“Marriage is…(fill in the blank?)” I wonder how we would finish that sentence, using just one word. “Marriage is (what?).” If we had the time, it’d be interesting to survey a range of people and hear all the different ways folks would answer that question.
Maybe some would say,
especially at a wedding, “Marriage is… beautiful.” Or maybe others would say,
“Marriage is a gift.”
And both of those are true. But what if I told you that we could
also finish that sentence this way, “Marriage is death”?
Now if marriage is
something of a death, I suppose that means a wedding is in fact a funeral. And
if you’re the ones getting married, that means on your wedding day you’re
actually attending your own funerals!
That’s what I would
like us to consider: marriage as a death.
1.
Leaving & Cleaving
First, marriage
involves the death of two independent lives, as husband and wife come together
to form “one flesh.”
When God created
marriage in Genesis 2 he declared, “Therefore a man shall leave his father and
his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh” (Gen
2:24). “So,” Jesus explained, “they are no longer two but one flesh” (Mt 19:6).
In other words,
marriage involves a transition from two individual lives to a new state where
two will now constitute one family. Once a marriage is enacted, the man and
woman are no longer two separate individuals, but one unit.
As scripture indicates, this involves a sort of “leaving”– “man
shall leave his father and
his mother.” In other words, in marriage, our former way of life undergoes a
“death.” But it is to allow something new and beautiful to emerge.
No longer can we live merely with our own interests in mind, but
we must live for the interests of the other, viewing them as one with
ourselves, as our very self.
2.
Dying to Self
Second, we see that
marriage involves us constantly needing to die to ourselves as we seek to serve
the good of the other.
In his book The Cost of the
Discipleship, Luthern pastor,
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, famously wrote, “When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and
die.” (And Bonhoeffer of course knew this in his own life, as he ultimately
died at the hands of the Nazis due to his opposition to their regime.)
“When Christ calls a
man, he bids him come and die.” That is, when Christ calls us, grants us
faith, and makes us his own, he not only saves us, forgives us of our sins,
making us right with God, but he also makes us a new person—meaning our old
self has now received a death sentence. As Paul explains in Romans 6, “We know
that our old (sinful) self was crucified with [Christ] in order that the body
of sin might be brought to nothing.” Or as Jesus said, “If anyone would come
after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me” (Mark
8:34-36). To experience salvation in Jesus necessarily requires the death of
our old selves.
Now, this is true of
the Christian life in general. But it’s also true of marriage in particular.
Marriage involves the call to die to ourselves.
This is so contrary to
what society tells us. Our culture tells us to pursue self-fulfillment at all
costs. But when self-fulfillment is our goal, then marriage is useful only in
as much as it serves me. Marriage is measured by what I get out of it.
But in that case, when
marriage no longer serves my own self-fulfillment—if it becomes inconvenient or
difficult—then marriage is no longer of any use and should be discarded. In
fact, marriage may actually be getting in the way of my very self-fulfillment;
and divorce is actually the path to self-fulfillment!
But the truth is,
marriage is actually a call to die. Marriage exposes our selfishness and our
pride, as our interests come into conflict with our spouse’s. And so in that
way, marriage is death, a call to put to death our own pride and selfishness in
order to serve them.
A word to those who
are about to get married:
Soon-to-be bride,
believe it or not, but the man that you’re currently so enamored with right now
is actually going to be quite difficult to love at times. He’s a sinner. And
he’s going to sin against you. And not only that, but you’re also a sinner,
which means you’re going to struggle to love him as you should. Not only will
his sin make this difficult, but so will yours. Marriage will be a call to die
to yourself, your own pride and your selfishness.
Soon-to-be husband,
the same goes for you. I know it’s hard to imagine right now, even more so on
your wedding day as your new wife stands there in that beautiful dress, all
done up. But yes, believe it or not, you’re going to find it difficult to love
her at times. She is also a sinner, and she’s going to sin against you. But
added to that, you’re a sinner, which means you don’t love as you ought. Your
capacity to love as you ought is broken. Given your selfishness and pride,
you’re going to struggle to love your wife as you should. In this way, marriage
will be a call to die to yourself.
We hear “death” and
understandably we think of something ugly. But in this case, this death is
actually something quite beautiful: the putting to death of our old sinful
selves, as God uses our marriages to as another means of sanctifying us into
the image of Christ!
3.
Christ’s Marriage as Death
Finally, and lastly,
we see in marriage not only our own deaths, but a picture of Christ’s.
Marriage involves a
call to die. And this call to die is perfectly exemplified in Christ who dies,
not to himself and his own sin (for he has none), but for ours.
Scripture tells us
that God instituted marriage ultimately to symbolize and point to Christ’s
relationship with his people—the church, those bought by his blood. Paul
explains in Eph 5:32, “This mystery [i.e., marriage] is profound, and I am
saying that it refers to Christ and the church.” Marriage, the most intimate of
unions between a husband and a wife, portrays the union God would restore
between himself and his people.
But ultimately this marriage, this union, meant death for Christ. Because of our sin, we are
not born in proper relationship with God. We are at enmity with God, objects of
his righteous judgment and indignation. And yet God, because of the great love
with which he loved us, sent his Son, who became a man, died in our
place—suffering the punishment that we deserved—and raised victorious over
death three days later. Because of this, those who put their trust completely
and solely in Christ (not in anything that we do) are rescued by Jesus.
Christ wins his bride, saving his people and uniting himself to
them in eternal marriage. As Paul says in Ephesians 5, “Husbands, love your
wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her….” (Eph 5:25). Marriage involves a call
to die. And this call to die, this self-sacrificing love, is perfectly
exemplified in Christ who dies in love to win his bride and unite us into
eternal, unhindered relationship with him.
If you are reading
this write now and have not yet put your trust in Jesus, seek the savior even
today. Turn from sin, and put your trust solely and completely in Jesus.
And Christian husbands and wives, look to Christ and his death as the model for your own. Approach your marriage as nothing short then death.
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