QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON MARRIAGE
QUESTION #222 -- Is it
contrary to the Scriptures for a
Christian to marry a
non-Christian?
ANSWER #222 -- It certainly is.
(Read 2 Corinthians 6:14.)
* * *
QUESTION #223 -- The Bible
commands a man to leave his
father and mother and to cleave
unto his wife. But does not this
same command apply to the woman,
the wife, as well?
ANSWER #223 -- Yes, the
commandment applies to the wife
just the same as to the husband,
and the wife has no more right
to cleave to her father and
mother after she marries a
husband than the husband has to
subject his wife to the demands
of his paternal home. It is the
same for both.
* * *
QUESTION #224 -- Does the
thirtieth chapter of Numbers
mean that a young woman or wife
should obey her father or
husband before she obeys the
Lord, and does this apply to our
day?
ANSWER #224 -- The purpose of
the provisions of this chapter
was to make as full protection
as possible against rash vows,
and the arrangement was for the
special protection of young
women and wives. Vows are of
little worth at any time, seeing
they are in substance
substituting one's own word for
the word of the Lord, and they
are particularly dangerous very
much of the time. They lead to
strain and confusion in the
individual himself, and also to
the committing of greater evils
(like Herod who murdered John
the Baptist for his oath's sake)
in order to keep them. And at no
time was it ever anyone's duty
to obey any man in preference to
obeying God. For God is the only
God, and to Him only we owe
supreme allegiance.
* * *
QUESTION #225 -- What scripture
do you consider justifies
remarriage after divorce?
ANSWER #225 -- Matthew 19:3-9.
* * *
QUESTION #226 -- I know a woman
who sinned greatly against her
husband and family. Now she
wants to be a Christian, out is
haunted by a feeling that she
must confess her wrong and by
the fear that such confession
will bring great injury and
hate. Is she doomed to be lost?
What must she do?
ANSWER #226 -- Sin often exacts
a tremendous price in remorse
and fear. This woman should give
her heart to God and trust for
His mercy and pardon, and then
she will know what and when to
do what she must do, and God
will help her, and prepare the
way for her. She is by no means
doomed to be lost, and ought by
all means to make her peace with
God at once.
* * *
QUESTION #227 -- I have heard
husbands and wives admit they
are jealous. I have always
thought that sanctification
eradicates jealousy. But those
who hold otherwise quote from
the Scriptures that God is a
jealous God. What is the truth
about this matter?
ANSWER #227 -- Like most words,
jealousy requires some
modification to express all that
is implied in it. Let us start
on the upper end of the line:
God is a jealous God, so the
Scriptures inform us. But what
does this mean? It means that
God demands to be the sole
possessor of our affections, and
that He will not share us with
any other person or object of
worship. To say that we may
worship idols and bow down to
the false prophet and that God
will not care is to misrepresent
the God of the Bible. But on the
other hand to say that God will
take away any person we love or
any object we cherish just in
order to hold us to Himself is
exaggeration. He is jealous only
when our love becomes
inordinate. Now come to human
jealousy: no husband or wife is
willing to share the affections
of his mate with a third person,
and we do not expect him to do
so. And when there is evidence
of infidelity of one party or
the other we do not condemn the
innocent one for being hurt and
feeling misplaced. But there is
a sinful jealousy that exists
without cause, and this sort is
nonexistent in the Christian
whose heart is pure.
* * *
QUESTION #228 -- I heard a
preacher preach that people who
have been divorced and married
again should separate, no matter
for what cause they were
divorced. Just what can anyone
do in a case where they were
divorced in their sinful days
and before they had light on the
matter and are now married
again) with children, and all
are trying to live the Christian
life?
ANSWER #228 -- I think the
preacher was speaking as though
he were wise beyond what is
written, and I advise you to
forget what he said. As to what
can be done in cases like you
mention: another wrong would not
make a former wrong right. mist
God for mercy and pardon and for
grace to live right and go on as
you are-there is nothing else
you can do.
* * *
QUESTION #229 -- I Corinthians
7:14 reads as though the
children of sanctified parents
are born holy, but this cannot
really be the meaning.
ANSWER #229 -- No. The meaning
is that the marriage described
is legal and the children are
legitimate.
* * *
QUESTION #230 -- What can
Christians do when their married
life is unbearably unhappy? Is
there anything to do but just
"grit one's teeth and bear it,"
no matter how acute the problem
becomes? The persons I have in
mind have been married a long
time and have several children.
For the children's sake if for
no other reason, they would not
even consider a divorce. Yet
they have been very unhappy
right from the first of their
marriage. They have honestly
tried, with all Christian
charity, to make a "go" of it,
but each year seems more unhappy
than the last. The husband has
become a nervous wreck whose
irritableness and harsh words
keep the wife in a constant
state of fear and dread. Her
health has collapsed as a result
of child-bearing and the
enforced neglect of poverty
until she is not in a fit
condition to be a wife at all.
Under these conditions what
would you do?
ANSWER #230 -- In the first
place, I cannot admit all the
premises. I believe that even
one good sanctified Christian
can make a go of a marriage
proposition, although of course
it is much easier when two
co-operate. There are many
complications even in the lives
of the most fortunate people,
but the grace of God makes
husbands and wives overcomers,
and that almost without regard
to complications. The only cure
for family trouble that I know
of is just the same as the cure
for drunkenness and the use of
tobacco -- just plain,
old-fashioned full salvation
through faith in the Lord Jesus
Christ. The trouble is people
become selfish and sentimental
and want some easy kind of
happiness, whereas genuine peace
and joy come from abandoning
everything to God and burying
one's personal preferences in
the will and love of God. The
people of whom you speak are of
course to be pitied in the
fullest sense. But that weak
pity which would make their
trouble anything but sin and
their remedy anything but grace
would be cruel as well as weak.
There is a way for them, and it
is the simple way of the cross
and the Pentecostal experience.
* * *
QUESTION #231 -- Could we safely
infer, by taking the negative
view of Matthew 19:6 that some
married people are not married
in the sight of God?
ANSWER #231 -- No, such an
inference is neither correct nor
safe, and any attempt to hold
and propagate it will add
confusion. Marriage has to do
with human society, as well as
with individual relation, and to
hold that people who are
divorced and remarried without
having had scriptural ground for
divorce are not married is an
insult to common sense and in
the way of an effort to loosen
the bands of human society and
throw the world into chaos. I
always advise divorced people,
no matter what the occasion of
their divorce, not to remarry.
Practically all who do so have
trouble with their own
conscience later, and I believe,
for the sake of Christian
influence, they should live as
Paul the apostle did. But after
they marry, there is nothing
they can do to atone for the
mistakes of the past except to
do all within their power to
make their present marriage a
success. And with the exception
of a few overzealous reformers
here and there, this is the
position held by leaders and
teachers in the Protestant
Church in all ages.
* * *
QUESTION #232 -- I know a
married couple who both claim to
be Christians. The wife lives a
good, humble life, keeps her
house clean and sanitary and
does all she can to make her
home pleasant. But the husband
is kind only in the presence of
others. In his home he is
unbearable. He treats his wife
as though she were just a
drudge, and shows her no
kindness at all. If he does not
change the home is going to be
broken up. Can't you say
something that will help?
ANSWER #232 -- Husbands and
wives should both remember that
it takes two to make marriage
successful, and as Christians
they should not forget that the
same courtesy that makes them
acceptable in business and shop
is required of them at home.
There may be a lot of silly
shallow excuses for boorishness,
but the fact is that any one who
is truly a Christian can find
grace to be just and pleasant,
and if he finds it hard to do
so, he should make it the
subject of prayer. The failure
of marriage and home is too
serious a matter for any one to
allow. Two Christians can make
their home a happy home, and for
the love of Christ they should
do so.
* * *
QUESTION #233 -- How far can a
Christian woman go in concession
to her unconverted husband as
regarding places of worldly
amusement?
ANSWER #233 -- I think every
person will have to work out
this program for himself. To say
there is no problem here would
be foolish, and the line between
Christian charity and hurtful
compromise is too narrow for
general definition. My mother,
for example, would never permit
even a deck of cards in the
house, although she was not a
Christian in my childhood days.
But I have heard the story of
the drunken husband who brought
his evil companions to his home
in the night and compelled his
wife to get up and prepare a
meal. And her patience, so the
story goes, won the husband and
his companions to the Lord. But
strain as I may, I cannot
imagine my mother doing anything
like that, and yet she impressed
her lessons of sobriety and
honesty in a way her children
could not forget.
* * *
QUESTION #234 -- Please tell me
why Matthew 19:9 gives one
ground upon which divorce may be
secured, while Luke 16:18 does
not give any grounds, but seems
to forbid it.
ANSWER #234 -- There is no
inconsistency here. Luke stops
with statement of general
prohibition, while Matthew
gives, in addition to the
general prohibition, the one
exception allowed. One must take
all the Bible says on any
subject before he can justly say
what the Bible actually teaches
regarding it.
* * *
QUESTION #235 -- If miscegnation
or the mixing of races was a sin
in the days of Joshua and Ezra,
would it still be a sin today to
mix the blood of different
nations? (Joshua 23:12; Ezra
10:10).
ANSWER #235 -- If by sin you
mean an act that brings
individual condemnation, then I
would have to say no, the mixing
of the races is not sin And I
base this judgment upon two
things:
(1) The emphatic statement that
God "hath made of one blood all
nations of men for to dwell on
all the face of the earth" (Acts
17:26); and (2) the implied
equality of men on the basis of
the universal adaptability of
the gospel. The limitations
under which the ancient Jews
lived in this respect passed,
along with the old ceremonies,
limitations of diet, etc. This
answers all the question you
asked, and I suppose I should
stop here. But to avoid any
possible misunderstanding, I
think it should be said that,
although legal from the New
Testament point of view,
miscegnation does not stand up
very well (except within pretty
circumscribed limits) under the
test of expediency. The fact is,
marriage, to be successful, has
to respect a lot of things, and
should ordinarily not be
required to bridge any great
distances of race, culture,
religion or social and financial
status between its contracting
parties.
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