1st Corinthians Chapter
Seven
Commentary by Ron Beckham
Verse 1. "Now concerning
the things of which you wrote to me: It is good for a man not to touch
a woman."
In our culture, most people
think just the opposite from this Scripture. Most of the magazine
articles and self-help books would say "It is BAD for a man not to touch
a woman." This chapter (chapter 7) is largely about sex, for the most
part, and as J. Vernon McGee pointed out, other writings on sex are
presented in a much less dignified manner than the materials presented
by the Apostle Paul. The Lord, through Paul, takes a very difficult
topic and will bless our lives with it.
Paul spoke (actually, he still
speaks to us through the Word of God) from experience. He had been a
member of the Jewish Sanhedrin. In Acts 26:10, it says he (Paul) "gave
his voice against" the Christians. The only way he could have done that
was as a full voting member of the Jewish Sanhedrin, and one of the
conditions of voting membership was that the member must first be
married. The Jewish Yebhamoth, in a commentary on Genesis 5:2, states
"a Jew who has no wife is not a man." The "Mishna" said this should
occur for a Jewish man at 18-years of age.
We know he was not married at
the time of this letter (see verse 7) but when he writes of marriage, he
writes from experience, and when he speaks of being "loosed from a wife"
he is a man who knows the pain of loss. When Paul cries to husbands
"Husbands love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and
gave himself for it" (Eph. 5:25), he shouts from the heart, as a man who
has loved and lost.
Verse 2. "Nevertheless,
because of sexual immorality, let each man have his own wife, and let
each woman have her own husband."
Marriage is an excellent
"testing" place for us. It tests what we are, and changes us. J. H.
Mac Duff once said:
"I stood in the test room of a
great steel mill. All around me were little partitions and
compartments. Steel had been tested to the limit, and marked with
figures that showed its breaking point. Some pieces had been twisted
until they broke, and the strength of torsion was marked on them. Some
had been stretched to the breaking-point and their tensile strength
indicated. Some had been compressed to the crushing-point, and also
marked. The master of the steel mill knew just what these pieces of
steel would stand under strain. He knew just what they would bear if
placed in the great ship, building, or bridge. He knew this because his
testing room revealed it. It is often so with God’s children. God does
not want us merely to be like vases of glass or porcelain. He would
have us like these toughened pieces of steel, able to bear twisting and
crushing to the uttermost without collapse. He wants us to be, not
hothouse plants, but storm-beaten oaks; not sand dunes driven with every
gust of wind, but granite rocks withstanding the fiercest storms. To
make us such, He must needs bring us into His testing room of suffering.
Many of us need no other argument than our own experiences to prove
that suffering is indeed God’s testing room of faith."
So it is with marriage. Some will decide
that marriage is impossible, because two fierce, opposing wills are
constantly directed toward one another. The ultimate secret, of
course, is that each finally stop insisting on their own wills, in favor of the other,
and even more important, in favor of the Will of God.
The Corinth that Paul addressed was an exceedingly
sinful city. Socrates, a Greek very much in the thoughts of those
people, gave written advice to prostitutes on how they should conduct
themselves. As one author said about Corinth, "the whole thought (for
most of the people) was to get rid of the desires of the body by
satisfying them." Sounds like a modern self-help magazine article. I
mean, you can drive down to the market and buy some kind of book with a
"How-To" live a better life motif, and it will contain words very much
like that. I recently saw an article by a medical doctor, with the
title "Use It or Lose It."
The Stoics of that culture, were
a major force in the shaping of people’s ideas. They taught that basic
desires were to be denied, at all cost. Those ideas are also around today.
This was in opposition to the Epicurians of that culture, who felt we
should go all the way with our desires, whenever possible. Paul
addresses both extremes in response to questions in letters from the
Corinthians.
Verse 3. "Let the
husband render to his wife the affection due her, and likewise also the
wife to her husband."
What a wonderful job
assignment: To LOVE one another. A lot of people have said, in books
and sermons, "It’s the husband’s job to love the wife" (Ephesians 5:25), but
the wife only has to "submit" to the husband (Ephesians 5:22). That’s
nonsense. The wife is a parable of the church in Scripture (Eph. 5:25
again) and the church is certainly supposed to love the Lord. Also, in
Titus (2:4), the older women are to encourage the young women "to love
their husbands…"
Love is the whole point in our
relationship with our Lord. "God is Love" as revealed in 1 John 4:8.
As we let our Lord into our lives, we learn to love. He IS love, and He
moves right into the center of our lives, into our heart of hearts, and
brings His love with Him, for you and for me. Affection becomes joy,
for we learn to really LOVE that other person.
Verse 4. "The wife does
not have authority over her own body, but the husband does. And likewise
the husband does not have authority over his own body, but the wife
does."
That a wife should have such
authority was a blockbuster in that culture, for a wife was generally
thought of as chattel, not worthy of consideration. When we consider
the Bible, which offers dignity and freedom to women, it is important to remember that ancient culture almost
unanimously took citizenship, even full humanity away from women, and
reserved dignity only for men. Paul, and the Holy Spirit, (in the Bible)
uplifts the woman to a role equal to men. In Christ, "there is no male
or female…for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28 &
context).
Verse 5. "Do not deprive
one another except with consent for a time, that you may give
yourselves to fasting and prayer; and come together again so that Satan
does not tempt you because
of your lack of self-control."
Celibacy is a gift (and so is
marriage). Like teaching, or evangelism, prophesy, giving, or
encouragement, the gift is a supernatural enabling, sent by God for a
good purpose in our lives. By definition, the married are understood to
not have the gift of celibacy. They have other gifts of equal
importance and the married are to love that other person, the spouse,
with everything they've got and not somehow hold back from them. The
gift of celibacy should not be exercised in the absence of a Leading and
an Enabling by Almighty God. The husband and wife should love one
another. The married are to love, and are gifted in that area; the
celibate are to love & are gifted in that. The celibate person
will be gifted by God to not express themselves in a sexual manner.
We are not all the same in our Lord. Of such is the body of Christ.
Verse 6. "But I say this as a
concession, not as a commandment."
The whole of our life in Christ
is about freedom in Christ, and not about bondage at all. We just
finished 1 Corinthians 6, where Paul surprised us with the statement
"all things are lawful for me" --- also keep in mind that he went on,
"but not all things are profitable" or "expedient" for us to do them.
Out bodies belong to the Holy Spirit of God (1 Corinthians 6:19) ---
We no
longer have to constantly worry about how we should behave or what we should do, for
we look to Him. We have been bought by Him and we are to glorify Him. Each
of us must look to our heart, where Christ lives, and follow Him, now
and forever!
Verse 7. "For I wish
that all men were even as I myself. But each one has his own gift from God,
one in this manner and another in that."
When I was younger, it was
unthinkable that I would be unmarried. It was like I was born to be
married, for I really could not live any other way. And then, at a
different time in
life, God gave me the Grace to remain unmarried.
Previously, I really do not think I could have been unmarried, and then
I could. I was growing older, but it is really in my attitudes - God
was
changing me. That which I could not do before, became actually right for me, and God
has changed me again, for He has selected me to be a husband to my wife. The ability to be unmarried is indeed a
gift, and all do not have it. When we look to Him, we find
that He enables to be what we previously could not be.
Verse 8. "But I say to
the unmarried and to the widows: It is good for them if they remain even
as I am;"
Many can agree with Paul --- there
is much trouble in marriage. Both the happiest and the unhappiest
memories in life can relate to marriage. I can remember loving my
beloved of my youth more than life itself. I would have done anything for her. I
also remember how it was after she suddenly began her psychotic
episodes. It was like she was there but the best part of her was
gone! I remember the eerie feeling that it was like someone else was
inhabiting my wife’s body. This sweet, articulate, intelligent person,
had instantly become a suspicious, even murderous person. The joy of
this person, that I loved more than myself, turned into a sort of hell
on earth - for all three of us (including our daughter). I could
clearly see that, if we are unmarried, there is benefit in remaining as
we are.
Verse 9. "but if they
cannot exercise self-control, let them marry. For it is better to marry than
to burn with passion."
God, who created sex and all
that goes along with it, also created marriage, encouraging us in
Genesis to "be fruitful and multiply" and teaching in Hebrews 12, us
that "marriage is honorable in all and the bed undefiled…" There is
something wrong with humanity, but there is nothing wrong with
marriage. By that it's meant that we often take that which God gives us and
misuse it. The husband, who is supposed to love the wife, far too often
hits her. The employee who should be diligent and look to the interest
of his employer, loafs on company time and pilfers. And so on. Marriage
is honorable---let us prayerfully consider how we treat that other
person. To those who are not going to be honorable in
marriage, it is better to not marry. But for those who cannot be
celibate and will honor their spouses, "it is
better marry."
Verse 10. "Now to the
married I command, yet not I but the Lord: A wife is not to depart from
her husband."
What we should see in all these verses
is that we are to be very slow to change our circumstances. Years
ago when I was much younger, I
asked my wife, "Why are you divorcing me(?)," she did not answer for a
long time. Then finally, unexpectedly, she volunteered that God "told"
her to do that. It did not sound right at all, for God loves marriage
so much and does not seem at all pleased when we end our marriages.
These verses are clear: We are not to divorce, we are not to change
jobs; we are to remain in the circumstances we were called (to Him) in.
The variable in all of this is that He sometimes calls us to go in HIS direction. That’s fine, for when He calls,
we must listen, for it certainly can be time to go.
Verse 11. "But even if
she does depart, let her remain unmarried or be reconciled to her husband. And
a husband is not to divorce his wife."
Here it is again: We are to
remain in the condition in which we are now, and be very slow to change the
circumstances in which we find ourselves. We would be ahead
financially, many think, if there were two incomes instead of one. The
children would be much better off with another "parent." We
might think, "if
only I did not have to make ALL the decisions." Actually,
many have had such thoughts, and many have come to feel sorry they
have married, because motives in marrying are often insufficient. If
divorce does come, note this verse: let her or him expect they will remain alone.
Verse 12. "But to the
rest I, not the Lord, say: If any brother has a wife who does not believe, and
she is willing to live with him, let him not divorce her."
This was a big issue to these
Corinthian people. Theirs was not a Christian culture.
Today's "Western" world is not,
either, but it has a lot of "Christian" influences and many like to think
of it as "Christian." In those days, at the time of this letter, it was common for a
marriage partner to be "saved" and then wonder, "Now what
do I do(?)" in
relation to the unsaved spouse. "Should I divorce them?" was one of the
questions they addressed
to Paul. His answer: If possible, stay with the other person!
Verse 13. "And a woman
who has a husband who does not believe, if he is willing to live with her,
let her not divorce him."
Now, lest we think there is one
standard for the man and another for the woman, he responds to the wife:
do
not divorce your unsaved husband! The same principle applies in all
cases. The exception is in the case of real, personal danger to the
parties involved. It is probably true that I saved the life of my young
daughter, many years ago, by removing her mother from the home, when the mother
stated her intention to harm our daughter. Our job is to save lives:
not unduly endanger people. If he beats you, get out, but be very slow
to divorce, and always look to God. Jesus Christ is your true husband
(the husband of us all in the church) and He loves you. He does
not want you, your spouse or your child to be harmed.
Verse 14. "For the
unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife
is sanctified by the husband; otherwise your children would be unclean,
but now they are holy."
There are blessings in the lives
of those who know Christ. Our Lord moves right into our lives, and He
brings with Him, peace, joy, a concern for others, honesty, and much more. The
people in our lives benefit from the One
who is in us. Because of Him, we learn how to listen. I once
knew NOTHING of listening, and now I have learned much - because of Him.
To listen is definitely a benefit to the ones around us.
Years ago, I went "down the drain" financially, and pretty much stayed
there for two decades. He was with me, all that time. Three times I worked hard but made
no commission income for 6-months. There was no other income.
At the end of each of those times, I still had a roof over our heads.
My family was not malnourished; there was some food in the pantry, and no one
was sick. There was heat or cool, depending on the time of year. How
He did it, I do not really know, but I do know that it was the benefit
of the Lord in our lives, and it spread to also cover and protect my
children.
Verse 15. "But if the unbeliever
departs, let him depart; a brother or a sister is not under bondage in
such cases. But God has called us to peace."
It was difficult to let my wife
go, when she did not want me anymore, but I was finally able to let that
happen. One of the things I recalled was the time, many years ago, when
I did not want God anymore - He gave me my inheritance and simply let
me go off to be a prodigal son. It eventually seemed only reasonable to
let my wife go in the same manner.
Here’s a question: What if your
wife (or husband) DOES start divorce proceedings against you? What if
your cries of "What about the children?" go unheard, and
they walk out?
On the ground that "God has called us to peace" - let them go! Remember,
it is YOU that needs to learn to "Be still (cease striving)
and know
that (He) is God (Psalm 46:10)." You cannot live the life of your
spouse. That is actually one of the things God is teaching you: to NOT
always attempt to control the behavior of others. Let them go, and
then begin to pray
for them. Did they go to someone else? Let them go.
Pray for
them
even then. Marriage is a part of THIS life and the loss of every good
thing is only temporary - we are headed for eternity, where there will
be no more loss.
Verse 16. "For how do you know, O
wife, whether you will save your husband? Or how do you know, O
husband, whether you will save your wife?"
One time, I became acquainted
with a man who was serving on jury duty in a Superior
Court. He told of the ten years his wife prayed for him, and
during that time he
did not receive the Lord. He did go to church; but they prayed for him; they
sought the Lord, fasted, and nothing happened. Suddenly, after ten
years, he received the Lord in a dramatic manner. One of the factors in
his decision to turn to the Lord, was his wife, who was kind and gentle,
and loved the Lord, without constantly insisting that he MUST be a
Christian!
On weekday evenings for a long time, a group of
us tried to stay in shape by taking a fast-moving 45-minute walk through a
local park. One of the women said something very similar --- Her
husband turned to the Lord ten years AFTER she did. Finally the Lord
saved him and also delivered him from substance abuse. He told her that
it was her example that continually touched his heart and finally
resulted in his salvation, during those
years.
Verse 17. "But as God has
distributed to each one, as the Lord has called each one, so let him
walk. And so I ordain in all the churches."
What God has "distributed" to
you, might seem like a problem to you. You might not like what God has
given you. Things are comparatively pretty good for us, here in
in the 21st century. In a few verses, Paul will
be encouraging the slave (and a lot of people were abject slaves at that
time) to incredibly remain in slavery.
For a long time, I wanted things to be
DIFFERENT. I was not satisfied with my jobs, my lot in life. I wanted
MORE. I did not understand that the limiting circumstances in which I
lived were ordained by God. I just thought I was "in a rut" or maybe
this was some kind of accidental set of circumstances that I could
overcome, if I just kept on trying. As it turned out, I did not change
things through striving at all.
Verse 18. "Was anyone called
while circumcised? Let him not become uncircumcised. Was anyone called
while uncircumcised? Let him not be circumcised."
Stay as you are. But there is an
exception. Note that Paul continued to go to the Jews and attempt
to win them to Christ. In just about
every community he first started with them and spoke long to them before he
turned to the Gentiles. He was a Jew and he spoke to Jews, yet when the
Holy Spirit revealed it was time to speak to the Gentiles, he did just
that. Yes we stay as we are, but we also follow the Holy Spirit of
God. God will teach us to be open and simply be what we are, but where
He Leads, you and I MUST follow. We’ll never know His joy any other way.
Verse 19. "Circumcision
is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing, but keeping the commandments
of God is what matters."
This was quite a blockbuster for
the Corinthians of that day. To be a Jew was thought to be a great
benefit, in that place
and time. The Pentateuch, the Ark of the Covenant, the Exodus from
Egypt, the 10-plagues, the parting of the Red Sea - all of this seems
like ancient history to us. But it was recent history for those of the
Roman Empire.
The news was still "fresh" to them, and there was an awe
in relation to the Jewish people. For Paul to say "Circumcision is
nothing" was a much bigger statement than it is now. On the other hand,
Greeks practically WORSHIPPED physical perfection. To be unmarked and
beautiful was even more important than it is today. To say "Uncircumcision
is nothing" was also a powerful and surprising statement, because the
mark of circumcision would seem like a deformity to many of the Greek
and Roman people who lived in Corinth.
Verse 20. "Let each one remain in
the same calling in which he was called."
This verse sums up the chapter. Be
very slow to change your circumstances. There are always people who
turn to religion because they don’t like their lives. I have run into
people who apparently have turned to God for a better job and more
money. I DO believe, by the way in "battlefield conversions."
That is a World War I and II (and possibly U.S. Civil War) phrase,
referring to the person who "converts" when bullets are flying and "unconverts"
when the war is over. A lot of those conversions, however, are real.
I am convinced life is tailored
to bring people to Christ. There is no other reason for the aging
process. If you have ever spent time in a convalescent home, you have
seen older people who are losing everything - health, family (they
seldom have visitors anymore), money (those places cost a LOT); their spouse is
usually dead, and most have no real hope of ever going home - their home
was probably sold by grandchildren to pay for the hospital care. The
person who has lost so much will turn in one of two directions: Outward
to the Lord, or inward into anger. The Holy Spirit is speaking to them,
urging them to choose the Lord.
I was called to the ministry
when I was about 16-years old. I responded in a couple of years by
running-off to join the military. In my 30’s, I had returned to the
Lord, and subsequently experienced a profound call to return to school,
and responded by getting a couple of degrees in Bible (A Bachelors
degree in "Religion with Emphasis in Bible" and a Teaching
Certificate). I expected that because I had responded to Him this time,
the doors to ministry would be flung open to me. That was not the case
- Such "doors" were emphatically closed, despite all my pounding on
them, and I returned to a business career, disappointed in the result.
However, the Lord opened
many doors to ministry by returning me to the business community,
in situations and with people where possibly no one
else might have been able to go. And of course, wherever we go, we
take Christ with us, because He is in us. I was able to speak to people
who would never go to Church or listen to Christian radio. A favorite
Scripture of mine has been Isaiah 43:16, where it indicates the Lord has
"pathways" we know nothing about. The reference is the Red Sea
and the people Israel. They had mountains on each side, the Red Sea in
front, and the formidable Egyptian army behind them. The Lord opened a
pathway for them right through the water!
When you are discouraged. When
nothing seems to go right for you. When you feel caught by situations
that are out of your control, remember that the Lord has "pathways" you
know nothing about. If He leaves you in your circumstances, remember He
is Good and is leaving you there for a Good purpose. And always
understand He has pathways that can lead you right out of a bad
situation - If it's the right time, He ALWAYS can lift you right out of
trouble. Just relax where you are, the best you can. Trust in Him, and
when the time is right, He WILL deliver you, for He loves you.
Verse 21. "Were you
called while a slave? Do not worry about it; but if you are able also to
become free, rather do that."
Many people feel like slaves in
some job or another, and perhaps in marriage, as well. There is an
impulse, when we receive Christ, to feel we are called to go off to some
kind of ministry. Sometimes this impulse is the Lord, but He much more
likely prepares us for many years before we are sent.
Being a slave is not pleasant.
The example of slavery made very real to us in recalling what existed in
the U.S. before the Civil War. Incredible, isn’t
it, that one person would actually feel they could "own" another
person? Yet, they did. The rationale was to legislate away the
humanity of those other persons. Many, most of the slave owners in the
U.S., convinced themselves the group they enslaved were somehow not
as human as they were. Hitler, in Germany, did the same thing, by
deciding that other "races" (there is only one race, the human race)
were somehow inferior. Internationally, we have done the same thing with our unborn
children – legislation has been passed that the "fetus" is not yet a
person, and therefore may be legally murdered – not for crimes they have
committed, but it is in their innocence that we kill our children.
Slavery in the Roman Empire, as
it was among the Greeks, was very common, and was often NOT racially
motivated. The actual motivations included money (receiving work
without payment of wages), power over other human beings, prestige
(having more slaves than the Joneses), and so on. Bad motives and very
bad treatment of other people. Yet Paul says, "stay where you are… don’t
be concerned about it." If the Lord sends you here or there, fine! But
be slow to send yourself. Start letting HIM make the decisions. That’s
the way it should be, and that is the only true of REST for your soul.
But when He sends you - Go!
You see, the real victory in our
lives is not a better job or more money. Real life does not consist of
money, or even health. When Jesus said "I am the
Way, the Truth, and the Life" (John 14:6) He was giving you the secret of
real life, which is better than externals. It is better even than
being free. We have met people who have everything they want, and
yet they are miserable for all of it. The reality of joy does not come
from circumstances, it comes from Jesus Christ, crucified, dead in the
tomb, buried,
risen, and ALIVE in your heart and mine.
Verse 22. "For he who
was called in the Lord while a slave, is the Lord's freedman; likewise he
who was called while free, is Christ's slave."
Every one of us in Christ is called
of God. God has revealed His will to every one. Where are you now?
What are you doing in the place you are in, right now? But if you make a mistake
in your choices, it is not the end. Many years ago, when I ran
away from His call, He simply used my mistake for His glory and
ultimately, for good.
How do you really KNOW the
purposes for which God called you? You may think, "I don’t remember being
CALLED at all!" We are all saved for a PURPOSE and that purpose is often
all around us and we don’t see it! So many times, I have been in
a place, and I wondered, why would God want me here? I could
think of no reason, so I decided to leave. God has blocked many
from
leaving places and circumstances which they thought were bad. It is later
we understand that God uses me in those "negative" circumstances – that’s why
we were
placed there. People see Christ in us when we see only the "trouble"
we are in. That’s why, when we try to get away, it does not work. That’s
why, when we pray, He did not seem to answer. As it has been said,
"we are often the only Bible that people around us ever read" and if
they are still "reading," we should be slow to go away from them.
Verse 23. "You were
bought with a price; do not become slaves of men."
I cannot stress enough that we
do not belong to ourselves. I am not mine; you are not yours or mine.
If we are married, our spouse is not "ours." The purchase price has been
paid for each and every one of us. We are free in our Lord. Jesus Christ gave His blood for each
and every one. We belong rightfully to Him.
Therefore, it is no longer our choice what job
we take. If we need a job, the interviewer doesn’t make
the decision – he or she is simply God’s agent in the decision as to whether or
not to hire us. It is no longer our decision when we want to move
to another part of the country or world. We have the freedom to turn to
Him in all things. In other words, we PRAY at every crossroads of
life. Have you ever noticed how stressful it is to make certain decisions? One
of the marks of the elderly is that they (we) often reach a point where
they have made one too many decisions. Decision-making, easier for the
young, cumulatively becomes much harder for those who are older. That
is one reason why it is important to turn our lives fully over to the
Lord. Life gets harder as we get older. When He
says "My yoke is easy and My burden is light"
(Matthew 6:33) He is urging us to prayerfully come to Him in our decision-making,
and in all things. He will direct you.
Verse 24. "Brethren,
each one is to remain with God in that condition in which he was called."
We are like we are, because that is how God made
each one. If we are short or tall, or have a certain intelligence
or special abilities, it is not because
we deserve the good thing, it is because of God’s grace and it is given for
HIS purposes. From that perspective, we do well if we accept what
we are,
for by doing so, we accept God Who made us. Faith, from that viewpoint,
is defined not only as 1) Believing that He is, but also
that 2) we trust He knows what He is doing, and
finally 3) we accept His love – We believe that what He
does, what He allows, is done out of love for you and for me. We
are to TRUST in
Him.
Verse 25. "Now
concerning virgins I have no command of the Lord, but I give an opinion as
one who by the mercy of the Lord is trustworthy."
Every once in awhile, we meet someone who has never been married,
and never been with another person
in such a manner. We are surprised, because it is not typical for our
society. "Modern" culture is obsessed with the concept of "fulfillment." Actually,
the true feeling of being fulfilled is never going to be realized
in marriage, employment, owning a business, career, good health, or any
of those things the "experts" tell us we must have in order to be happy.
I have read all sorts of
interpretations about what this verse actually means, by the way. When
Paul says "I have no command of the Lord" he is likely
referring to
specific commands, such as in Matthew 5 and in other places. We are not
to commit adultery, even in our minds and hearts. We are not to
divorce, except for the reason of adultery by the other person (which is
a pretty strong signal that your partner has already left the
marriage). Also included is the Lord’s observation that to marry a
divorced person is to commit adultery. Jesus was very specific that
marriage is not entered into lightly – It is a lifetime contract of love
and fidelity between a man and a woman.
Our Lord gave those
commandments, and when Paul says "Now concerning virgins, I have no
commandment from the Lord" he is dealing with marital situations not
previously discussed by the Lord. The Corinthians had asked these
questions in a letter to Paul, and Paul is prayerfully responding, not
only to them, but also to you and to me.
Verse 26. "I think then
that this is good in view of the present distress, that it is good for a man to
remain as he is."
In our culture, we generally
decide it is good to be married. And sure enough, it is. In the early
church, it was generally felt the Lord would return before the end of
the first century, AD. The "present distress" included the reality that
Caesar Nero was now on the throne of Rome, and that he was a lunatic who
did not like the "followers of the Way," as early Christians termed
themselves. He often had them tied to poles, dipped in oil, ignited,
and used them to light his garden. Most of us have not yet experienced
a threat of death in relation to our Christian experience. In the
Rome of that time, remaining single would certainly have merit. Who could bear
it if his or her beloved became a torch in Nero’s garden?
Verse 27. "Are you bound
to a wife? Do not seek to be released. Are you released from a wife? Do
not seek a wife."
The message continues – if doors
are to open in our lives; let them be the Lord’s doors and not
merely our own. There is a message in all of this, as to remaining married,
staying single; not changing jobs, retaining the status of "slave" --- and that is:
Don't be too quick to change your
circumstances if you don’t like them. I have seen, with surprise,
that when I go to another state, or change jobs, or whatever, that my
troubles (which I thought I left behind) go with me.
Some say to not be married is a
kind of "death", wherein a great source of happiness is denied us.
(Others might say to be married is a kind of death). As
Christians (or not), our first step in contemplating a life change, is
often to decide we have logically considered everything, and then we may
pray for assistance in deciding how to make the change. After we
do whatever it is we have decided, we tend to ask God’s blessing on what
we have already done.
Try this as an alternative:
Pray first. Stay before God in prayer. Don’t do anything until
God has answered, even if it takes a long time (for today's people, a
"long time" is probably something more than a day). Accept it when He
sighs in your heart and responds "No, my child; remain where you are."
For remember, He called you in your present circumstances and may well
have use for you right there! Be slow to change that which God has not
changed. Follow HIM and not merely your own ideas.
Verse 28. "But if you
marry, you have not sinned; and if a virgin marries, she has not sinned. Yet
such will have trouble in this life, and I am trying to spare you."
A beautiful part of marriage is
to love that other person so much that you want their needs, their
victories, their joy, more than your own. When we read "husbands love
your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for
her" (Ephesians 5:25) we recognize that marriage is a sort of parable,
introducing us to the incredible love that God has for His people.
Christ gave Himself up utterly, for you and for me, ultimately dying in
our place, that we might live.
Marriage can fall short of
that mark. If we are truly in love with our spouse, we overlook
their faults.
We are pleased that they are just as they are, for we love them. It is a given
that we love ourselves. If we say, "I do not like myself," it really
means "I like myself so much that I am annoyed with the body that has
been given to me – I am so much better than this." We automatically
care for ourselves, but the greatest joy in life is to utterly love
another. I am convinced that the greatest joy of life with God, after
"death" will not be knowledge (though we will know, even
as we are known), but love. Eternity will be an unending
process of falling love with the Lord, over and over again. We
will live in His
love for us; the love He has given to you and to me.
But please note what it says in Verse 28: "if you do marry, you
have not sinned!" That includes the divorced as well as the never-married.
Though some teach otherwise, we can be forgiven from even the sin of
divorce. In remarriage and in all things we must seek the Lord and
follow HIM; not our own understanding.
Verse 29. "But this I
say, brethren, the time has been shortened, so that from now on those who
have wives should be as though they had none;"
Our main focus in life should be on our
Lord. He is our permanent inheritance and everything else we enjoy is
only temporary. In eternity, we shall "be like the angels, neither
marrying or giving in marriage." Marriage is a device for this time,
this place (as a method of learning to love, and also for the bringing
of people into the world), and it should
not be the whole focus of our lives. It is obvious in Scripture that
the wife and husband are to love one another, but first we must
love the Lord, and then we are made truly able to love one another.
Verse 30. "and those who
weep, as though they did not weep; and those who rejoice, as though they
did not rejoice; and those who buy, as though they did not possess;"
Jesus made a number of statements
along the line of "let the dead bury their dead"
and so on. If I am caught up in my grief so that I cannot function, I
am probably not thinking about others and what they might need. If
I am so deliriously happy that I could not conceive of being any
happier, because I have a great spouse, a wonderful job, or whatever, I
am perhaps giving insufficient thought and prayer in relation to those
around me. Life is more than all about ourselves.
Have you ever thought about what
it means to accept the concept of Adam and Eve as literal parents of
every person? It means we are all one people, one blood, one race – we
are brothers and sisters in Adam and Eve. Same with Noah – if we accept
him as the progenitor of all of us, we are again one in him. If we are
all family, we should all love one another. We are twice born,
first in Adam and then in
Christ, it is unthinkable that our focus should be anywhere
but on the needs of other persons. What I have (or don’t have)
matters less when I start to consider your need. What we need is
one another, as Christ directs us and enables us to love.
Verse 31. "and those who
use the world, as though they did not make full use of it; for the form of
this world is passing away."
We all have choices. Assuming we
have the money this weekend, we can go to the movies, go out to dinner,
go sailing if we are near the water, or whatever. But we can be better off
if we don’t take advantage of every opportunity that comes our way.
Many spend years grabbing everything possible within reach. As we
look back on it, most of it did not make us wiser or happier, and didn't make
the lives to those around us any better, either.
"It’s my life and I can do what
I want with it" is just NOT a true statement. This is really a SELFISH
statement, and selfishness only leads to unhappiness anyway, for you and
for the people who must encounter you on an on-going basis. Full use of
this life is to receive Christ, discover His love, grow in His way, and then share
His love with those we meet.
Verse 32. "But I want
you to be free from concern. One who is unmarried is concerned about the
things of the Lord, how he may please the Lord;"
The key Scripture of my life has
been Matthew 11:28-30, "Come unto Me, all you who
labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon
you, and learn of Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart; and you shall
find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light."
How can you be without care (that is, without anxiety, nervousness,
fear, dread, and the like)? --- Come unto Him! Being married, as
in these verses, can be very good, and to address the cares of this world is not
bad thing either. The point is, we are to place Christ first
in our lives, for nothing else works right, unless we do) What would life
be without music? The answer is, it would not be as good. What would
life be without Christ? There would not be any life at all.
Verse 33. "but one who
is married is concerned about the things of the world, how he may please
his wife,
The statement of this verse is true. What’s
important when you are married is pleasing your spouse. For most,
in marriage, it often seems that we fall short of pleasing them. We have to have many cares for them; and then there
are more cares that we never even thought of yet! I always thought it
was important to vacuum at least once a year, and to dust at some point
before you leave that place and move to another. The dishes should be
washed when you run out of them. Wives don’t think like that – and it
takes a lot of concerned thought to anticipate what the other person might want at
any given time.
Verse 34. "and his
interests are divided. The woman who is unmarried, and the virgin, is
concerned about the things of the Lord, that she may be holy both in
body and spirit; but one who is married is
concerned about the things of the world, how she may please her
husband."
The wife, on the other hand, is
expected to be sympathetic when she does not see her husband all day,
and here he comes, rushing home – To see her? No, to turn on the
football game! I remember a young couple, who came next door to seek
our advice – She was in tears, and he had a hard, set look to his face.
She had spent the day, washing and ironing his shirts. He came home,
looked at them, frowned, and threw them on the floor, announcing that
they weren’t ironed as well as his mother did it! I do not know what
happened to that newly-married couple, but I am not encouraged about how
things might have turned out. And when he (the husband) comes home, she
sees him as an escape valve for the children – at last, he can be with
them for awhile and she can get some peace. But no, he needs some "time
on the Internet," so he can unwind." He’d better be careful, or she’ll
unwind him for good.
Verse 35. "This I say
for your own benefit; not to put a restraint upon you, but to promote what
is appropriate and to secure undistracted devotion to the Lord."
Life is very distracting. I have
often thought that we have all the labor-saving devices in the world,
and yet we have less time than ever. We have clothes washers and
dryers. Automatic coffee makers are in just about every kitchen. We
have microwave ovens, automatic transmissions, high-speed dental
drills. I don’t have to pound things in with a rock, like our earliest
ancestors, for I have an electric screwdriver. We don’t even have to
waste any time driving to an athletic event or an opera – we just have
to turn on the TV and watch from home. Yet there is not enough time.
The more we have, the more distracted we are. And yet, as Paul says, we
are not COMMANDED to avoid these things – there is no leash put on us,
for we are FREE in Christ. But we should look to God as to what we watch
and what we do.
Verse 36. "But if any
man thinks that he is acting unbecomingly toward his virgin
daughter, if she is past her youth, and if it must be so, let him do
what he wishes, he does not
sin; let her marry."
What do you do, when you’re
dating, and things start to get out of control? What happens if
behavior starts, that is, in Scripture, reserved for marriage? You
really have two choices: Either run, like Joseph did from Potiphar’s
wife, or marry her. Taking some "middle ground" just does not work.
Attempting to take the middle ground, that is, to get at least part of
everything you want, without the commitment of marriage, seems to be what
the people these days do – But what you want is often not what is
good for you.
Marriage involves commitment.
In years past, I often encountered couples
who lived together but were not married. Time and time again, they
would eventually marry, and they were often surprised when they went
from happiness to misery, with only a marriage ceremony in between.
There is nothing at all wrong with marriage, but there is something
wrong with us. We don’t like commitment. If I HAVE to be
somewhere, I am always a little less happy than when I WANTED to be
there. Let me give you an example: I have not smoked for
decades, and no
longer even have an urge to do it. Yet there has been an exception,
and that is when I have seen a "No Smoking" sign. Somehow, the sight of a
sign that says I cannot do something contributes to my desire to do it,
even though it is harmful for me.
Underneath it all, we all
understand that marriage is when I give up myself, in favor of another
person. I do not marry her so that I can a) conquer her, and
then b) exercise my rights over her by watching Monday Night
Football. I marry her because I love her, and show that love by
prayerfully sacrificing my life for her. Many don't achieve that and
we confess to a lack of perfection in that and other areas.
Verse 37. "But he who stands firm
in his heart, being under no constraint, but has authority over his own
will, and has decided this in his own heart, to keep his own virgin
daughter, he will do well.
Those were days of "giving in
marriage." The parents would get together, arrangements were made, the
young people were chosen for one another, and eventually, they married.
In reality, things never worked that well, but things don’t work very
well now, either. There was a theory around for centuries, that if the
system of choosing the marital parties was abandoned, and the couples
married out of love, people would be happier in marriage. In our
lifetimes, if we are old enough, we have seen "love" become the basis
for marriage, in much of the world.
Parents usually don’t choose for
their children anymore. Young people choose for themselves. How has it
worked out? Not very well. Just read the papers and see how many
spouses are divorcing one another, committing domestic violence, calling the
police on each other – such behavior is so common that 99% of it never
makes the newspapers at all. The problem was not that we were "given in
marriage." The problem is not even that we ourselves choose in
marriage. The problem is that we are sinners who are the children of
sinners and having no other choice, we marry sinners. What we really need is
Christ at the center of our lives. Then, whether we call ourselves
"Christian" or not, our decisions have a chance of succeeding --- in
Him.
Verse 38. "So then both
he who gives his own virgin daughter in marriage does well, and he who
does not give her in marriage will do better."
Not being married is lonely, at
least that is the way it is for many. "Singles" often don't quite know what to do
or say at social gatherings, but we usually have something to say to our
spouse. Intellectually and emotionally,
I don't agree that it is "better" to be unmarried. Yet, spiritually,
within that place in us where the Lord lives, we know, we REALLY know,
that married or not, it is better to place the Lord FIRST in everything,
no matter what our situation in life.
The loneliness we feel will
never be satisfied in any way, except in Him. Many have
attempted to deal with the emptiness by filling it with some experience
or another, like drinking, drugs or an "affair," as though the other
person was some kind of
"object" to fill that empty place). You and I were built
that Christ would be IN us, and for us to be in Him. Each of us only
"does well" when we are complete in Him.
Verse 39. "A wife is
bound as long as her husband lives; but if her husband is dead, she is
free to be married to whom she wishes, only in the Lord."
Notice "only in the Lord" at the
conclusion of this verse. Paul stated in another place that "all things are lawful for
(Him, but) not all things are expedient" (as in one translation). The
freedom I have found in my walk with the Lord was not expected.
I thought it would be "don’t do this; don’t do that." But I
do not feel at all constricted in my walk with Christ. Rather,
there is freedom
like never before, in this life in Christ. So, I may
do a great many things – "only in the Lord." I have learned to look to
Him first. To seek His counsel and His wisdom, before I do that
which I think I have the freedom to do. Or rather, I should say I am
"learning" not that I have "learned." Only He has the perspective, the
wisdom, and the love. If our spouse is gone, it is lawful for us to
remarry, "only in the Lord."
Verse 40. "But in my
opinion she is happier if she remains as she is; and I think that I also
have the Spirit of God."
The phrase "But in my opinion" sounds like
Paul himself is deciding this for us, and you might conclude that
somehow this section is not sanctioned by God, as is the rest of
Scripture. But then he qualifies his statement by referring to the
Spirit of God, who was in Him and led Paul to the uttering of these
words for you and for me.
You may wonder, how could these
words in Scripture be the very Word of God (when they are also very much
the words of Paul)? Note that He, the Lord, is the "omega" as
well as the "alpha." He not only started all things, but He is also
very capable of bringing all things to a successful conclusion, as well.
Paul can still be Paul; yet his words can be the very Word of God.
God can also use you, and He does, more than you know.
I think it is wonderful that the
Holy Spirit used Paul just as he was. Paul had the freedom to say, and
write, just what he wanted. He could still very much be Paul, with
opinions, concerns, uncertainties – in all, He was Paul. Yet the Holy
Spirit achieved through him exactly, precisely what was needed, in order
to bring to pass the very Word of God, for every generation since that
time. The same is true of the Apostle John, the prophet Moses, the
Apostle Matthew and Joshua. We have
the words of Amos the prophet and yet also the Word of God through him. Remember
James 5:17-18 – the amazing Elijah was just an ordinary man.
When Christ is in you, much can
be done through you as well.
The Holy Spirit, because He is
God, is able to take your words, and mine, just as they are, and use
them for good in the lives of other people. You can be Bob or Sue
(you can be YOU), and I can be Ron. Yet, if we truly come to Him, to
our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, that fulfillment we have always
wanted, will start becoming real in our lives. That hunger we secretly
had to do something meaningful for another human being, will start to
be real. Not because we made it happen (that’s where we went wrong
before), but because we have come to Him.
Taste and see that the Lord is
good, and He WILL equip you for a life filled with joy, and a life in
His service, which for most of us, will be right in the place we already
are. It is often not our circumstances that need to be changed, it is
US that need to be changed inside. And He is in the business of
doing just that – for our good and for His glory. Can we praise the
Lord in all things? We certainly can. Can we thank Him in everything?
Indeed we can, and we should. Let’s thank Him, right now.
Father, we thank You for our
circumstances of life, even though we don’t always understand them
and even
though we may not like them. We decide right now, Lord, to trust in
You. We thought we trusted in You before, but it often has not occurred
to us that when we grumble about our lives, we are not trusting in You.
Lord, we receive You now, in ways we have not received You before. Fill
us anew with Your Holy Spirit. Give us love for those around
us, even when we are rejected by them. Open our eyes that we might see
the times You use us for Your glory, in the lives of other people. We
love You, Lord, and we thank You that things are just as they are. We
often do not understand but we do love you and praise Your Holy Name.
In Jesus Name. Amen.
Ron Beckham, Pastor
Friday Study Ministries
www.FirstChurchOnTheNet.org
www.FridayStudy.org
Write to:
Ron@FridayStudy.org
"While
we were yet sinners, Christ died for us"
(Romans 5:8)
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