Or do
you not know, brethren (for I speak to those who know the law), that the law
has dominion over a man as long as he lives? For the woman who has a husband is
bound by the law to her husband
as long as he lives. But if the husband dies, she is released from the law of her husband. So then if, while her husband lives, she marries
another man, she will be called an adulteress; but if her husband dies, she is
free from that law, so that she is no adulteress, though she has married
another man. Therefore, my brethren, you also have become dead to the law
through the body of Christ, that you may be married to another—to Him who was
raised from the dead, that we should bear fruit to God. – Romans 7.1-4
Marriage in an
integral part of the New Testament. The church is called the bride of Christ. Marriage
is called a picture of salvation. Here marriage is used to illustrate man, the
Law, and our relationship to God.
Paul writes of
marriage. A woman is bound no her husband as long as he is alive. That reminds
us of just how serious marriage is. If a woman marries another while her
husband is still alive she is an adulteress. (By the way, that same terminology
is used elsewhere for an unfaithful husband). I know it a little old fashioned
now, and that many would disagree with me, but I think that teaches that
marriage is well and truly forever.
But that's not
really the point here so I'll leave it for now.
The point is that
God uses yet another illustration to show the break with the past when we get
saved. Not only do we have a new boss, we have a new marriage partner. We could
not just simple divorce the marriage to the Law. Marriage is ‘till death do us
part’ so death had to take place to break that bond.
But now, through
the body of Christ we died to the Law. It is a new us who is married to Christ.
We, as the church of the redeemed, are the Bride of Christ.
I once heard an
illustration I think fits here. Pardon the fact that it is ‘old fashioned’ and
based on an ‘old fashioned’ view of the home. There was a woman who fell in
love with a man. He seemed the perfect husband. At first everything was great.
But within a few weeks her husband gave her a list of things he expected out of
her. It was an impossible list. Every day she worked as hard as she could, but
the work was never done before her husband got home. She was in a constant
state of despair and frustration because she couldn’t measure up to his
expectations.
Eventually her
husband died. Time went and she met another man and married him. Life was a
dream, not list of rules or requirements. When she asked him about it he said ‘I
am happy enough that you just love me.’
A few weeks later
she was tidying up and came across a piece of paper in a drawer. When she unfolded
it she saw that it was the list that her first husband had given here. When she
was done reading it she laughed as she realised that she was doing everything
on the list and more!
Why? Because now
she was working out of love, not because she had a list she had to keep. Love
motivated her to serve.
And so it goes
with the Law and Christ. One binds us to a list of rules, the other frees us to
serve in love.
Praise God for
being ‘married to another!’
2 comments:
Roger, this is a fantastic blog post. You are biblically correct and willing to bring wrath on your head from those who want to encourage serial monogamy (multiple marriage partners but one at a time.)
Your comments on the fact that we are no longer "married" to the Mosaic law because in Jesus we died to the old self but we love and serve the Lord because "He first loved us." The guys in the Orientation class yesterday wanted me to explain the difference in the Old Testament and the New Testament. This was one point I made. Keep up the good work on your blog.
Thanks for the encouragement Tipp
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