Monday, December 1, 2008

Something to ponder.....

I took this out of a good friend of mine's blog....
Take a moment to read and reflect:

Being in love,” that intoxicating feeling, is sublime, heady. It elevates us, changes our perceptions of the world, of our present, of our future. Our heart sings. Our dreams for ourselves ring with angelic voices.
But it can’t last; it isn’t meant to. It’s like learning an instrument. We hear an acoustic guitar and want to play it. There’s excitement at the beginning, the potential, the thrill. The learning process begins - and soon we find “this isn’t easy.” Playing an instrument requires commitment, focus, determination - and a whole lot of time.
The halo melts away. It is at this point that our will must engage - the will to believe, to faithe, to trust that we do love it even if we don’t feel it.
If we try to hang on to that halo we won’t advance. If we cling to that in-love-ness, the mere feelings, we will be using our will to cling to the mere romance of it rather than being propelled into deeper knowledge and proficiency. We’ll continue to romanticize - and we’ll be disappointed time and again as our largely illusory dream slams up against reality.I’m not knocking those in-love feelings. But feelings come and go, and yet love doesn’t have to.
I’ve often heard people say the Greek word “agape” means “God’s love.” But it doesn’t, since John 3:19 says “This is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved (agape) darkness rather than light.” That means they were wholeheartedly committed to darkness. Their love was a choice of their will.
That’s what God’s love is like. It is the wholehearted, committed giving of Himself even at His own expense.
The story is told of the great violinist Itzhak Perlman having a fan approach him and say, “I would give my life to play like you.” His reply? “Lady, I did.”
Marriage can be a lot of work at times. It is a giving over of oneself to a partnership, a union. That’s going to be costly at times, because to say “yes” to one thing is to say “no” to many other things. For me to be committed to playing music and writing means all of my work/hobby time is taken up with those things. I don’t have time to be a great photographer or fly model airplanes as well.
We vow to love, honor, cherish, till death do us part. That’s costly to the flesh that wants to do what it feels. Our flesh wants to avoid pain and find pleasure. That’s natural; that’s just the way the flesh is. Jesus, in the days of His flesh, attempted to avoid the pain of the Crucifixion there in the Garden.
But if we, like Jesus, recognize that we are not meant to be flesh-driven, that pleasure and pain are both included in the package, it will take much of the sting out of sorrows; This is going to be very hard at times, but in Christ I am filled full with everything I need to follow through.
In the end what we find, in marriage, guitar playing, and following Christ, is a deeper halo - not our dream for ourselves but “God’s idea of us when He devised us” (George MacDonald). We finally find the identity, and the daily expression of it, that we were made for. That’s real satisfaction and fulfillment.








.....And once we have gone through the Gethsemane of our marriage, our test, and stand up in choice and say to God, “Not my will, but thine be done,” and endure in faith whatever it is we go through, we come out on the other side with new abilities, new character, deeper faith - and a true, real love for our spouse.
The world, to a great extent, doesn’t know this. I’d say most Christians don’t know it; the divorce rate of professing Christians isn’t any different than unbelievers.
This principle applies in anything we endeavor to do. Idea, and desire, then outworking (and often losing desire) by faith, and then a deeper experience - a burgeoning mastery of the thing. Learning a language, studying an instrument, writing a song, being married, having children - all these are done by the same principle. People who quit often have seriously mistaken ideas of what marriage, or children, or learning an instrument is like (we all have mistaken ideas, but some are catastrophic). People who marry for “being in love” and don’t hold to the vow of “til death do us part” often divorce and remarry for “being in love,” once again expecting those love-feelings and the enchantment to continue endlessly. Then when it dies again, they jump ship again.......

1 comments:

More Christ Like said...

>>>But feelings come and go, and yet love doesn’t have to.

So very true. Why don't you post a link to your friends blog we can all see what other goodies they have over there : )

Here is some stuff you might enjoy on divorce and remarriage.

Leslie McFall has an interesting way to deal with the so-called exception clause in Matthew 19:9 that some hold allows for divorce and remarriage in the case of marriage unfaithfulness.

He has written a 43 page paper that reviews the changes in the Greek made by Erasmus that effect the way Matthew 19:9 has been translated. I reviewed McFall's paper at Except For Fornication Clause of Matthew 19:9. I would love to hear some feedback on this position.

I also have list of good conservative articles on the subject of Divorce and Remarriage.