Because God didn’t dictate a particular ritual or ceremony, even Christian weddings today are trending towards being completely secular. Yes, we still do them in church buildings—but it is not an official church service! Ministers still perform the ceremony—but so do fathers, professors, camp counselors, and county judges. Most couples write their own vows rather than use stuffy church words.
One of the reasons the act of marriage is under fire in society is because of our uncertainty about what it is. Is marriage just a piece of paper, a legal status, a social status? Is there anything spiritual about marriage or is it just a cultural convention?
We really don’t even know what it takes to be married, or when marriage occurs! If a couple live together for twenty years are they married? Does it depend completely on the laws of the county or state or country where they reside? Can people just decide to be married? Or are two people married if they have a sexual relationhip—whether they intend to be married or not?
Does God not have anything to say about any of this???
We are so confused about what marriage is, no wonder Christians have so little trouble either ignoring it or abandoning it!
Moses, Jesus, and the Apostle Paul all return to the Beginning to talk about marriage—yes, the very beginning, so I think we should too. In simple words, let’s remind ourselves of God’s description and design from the beginning
From Genesis 1:26-28—The First Creation Account
- We are created in the image of God, male and female. As God is “us”, so are we!
- The first command is to be fruitful and increase in number. “Fill the earth”! Procreation seems to be high on God’s agenda for men and women.
From Genesis 2:18-25—The Second Creation Account
- Creation is incomplete until both Man and Woman are created.
- Because both are incomplete without the other, Moses inserts “for this reason” people get married!
- His basic description of the marriage ceremony includes three distinct actions:
- First a man decides to leave his birth family to create a new family.
- He bonds himself intentionally to a wife, with the intent of being married
- The two become one flesh through the sexual union.
THEN GOD JOINS THEM TOGETHER! This is the part we forget! We think that the law joins people together, or our vows, or that sex joins people together, but Jesus says, GOD JOINS THEM TOGETHER.
We make the same mistake with marriage that we do with baptism. Sure, we decide to be baptized! Sure, we submit to baptism. Sure, we are immersed in the Name of Jesus–but nothing would happen if God did not do something, if God did not wash away your sins! If God did not give you new life. If God did not add you to those who are being saved! You cannot save yourself—and you cannot join yourself to another without God!
Don’t you think that this understanding elevates marriage from where it currently is in our world? If we were to truly believe that God was joining a man and woman, would this moment not become much more holy!
I do believe that if we want to avoid divorce, we must recognize the divine participation in marriage and the holiness of the union. We need to teach our children what God does at marriage. We need to instruct our engaged that God must do their ceremony. We need to instill in all of us who are married an awareness of being acted upon by God, divine intervention that created this union.
Only when we understand the sacred holiness of marriage can we understand the laws and attitudes of the world have very little to do with our marriages.