversight by parents
(versus the freewheeling, recreational approach of dating). It is instructive
that in Scripture there are no positive examples of romantic relationships
apart from betrothal, whether Jewish or Gentile. Every scriptural example where
the father (or another adult if the father was dead) initiated and oversaw the
romantic relationship (such as Adam/Eve, Isaac/Rebecca, Joseph/Mary, etc.), the
outcome was blessed by God. On the other hand, every example where the father
did NOT initiate and oversee the relationship (such as Esau/wives,
Shechem/Dinah, Samson/Delilah, etc.) the outcome was either mixed or
disastrous! It is simply the sowing and reaping principle of Paul’s command to
the young men to treat the younger women as sisters, in all purity (1 Tim.
5:2).
In Scripture I have observed at least five reasons why Bible-believing
Christians ought to consider the betrothal approach to marriage as
transcultural, that is, normative for all people in all cultures. See if this
makes sense to you.
1. THE PRE-CULTURE CREATION MODEL — In Matthew 19:4-6, Christ appeals to
the pre-culture creation account of Genesis 1-2 as abiding justification for a
biblical view of marriage (just as Paul does for male church leadership in 1
Timothy 2:13-14). By pre-culture I mean that cultural creeds and customs
had not yet developed. In the Garden of Eden we are dealing with pristine
conditions, the commencement of civilization untainted by mankind's sin or
ceremony. Following Christ's example, Christian scholars throughout church
history have likewise based marriage on what they call the creation ordinance.
So, what exactly was this original prototype? The Father (God), through wise
and loving oversight, brought together the bride (Eve) and the groom (Adam) for
the sole purpose of marriage. God didn't create a dozen men and a dozen women
to play the dating game and then marry whomever they wished. Instead, He wanted
Adam to be a one-woman man (1 Tim. 3:2) and Eve to be a one-man woman (1
Tim. 5:9). Prior to the fall, Adam and Eve were the ideal couple, the norm
for marriage throughout time.
2. THE LAW WRITTEN IN THE HEART — Biblical and historical evidence
reveals that the creation model of betrothal became the practice not only for Israel but also for nearly every civilization in history until the twentieth century. Even
prior to the origin of Israel and the Mosaic Law, the nations of the world
embraced biblical betrothal. And Israel's contemporaries, while rejecting much
of the Mosaic code of conduct, nevertheless adopted biblical betrothal. Egypt, Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome and the many cultures since the time of Christ have likewise
practiced betrothal. Why? The Apostle Paul relates in Romans 2:14-15 that when
Gentiles who do not have the Law do instinctively the things of the Law … they
show the work of the Law written in their hearts. History confirms that
betrothal is not a cultural peculiarity but rather an instinctive principle
written in the heart of all mankind.
3. AN AGELESS PRINCIPLE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT — The Apostle Paul explains
in Romans 15:4, written primarily to Gentile Christians, that whatever was
written in earlier times [the Old Testament] was written for our [New Testament
believers] instruction, that through perseverance and the encouragement of the
Scriptures we might have hope. Whatever was written? Yes, the entire Old
Testament continues to instruct us through its ageless principles including
betrothal, a principle of self-denial about which Paul is exhorting in this
very context (cf. 1 Cor. 10:11; 2 Tim. 3:16). When everyone around
us is yielding to fleshly dating, it is our own perseverance (steadfastness)
and the encouragement of the Scriptures (biblical examples of betrothal) that
will give us hope, a confident expectation that God will provide for those who
are faithful. About this verse, Donald Grey Barnhouse remarked in his
inimitable commentary on Romans, that between the lines of the former
revelation are great eternal principles.
4. APPLICATION TO A DIFFERENT CULTURE — Again, the Apostle Paul advises
predominantly Gentile Christians — indeed, all who in every place call upon the
Name of our Lord Jesus Christ (1 Cor. 1:2) — to follow God's normative
principle of betrothal (i.e., patriarchal responsibility over marriage): But if
a man thinks that he is acting unbecomingly toward his groom's offer of
marriage (Jn. 3:36). During betrothal the groom (Christ) is demonstrating His
virgin
daughter, if she should be of full age, and if it must be so, let him do what
he wishes, he does not sin; let her marry (1 Cor. 7:36ff). Notice
that even to Gentile believers Paul's marital advice is grounded in the
father's biblical authority to do what he wishes in regard to his daughter,
even if she is of full age, i.e., getting beyond marriageable age. Betrothal,
then, is a practice which Paul considered to be in Christ and one that he
taught everywhere in every church, to both Jewish and Gentile cultures (1
Cor. 4:17).
5. CHRIST'S MARRIAGE TO THE CHURCH — Perhaps the most compelling reason
for recognizing betrothal as transcultural is our Lord's use of this standard
for His relationship with His own multicultural bride, the church. As the
spiritual father of the Corinthians, Paul declares: ...for I betrothed you to
one husband, that to Christ I might present you as a pure virgin (2 Cor.
11:2). Why would Christ choose betrothal if it were not God’s own
prescription for pre-marital fidelity? Indeed, Paul suggests that its primary
purpose is to present you as a pure virgin. Just as Christ doesn't want us
dating around in the spiritual realm because it leads to physical, mental and
emotional impurity, so likewise in the natural realm.
How did Christ betroth Himself to His bride? Notice that it perfectly parallels
the biblical betrothal model found in our relevant passages above. First, the
Heavenly Father and Son together chose the bride (Eph. 1:4; Jn. 15:16).
The Son was then sent to seek His bride (Lk. 19:10). During this time He
was in continuous communication with and submission to His Father (Jn. 5:30)
At the time of betrothal, Christ paid the greatest bride price in history, His
own precious blood (1 Pet. 1:18-19). The bride (the church) has the
choice to accept or reject the love for us through words, acts and gifts, and
we grow to know and love Him more and more each day (Eph. 3:17-19). Christ's
love for His betrothed is a secure, permanent relationship, unlike dating
around (Heb. 13:5; Rom. 8:37-39). During betrothal we cannot touch Him,
but after He comes for us in marriage, we will (Jn. 14:2-3). After our
processional to heaven, our marriage to Christ will be celebrated with a great
wedding feast (Rev. 19:7-9).
IDENTIFYING
GOD'S PRINCIPLES FOR ROMANCE
From creation to Christ's second coming and covering a multitude of cultures,
the Scriptures consistently present the betrothal model as normative, not
cultural. Before sin, before Israel, before the Law, before Christ, before the
church., God instituted betrothal. What, then, are the essential, unchanging
principles which stand behind this universal practice as an expression of the
very character of God? A careful inquiry (Who, What, When, Where, Why and How)
of the sixty or so relevant passages reveals five fundamental principles of
scriptural romance: piety, patriarchy, purity, preparedness and patience. Let's
see from where these timeless truths originate.
PIETY. In a sentence, piety is a general godliness or righteousness in
attitudes and conduct which imitates Christ's relationship with His bride, the
church. Piety is the character quality which undergirds and permeates the other
four principles of scriptural romance. It is a pure devotion to please Christ
rather than self in all our relationships, focusing on inward character rather
than outward beauty. Apart from true piety, applying the other principles will
be hypocritical at best. Illustrations of this quality abound among the godly
couples in Scripture. Isaac, for example, was meditating in the field while he
awaited his bride's arrival (Gen. 24:63). Joseph, in his relationship to
Mary, is described as a righteous man (Matt. 1:19). Jesus Christ the
righteous weds his bride, the church, after she is clothed in the righteous
acts of the saints (Rev. 19:8). Other notable examples of piety in
romance would include Jacob and Boaz.
PATRIARCHY. If piety is the undergirding virtue, then patriarchy may be
called the overarching principle since the father's leadership is definitive in
scriptural romance. In brief, the father lovingly prepares, protects and
provides a spouse with the cooperation of a son or approval of a daughter. Just
as God perfectly fashioned Eve for Adam, the bride's father prepares his
daughter to be a suitable helper through training in spiritual maturity,
academics, fine arts, and life skills (Gen. 2:18,22). Like the biblical
patriarchs, he protects his daughter physically, morally, and emotionally,
keeping her under his roof until she marries and never releasing her to an
unprotected situation (Ps. 36:7; Deut. 22:21; Num. 30:3ff; cf. Gen. 34:1ff).
Indeed, he is jealous for [her] with a godly jealousy to protect her purity
so that she is betrothed to only one husband (2 Cor. 11:2). With a
relationship of deep trust and respect, the bride's father provides his
daughter with a husband which she approves (Exod. 2:21; Jos. 15:17; 1 Sam.
18:27). The father initiates, investigates, oversees and chooses his
daughter's husband, though she may humbly decline (Gen. 24:58; 1 Sam. 18:20;
Jn. 3:36; 1 Cor. 7:36).
Correspondingly, a groom's father prepares his son to be a godly leader and a
generous provider (Gen. 2:15-17; Prov. 1-7). Protecting a son is less
stringent than protecting a daughter since he is less vulnerable. But it is
still a moral concern, which is why Solomon candidly counseled his son
regarding immoral women in Proverbs chapters 2, 5, 6 and 7. Finally, the
groom's father provides a wife (Jer. 29:6), yet with the active
participation of his son (Jn. 15:16). Adam's father brought to the man
the woman who was fashioned for his need (Gen. 2:20-24), as did Abraham
also and most other Old and New Testament fathers (Gen. 24:3; 38:6; Jdg.
12:8-9; 2 Ki. 14:9; Jn. 6:37). Historically, a Jewish father considered it
his responsibility before God to train his son in a trade, to teach him the
Law, and to bring him into wedlock. Because he was instructed not to forsake
the instruction of his mother and father (Prov. 1:8; 4:1), a godly young
man never married a wife without the oversight and blessing of his father. And
all unblessed marriages in Scripture resulted in a mixed or disastrous result,
such as Esau, Shechem and Samson.
The mother of the bride or groom is to support, not supplant her husband as
patriarch, giving wise counsel to her husband and children as King Lemuel's
mother did (Gen. 2:18; Prov. 31). But what if the father is physically
absent from the family through death, desertion or divorce? Then the mother
assumes his role of initiating and overseeing the betrothal process, just as
Hagar got a bride for Ishmael (Gen. 21:21). By analogy, if the father is
spiritually absent from the family, the mother may assume his betrothal duties
if he does not disallow it (Acts 16:1; 2 Tim. 1:5; 1 Cor. 7:14).
PURITY. Having summarized the concepts of piety and patriarchy, the
third fundamental principle of scriptural romance is purity, which in the
Scripture means no physical affection or romantic emotions prior to God's
approval. In the choice of a mate, physical attraction clearly must be
secondary to inner character and spiritual maturity. Seek a woman of virtue (Prov.
31:10ff; Ruth. 3:11) and a man of character (Ruth. 2:9,15f). Romantic
touching — holding hands, hugging, kissing, etc. — are appropriate ONLY within
marriage (Gen. 2:25; 26:8; Prov. 5:18f; 6:29; S. of Sol. 4-8; Matt. 1:24f; 2
Cor. 11:2; Heb. 13:4). It is good for a man not to touch a woman (1 Cor.
7:1; Gen. 20:4,6; 34:3; Ruth 2:9; 2 Sam. 11:1ff; etc.). God never intended
any level of limited romantic touching prior to marriage. James describes this
principle of the slippery slope in 1:14: But each one is tempted when he is
carried away and enticed by his own lust. Then when lust has conceived, it
gives birth to sin; and when sin is accomplished, it brings forth death. By
God's design for procreation, one touch leads to the next. Consequently, in
Scripture couples were generally in the company of their families or chaperoned
(Gen. 2:22-24; S. of Sol.1-3 — by the daughters of Jerusalem). And
when not chaperoned, moral disasters occurred, such as Shechem with Dinah,
Samson with Delilah, and David with Bathsheba. Lead me not into temptation, a
plea to the Heavenly Father, should likewise be heard by earthly fathers (Matt.
6:13; 26:41). Make no provision (opportunity) for the flesh in regard to
its lusts, warns the Apostle Paul (Rom.13:14). Aloneness is an
opportunity for the flesh, even the aloneness of a public place away from one's
family. Let him who thinks he stands take heed lest he fall (1 Cor. 10:12;
cf. Prov. 28:26).
But physical morality isn't all that is included under the purity principle.
God also requires emotional purity in our relationships. Unrestrained romantic
emotions lead to mental impurity, adultery with her in his heart (Matt.
5:28). Consequently, romantic emotions (conveyed through romantic looks,
acts, language and gifts) are appropriate ONLY after the betrothal covenant has
been made (S. of Sol. 1-3). Otherwise, emotional fraud will likely occur
(1 Thess. 4:6). Yet even during the betrothal period, all anticipation
of marital affection is to remain pure and undiscussed between the couple (S.
of Sol. 1:2; 2:6; 3:1), romantic language is to be moral and modest (1:10,15,16),
and strict patience and self-control is to be a mutual commitment (2:7,15;
3:5).
PREPAREDNESS. Preparedness, the fourth fundamental principle of
scriptural romance, is a readiness for marriage both spiritually and
vocationally. For example, before he was married, Adam was prepared both
spiritually (he knew God's law) and vocationally (he knew horticulture) (Gen.
2:15-17). Likewise, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses — in fact, every
godly father — first gave his son adequate training both spiritually and
vocationally (to avoid slavery and debt) before he brought him into wedlock. In
the scriptural examples, if a young man was not leading spiritually before
marriage, there was little hope that he would lead spiritually after marriage.
Similarly, a young man who had not saved up a bride price (three years' wages)
was considered unprepared to support a wife and family. The bride price was a
primary evidence of financial preparedness. Solomon enjoins, Make it ready for
yourself in the field (vocational preparation); afterwards, then, build your
house (family) (Prov. 24:27). The Hebrew concept of house building here
refers to marriage and a family (cf. Prov. 14:1), a matter that must
wait its turn until afterwards, i.e., after vocational preparation. What is
needed is not merely a job (which can easily be lost) but a well-trained,
marketable skill.
A young woman before marriage should be spiritually prepared according to the
pattern of Sarah, Mary and the Proverbs 31 woman (cf. also Tit. 2:3-5; 1
Pet. 3:1-6; 1 Tim. 3:11; 5:10). Vocationally, a young woman must develop
her domestic skills to care for a home and children (Tit. 2:5). But this
is only HALF the preparation. She is to be her husband's helper not only in
fruitfulness but also in dominion (Gen. 1:28). So, the second half of
her vocational preparation is to develop her God-given talents to the level of
their endowment in anticipation of the husband for whom God has fashioned her (Gen.
2:18,22). Talent development in daughters is sometimes downplayed out of
fear of encouraging an attitude of careerism. Yet with proper heart
instruction, it cultivates not careerism but a biblical dominion helper, i.e.,
a wife who will truly strengthen her husband in his chosen life work. And it is
best developed in the context of a family business where a daughter can train
under her father as she will later serve under her husband.
PATIENCE. The fifth fundamental principle of spiritual romance is
patience, an attitude of trusting our sovereign God to accomplish His perfect
plan in His perfect time through imperfect fathers. Isaac, you recall, remained
under his father's authority and roof serving God and family until age forty
when Abraham got him a wife (Gen. 24). And Paul's reference to a
daughter of full age suggests no haste on the part of her father (1 Cor.
7:36f). On the other hand, a man is to rejoice in the wife of [his] youth (Prov.
5:18), not his old age. Thus, a father must be diligent in preparing his
sons and daughters for marriage, then be equally diligent in providing a
suitable, godly spouse. This requires careful praying, searching and
investigating as a priority so that your sons and daughters will not lose
confidence in their father. The rule of thumb is: patience without procrastination.
A son or daughter should focus on actively serving God while maintaining a deep
sleep emotionally until their father presents them with a potential spouse (Gen.
2:21f). They must not arouse or awaken love prematurely through their
impatience (S. of Sol. 2:7). All Christians are called to walk by faith,
not by sight (2 Cor. 5:7). Some young people lower their standards
because they get desperate, afraid they'll be spinsters for life. Yet your
faith must be in a sovereign God who, since the fall of man, has used imperfect
fathers (and mothers) to accomplish His perfect plan for mankind. He can use
your father to bring you a spouse at just the right time — trust Him!
TAKING EVERY THOUGHT CAPTIVE
As I asked before, let me ask again: Is it possible that we have unwittingly
been deceived by our culture and have departed from God's truth in this matter
of romance, dating and finding a spouse? After carefully examining God's Word,
I hope we are well on the way to understanding our cultural conflict. Paul warned
believers not to be taken captive...according to the elementary principles of
the world (Col. 2:8), but rather to take every thought captive to the
obedience of Christ (2 Cor. 10:5). In the warfare of Christian living,
it's either take captive or be taken captive. There is no neutral ground this
side of heaven. The battle we wage is a clash of ideas, but they are ideas with
very practical ramifications. In our next article on this subject, we will
begin exploring how to put off cultural dating and put on the five fundamental
principles of biblical betrothal, explaining not only the WHY but also the HOW.
These timeless truths will positively transform the relationships within your
family, though the process may challenging. But take heart, for the battle has
already been won, and the booty is yours to claim!
Chapter 2
Dealing
With the Dating Dilemma
Much credit for this
article goes to other godly men who have preceded me in their writings on this
subject, such as Paul Jehle, Jim West, Reb Bradley, Jonathan Lindvall and Dr.
S. M. Davis, to name a few. It is with sincere appreciation and recognition
that I build upon their abiding contributions.
A marriage begun through dating is like a house built of cards, it is
structurally weak and vulnerable to the winds of adversity. More than half such
marriages collapse in divorce; those remaining are riddled with stress fractures.
So in our first chapter on this subject, we pointed out the solid foundation of
dating's scriptural alternative, biblical betrothal. Four cornerstones were
carefully laid:
1.
The underlying life philosophy (to please Christ vs. self),
2.
The relevant passages (significant relationships and concepts),
3.
A transcultural interpretation (normative for all time), and
4.
The five fundamental principles (piety, patriarchy, purity, preparedness and
patience). Now
it's
time to erect the superstructure of application, exploring how to put off
cultural dating in
order to put on biblical betrothal (cf.
Eph. 4:22-24).
But why scrap
dating? Though we already noted the negative fruit of dating (remember the used
chewing gum?), this may still be a recurring question, especially among teens
exposed to the world. It's difficult to dismiss what's familiar. Even some
parents may wonder, is dating really that bad?
Each of us has faced hazardous activities in our lives at one point or another.
Some have served our country on the battlefield. Others have encountered perils
on the job. Still others of us have endured danger due to our own foolish
choices. I'll never forget the risky stunt I chanced as a youth trying to water
ski on my back being pulled by my feet and nearly drowning when I couldn't
release myself from the tow rope. Or my absurd attempt to navigate a
treacherous inlet to the ocean in a tiny rowboat. Or, as a student pilot at age
18, when I stupidly flew a plane in stormy weather and had to dive the plane
through an opening in the clouds at a speed far exceeding its design. Yet the
most dangerous, misguided and ruinous activity that I ever undertook in my life
was DATING!
It is amazing to me how blind we Christians have been regarding the dangers of
dating. Dating is a threat to our physical purity. Dating is a menace to our
emotional happiness. Dating is a liability to our spiritual growth. Yet society
continues to glorify dating on television, in movies, in classrooms, in romance
novels, in magazines and on billboards. And Christians have thoughtlessly
followed the Pied Pipers of our culture.
DATING DEFINED
More recently many godly Christians — especially in the homeschooling movement
— have begun to wake up to the dangers of dating and wisely ask, Is dating
consistent with the principles of scriptural romance? To answer that question,
let's first agree on what we mean by dating. One writer has called dating
simply a social activity between a man and a woman. That sounds pretty tame.
What could possibly be wrong or dangerous about a social activity between a man
and a woman? But that definition is not precise enough in that it would
include, say, a picnic between a girl and her brother. To be more accurate we
must define a date as a temporary romantic relationship focused on current
enjoyment. So a date is temporary rather than permanent, it is romantic (often
only slightly at first) rather than platonic, and it is focused on current
enjoyment rather than future matrimony.
A definition, however, sets forth only the bare essentials. More helpful,
perhaps, is the following chart showing dating's distinguishing characteristics
in contrast to biblical courtship and betrothal. By this fuller description
some Christians may realize that they are actually involved in dating (or a
dating/courtship hybrid) but calling it courtship. A rose by any other name
smells the same — and grows the same painful thorns!
DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS OF DATING AND BETROTHAL

DATING'S HISTORY
Understanding dating's distinguishing characteristics, you may wonder how such
a destructive activity ever developed. And worse, how Christians became so
duped by it. Let's take a moment, then, to briefly review dating's history.
In Scripture, dating was an exception and a violation of God's design for
man-woman relationships. Samson is a sad example of a man with a dating spirit,
reaping its disastrous consequences (Judg. 14-16). Dating became the
norm in Western culture only in the twentieth century, particularly during the
roaring 20s. Secular historian Ellen Rothman in Hand and Hearts — A History of
Courtship has noted,
A first-class revolt against the accepted American order took place among
American youth in the 1920s. This was not a sudden eruption, but rather a
series of seismic tremors that occurred with increasing intensity and frequency
through the 1910s and 1920s. By 1930, the terrain through which young Americans
passed en route to marriage would be almost unrecognizable to their parents.
(p. 289)
In his penetrating book Christian Courtship vs. The Dating Game, Pastor Jim
West concurs, The phenomenon of dating is a relatively new institution in the
United States. Prior to 1920, courtship laws included rigid supervision of the
female. Courtship was not entered upon unless parents were first consulted and
their approval secured (p. 4). Interesting, isn't it, that what's cultural is
not betrothal but dating!
But how did this new cultural practice take root? The attitudes that undergird
modern dating arose out of the eighteenth century philosophical movement called
Romanticism which emphasized making decisions based on emotions rather than on
reason and commitment. This movement influenced not only literature, music, and
art but ultimately relationships as well. In contrast to the biblical mandate
to love the one you marry (Eph. 5:25), the Romantics taught the reverse
— to marry the one you love. Thus they concluded, couples must cultivate
love-feelings for one who was not yet their spouse.
With this flawed philosophical base, several innovations of twentieth-century
culture contributed to dating's moral carnage:
(1) The rise of feminism encouraged young women to leave the loving protection
of their father and, for the first time in history, enter the work force where
they would meet young men.
(2) The Industrial Revolution and World War I drew young men away from the
restraining oversight of parents, church, and community.
(3) Increasing urbanization crowded more people into closer living situations
with inadequate parental supervision.
(4) Co-ed universities permitted young women to live on campuses with young
men, a major historical shift.
(5) The accessibility of the automobile to young people gave uninhibited
freedom from the watchful eye of parents.
(6) The movie theater gave opportunity for Hollywood's romantic expression of
love to influence millions of young viewers.
(7) New dances were no longer group oriented but couple oriented, and couples
romantically danced cheek-to-cheek.
(8) New dress styles were immodest, encouraging lustful dating rather than
loving betrothals.
(9) Most significantly, fathers abdicated their God-ordained responsibility to
teach the biblical practice of betrothal and to safeguard their children in
male-female relationships. With their primary focus on a job outside the home,
they were blindsided by the subtle encroachments of cultural change. And they failed
to ask the question that every father must now address, Does dating fit the
principles of scriptural romance?
COMPARING DATING WITH SCRIPTURE
Think it through as a Berean (Acts 17:11). Compare dating with the five
fundamental principles of scriptural romance: piety, patriarchy, purity,
preparedness and patience. Ask yourself, Does dating foster general piety,
godliness and righteousness in both attitudes and conduct, imitating Christ's
relationship with His bride, the church? Or does dating encourage wrong goals,
wrong motives, and wrong behavior in male-female relationships?
In regard to patriarchy, Does dating fit with a father's physical, moral, and
emotional protection of his child? Or does dating promote the release of a
young person to an unprotected situation? Does dating enable a father to
provide his son or daughter with a godly spouse? Or do dating partners meet on
their own, plan their dates for personal pleasure, and generally avoid parental
oversight?
With respect to purity, Does dating nurture physical morality, treating the
younger women as sisters, in all purity? Or does dating tempt one toward
physical affection through unchaperoned meetings, often at night? Does dating
cultivate emotional purity, preserving all of one's romantic emotions for
his/her spouse (for I betrothed you to one husband — 2 Cor. 11:2)? Or
does dating result in emotional promiscuity, fragmenting the heart with each
dating partner, leaving hurts, bitterness, and insecurity — and preparing young
people for unfaithfulness and divorce?
Concerning preparation, Does dating facilitate a young person's preparation for
marriage, both spiritually and vocationally? Or does dating actually distract a
young person from commitment to God and completion of his or her vocational
training, creating emotional attachments that interrupt God's plan for his or
her life? One pastor has observed, most young people in the dating culture are
nowhere near ready to get married. Mentally, they haven't completed an adequate
education. Spiritually, they haven't developed deep convictions necessary for a
successful marriage. Financially, they haven't become sufficiently stable to
support a new household. Physically and emotionally, they haven't matured in
self-discipline to remain one hundred percent pure.
Finally, pertaining to patience, Does dating promote a patient attitude of
walking by faith and not by sight, trusting in our sovereign God to work
through imperfect fathers to accomplish His perfect plan? Or does dating awaken
prematurely a young person's emotional affections, resulting in hasty,
ill-advised marriages? The answer to each of these questions is obvious and
indisputable to any honest, God-fearing parent or teen.
As I said at the outset, dating is a dangerous threat to our young people's
physical purity, emotional stability, and spiritual growth. This is true
because dating opposes every fundamental principle that God has given us for
scriptural romance. It is a game of Russian Roulette, a pistol to the head with
five of the six cylinders loaded. And knowing that God allows us to reap what
we sow (Gal. 6:7), five out of every six young people are going to be
seriously injured by it. But what if a young person is having a tough time
resisting the desire to date? How might he gain victory over the dating spirit?
VICTORY OVER A DATING SPIRIT
A dating spirit is a desire or yearning to enjoy the romantic appeal, glamour,
and allurement of dating, even though you know in your conscience that it
dishonors God's principles and distracts you from a single-minded devotion to
Christ (1 Cor. 7:32,35). A dating spirit, therefore, may be found in a
young man or a young woman who is committed not to date, but who still allows
his or her heart to become attached emotionally to someone prior to betrothal.
A dating spirit is like lusting rather than committing adultery — it's not as
bad, but it's still very wrong and dangerous.
Dating, even Christian dating, generally results in a series of emotional
attachments or bonds with different dating partners. To express this in the
language of romance, a young woman gives a piece of her heart to a young man
when she becomes emotionally involved with him. By the time she meets the man
she will marry, she will have only a fragment of her heart left to give. Even
without going out on a date, a young woman can give pieces of her heart to
several young men during her youth, so that by the time she marries, she is no
longer a one-man woman (1 Tim. 5:9). Yet Paul's analogy of Christ and
the church in 2 Corinthians 11:2-3 explains that a pure maiden saves her love
for one man only, not just physically but emotionally too. The goal is not just
physical purity but emotional purity — only one romance for life! Every
emotional attachment that a young person saves for his or her spouse is like
another weld in the marriage that bonds them tightly and securely together.
Do you have a dating spirit, a desire for romance before betrothal? See how you
fare in our Quiz for a Dating Spirit. Answer YES or NO to the following
questions (be honest with yourself):
1) Do you desire a relationship for fun and recreation rather than one that
leads to marriage?
2) Do you excitedly look forward to meeting the opposite sex at recreational
events, in the classroom, or at your workplace?
3) Do you desire romantic emotions before you are both ready to marry?
4) Do you desire physical affection in a pre-marital relationship?
5) Do you resent the thought of your father initiating, investigating,
choosing, and overseeing your romantic relationship? Instead, do you want
control, freedom, and privacy in your relationship?
If you answer yes to any of these five questions, then you probably have a
dating spirit, that is, a desire for the appeal, glamour, and allurement of
dating. What can you do about it? How might you keep a blameless conscience
before God? How can you preserve your whole heart for your future spouse? You
must renew your mind (Eph. 4:23) in the way you think about dating, both
spiritually and practically.
SPIRITUALLY RENEWING YOUR MIND
But how exactly do you renew your mind? From a multitude of Bible references we
understand that the terms mind, will, soul, spirit, conscience, and heart all
refer to the inner man in contrast to the outer man (cf. 2 Cor. 4:16).
In brief, your mind/heart is the focus of your mental, emotional, and spiritual
activity. Outward behavior is simply the overflow of what's in the heart. Watch
over your heart, warns Solomon, for from it flow the springs (lit. 'the
outgoings') of life (Prov. 4:23). That's why the Apostle Paul in Romans
12:2 grounded not being conformed to this world (your outward behavior) upon
the renewing of your mind (your inward beliefs and desires).
The writer of Hebrews gives us even greater insight into the mind/heart when he
explains, For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any
two-edged sword,... able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart (Heb.
4:12). Our thoughts, of course, are our beliefs. Our intentions are spoken
of elsewhere in Scripture as our desires, motives, lusts, cravings, passions,
and yearnings. Although there are many ways our desires manifest themselves
(laziness, sensuality, materialism, approval, control, pride, etc.), there are
actually only two fundamental motives that underlie all of our attitudes,
emotions, words, and deeds. Either we will be controlled by a desire to please
Jesus Christ, or we will be controlled by a desire to please self. Christ vs.
self — these are the two conflicting roots which, Paul declares in Galatians 5,
will produce either the fruit of the Spirit (growing out of love for Christ) or
the deeds of the flesh (growing out of love for self).
It is equally enlightening from Romans 1:24-26 that uncurbed desires will cause
us to embrace lies so that we may rationalize those desires — they
(homosexuals) exchanged the truth of God for a lie. Satan, who is the Tempter
of our lusts and the Deceiver of our minds, knows this well and uses this
weakness to gain a foothold in our lives. Consequently many Christian young
people will strive to find some justification to satisfy their hunger for
dating. They are driven by an appetite for romance that is constantly being fed
by Hollywood's movies, television, videos, advertisements, magazines, music,
and romance novels.
Parents, shouldn't we be sheltering our children from the lies and lusts of the
Evil One? Are we at least partly responsible for their failure to love Christ
more than self? Make knowing, loving, and obeying Christ the trademark of your
home, and your children will find victory over the dating spirit.
But Hebrews 4:12 mentions the thoughts (beliefs), in addition to the intentions
of the heart, as needing renewal. What renewed beliefs about dating will enable
us to prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and
perfect (Rom. 12:2)? In our first article we learned about the five
fundamental principles of scriptural romance: piety, patriarchy, purity,
preparedness and patience. But did you know that there is a direct, New Testament
command against dating?
GOD'S COMMAND AGAINST DATING
Since God's truth, not man's opinion, is our standard for belief and behavior,
please read my comments with your Bible open so that God can speak directly to
your heart what He says about dating. His clearest and most instructive word on
this subject is found in 1 Thessalonians 4:1-8. Paul's first epistle to the
Thessalonians reflects the moral climate of that seaport city of mostly pagan
Greeks. He wrote not only to encourage these new converts in the face of
persecution but also to exhort them concerning several temptations within their
culture, one of which was moral laxity (much like our day).
In verse 1 Paul writes that he regards his forthcoming exhortations as simply
the outworking of a loving desire to please God. Since desires will influence
beliefs (Rom. 1:24ff), this is Paul's starting point — and ours as well
— for child training. But lest his remarks somehow be viewed as optional, he
calls them by a first century military term, commandments ... by the authority
of the Lord Jesus (v.2). God's will, Paul continues, is that His people
be holy, set apart from sin unto God in all our daily experiences, and
particularly from any and every form of sexual immorality (v.3). But how
are we to maintain purity in our relationship to the opposite sex?
Paul's answer is found in verses 4-6 where God gives to man the know how for
properly acquiring his own vessel (wife), something of an expansion of Paul's
exhortation to the Corinthians: because of immoralities, let each man have his
own wife (1 Cor. 7:2). Although commentators throughout the
centuries have differed over the meaning of vessel (body vs. wife), the word
meanings, grammar, context, Septuagint usage (Greek version of the Old
Testament), and rabbinical literature give greater evidence for this being
God's instruction on getting a wife. Indeed, Paul uses the word this way in 1
Peter 3:7 where the wife is spoken of as the weaker vessel. Thus, many
commentators both old (Augustine, Zwingli) and new (Alford, Ellicott,
Hendriksen, Lange, Lenski, Moffatt, Nicoll, Robertson, Vine) favor this view as
interpreted in many Bible translations.
HOW TO ACQUIRE A WIFE
So in what way should a man acquire a wife? Paul explains that he should pursue
courtship in holiness before God and in honor before men (v.4), not in
lustful passion (v.5) which shows neither restraint of sin nor respect
of persons. Indeed, this is the debased practice of the Gentiles (unbelievers)
who don't know God, a theme more fully developed in Romans 1. Lustful passion
describes the ultimate outcome of today's dating culture, whether it's intended
or not. If personal pleasure is dating's purpose, if romantic emotions and
physical affection are promoted, if complete privacy is permitted and oversight
by parents is resented, then you may be sure that, sooner or later, lustful
passion will defile and dishonor the relationship. God's principles simply
cannot be compromised without consequence. Do not be deceived, God is not
mocked; for whatever a man sows, this he will also reap (Gal. 6:7).
Pursuing a wife in sanctification and honor (courtship/betrothal rather than
dating) states Paul's exhortation positively. Verse 6 states the case
negatively: that no man transgress and defraud his brother in the matter. The
term transgress literally means to go beyond what is proper, to exceed the
proper limits. To this Paul adds a metaphor taken from the world of commerce:
defraud, meaning to cheat, steal, have more than one's due, selfishly attempt
to gain more while disregarding others and their rights. In the context of
acquiring a wife, these two terms refer to exceeding the proper limits of a
male-female relationship and thereby stealing the physical and emotional
affection that belongs to a brother. But who is this brother that is being
defrauded? It can only be the woman's future spouse! Noted commentator Leon
Morris in the New International Commentary on the New Testament concurs:
Promiscuity before marriage represents the robbing of the other of that
virginity which ought to be brought to a marriage. The future partner of such a
one has been defrauded…. It reminds us that all sexual looseness represents an
act of injustice to someone other than the two parties concerned (p. 126).
This theft of affection that typically occurs in dating may never be known by
the future spouse. Will justice be denied for stolen kisses? Not according to
verse 6, which solemnly warns us that the Lord is the avenger in all these
things. God will punish those who refuse the path of purity in acquiring a
wife. No man can reckon on escaping the consequences. Again we are reminded
that God is not mocked; whatever a man sows, this he will also reap. You may be
tempted to spurn these words as just one man's opinion. But this very passage
concludes with a caution against such flippancy: he who rejects this is not
rejecting man but the God who gives His Holy Spirit to you (v. 8). Defrauding
a brother is not a failure to keep some man-made rule but is sin against the
Holy Spirit, our Sanctifier. This should motivate us spiritually to resist the
dating spirit.
DISCARDING THE MYTHS OF DATING
There are also some very practical reasons that can motivate us to resist a
dating spirit. We can categorize these reasons under two topics: the myths of
dating (untrue) and the dangers of dating (true). In Proverbs, chapters 2, 5, 6
and 7, God cautions young men not to be ignorant about their relationship with
young women (cf. Prov. 7:6-10). Young men who fall into immoral
relationships are lacking good sense because they have believed several worldly
myths about dating. These myths, gleaned from Paul Jehle's book Dating Vs.
Courtship, must be biblically exposed in order to understand the faulty
foundation of modern dating.
MYTH #1: I need a boyfriend/girlfriend to overcome my loneliness and
fulfill my social needs. This myth is a contradiction of 1 John 1:6-7, If we
walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another….
God has designed fellowship with Himself and within the church to fulfill our
loneliness and social needs. Adam was alone, meaning he needed a helper to
fulfill the dominion mandate to be fruitful and rule the earth. But Adam was
never said to be lonely because he enjoyed perfect fellowship with God. Only
repentance from the sin of self-pity will overcome loneliness. The real social
need of individuals is to learn to fellowship with Christ and His church.
Having a boyfriend or girlfriend actually works against true fellowship because
it creates a relationship that focuses on one and excludes others.
MYTH #2: A necessary part of maturing is having someone with whom you
can share your affections and trust (True). Dating fulfills this need (False).
Here is a myth that denies Romans 12:9-10, Let love be without hypocrisy. Abhor
what is evil; cling to what is good. Be devoted to one another in brotherly
love; give preference to one another in honor. The dating game is the worst
atmosphere to honestly share your affections since love in dating is hypocrisy,
a sensual love disguised as true love. What we need is brotherly and sisterly
affection from true friends who will not abuse our trust for selfish romance.
MYTH #3: Physical affection in dating is normal, natural, and okay, just
keep it under control. But what does 1 Corinthians 7:1 say? It is good for a
man NOT to touch a woman. And Ecclesiastes 3:1,5 reminds us, To everything
there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven... a time to
embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing…. With Solomon we must ask, Can a
man take fire in his bosom and his clothes not be burned? (Prov. 6:27).
By God's design for procreation, one touch leads to the next. God intended
physical affection ONLY within marriage, and not before.
MYTH #4: Dating was the way we adults found our spouses, and it hasn't
hurt us any. So it must be okay for our kids. Yet this myth compromises 1 Peter
1:15, Like the Holy One who called you, be holy yourselves also in all your
behavior. There are two serious errors in this myth. First, most adults who
don't think they have been harmed by dating are not comparing their dating or
their present marriages to God's standard. Our standard as parents must be the
very holiness of Christ. The second error is that of making our own experience
with dating, rather than God's revealed principles about romance, the standard
for our children.
MYTH #5: One of the purposes of the church is to help our young people
find their mates through the youth group. But Scripture teaches us in 1
Corinthians 14:26, What is the outcome, then, brethren? When you assemble… let
all things be done for edification. God does have a purpose for the church in
preparing young people for marriage, but it is NOT to set up a dating forum
through the church youth group so that the same sinful patterns can be
practiced on believers instead of unbelievers. Instead, our purpose in coming
together is to learn the principles of God's Word for righteous living,
including righteously finding a spouse. And these principles are best learned
in a family setting, not in a youth group.
MYTH #6: If you don't date, you will lose out to others who are dating
and marrying the best ones. Don't we believe Psalm 84:11, No good thing does He
withhold from those who walk uprightly? The issue here is, Can I trust God with
the provision of my marriage partner, or must I see this as a competitive
market? To put it another way, Am I going to get a wife by faith or by fear?
Delight yourself in the Lord, and He will give you the desires of your heart (Ps.
37:4).
DISCERNING THE DANGERS OF DATING
The above myths of
dating are all untrue. Seeing them biblically exposed will help young people to
combat the false arguments of the dating culture. But there are other practical
reasons to oppose dating. In Dating: Is It Worth the Risk?, Pastor Reb Bradley
discusses the following dangers of dating; and they are all true beyond
dispute.
LUST: Dating promotes lust (inappropriate desires). God commands
us to flee youthful lusts (2 Tim. 2:22), to make no provision for the
flesh in regard to its lusts (Rom. 13:14) and to acquire a wife not in
lustful passion, like the Gentiles who do not know God (1 Thess. 4:5).
Yet, dating promotes the sin of lust which clouds one's ability to think
clearly, even to the point of murder for King David (with Bathsheba's husband).
Likewise, Samson should have seen right through Delilah's deceptions, but
because of lust he lost his eyes, his freedom, and his life. Solomon, too, was
blinded by lust when he forsook the living God and worshipped the idols of his
foreign wives. Because of lust, the powerful become weak and the wise become
fools!
As parents we must ask ourselves, If these three godly leaders were no match
for lust, should we suppose that our children will not be its victims? Do we
think that we can send young men and women off by themselves and they not fall
prey to romantic desires? They will then enter marriage robbed of purity,
robbed of self-discipline, robbed of spiritual strength. No wonder so many
marriages start off in trouble! If a man lacks self-restraint before marriage,
he will lack self-restraint after marriage and be very prone to
self-centeredness and unfaithfulness.
SELF-CENTERED, FEELING LOVE: Dating develops a self-centered,
feeling concept of love. Dating is based on the idea that two people should
kindle an emotional attraction for one another before the commitment of
betrothal. But it turns out to be a self-centered love that likes how the other
person makes them feel. Anyone in a healthy marriage will testify that
selflessness, not feelings, is the key to a great marriage.
PERMANENT, EMOTIONAL BONDS: Dating creates a permanent, emotional
bond between two people who will not necessarily marry one another. Dating;
with its emphasis on emotional intimacy, knits the hearts of two people
together forever. Now, the bond may fade somewhat over time; but most married
people will testify to its permanence. Ex-boyfriends and ex-girlfriends may be
gone, but the emotional heart ties, along with the scars and calluses, remain.
In fact, it is said that nothing can be sweeter than first love. Even
Revelation 2:4f exhorts us to return to our first love, who is Christ. Because
of this principle, marriage partners who have not been one-woman men and
one-man women often fantasize about their first love. Young people, you will
only have ONE first love — don't ruin it by dating!
UNREALISTIC STANDARDS OF COMPARISON: It's not uncommon, after the
newness of marriage wears off, that marriage partners find themselves
discontent with each other. Often, then, they will mentally compare their
spouse to someone they knew in the past. Men sometimes think thoughts like
this: She doesn't cook like so and so; she doesn't kiss as good as so and so;
she isn't as pretty as so and so. And women are tempted to think thoughts like:
He isn't as sensitive as so and so was; he just doesn't listen to me the way so
and so did; maybe I should have married so and so — he made me feel so
cherished. If we had never been intimate with so many so and so's, we wouldn't
have such extensive standards for finding fault with our mate but would find
greater contentment in marriage.
SCARS OF REJECTION: Dating generally results in breaking up;
causing scars of rejection, callused hearts, emotional insecurity, fear of
commitment, failure to trust others, and less ability to give of our love. God
designed us to become emotionally attached to just one person til death do us
part. Therefore, the pain of breaking up is, in seed form, the same as divorce.
It is harder to give love the second time around. God's grace can certainly
help us with these scars, but they are the consequences of violating the way He
made us. The human heart was not designed for multiple joinings and tearings!
PREPARATION FOR DIVORCE: Dating literally trains young people to
break off difficult relationships rather than to work through their problems,
conditioning them more for divorce than for marriage. They learn that when the
going gets tough they don't have to hang in there but can bail out of
relationships. Not only do they not learn the selfless, unconditional love
needed for a strong marriage, they learn instead intolerance and lack of
commitment.
APPETITE FOR VARIETY: Dating develops an appetite for variety and
change, creating dissatisfaction in marriage. The stimulation of multiple
dating adventures often causes one to become bored when married to just one
person. After having multiple relationships with no strings attached, marriage
can give the feeling of being tied down to just one person. The
courtship/betrothal process protects young people from this wrong attitude.
DESTROYS FELLOWSHIP: Dating destroys fellowship, leaving
Christians alienated in their relationships with each other. Christ places a
high premium on unity among his people. But dating and breaking up promote
alienation, hurt, and bitterness among believers, just like divorce does. Youth
groups are full of such divorced couples whose ministry together is hampered.
LACKS PROTECTION: Dating lacks the protection afforded by parental
involvement. Under the guise of freedom and responsibility, the modern church
claims it is wrong for parents to direct the romantic affairs of their adult
children. But this line of reasoning criticizes the biblical principles,
precepts, and practices which have produced consistently good fruit. And
according to Christ, a tree is known by its fruit.
WARPS REALITY: Advocates of dating claim that betrothal doesn't
prepare young people for life's realities, like rejection, temptation, and
abuse. In truth, however, dating itself creates these difficulties by warping
the reality that God wonderfully created for a warm, stable marriage through
courtship and betrothal.
HOW CAN PARENTS RESIST?
Dr. S. M. Davis, a devoted pastor, suggests several crucial things that parents
can do to combat the dating spirit. First, capture the heart of your teen. Make
this the highest goal of your parenting. Malachi 4:6 foretold that He (Christ)
will restore the hearts of the fathers to their children, and the hearts of the
children to their fathers.... Godly fathers, then, will plead the words of
Solomon, My son, give me your heart... (Prov. 23:26). This is where a
young person's heart is to be focused prior to marriage, committed to Christ
and his family. And parents are commanded to keep their children's hearts
safely protected from the deceptions and temptations of the Evil One!
Next, pray daily with your children for their future spouses. Pray for their
spouses' growth in godliness, character, wisdom, purity, and skillfulness. Then
when your son or daughter is ready for marriage, search diligently to find that
suitable spouse so your children won't loose heart.
Always be teaching your children self-discipline which is necessary for control
over their emotions and desires. They must learn to do what is right regardless
of their feelings. Believe it or not, this begins at the dinner table by
training them to eat what they don't like. You don't have to like it, you just have
to eat it, has been a common saying in our home.
Teach the truths of betrothal regularly and diligently to your children when
you sit in your house and when you walk by the way, when you lie down and when
you rise up (Deut. 6:7). The world's philosophy of dating is constantly
bombarding them and requires your continual correction.
Keep your protection level high. You cannot overprotect a young person from
ungodliness. Be alert to the dating spirit coming into your home through
ungodly friendships, television, magazines, romance novels, movies, music, etc.
Remember that the media is aggressively opposed to biblical fatherhood. Even
the movie The Sound of Music portrayed Captain von Trapp as rude and intrusive
upon his 17 year old daughter's affections for a young man who turned out later
to be a Nazi. Parents, you must be alert to what is influencing your children.
Beware when you let your sons (and certainly not your daughters) take jobs in
the secular work force where many Christians have been swept off their feet by
the flirtations of worldly co-workers. Even worse is the college campus! Far
better to develop a family business and to pursue college at home (see College
at Home for the Glory of God http://www.patriarch.com/college@home.html).
Finally, don't yield to fear. Many parents fear conflict with their children.
They fear their kids won't like them. Or, they fear their children will run
away from home if life is too strict. But if we are to expect God's blessing in
our home, we must rear our children out of faith, not fear.
HOW CAN YOUNG PEOPLE RESIST?
Young people must likewise fight the dating spirit in practical ways. First,
give your heart fully to your parents. Young people, parents don't have to be
perfect for God to use them in finding your spouse. He's been using imperfect
parents since the fall of Adam with amazing success! Start thinking of you and
your parents as a team that works AGAINST the devil's dating scheme and FOR
God's betrothal plan.
Next, look to future blessings, not present pleasures. Anticipate how exciting
it will be to give your whole heart to your future spouse, where you haven't
torn away pieces of your heart throughout your youth and given it to others —
not even in your imagination. Think how incredibly strong the bond will be with
the man or woman God has chosen for your mate.
Be careful about defrauding other young people. Defrauding means cheating
someone by offering something you can't righteously fulfill. Girls, even
attracting others through your eyes, walk, or dress is defrauding! Boys, treat
every young lady the way you want other men presently to be treating the woman
you will one day marry.
When you are tempted to flirt, even in your imagination, pray for your future
spouse, that God will keep them pure in heart just as He is helping you to
resist temptation. Think of your future spouse rather than the person your
heart is currently being drawn to.
Get a bigger vision than just your own life. The decision you make regarding a
mate will affect not merely you, but your children and your grandchildren, and
so on for many generations (Isa. 58:12) — either for good or for bad.
Commit your life to a multigenerational vision.
Delight in God's protection through your parents just as you would a large, strong
umbrella during a torrential downpour. Be glad you have parents who keep the
umbrella of protection over you and won't allow boy after boy, or girl after
girl, to toy with your emotions.
Be willing to be laughed at by your relatives and others who don't understand
God's truth. Every great person in the Bible who took a stand for God was
ridiculed. Be ready to give them a godly answer.
Maintain a 1 Corinthians 7 focus of undistracted devotion to Christ (1 Cor.
7:32-35). Dating people are acting like married people by focusing on one
another. But Paul explains in 1 Corinthians 7 that single people are to focus
on their devotion to Christ, how you may please and serve Christ during this
special period of your life.
Finally, young people, go to sleep emotionally, and wait for God to awaken you
through the provision of a spouse by your parents. You must not arouse love
prematurely through impatience (Sol. 2:7). Instead, you are called to
walk by faith, not by sight (2 Cor. 5:7) — faith in a sovereign God to
work through imperfect parents to accomplish His perfect will for you. Until
then, follow the advice of attention toward all, intentions toward none.
GOD'S SOLUTION TO THE DATING SPIRIT
Earlier I asserted that dating is dangerous — even reckless — like playing
Russian Roulette with five of the six cylinders loaded. Perhaps in your home
you would be more comfortable with only two or three of the cylinders loaded.
But do you really want to gamble with your children's future marriages at all?
A recent study revealed that 43 percent of evangelical Christians who date fall
into moral disaster! If you knew that an airline would loose 43 percent of its
passengers in plane crashes, would you put your child on one of their planes?
Of course not! Then why risk them morally to dating?
What is God's solution? Repentance of the dating spirit! Repent means to change
your mind (both desires and beliefs) with a resultant change in behavior. It
means to please Christ more than self and to acquire a wife in sanctification
and honor, not in lustful passion. In short, it means not to eat dessert first,
just like your mother always told you. Christ has a banquet in store for you,
but dessert before the meal ruins the appetite. Will you be hungry for His
feast when He brings it to you?
Chapter 3
Preparing Your Children for Biblical
Betrothal
The story is
told of a famous traveling juggler who retired from his career and invested his
entire life savings in a huge diamond. On the ship back to his homeland, where
he intended to live out his remaining days, several fellow passengers
recognized the well-known performer as he strolled on the upper deck and urged
him to give one final, dazzling show. Enticed by the praise of men, the juggler
removed two balls from one pocket and his immense diamond from the other.
Beginning to juggle them together in the most spectacular fashion, he tossed
the objects higher and higher into the air as the crowd roared with acclaim.
Suddenly, the great ship heaved to one side, the juggler lost his balance, and
the precious, sparkling diamond fell into the deep, black sea where it was lost
forever.
Like that priceless diamond, our children are our own irreplaceable treasures.
Yet many parents today are carelessly juggling them for the praise of men,
yielding to the enticing counsel of friends and relatives to lighten up in
their child training. But when the ship of life lurches, as it always does,
these parents will lose their precious children forever in the dark sea of
depravity. You think it can't happen in your family, but Dads and Moms, you
must keep a firm grasp if you are to preserve your children from the
temptations of the world. And probably the greatest snare will be the
attraction of romance, where passion rather than principle reigns supreme!
In our two prior articles on this subject, we sought first to establish the
abiding Scriptural principles for betrothal, then to evaluate whether dating
was consistent with those principles. Effectively dealing with the dating
dilemma, however, is only half the equation, the put off of Ephesians 4:22-24.
The other half, the put on, is the substance of our remaining questions. If not
dating, then how do we prepare our children for biblical betrothal? And, when
the time comes, how do we practice betrothal step-by-step?
COURTSHIP vs. BETROTHAL
Preparing our children for biblical betrothal begins with an accurate
understanding of what it is. Until our present century, children knew what
betrothal was because they grew up in homes and churches that practiced it.
They found security in the process of betrothal and eagerly looked forward to
it as a great blessing. But today, regrettably, it is an enigma that requires
explanation, illustration and sometimes even persuasion with our children. Let's
explore together what betrothal is, and what it is not.
In our past two articles, we have used the terms courtship and betrothal almost
synonymously to refer to the biblical process of pursuing a man-woman
relationship under the careful and caring oversight of parents and for the sole
purpose of marriage, not recreation. But in addition to this general use, the
words courtship and betrothal also have specific, technical meanings that
distinguish them from each other. Indeed they are two separate and sequential
stages in the fourfold process that leads to marriage, a process comprised of
friendship, courtship, betrothal and wedding. Friendship (a cordial
relationship of mutual esteem) and wedding (the ceremony joining a man and
woman in marriage) are well understood by all. But what is the distinction
between courtship and betrothal? We'll be devoting entire, detailed articles to
each of these topics in upcoming chapters, so please bear with me as we look at
them only superficially now.
Like the word trinity, the term courtship is not found in the Bible, but the
idea surely is. In brief, courtship is the process of investigating (i.e.,
getting to know) a person with marriage in mind. It is the time period, after
spiritual and vocational preparation for marriage has been completed, for
evaluating a suitor's inward character, values, interests, beliefs, practices
and life purpose to ensure that a godly match occurs. The term courtship is
derived from the words court and ship. Court means a trial of law for
evaluating evidence; and ship refers to boundaries (such as in the word
township, meaning boundaries of a town). So, the term courtship may be used to
speak of the boundaries, or proper approach, for evaluating evidence of a
person's true character, just as in a court of law. We see this investigative
process in several scriptural marriages (Isaac and Rebekah - Gen. 24) as
well as in various scriptural principles, such as 1 Thessalonians 5:21: Examine
everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good.
Betrothal, on the other hand, refers to the stage that comes after a positively
concluded courtship investigation. Betrothal may be defined as a binding
commitment to marry, sought by a young man, agreed to by a young woman,
approved and supervised by the fathers of both, and attested by a bridal
provision (bride price/dowry) and by witnesses and/or a document. In Scripture,
the terms betrothal, engagement and espousal come from the same Hebrew and
Greek words meaning, basically, a promise to marry. But this is a far more
secure promise than our modern engagement such that in Bible days it required a
decree of divorcement to annul it. So strong was the betrothal commitment that
in Scripture the couple is already referred to as husband and wife, the parents
are called in-laws, and a woman whose betrothed spouse dies is designated a
widow!
As demonstrated in our first article of this series, betrothal was God's
pattern throughout Scripture and was the norm for all cultures before the
twentieth century. Perversions of God's standard have included dating (such as
Samson with Delilah), polygamy, and divorce, but these were always exceptions
to the rule both in Scripture and history. Even modern Western culture
practiced betrothal until the 1920s, and it was in some measure embraced by
Christian churches until the 1950s. For example, according to Jonathan
Lindvall, in 1959 the Family Life Committee of the Lutheran Church Missouri
Synod reported that almost half of the Missouri Synod families responding [to a
survey] accepted betrothal as equal to marriage in the sight of God. They
further reported that sixty-nine percent of the clergymen of the Missouri Synod
regarded betrothal as binding as marriage.
For three generations now, children have had virtually no knowledge or
understanding of biblical courtship and betrothal. In times past, boys and
girls observed godly romance in their home, church and community. It was the
common experience of their brothers, sisters, cousins, friends and neighbors.
They learned it practically by osmosis. But all that has changed. Now to offset
the strong allurement of worldly dating, our children need deliberate and
thorough training for courtship and betrothal. What are the necessary steps for
such preparation? There are three: (1) example, (2) encouragement and (3)
equipping.
YOUR CHILDREN'S EXAMPLE
First, your own marriage is your children's example, or model, for how they
will understand the five fundamental principles of scriptural romance: piety,
patriarchy, purity, preparedness and patience [see Page 13]. As they observe
your marriage, how will your children envision their own future relationship
with a spouse? Ask yourself these questions:
Parents, does piety in your marriage-imitating Christ's relationship with His
bride, the church-give your children a healthy appetite for a godly marriage?
Or does sinfulness between you and your spouse suppress their natural hunger
for a life companion?
Fathers, through your vigilant care for your wife, are you giving your children
a thirst for patriarchy-a husband who spiritually leads, morally protects and
sacrificially provides for his bride? And wives, through your respectful
submission to your husband, do your children eagerly look to their father for
oversight? Or do your children witness self-centeredness by the husband and
disrespect by the wife which tear down patriarchy?
Dads and Moms, through your faithfulness (purity) toward your mate, have you
given your children a single eye of devotion to one spouse for a lifetime? Has
your marriage given them a vision for loyalty and affection toward one partner
for life? Or, do your children observe a cold heart within the home and a
wandering eye outside it, an attitude of sensuality?
Fathers, are you exemplifying spiritual leadership in worship, prayer,
teaching, witness and decision making in your family? Are you educating your
sons to be well-trained vocationally and to avoid the slavery of debt? And is
your daughter being prepared to be a helper in her husband's life work through
the development of her God-given talents? Or is slothfulness in your own life
begetting slothfulness in your children-the sins of the fathers being passed on
to their children?
Finally, Dads and Moms, is your marriage one of confident patience mixed with
diligence, walking by faith, and not by sight? Or are you often fretful,
anxious and intolerant toward one another and toward your circumstances? In
short, is your example teaching your children to be persistent or perfidious?
Be assured, parents, how you practice these Five Fundamental Principles in your
own romance will significantly influence your children's attitude toward
biblical betrothal. But in addition to your marriage being their example or
model, there is another way that your children are prepared for biblical
betrothal.
YOUR CHILDREN'S ENCOURAGEMENT
Your relationship to your children is their encouragement, or motivation, to
embrace biblical betrothal. Thankfully the Lord is turning the hearts of
fathers back to their children and the hearts of children to their fathers (Mal.
4:6; Lk. 1:17) for the most essential ingredient in child training is a
mutual love between father and child. Why is this so? It is because a child who
sincerely loves his father will be motivated to please him, obey him, and honor
him. Jesus explained the motivating power of love when He declared, If you love
Me, you will keep My commandments (John 14:15). So, a child who truly
loves his father will want to obey and honor his father in the principle of
betrothal. A daughter will entrust her heart to her father, and so will a son.
Moreover, a father who truly loves his children will want to prepare, protect,
and provide a spouse for his children because his heart has been turned to them
in righteousness.
Some fathers have chosen to formalize and symbolize the loving trust and
commitment that exists between them and their children in regard to betrothal.
They may do this through a verbal or written covenant expressing one another's
promise before God to follow biblical principles of courtship and betrothal and
to avoid worldly dating and romance.
A signed covenant, framed and hung somewhere in the home, can serve as a
regular reminder of the solemn promises that were made. Yet some fathers have
rightly observed in Scripture that a covenant was always ratified with a sign
or symbol, such as the rainbow which affirmed God's covenant with Noah never to
flood the earth again. At the time of signing the covenant, they have given
some sort of token to symbolize their agreement. The Courtship Connection (www.CourtshipConnection.com.
Phone: 734-847-5210) offers a Heart Necklace with Key designed for this
very purpose. This is a meaningful symbol of a daughter giving her dad the key
to her heart until he gives it to her future spouse at the time of betrothal.
The inscription on the heart is He who holds the key can unlock my heart.
With our own three daughters (who happen to prefer rings over necklaces) we
chose three matching rings since in Scripture the ring was a sign of authority
and protection (see Esther 8:2). And we termed them covenant rings to
symbolize our mutual agreement that their hearts are under the authority and
protection of their father until he betroths them to a young man. My wife and I
made this a very special occasion by taking our daughters to a famous New
England Inn for dinner, a real dress-up affair, though they were not told the
reason. Since we seldom order dessert when we eat out (expensive, you know),
they were perplexed when I told them that this event called for special
feasting. When the waitress brought their desserts, each plate came with a
small, gift-wrapped box (my pre-arrangement with the waitress, of course). We
had taught the girls about betrothal for several years before. Now was the time
to bring their training to its proper conclusion of a commitment.
We have said that to successfully prepare your children for betrothal, your
marriage is their example and your relationship (to them) is their
encouragement. But preparation will fail with only modeling and motivating, as
important as these two components are. There is an essential third element
which deals with the necessary method for implanting truth so it sticks.
YOUR CHILDREN'S EQUIPPING
Your ultimate equipping of them comes through training. What Christian parent
is not thoroughly familiar with the classic child training passage: Train up a
child in the way he should go, and when he is old, he will not depart from it (Prov.
22:6)? But what exactly is training? It certainly hinges upon modeling
(through your marriage) and motivating (through a trusting relationship with
your child), but training includes at least two further steps for embedding
truth in our children's hearts.
Based on the Old Testament word for train (Hebrew: chanak) in Proverbs
22:6, we understand that training involves starting or beginning our children
early with right thinking and desires rather than allowing them to develop
wrong ideas and passions. This Hebrew word was used for starting a building
with a level foundation so that its walls would not later be crooked. In the
home it spoke of beginning a toddler on nourishing foods in order to give him
an appetite for what is healthy. So training our children for betrothal means
teaching them young and giving them an appetite only for what is godly.
The world lies in the lap of the Wicked One who uses its attractions to tempt
our flesh (and our children's flesh) to sin. From many of the world's ungodly
influences, we can and should shelter our children. Whatever would tear down
our training in betrothal must be avoided, such as friends or activities that
encourage a dating spirit, and television, movies, videos, magazines, music,
and novels that glorify Hollywood romance.
But what do you do about the influences you can't control, such as billboards,
romantic couples on the street, remarks by relatives, advertisements in stores,
etc.? When your children see these examples of Hollywood romance, they will be
influenced by them unless you interpret them through the grid of Scripture,
helping your children to always be evaluating their environment through a
biblical world view. So if you notice your children observing these influences,
don't simply ignore it but expose the error by bringing it into the light of
God's Word (Eph. 5:11-13).
In addition to the Old Testament word for train, signifying the early
development of a godly appetite, there is a New Testament word which adds the
final component for inoculating truth in our children's hearts. It is the Greek
term gymnazo from which we get our English words gymnastics and gymnasium and
is normally translated as train, discipline and exercise. So to equip our
children for betrothal means first to whet their appetite through early
instruction and then to gymnazo them. But how do we do that?
Simply put, gymnazo refers to daily sustained exercise of mind and body-years
of hard practice like a gymnast or other athlete. The writer of Hebrews
explains: But solid food is for the mature who, because of practice, have their
senses trained (gymnazo) to discern between good and evil. (Heb. 5:13f).
Do you want your son or daughter to discern rightly between good and evil in
the area of romance? Then you must exercise them in godly thinking about betrothal,
which will then produce godly living. Study and discuss with them the
principles and practices of betrothal until personal convictions are formed in
both you and your children. A belief becomes a conviction when you are
convinced from God's Word-not from somebody else's teaching, but from your own
study of Scripture-that a particular practice is required of you, and that to
do otherwise would be sin.
But training occurs at all times, either for good or for bad. If our children
are not being trained in godliness, then they are being trained in ungodliness.
In 2 Pet. 2:14, Peter speaks about persons whose hearts were trained (gymnazo)
in greed because they were allowed to practice greed. Are we inadvertently
training our children in worldly romance by allowing them to practice it in
thought (movies, magazines, music, romance novels) or action (dating)? Instead,
parents, we must exercise daily, sustained effort over years of hard practice,
teaching them to say yes to God and no to self as they discipline (again,
gymnazo) themselves for the purpose of godliness (1 Tim. 4:7; cf. Lk. 9:23).
ESSENTIAL TRAINING TOPICS
As we have already implied, training our children in betrothal begins with
their thorough understanding of it from Scripture to the point of personal
conviction. But there are several other, corollary topics which must also be
studied and discussed if betrothal is to take root in our children's hearts.
Here is a list of some that we have found to be vital (and that we hope to
write about in the future):
1. The sufficiency and authority of Scripture for the entire Christian
life.
2. The sovereignty, goodness, and wisdom of God as a trustworthy Father.
3. Pleasing Christ, not self, as our motivation in all we do.
4. Self-disciplined, not desire-driven, choices and actions.
5. Knowing the will of God based on Scripture, not feelings.
6. Biblical love (selflessness) vs. Hollywood love (lust).
7. The purposes, procedures (roles), and permanence of marriage.
8. Parent shadowing, not peer grouping.
9. A multi-generational vision, not It's my life.
10. Scriptural and practical qualifications for a godly husband or wife.
Does all this sound a bit overwhelming? Then let us recognize two fundamental
facts that affect not only the topic of betrothal but really all of the
Christian life. First, the bad news. With every new truth, most of us start off
behind the proverbial 8 ball. That is, we have been doing it wrong all our life
until we learn from God's Word what is right. So we have unbiblical thinking
and ungodly habits from our past which must be discarded. To use the
vernacular, we come into this with a lot of baggage. And the older our children
are, the more we have given them a lot of baggage to discard as well.
But God has some wonderfully good news for us too. God not only commands but
also blesses our prompt obedience whenever we understand new truth. God's truth
is like an umbrella of protection from serious harm. When we are standing out
from under it, we are prone to be struck by lightning, baseball-size hail,
meteor showers and whatever else the devil throws at us (through temptations,
error, etc.) until we take cover under God's protective umbrella of truth. So
no matter where we are in the path toward marriage, God wants us immediately to
rush underneath His protective umbrella of truth, repent of unbiblical thinking
and ungodly behavior, and begin practicing the principles of betrothal with our
children. God sternly warns us, To him who knows the right thing to do, and does
not do it, to him it is sin (Jas. 4:17). Yet God also lovingly beckons
us, those who honor Me, I will honor (1 Sam. 2:30). Repentance is the
path of protection, honor and rich blessing-both for us and for our children.
Chapter 4
Choosing a Spouse by Faith, not Feelings
Much of the
content of this article has come to me from two esteemed mentors: Dr. Garry
Friesen, my fellow student at Dallas Seminary, and Dr. Jay Adams, my professor
at Westminster Seminary. Others who have written supportively of this view
include J.I.Packer, John Frame, Sinclair Ferguson, James Boice and John
MacArthur. It is with deep appreciation and recognition of their biblical
understanding that I pass on these insights to you.
Three fathers, in teamwork with their sons or daughters, may approach the
life-transforming choice of a spouse in one of three contrasting ways. Pat
Pragmatic, the first father, believes that the Scriptures don't really address
the issue of choosing a spouse, at least not adequately. So Pat thinks about
this matter rather practically, figuring his son or daughter will meet many
potential mates in the classroom or the youth group or the work place, will
date around to find one who is compatible, and then will marry. Yes, Pat admits
that his children will likely sustain some spiritual and emotional injuries in
the process, but he thinks that the betrothal approach to marriage just isn't
sensible for today's culture - it's unrealistically ideal. After all, you can't
buck the whole world, can you?
At the other end of the spectrum is Mark Mystic. Mark says he believes that the
Bible is the completed revelation of God to man. Yet he doesn't always act like
it. In personal issues like this, Mark claims that God will give him direct,
supernatural guidance through inner impressions. So as he applies the courtship
and betrothal principles, he looks at the matter almost mystically, presuming
that God will provide him (or perhaps his son or daughter) a special inward
prompting when the right spouse comes along. How Mark will distinguish that
supernatural feeling from a strong desire to marry, he's not really sure. But
he certainly hopes that special feeling comes before the kids reach age forty!
In the middle of this spectrum is Sam Scripture. Sam is convinced of the
sufficiency of Scripture for everything pertaining to life and godliness, as
Peter so hopefully declares in 2 Peter 1:3-4. And, with the Apostle Paul, he is
certain that the Scriptures make a man of God adequate, equipped for every good
work (2 Tim. 3:17), including the good work of choosing a spouse. So Sam
has explored the Scriptural pattern of getting spouses for his children; and he
is carefully applying the principles of betrothal with faith in a sovereign
God, confident that God will withhold no good thing from those who walk
uprightly (Ps. 84:11). Whereas Pat Pragmatism holds to something LESS
than the sufficiency of Scripture, and Mark Mystic believes in something MORE
than the sufficiency of Scripture, Sam rests assuredly on the completed
revelation of God's Word alone - Sola Scriptura as the great Reformers called
it.
Now the pragmatic view of choosing a spouse will most naturally lead to the
modern dating scene as Pat discovered above. This approach to marriage we have already
shown to be fraught with grave error and danger in Chapter 2 of this series:
Dealing With the Dating Dilemma (see page 16). It is Mark's mystical view of
choosing a spouse that we hope to remedy in this present article. For it is
this feeling orientation to the doctrine of guidance which underlies much
deception and desire-driven living among evangelical Christians today,
particularly in the area of romance.
To test your own view of choosing a spouse, try taking the following quiz.
QUIZ ON CHOOSING A SPOUSE
(True or False)
T/F 1. In all the world, there is either NO person or only ONE person who is
eligible to be my spouse.
T/F 2. If God wants me to remain single and I marry anyone at all, then I am
outside God's will.
T/F 3. If God has a particular spouse chosen and I marry someone else, then I
am outside God's will.
T/F 4. If the spouse God has selected for me marries someone else, then I
cannot enjoy God's perfect will no matter what I do.
T/F 5. If either a man or a woman marries outside of God's will, there is
nothing they can do to reverse the decision and return to the center of His
will. They are permanently stranded in the barren terrain of God's second best.
Did you answer True to most of the quiz questions? Actually, the correct answer
for all five questions is False. Surprised? Then read on!
Christians today, more than at any other time in church history, have embraced
a fallacy that extensively shapes and directs our lives. It is an error in the
doctrine of guidance, or how to know the will of God. We all want to make right
decisions, because those decisions will then turn around and make us, either
for good or for ill. So, the central question before us is, How does God guide
us? How do we know His will for us?
WHAT GOD'S WILL MEANS
But first, what does God's will mean? In Christian conversation we use the
phrase in three different ways. For example, in talking to a grieving friend
who has lost a close relative in a tragic accident, we might say, The Bible
says everything that happens is part of God's will, and though we may not
understand why these things occur, we can be comforted in knowing that a wise
and loving God is in control. Here we are referring to God's sovereign will.
In another situation, we might be speaking to a Christian friend considering
marriage to an unbeliever whom we would warn, If you marry her, you will be
disobeying God's will. Now we are speaking about God's moral will.
Finally, to an acquaintance considering several job offers, we might ask, Have
you discovered God's will about which job He wants you to accept? Here we are
talking about God's individual will. What do we mean in each of these three
instances?
By God's sovereign will (called providence by the Reformers), we mean His
secret plan which determines everything that happens in the universe (Eph.
1:11). In eternity past God formulated a perfect plan for all of history.
The world was created by His will, kings rule by His will, and our salvation is
the result of God working all things after the counsel of His sovereign will.
He even determines each toss of the dice in a Monopoly game (Prov. 16:33).
No one or no thing can resist or frustrate His sovereign will which will surely
come to pass. And yet, though God determines all things, He does so without
being the author of sin, without violating the will of man, and without
destroying the reality of decision making. Each one of us is held responsible
for every decision we make.
Our second usage, God's moral will, refers to His moral precepts, principles,
and practices revealed in the Bible that teach how men ought to believe and
live (Deut. 29:29). The Bible reveals 100 percent of God's moral will.
It is for this reason the Apostle Paul states in Romans 2:18 that even the
unbelieving Jews knew God's will (right from wrong) because they had the
Scriptures. The fact remains, however, that there are many things which the
moral will of God does not declare - specific situations where you must make
choices. You have to decide where you will live, what church to join, which
person to marry, what job to take, and a host of smaller decisions every day.
How are these specific decisions to be made?
Many Christians today claim that these specific decisions are to be guided by
God's individual will - God's ideal, detailed life-plan uniquely designed for
each person (Prov. 16:9). It is popularly taught that God's individual
will encompasses every decision we make and is progressively revealed by the
indwelling Holy Spirit to the heart of the individual believer through various
means such as circumstances, personal desires, and inner feelings. This
individualized aspect of God's will is variously called God's perfect will,
God's specific will, God's ideal will or the center of God's will. And to abide
within God's moral will but miss God's perfect will results in what some
authors have called God's second best. In marriage, this means choosing the
right partner or else living with God's second best. You can change cars,
houses, schools or churches if you discover you've missed God's will, but the
choice of a spouse is irreversible for a committed Christian.
TESTING GOD'S INDIVIDUAL WILL
With one's entire future at stake, a wise Christian parent or young person will
surely want to test this doctrine of guidance, apply what is true and avoid
what is not (1 Thess. 5:21). Like the noble-minded Bereans, we ought to
examine the Scriptures daily to see whether these things are so (Acts
17:11). Is it really true (biblical) that God leads Christians through
circumstances and feelings into His individual will for them, something more
specific and detailed than the Word of God itself?
Four arguments have been offered in support of the concept that God has an
individual will for each person: reason, experience, biblical example and
biblical teaching. First, it is claimed that because God is a God of order (1
Cor. 14:40) and because God knows the future perfectly (Matt. 11:21f),
then it is only reasonable that God would use these abilities to formulate and
reveal an individual life plan for each of us. What great king has no design
for his people? What wise shepherd has no path for his sheep? What loving
father has no specific direction for his sons and daughters? It's only
reasonable to say that God has an individual plan for each of His precious
children.
But is that actually the case? Does an effective king seek to legislate every
activity of his people? No, he establishes basic laws to promote righteousness
and determines penalties for noncompliance. He doesn't desire a nation of
slaves or robots, but a people who act responsibly within the limits of the
law. Likewise, the wise shepherd sets boundaries for his sheep, but allows
freedom of movement within those boundaries. He establishes limits for the
safety of the sheep, but doesn't use his staff to point out every tuft of grass
for each animal to eat. And does the loving father guide every detail of his
child's life? The truly caring father teaches his child the basic principles of
life, right from wrong, wise from foolish. He then seeks to train the child to
make wise decisions on the basis of principles learned in his youth. Yes, God
does guide His people like a King, a Shepherd, and a Father. But reason
supports that God guides us through His moral will given in the Bible, teaching
His children to wisely use their freedom in the application of His principles
to the decisions of life.
Wait a minute, you think. What about the experiences of dedicated believers
throughout church history, men like Martin Luther, John Wesley, David
Livingstone, and Hudson Taylor. Those men attributed their spiritual successes
to knowing God's individual will for their lives and doing it. But is that the
correct explanation? Are there any other factors that might account for their successes?
It seems equally possible that those great men and women of God were successful
because of their obedience to God's moral will in the Bible. In fact, spiritual
success is actually promised by God to the one who obeys what God has revealed
in His Word: ...be careful to do according to all the law which Moses My
servant commanded you; do not turn from it to the right or to the left, so that
you may have success wherever you go... be careful to do according to all that
is written in it, for then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will
have success (Josh. 1:7-8). Blessing, God says, comes as the result of
knowing and obeying the moral will of God revealed in the Bible (cf. John
13:17; 2 Tim. 3:16f).
If God's individual will can't be proved from reason or experience, surely we
can argue it from the many biblical examples. After all, didn't the Apostle
Paul claim that God guided him specifically in his Macedonian vision of Acts
16? And in other instances, the Lord led Ananias to Paul in Acts 9 and Peter to
Cornelius in Acts 10. In fact, God's individual will is evident in the lives of
Joseph, Moses, Joshua, David, Elijah, Josiah, Ruth, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel,
Daniel and many others.
But examples in Scripture must be handled with great care. Many events are
recorded in the Bible primarily because they were unique occurrences in the
outworking of God's salvation history. So what must be determined in each case
is whether the example was intended to illustrate normative Christian behavior.
Should one expect a light and a voice from heaven to accompany a call to a
particular vocation, as Paul experienced in Acts 9? Was this normative? God
spoke to Balaam through a donkey in Numbers 22. Should each believer keep one
in his back yard just in case? Yes, the Bible has many examples of men and
women who received supernatural guidance from God through visions, angelic
messengers, physical miracles, and even an audible voice from God. But, in
fact, this was not even the norm for believers in Bible times. Even for the
Apostle Paul, most of his decisions were based solely on God's precepts and
principles. And the average believer in Bible times who did not hold a unique
office such as apostle, prophet, judge or king NEVER received any supernatural
revelation.
Well, if the biblical examples do not prove God's individual will for
Christians, then what about the specific Scripture passages where believers are
instructed to know and do God's will for their lives? Apart from the
non-normative biblical examples just discussed, there are only about a dozen
Scriptures that even hint at an individual will of God for Christians to
follow. And with each of these Scripture passages, the problem is poor
interpretation that does not take into account either the context or the word
meanings. In every case, it can be shown that the biblical writer is referring
not to an individual will but rather to the moral will of God. For example,
Isaiah 30:20-21 (...your ears will hear a word behind you) is often quoted to
describe the inward work of the Holy Spirit giving specific guidance of God's
individual will. Yet if the additions and capitalizations (which are not in the
original Hebrew) are left out, it becomes clear from the context that the voice
behind them was not an inner voice of the Holy Spirit but rather the voice of a
prophet coming out of hiding (vv. 8-11) to teach repentant Israel (v.
19) the way of God's law.
After testing the arguments for God's individual will - reason, experience,
biblical example and biblical teaching - this third use of God's will is found
to have no valid support from Scripture, even though it is commonly (and
confusingly) taught in modern churches. Though seldom believed before this
present century, it has become so accepted today that most Christians don't
know how to think outside the box. This is particularly crucial for such a
life-transforming decision as choosing a spouse. So let's do some final testing
of the trappings associated with God's individual will.
The individual will of God has been compared to a personalized road map that
shows the one, specific, detailed route you should take through life, including
all the decisions you will ever make. It is taught that God does not show us
our whole journey all at once but gives us road signs along the way as we need
them, four of which are circumstances, results, inner impressions, and personal
desires. Yet in actuality Scripture reveals that these are four ways God does
NOT guide us. Let's evaluate them one by one.
CIRCUMSTANCES DO NOT GUIDE US
First, as believers in the sovereignty of God, we know that no circumstance
develops by chance because God is the Sovereign Ruler over all things,
including the circumstances that surround the decisions we make. It is
reasoned, therefore, that just as we read our Bible because God wrote it, so
also we should read our circumstances because God providentially controls them
to reveal His individual will to us. Open and closed doors are said to be two
of the most obvious circumstances through which God reveals His individual
will. Paul was directed to stay in Ephesus by an open door (1 Cor. 16:8-9). And
he regularly prayed that God would open other doors for him (Col. 4:3).
Putting out a fleece is yet another circumstantial sign. This is the practice
of asking God to speak directly through a providential sign agreed upon
beforehand. It comes from the story of Gideon in Judges 6:36-40 where Gideon
asked God to answer yes or no concerning his battle against the Midianites
through the use of a fleece of wool or sheepskin. This same method of
discerning God's individual will was used by Abraham's servant who asked God to
use a circumstantial sign to reveal the right bride for Isaac. Even before he
finished praying, Rebekah appeared and immediately fulfilled the sign by
providing water not only for the servant but for his caravan of camels as well (Gen.
24).
But are these examples normative for believers today - or even for believers in
Bible days? Does God, in fact, reveal His specific, individual will in advance
to us for everyday decisions through circumstances, such as open or closed
doors and fleeces? And how can we be sure we are interpreting the circumstances
correctly, since Scripture gives no guidelines for this? Contrary to popular
belief, the Bible actually does not support the road sign of circumstances. The
Bible teaches that God's sovereign will is purposely hidden from man, and that
His moral will is already revealed in its entirety in the Bible: The secret
things [His sovereign will] belong to the Lord our God, but the things revealed
[His moral will] belong to us and to our sons forever, that we may observe all
the words of this law (Deut. 29:29). Circumstances, then, are not
designed to give hints about God's future sovereign will or about His moral
will either.
In fact, Solomon made it clear in Ecclesiastes 1 that trying to interpret our
circumstances makes life seem futile: Vanity of vanities, all is vanity, he
declared. It often appears that God favors the wicked and resists the righteous,
says Asaph in Psalm 73. Apart from the Bible's teaching that God is at work in
history, the raw data of circumstances is often mysterious and conflicting. It
shouldn't be surprising, therefore, to read in John 9:2-3 that those who
attempted to interpret circumstances failed in their efforts. Similarly, the
Lord had to correct a wrong interpretation of the circumstances in Luke 13:1-3
when He explained that a group of Galileans killed by Pilate were not greater
sinners than others (cf. also vv. 4-5). Such events were determined by
the sovereign will of God; they were not circumstantial signs to be interpreted
for daily guidance.
God has His wise and sovereign reasons for each event in history, but He does
not regularly give man a running commentary of His reasons, just as Solomon
observed in Ecclesiastes 11:5-6, Just as you do not know the path of the
wind... so you do not know the activity of God who makes all things. Sow your
seed in the morning, and do not be idle in the evening, for you do not know
whether morning or evening sowing will succeed, or whether both of them alike
will be good. We just do not know the activity of God because we cannot and
should not interpret the divinely controlled circumstances around us. It's like
the farm boy who ran to tell his father that he had to leave the farm because
he'd just been called to the ministry. The clouds had floated by in the shape
of a P and a C, which he interpreted to mean preach Christ. His dad, however,
deciphered the sign differently, and told him to get back to work since God was
telling him to plant corn, pick cotton, punch cows, and pluck chickens.
Probably the classic interpreters of circumstances were Job's comforters -
Eliphaz, Bildad and Zophar. After sitting silently with the afflicted Job for
seven days, they thought they were wise enough to interpret his circumstances
for the next nine chapters. You know what? They were wrong nine chapters out of
nine! Only God really knew what was going on. And when did God finally reveal
to Job the divine interpretation of his troubles? He never did! God just wanted
Job to trust Him for the present as well as the future. And that is how God
wants us to live too - by faith, not by interpreting circumstances.
NEITHER DOORS NOR FLEECES
But doesn't Scripture speak of open and closed doors? If these are not
circumstantial road signs from the Lord, then what are they? How does one
distinguish between an open door and one that's only ajar? And who opened the
door anyway - God, or Satan, or neither of them? How do you differentiate
between a closed door and a test of faith?
The phrase open door in Scripture is a figure of speech for access to something
or an opportunity to do something. For instance, in Acts 14:27, Paul and
Barnabas reported how God had opened a door of faith to the Gentiles, meaning
that the Gentiles had been given an opportunity to hear the gospel and believe.
But the question is, does an open door constitute individual direction from God
that must be obeyed, or is an open door simply an opportunity that may be taken
or bypassed depending upon the judgment of the believer?
Paul seems to answer that question by his remark in 1 Corinthians 16:8-9. Verse
9 reveals two very important reasons for Paul to stay in Ephesus awhile longer.
On the positive side, a wide door for effective service had opened for him; on
the negative side, there were many adversaries trying to close that door. In
short, Paul decided to remain in Ephesus to utilize the opportunity and to
neutralize the opposition. He didn't look upon this door as a road sign
commanding him to stay in Ephesus but rather as an opportunity to spread God's
message and combat God's enemies.
Again in Colossians 4:3, Paul wasn't praying for a circumstantial sign, but
rather for an opportunity to preach the gospel, a door for the word. Lest there
be any question that an open door in Scripture is not a road sign to be obeyed
but rather an opportunity to be evaluated, look at 2 Corinthians 2:12-13. Here
is an open door from which the Apostle Paul walked away! When Titus did not
meet him in Troas as planned, Paul became so concerned that he left Troas, open
door and all, and went looking for him in Macedonia. Now if an open door
constitutes a road sign from God to be obeyed, then Paul's action would be
unexplainable. But if an open door is an opportunity to be considered and
weighed (and possibly bypassed) in light of other factors, then Paul's action
was clearly understandable.
What does Scripture say about closed doors? Not a word! Yes, the concept of a
closed door is found in Scripture, but it simply means the absence of an open
door of opportunity. For example, in Acts 16:7 when the Spirit did not permit
Paul and Silas and Timothy to go into Bithynia, God sovereignly accomplished
this by not giving them an open door of opportunity. And whenever Paul was
sovereignly prevented from pursuing a godly plan, he didn't interpret it as a
no answer from God but simply waited and tried again later (cf. Rom.
1:10-13).
What about this issue of putting out a fleece as a circumstantial sign of God's
individual will? Is Gideon's practice a model for believers today? Let's notice
several differences between Gideon's fleece in Judges 6 and today's practice of
putting out a fleece. In the first place, Gideon's fleece was not simply a
circumstantial sign, it was a miraculous display of supernatural power. Gideon
had already been visited by the angel of the Lord, his offering had been
consumed by fire from the rock, and God Himself had spoken aloud to Gideon. Now
he was asking God for another genuine miracle of the fleece being wet with dew
while the surrounding ground remained dry, something far different than, say,
someone inquiring about your house before you advertise it for sale!
Second, Gideon wasn't using the fleece to gain guidance, but to gain
confirmation of guidance that had already been given, guidance that had come
through supernatural means. So Gideon was not seeking the right decision but
enough faith to believe that God would deliver Israel through him.
Third, rather than being an example of a proper approach to receiving guidance,
Gideon's demand for further signs was really an expression of doubt and fear
which God graciously tolerated, certainly not a model for us to follow.
In summary, then, Gideon was not seeking a circumstantial sign but a miraculous
one; he didn't use a fleece to obtain guidance, but to confirm guidance already
given; and his motivation wasn't a desire to do God's will but a reluctance to
do God's will.
The other primary example of putting out a fleece is Abraham's servant,
Eliezer, getting a bride for Isaac in Genesis 24. Does this passage teach that
Christians are to seek detailed guidance beyond the moral will of God in the
Bible? Is this the way we are to discover the specific person we're supposed to
marry? No, the experience of Abraham's servant is an example of God's special,
supernatural guidance which was not even the norm for believers in Bible times.
Here was a unique incident in the salvation history of the Old Testament where
God had promised Abraham in Genesis 15 that he would have innumerable
descendants. But that promise first required the birth of a son, and that son
had to have a wife. For this reason, the servant based his request on God's
covenant-keeping character as one who is faithful to his promise - the literal
meaning of lovingkindness in Genesis 24:14. Therefore, this example does not
depict the normal father using the normal method to pick a normal wife for his
normal son. Rather, this was the fulfillment of a special covenant with
Abraham, using angelic assistance and a supernatural fleece to bring about
success.
Having seen, then, that God does not communicate His will through
circumstances, what about the second road sign of results or blessings?
Actually, this is often viewed as a way of confirming God's will more than
determining God's will, since God's will is said to bring good results or
blessings to the believer. A good result is like the sign at your destination
that reads, Welcome, you made it. You were pretty sure you had followed the
directions accurately, but that final sign assures you that you stayed on
course.
But is this what the Bible teaches? It seems that if positive results and
blessing are proof of God's will, then Jeremiah was never in God's will! In
fact, many of God's servants throughout the Bible and church history have been
faithful in their ministries yet have encountered nothing but difficulties and
obstacles in life. Are they to be labeled as failures? Was their lack of
results due to being out of God's will? The Bible teaches that results must
always be viewed within the framework of God's sovereignty. And God's sovereign
plan for His universe presently includes both good and evil. It permits Gabriel
and Lucifer, Jesus and Judas to exist side by side. A day is coming when God
will judge all evil and reward all good. But until then, we cannot interpret
results or blessings as a sign or confirmation of God's will.
IMPRESSIONS DO NOT GUIDE US
The third road sign which is said to direct us to God's individual will is the
inner prompting of the Holy Spirit. Since the day of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit
dwells within each one who puts his trust in Jesus Christ. And one of the
Spirit's many wonderful ministries is the leading and guiding of believers: But
when He, the Spirit of truth comes, He will guide you into all the truth (John
16:13). For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are the sons
of God (Rom. 8:14). This inward guidance is sometimes called the inner voice
because it comes from within our heart, not outside our body. It is described
as the still small voice in contrast to physically audible sounds. Inner
impression, inward burden, inner witness, and checks in the spirit are other
expressions used to distinguish the nature of this guidance. Possibly the most
common designation for this road sign is the peace of God which is said to come
when we are in the center of God's will (Col. 3:15).
But herein is the dilemma of subjectivism. Christians who base their decisions
on feeling led or sensing God's will can have widely different, even
contradictory convictions. One father told me he had three different young men
claim it was God's will for them to marry his daughter. Hmmm! How do you argue
against the inner impression of a Christian who claims that God told him this
or God told him that? You can't, because there is no objective standard (the
Bible) by which his claims can be evaluated. This view of God's will can make
Christians susceptible to all sorts of doctrinal error and deception. After
all, how can one tell whether these impressions are from God or some other
source? We know that inner impressions can come from any number of causes: God,
Satan, an angel, a demon, human emotions, hormonal imbalance, sleep loss,
medication, sickness or even a Big Mac. Sinful impressions are obviously not
from God. But what about non-moral impressions, like whether to buy one car or
another? Scripture gives absolutely no guidelines for distinguishing the source
of your inner impressions. Tremendous frustration has been experienced by
sincere Christians who have earnestly but fruitlessly sought to interpret the
meaning of their inner impressions. Yes, impressions are real in that we do
experience them. But they do not reveal God's will. Two examples, I think, will
illustrate this.
First, if you read very many Bible commentaries, you will soon begin to notice
that no scholar writing his interpretation of the verses will appeal to inner
impressions as his guide to the Scripture. If an inner prompting is a good
guide to God's will, then why do all the hard work of serious Bible study,
learning the original languages and the principles of biblical interpretation?
Why not just say, God, tell me the correct interpretation through your inner
voice? Would you trust a Bible scholar who came to his conclusions that way?
A second example of the problem with subjective impressions would be the
typical decision made by a church's leadership or by a whole congregation. When
two, or ten, or two hundred people must all have the same inward leading on an
issue, the process becomes very complicated. Should a church require a
unanimous leading before proceeding with a decision? What if the decision can't
be postponed, but everybody has a different leading? What if equally godly men
line up on opposite sides of the issue? How can you resolve an issue when some
Christians think the Holy Spirit is telling them to vote yes, and other
Christians think the Holy Spirit is telling them to vote no?
But doesn't the Bible teach that one of the ministries of the Holy Spirit is to
lead believers? The answer, of course, is yes. The issue, however, is not
whether the Holy Spirit leads us but how He leads us. Romans 8:14 is often
quoted as proof that the Holy Spirit leads believers through inner impressions
into the individual will of God. But look at the context of this verse. First,
the context is not dealing with daily decision making in non-moral areas.
Second, this verse gives no indication whatever that the means of leading is by
inward impressions. And third, there is no hint at all that the goal of the
leading is the individual will of God.
What the Apostle Paul is discussing in this passage is righteous living, not
which car to buy or which woman to marry. The issue set before us (beginning
in 8:1) is the contrast between living according to the Spirit versus
living according to the flesh, or put simply in verse 7, obedience versus disobedience
to the law of God contained in the Bible. It is Paul's answer to the problem of
slavery to sin raised in chapter seven. In this context, then, being led by the
Spirit of God is simply another way of describing living according the Spirit
in which the Christian is putting to death the deeds of the body by obeying the
moral will of God in the Bible.
But what about the next few verses of Romans 8, especially verse 16: The Spirit
Himself bears witness with our spirit...? Doesn't this verse teach about an
inner witness? Again, the context does not describe daily decision making. In
verse 15 our spirit (i.e., our inner person), because it has been regenerated
through spiritual adoption, cries out Abba, Father. But why? Verse 16 explains
that the Holy Spirit bears witness to us, that is, He illumines our
understanding of Scripture that the promises of God are now ours (cf. 1 Cor.
2:14).
Another prominent passage on the leading of the Holy Spirit declares, the
Spirit of Truth... will guide you into all the truth (John 16:13). This
promise is directed not to all believers but specifically to the Apostles to
whom He was speaking. And the truth that Jesus would give them (truth that you
cannot bear now and truth about what is to come) was not inner impulses for
daily decision making but direct revelation from the Holy Spirit for writing
the New Testament, truths related to Christ's death, resurrection and second
coming.
WHAT ABOUT PEACE?
Perhaps the most common allusion to inner impressions is having the peace of
Christ when we are in the center of God's will (Col. 3:15). Yet in this
passage, Paul is writing not about God's provision for our decision making but
about maintaining love and unity in the body of Christ. The word peace can mean
one of two things in Scripture - either the absence of anxiety within a person
or the absence of hostility between persons. The whole appeal of Colossians
3:5-17 is for believers to manifest Christ-like attitudes and virtues that will
result in experiential unity among believers. So which definition of peace fits
this context? Surely Paul is talking about the absence of hostility between
believers, not a warm, fuzzy feeling. He's calling us to peace with one
another, not inner peace within our soul. The whole subject of inner guidance
is entirely foreign to the context.
But what about the lack of peace - the lack of tranquility - you might have in
the process of decision making? How do you explain it? What is the source of
this anxiety? Well, it could be your conscience. If you are pursuing a course
of action in violation of God's word, then your conscience will produce a
feeling of guilt. But if your decision is not a matter of disobeying God's
revealed will, then like we said before, your feeling may have numerous possible
causes: fatigue, illness, stress, timidity, uncertainty, weather, diet and so
on. How did you feel the morning you were to be married? Didn't you feel a
little unsettled inside? Yet if all marriages were called off because of
nervous grooms, we'd have no weddings! That lack of peace is perfectly normal
whenever we face a major new step in life. In summary, then, impressions are
just feelings, which can have numerous causes. But they are clearly not road
signs for God's will.
What, then, is the proper place of emotions in the Christian life? Instead of
being our method for determining truth, they are our God-given means for
responding to truth. The emotional cart is to be pulled by the intellectual
horse, and not the reverse. Our feelings are designed by God to express our
response to objective truth. For example, if a friend is injured, my God-given
emotions respond with sorrow; but if a friend gets saved, my emotions respond
with joy. In our relationship with God, our minds learn from the Bible what God
says is true. Our wills choose to accept God's truth and obey it. And our
emotions then respond accordingly with love, praise, thanksgiving, fear, hope,
trust, rejoicing and so forth, lifting our Christian experience to the highest
possible level of enjoyment. The Psalms are an ideal place to explore the
proper, biblical expression of our emotions!
One caution: Since our emotions are designed to respond to what we believe to
be true, we must walk by faith and not by sight (2 Cor. 5:7). We must
believe what God says is true, regardless of our circumstances. If we believe
our circumstances rather than God, then our life will be an emotional roller
coaster as our circumstances change. That's why James exhorts us to consider it
joy, my brethren when you encounter various trials (Jas. 1:2f). Why?
Because of the truth of God that trials will make you a mature Christian. That
is cause for joy! But if your focus is on the trial, then you will be
emotionally depressed.
Finally, let's examine the fourth road sign said to direct us to God's
individual will, namely, our personal desires. At the time of salvation, God
gives us a new heart and begins renewing our desires. The more we grow in
grace, the more our desires line up with God's desires. Though initially our
experiential righteousness is like filthy rags, God is washing those rags a
little more every day as we grow in Christ. But the problem with using personal
desires as a road sign is that, this side of heaven, Christians will still have
some sinful desires, foolish desires, prideful desires and many other desires
that are difficult to identify because the heart is deceitful and desperately
wicked (Jer. 17:9). Even the Apostle Paul expressed his own inner
conflict with desires (Rom. 7:15-25) and taught that Christians in this
life will always experience internal warfare as the flesh lusts against the
Spirit (Gal. 5:16-26). Ultimately, all desires must be judged by God's
moral will, the Bible, because only the Bible explains which desires are which.
HOW GOD GUIDES US
Though it can be emotionally unsettling to probe our fundamental assumptions,
we have tested the doctrine that God has an individual will for every person
which he or she must discover in order to be within the will of God (1
Thess. 5:21), examining the Scriptures... to see whether these things are
so (Acts 17:11). And having seen how each of the four arguments and each
of the four road signs are unfounded, we must conclude that this viewpoint is
actually an unbiblical teaching that will lead us into confusion, not clarity,
about God's will. It is not that God does not craft every detail of our life -
indeed, He does - but He simply has chosen not to reveal those details to us.
They are part of His sovereign will (Deut. 29:29), purposely kept secret
because He wants us to learn to Trust and Obey as the hymn writer so aptly put
it. Trusting is our response to His sovereign will; obeying is our response to
His moral will (the Bible). But how do the two work together in our choosing of
a spouse?
God's sovereign will has four primary characteristics, each of which has a
crucial application in the choosing of a spouse. First, as mentioned above,
God's sovereign will is secret or hidden until it happens. Would you like to
know whom you will marry? Just wait until the day after the wedding! Why, you
might wonder, doesn't God tell us His sovereign will in advance? It is because
He wants to build in us a character of trusting Him for our future, walking by
faith, not by sight (2 Cor. 5:7). Moreover, He is protecting us from
information we are not equipped to handle. Jesus teaches that we are wired to
handle only one day's anxiety at a time - and no more (Matt. 6:34).
Second, God's sovereign will is exhaustive. As the blessed and only Sovereign,
the King of kings and Lord of lords (1 Tim. 6:15), God is the ultimate
determiner of everything that happens, including our choice of a mate. In a
word, God works ALL things after the counsel of His will (Eph. 1:11).
Even the sinful acts of men are included in God's sovereign will as Peter
divulged that Jesus was delivered up by the predetermined plan of God (Acts
2:23; cf. Luke 22:22). And yet, as we said before, God accomplishes this
without being the author of sin, without violating the will of man, and without
destroying the reality and responsibility of decision making. He simply uses
man's nature to bring about His predetermined end.
The third characteristic of God's sovereign will is that it is certain. Daniel
4:35 declares that God's sovereign will cannot be frustrated by men, by angels
or by anyone else. Thus, it is not blind chance, impersonal fate, human
manipulation or Satanic trickery but rather God Himself who brings a man and a
woman together in marriage. And nothing - including someone marrying the wrong
person - can thwart God's sovereign will. Did Mr. or Miss Right pass you by and
marry someone else? God's sovereign will makes no mistakes - He knows better
who is ideal for us. Perhaps there was some hidden flaw in that person which
God was protecting you from. Or maybe God was protecting him from you as God
continues to conform your character to Christ. Could be you two just weren't a
good fit for each other.
Fourth and finally, God's sovereign will is perfect, bringing the highest glory
to God and the greatest good to man. God causes all things to work together for
good to those who love God (Rom. 8:28). God does not say all things are
good, because they're not. He says all things work together for good to make us
conformed to Christ. Even a difficult marriage can work together for good to
conform us to Christ's qualities of endurance, forbearance, and forgiveness as
we learn to love a less-than-perfect mate. So in the perfect sovereign will of
God, there is no such thing as getting stuck with God's second best spouse. And
whether we become bitter or better in marriage simply depends on how much we
are trusting in the sovereign will of God.
But trusting God's sovereign will is only half the equation for our choosing a
spouse. Remember Trust and Obey? The second half is obeying God's moral will.
And the substance of God's moral will is the Bible, pure and simple (Rom.
2:18). It is our perfect and complete guide for all faith and practice (2
Pet. 1:3-4; 2 Tim. 3:17), encompassing not only WHAT we do, but also WHY we
do it and HOW we do it. Speaking of this truth, Jesus told His disciples in
John 13:17, If you know these things, you are blessed if you do them. So our
two responses to God's moral will are (1) to know it and (2) to do it. The Holy
Spirit does not guide us apart from God's Word, rather He guides us through
God's Word as we diligently study it. Then He blesses us with success as we
faithfully obey it (Josh. 1:8; Ps. 1:1-3).
It is the purpose of this series of articles on God's Design for Scriptural
Romance to diligently search out the principles, precepts, practices, promises,
and prudence of God that relate to choosing a spouse. This is a process which
relies on faith, not feelings - faith in the sovereign will of God to
overshadow our feeble efforts, and faith in the moral will of God to direct our
uncertain steps. Though we may crave the multi-sensory experience of miraculous
circumstances and mystical impressions, God has given us His completed
revelation as our fully sufficient guide. Then when we make our decisions based
on the objective truth of Scripture, our emotions can find their God-ordained
place in responding to that truth with love, praise, hope, rejoicing and
thankfulness!
I was reminded of this truth recently when our family had the opportunity to
minister in Europe for several weeks. As we traveled through France, Switzerland, Austria, and Germany, there were many road signs that were bewildering to us
because we couldn't interpret them correctly (like the mystical view of God's
will). If we had sought to follow them, we would have wasted many miles and
turns, perhaps even ruining our trip. Thankfully, we had brought along a
complete touring guide to Europe, all mapped out in plain English. Similarly,
God has given us His authoritative and inerrant Guidebook (the Bible) for our
Christian journey, written in plain English. He has not intended us to become
confused and frustrated trying to read road signs He never designed us to
understand. Instead, He wants us to be guided by the principles of Scripture
for all of life's choices. Nothing more is needed; it is adequate to equip us
for every good work (2 Tim. 3:17), especially the good work of choosing
a spouse! In our next article, we'll begin to outline the exciting four-stage process
to a biblical marriage: friendship, courtship, betrothal, and wedding.
Chapter 5
Talking Biblically About Feelings
For
the substance of this article, I am indebted to Dr. David Powlison of the
faculty of Westminster Seminary.
We live in a society where the words I feel have become the catch phrase of
communication. Worse yet, what people feel has become the basis of much of
their decision-making. I'm sure you can relate to some of these examples:
I've lost all feelings of love for my husband, so my marriage is now hopeless.
I just don't feel like reading my Bible (going to church, mowing the lawn,
etc.), so I won't do it today.
Tell me what you feel, then we'll really understand each other.
Follow your feelings since feelings are the guide to personal fulfillment.
How do you feel about me, darling? Do you feel you could be happy with a
husband like me?
The words I feel have become the do-all expression, used for anything and
everything people may experience, think, or want. But what do people really
mean when they say, I feel this or I feel that? And, more importantly, what
does the Bible teach about feelings? To understand the vagueness and even the
deceptiveness of our feelings, see if you can decipher this paragraph:
I feel tense when I feel my husband has wronged me. Then I don't feel like
talking to him. Instead, I feel like leaving because I feel he won't listen
anyway. I don't feel the Bible applies to our conflicts, so I feel justified in
the anger I feel.
Have you ever heard a person talk this way? Do you sometimes talk this way? How
about your children? Let's take a closer look at the way we use the word feel
and what the Bible says about it. There are four different ways we use the word
feeling, but not all of them are biblical.
SENSE PERCEPTIONS
First, we use feeling to refer to sense perceptions. Cut your finger, and you
feel pain. You feel an external, physical event. But you can also feel internal
events. For example, I feel tense when my muscles knot up and I feel sick when
my stomach churns. So in its simplest sense, feeling is a synonym for a
physical sensation.
The Bible teaches that God made us to experience both physical pain and
physical pleasure. We see this throughout the Psalms (e.g., Ps. 107:1-6). The
people of Israel experienced hunger, thirst, fainting, misery and other
troubles. God intends such hardships to drive us to Him for help and refuge.
Later in this Psalm, we read how Israel experienced satisfied hunger, quenched
thirst, safety, and peace. God intends such blessings to stir us unto
thankfulness and rejoicing. So God designed us to feel things with our senses,
to experience both pain and pleasure. In fact, a promise in Scripture is often
an appeal to experience pleasure; and a warning in Scripture is frequently an
appeal to avoid pain. Consider the pleasures of food and drink that we are to
enjoy with thankfulness, particularly at the marriage supper of the Lamb! And
in relation to marriage, Jeremiah 33:11 equates the voice of joy and gladness
with the voice of the bridegroom and the bride. So the Bible teaches that
sensory experiences are properly called feelings.
OUR EMOTIONS
A second way we use the word feeling is to describe emotions. We say, I feel
angry, anxious, lonely, happy, affectionate, fearful, guilty, thankful,
excited, ashamed, compassionate, sorrowful, awed, joyful. These are all
God-given emotions. They are signals that register what is happening to you and
within you, like the red lights on the dashboard of your car tell you what's
happening under the hood. Your children have these red lights on their
dashboard as well! They feel angry, sad, fearful, and joyous. In fact, God is
Himself full of emotions like sorrow and joy, anger and tenderness. Since He
has created us in His image, we have emotions too.
But the Bible teaches that these emotions can be either justified or
unjustified, rightly expressed or wrongly expressed; and they are generally
linked with thoughts, attitudes, expectations, words, and deeds. So emotions
are not automatically legitimate. They simply register, for good or for ill,
what is going on in our relationships with God and neighbor. For example, we
say, Such and such happened, and I'm worried. That's a red light that I have
forgotten the sovereignty, wisdom, and goodness of God who controls all my
circumstances. Or we say, You offended me, so I feel angry. But when my anger
is evaluated by the Word of God, I will in all likelihood find in my response
some pride, some comparing, and perhaps some envy. If I am not careful to
repent right away, then that anger will be expressed in bitterness, hatred, and
even murder (cf. Gen. 4:3-8).
So in Scripture our emotions are properly called feelings, but they may be
either right or wrong based on whether they are biblically justified and
biblically expressed. This is important for you to practice as you live before
your children. But it is likewise crucial for you to train your children to
deal biblically with their own emotions, evaluating whether their emotions are
justified and whether their emotions are properly expressed. This will be vital
training for the intense emotions that will come with courtship.
BELIEFS, ATTITUDES, THOUGHTS
A third way we employ the word feeling is to describe our beliefs, attitudes,
and thoughts. This use begins to move outside the parameters of Scripture.
Notice in the above example how the wife said, I feel that my husband wronged
me. I feel he won't listen. I don't feel the Bible applies. I feel justified.
What is this wife really saying? She is saying she believes her husband has
wronged her. She thinks he won't listen. She doesn't believe the Bible applies.
And so she thinks she is justified. Though this wife expresses both physical
sensation and internal emotion elsewhere in her words, she is here expressing
her beliefs, attitudes, thoughts, and opinions.
Yet the Bible nowhere uses the word feeling in this way. And the problem with
allowing ourselves to use feeling to express beliefs is that feelings are
impossible to argue with. People either have them or they don't. When we
express beliefs in terms of feelings, our subjective, inner truth replaces the
objective truth of the Bible. If I feel it as an inner conviction, then it
becomes inherently true and right. You can surely see the dilemma a father will
face with his son or daughter during courtship if his child has been allowed to
express beliefs and opinions in terms of feelings.
God intends our beliefs and opinions to be carefully evaluated in the light of
truth. The Bible has devastating things to say about leaning on our own
understanding and being wise in our own eyes. Is what we believe and think true
or false, right or wrong, according the Bible? It is certainly proper to
subjectively feel devotion, enthusiasm, zeal, even passion regarding these
objective beliefs about God and His Word. But to use the word feeling to
articulate those beliefs, thoughts, or opinions is both wrong and dangerous. Instead,
we should just say, I believe this or I think that. Otherwise, we will find
ourselves as parents fighting a losing battle with nondescript feelings that
have been substituted for verifiable beliefs. And these so-called feelings will
likewise create havoc for our children in their future marriages.
OUR DESIRES
There is a fourth way we use the word feeling, and this one, too, is in error.
We often use the word feeling to express our desires. Notice again the wife's
words: I don't feel like talking to him. I feel like leaving. What is she
really saying? She means I don't desire to talk to him. Instead, I desire to
leave. Yet by using the word feel she has given implicit authority to her
impulses, inclinations, desires, yearnings, intentions, and plans. And she has
obscured her responsibility to submit her desires to the search light of God's
Word. When expressed as feelings, our deceptive desires will often produce
sinful choices.
Now, the Bible teaches that our desires may be perfectly valid: Honey, I feel
like pizza tonight. Nothing wrong with desiring a pizza for supper, is there?
But frequently our desires are of the flesh, which God intends to be overruled
by the Spirit. Most of what the world calls felt needs are really idolatrous
desires: health and wealth, significance and security, self-esteem and control.
God wants them to be exterminated by the Spirit, not indulged by the flesh (cf.
Gal. 5:16-18). The Holy Spirit is in the business of changing what you
want! Hebrews 4:12 tells us that the heart, or inner man, is composed of
thoughts and intents, i.e., beliefs and desires. It isn't surprising, then,
that Satan would confuse our language today with the word feeling for both of
these categories of the human heart. We call our false beliefs and fleshly
desires feelings simply because we do not want God interfering with the
idolatries of our wayward heart.
These last two uses of the word feeling - to mean either our beliefs or our
desires - are not biblical uses at all. So use the word feeling to express an
outward sensation like a pin prick, or an inward emotion like anger or fear.
But using the word feeling to mean belief or desire should be stricken from our
vocabulary and our children's vocabulary, if our beliefs and desires are
consistently to be evaluated by God's Word.
The Bible cuts to the very root of a life lived by feelings. And by His Word,
God judges the thoughts and intentions of the heart (Heb. 4:12) so that
we can (1) resist pleasing self and pursue pleasing Christ, (2) stop being
desire-oriented and start being self-disciplined, (3) replace feeling-centered
Hollywood Love with self-sacrificial Holy Love, (4) end the me-generation live
for myself vision of life and begin the multi-generational sacrifice for my
grandchildren vision of life, and (5) cease deciding by feelings and commence
deciding by Scripture.
[END OF PART 1]
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