Marriage
6
It is not good for man to be alone. It
is really not good for a man to be alone when he is in a marriage. In fact, it
is a crying tragedy. Yet it happens more often than we like to admit. And every
time we see it, we know we are seeing an exhibition of a marriage God did not
design. Why? Because God designed marriage to be a team.
This is exemplified most clearly in a
particular New Testament couple, Aquila and Priscilla. We meet them by
way of Paul in Acts 18. He comes across them first in Corinth (Acts
18.1-2) and is drawn to them because they share an occupation, tent-making.
Later in the same chapter, we meet Apollos, an eloquent man and mighty in
the Scriptures. (Acts 18.25) The problem is that Apollos was preaching
John's baptism of repentance, looking forward to a coming Messiah. He should
have been preaching Jesus. The Lord kindly sent him a couple of teachers. Whom
when Aquila and Priscilla had heard, they took him unto them, and expounded
unto him the way of God more perfectly. (Acts 18.26)
Something is fascinating here in a
marriage context. Every-single-time they are mentioned in Scripture, by name or
pronoun, they are together. Every single time. (Acts 18.2, 18.3, 18.18,
18.19, 18.20, 18.21, 18.26, Romans 16.3, I Corinthians 16.19, II Timothy 4.19) The
Scripture tells us they worked together, traveled together, lived together,
went to church together, converted together, studied theology together, and
taught together. He did not build a ministry over here while she lived a
separate life over there. They did it together.
I think I understand that. Mandy and I
serve the Lord together. I am a pastor, which means I do everything except work
in the nursery and play the piano. She does those two, in addition to
organizing ladies' activities, goes soul winning weekly, trains new soul
winners, leads our homeschool group, does discipleship with me, does marital
counseling with me, sings in the choir, decorates the auditorium, manages our prophet's chamber, teaches Sunday School periodically,
sings special music with me and others, visits with me, and plans church
activities with me. I do not have a separate life from her; she does not have a
separate life from me. We serve the Lord together. At times, we have considered
converting to Pentecostalism. Then, at least, we could get two salaries instead
of one. <grin>
Please do not misunderstand me. Every
couple has a marriage dynamic that makes sense to you. I am not saying that
your wife has to do with you everything my wife does with me. Nor am I saying
that this alone is the answer to making a great marriage. But I am saying that
there is a clear biblical example of one couple who were an awesome team.
Together.
This is one reason I have sought to
move our church gradually toward using married couples together for ministry.
Teach a class together. Go soul winning together. Be responsible for a service
commitment together. Visit the shut-ins together. I do not want ministry
service to impact the families in our church negatively. I try to be careful of
what I ask with that in mind. But the solution is not to not serve God because
of family commitments; it is to incorporate your family into your service to
God.
Of course, this is not applicable only
to ministry. I am thinking right now of a dairy farmer of my acquaintance. He
and his wife worked together for decades building their business. Many small
businesses are like that, husband and wife laboring together, often with a
child or three thrown into the mix as time goes along. I think we could make a
decent argument that America was a better place when families worked together
more than they do now.
"Next thing you'll say, Pastor
Brennan, is that we're even supposed to go bowling together. That's too much
for a body to take." Yes. And no. It would be great if you joined a
bowling league or a gardening club together. But, no, I am not saying you have
to be together 24/7. I am saying your marriage should function as a team; that
is how God designed it.
If you want to be alone, then be
alone. But if you get married, do not be alone. Be together.
Marriage is a team.
No comments:
Post a Comment