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I've just been at a wedding and was reminded again of one of my favourite marriage verses: "He who loves his wife loves himself." (Eph 5:28).

It occured to me that Paul could not have said this the other way around.  He who loves himself does not actually love his wife.  In the marriage covenant, other-love is self-love.  It's the only self-love allowed.  But the reverse is not true: self-love is not other-love

Now think of God.  If you really wanted to, you might want to talk about "God loving Himself."  But of course you'd only do so in the same way you'd talk about a husband loving himself.  How does a husband love himself?  He lays down his life for his wife.   How does God love Himself?  The Father commits all things into His Son's hands.

Any talk of self-love in God must be explicitly talk about triune relations - the Father loving the Son in the Spirit.  You simply can't talk about God loving Himself without emphatically underlining the multi-personal, other-centred nature of this God and this love.  Otherwise you make Him like the selfish husband.

In trinitarian theology there's an old argument about how you should proceed.  Should you "begin with the One" and then show how there are actually three Persons in this One God.  Or  should you "begin with the Three" and show how those Three are the One God?

Well surely we must acknowledge from the outset the tri-personality of this God.  Or else all that you say under the category of "The One God" will start to sound like the selfish husband who, from the overflow of His self-centredness, manages to love another!  So wherever we 'begin' three-ness must be on the table.  (More on this here).

There is a way from Trinity to aseity.  But there is no way from aseity to Trinity.

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Been talking marriage stuff with other couples recently.  Some thoughts on spouse-speak:

  • Husbands are called particularly to love.  Wives called particularly to respect (Ephesians 5:33)
  • In sin, spouses will speak the opposite of what their spouses need.
  • Therefore in anger a husband's words will kill and a wife's will emasculate.
  • The damage of harsh words is like thrusting a sword (Prov 12:18) - fast, sharp, devastating, wound-making
  • The good of healing words is like planting a tree (Prov 15:4) - slow, deep, seemingly ineffectual but incredibly fruitful

When you add all this up you get husbands who fail to plant seeds in their wives because it looks so ineffectual.  Wives then feel untouched by their husbands and in turn cool from them.  Here you have a breeding ground for resentment that will build until the knives come out.

Instead we need to engage in the ongoing work of seed planting - "I love you."  "I'm proud of you."

For more on men, women, words and planting seeds - these thoughts are always bouncing around my head on the issue.

Finally!  JW's knocked on my door this morning.  First time ever.  An older guy and a younger Polish woman.

So I threw some Gen 19:24 shapes their way. "To which Jehovah are you witnessing, the LORD out of the heavens or the LORD on the earth?"

The woman seemed quite interested.  The man said "Trinity?  Rubbish.  Paul refutes the trinity in 1 Corinthians 11:3."  So we went to 1 Corinthians 11:3

But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, the head of a wife is her husband, and the head of Christ is God.

"How does this refute the trinity?" I ask.

"Well," he explains, "God is the head over Christ which means Christ is less than God."

I say "So the Father is the head of Christ the way I'm the head of my wife?"

"That's right"

"Let me ask you, Is my wife less of a human being than me?"

"Yes" said the man.  "N.." said the woman and then changed it to a faltering yes.

I check I've heard them right.  "So my wife is less of a human being than me?"

"Well," reasons the man, "you make the decisions.  You're in charge."

"Mmmm and so I'm a greater being than my wife?"

"That's right" said the man.  The woman frowns.

I turn to her and say "You realise you're in a cult don't you."

The man grabs her by the arm and they start to make their escape.

"Keep reading the bible and keep thinking about marriage," I call to her as they move down the street.  "You know women are equal to men... AND JESUS IS EQUAL TO GOD!"

Don't think they'll be back any time soon.

But it goes to show that Arians are misogynists whatever the PC gloss.  And of course misogynists are Arians, whatever the Christian gloss.

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Today I heard one more story of a keen young gospel soldier recently married.  From what I can tell the wife is feeling abandoned, isolated and increasingly desperate.  And the husband is pressing on in his ministry service for the Lord!

If I had a minute with the young gun I'd ask him to read about John Wesley's disastrous marriage. Just after John married Molly he wrote to her from the road to inform her of his views on marriage and ministry: "I cannot understand how a Methodist preacher can answer it to God to preach one sermon or travel one day less, in a married than in a single state."  (Read more here).  It should be a cautionary tale for every young gospel soldier.

But the Wesley model is not dead.  I still remember the ringing endorsement our own marriage union gained from a leading UK evangelical while we were still engaged.  "You're marrying well there Glen," he said, "She's a doubler."  He was referring to a calculation that there are (apparently) ministry doublers and ministry halvers.  Thus the question to be asked about every prospective bride is, "Is she a doubler?"

Now that might be a question you ask a prospective PA or church worker.  But if that's the first question you want to ask your bride-to-be then, seriously, that's the proof right there.  It's not meant to be.  And you're the problem!  If the prospect of being fruitful and multiplying with this woman inspires a ten year business plan, call it off now.  The kind of multiplication God has in mind is multiplication in which you commit to each other for their sakes.  And, fellas, the more you want to use her for other ends, the less multiplication's gonna happen!

And I'm not just trying to make a cheap gag here.  The Lord has designed marriage to be a multiplying union.  But in His economy it turns out to be fruitful as and when you are brought to commit to each other in deep oneness.  I mean this physically but I mean it in every other way.  The way to ministry multiplication can only be through marriage multiplication which can only happen in and through the union and communion of husband and wife. That's got to be the beating heart of it all.

Single people should definitely seek the Lord's wisdom about who to marry.  Wesley should definitely not have married Molly.  If two people have massively different expectations of what Christian service will entail then that's a real warning sign.  But what first needs to be sorted out in our thinking is the very nature of marriage itself.  It is not a ministry multiplication venture.  It is a covenant union, joined by God, reflecting Christ to the world.  And out of this union comes a multiplication of spiritual and physical children.  Under God it cannot help but be fruitful and multiply.  But under God He will bring fruitfulness in very unexpected ways.  It will not be a multiplication one spouse's prior ministry plans.  The old individual plans must die.  This will be a new union with a totally new kind of fruitfulness - much of which simply cannot be predicted.

But an understanding of marriage that is anything like a contractual business partnership will strike at the very heart of the covenant union.

I pray for this young couple, that there would be a death to the old individualist/contractual understanding.  And that out of that death would come new life in their union and communion.  And, yes, that out of that there may even come a wonderful fruitfulness.  But it will be His fruitfulness His way.

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Some friends preparing for marriage asked for advice on money and giving as a couple.  Looking at the Scriptures together - e.g. Exodus 35-36; 2 Cor 8-9; Ephesians 5 - we came up with three principles.  A couple's giving should be generous, joyful and joint.

All giving should be generous and joyful (God loves a cheerful giver, He does not want your grudging sacrifice!).  But there's an added dimension in marriage.  If she's joyful and he's grudging it's not joint.  You need to be jointly generous and jointly joyful in it.

For the partner who wants to give more, this calls for a patient trust in the grace of Jesus.  Trust that He is your justification (not your level of sacrifice), and trust that only His grace can motivate the joyful generosity you long to see.  The more generous spouse will be tempted to lay down the law in this situation.  But on the contrary, this is a great opportunity to model the grace of Jesus and to see a real gospel motivation grow in their partner.

After discussing these three principles I wonder whether they can apply to many different areas of married life. Sex life, use of time, moving for gospel service...

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I looked at heretical marriages here.   Hopefully marriages are wonderfully healthy and Athanasian.  If they are they will have a proper co-ordination of unity, distinction and equality (they should be in the middle of the triangle).

But when they go wrong they become either Tritheist, Modalist or Arian.  To recap...

At position A we have the Arian marriage: they are united and distinct but not equal.  Here you have the Noble Rescuer married to a Poor Unfortunate.  Or an Abuser and a Victim.  Or your garden variety Superior Patroniser and their Silent Admirer.

At position B we have the tritheist marriage: they are equal and distinct but not united.  This couple runs on parallel tracks, more like a working co-operative than a marriage.

At position C we have the modalist marriage: they are united and equal but not distinct.  Here the couple get lost in each other.  Not in the Christ-like way of losing your life in order to gain it.  This is more like strategic people-pleasing - squashing their distinctives for the sake of an unhealthy one-ness.

Anyway, read here for more.

What about families?  Well I aint no expert.  But wouldn't it go something like this?

A tritheist family have 300 enagagements a week and no time together.  The children growing up have a lot of 'freedom' but they don't feel 'known'.  Christmas is hard because it's impossible to get everyone under one roof.

A modalist family have very few outside friends - everything's 'kept in the family.'  Members think in the collective: "My family says...  My family wants..."  When the kids hit adolescence they will long for a bit of freedom but be terrified of leaving the nest.  Christmas might be cosy (outwardly) but it's highly pressured.

An Arian family is dominated by an exasperating parent (i.e. this is not godly Ephesians 6:4 leadership - this is a power trip).  The children will feel the opposite of the tritheist children - they have no freedom but the interest their parent(s) take will either be abusive or manipulative.  The abusive variation is not difficult to explain.  The manipulative variation is easily seen when you think about one of Arius's big problems.  For him, Christ exists for the sake of the world, since what God really wants is a world, therefore He needs Christ to act as go-between. In the Arian family something similar can happen.  The children become mediators of the parents' desires for success in the world - living through their kids and all that.  Everythings a power play.  And Christmas is just plain dangerous.

What's interesting is that, just as in trinitarian theology modalism and Arianism are not so different, so too in families.  A modalist family will probably not survive adolescence without turning into an Arian family.  Once differences are asserted by those growing up, maintaining this unhealthy oneness is going to require the imposition of force or silencing of dissent.  You will probably see some serious scape-goating here.

Of course there are families that are worse than these!  You can think of many 'families' that experience only distinction.  But of course, many families are also healthy and exist towards the middle of the triangle.  And what's more, when we go wrong it won't always be in the same direction.  I guess we can identify with all of these errors to one degree or another.  And our experience of these types will change over time.

Imagine a woman who's grown up in a modalist-become-Arian family.  After years of scapegoating she learns that she is a problem person that no-one would want to know.  If she enters marriage - a tritheist one might suit her fear of intimacy.

Or imagine a man growing up in a tritheist family.  When he finds Miss Right he determines that he's going to get the intimacy he's always craved.  They have a modalist marriage and raise a modalist family... until the wife or kids want to assert some freedom/independence/distinctions.  And then we enter Arianism.

Anyway, I aint no family therapist.  And I've only read a couple of books on family.  So take those sketches for what they're worth and feel free to shoot me down or add comments...

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At some point I want to re-jig and expand the marriage stuff we did.  Week 1 is where I'd change things the most (I'd probably do more stuff like this and this). But for those who are interested, here is Handout 1.  Handout 2 is here.  I'll post Handout 3 tomorrow.

Marriage Course 1

INTRO – Not a bubble bath!

Lifting the lid on the fairytale.  It’s really a battle!

The culture says it's meant to feel like a relaxing bubble bath.

Instead it feels like a scalding hot bath full of antiseptic, and you are covered in cuts and bruises.

But it's very healing!

Marriage and the Cross – dying to live

You can live to self and your marriage will die, or you can die to self and your marriage will live.

Your spouse has the power to harm and heal you like no other.

Marriage depends on change.  And it starts with you.

Here's our prayer for the course - it's for each of us individually to pray:

Psalm 139:23-24:

23 Search me, O God, and know my heart;
test me and know my anxious thoughts.

24 See if there is any offensive way in me,
and lead me in the way everlasting.

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DISCUSSION 1

What picture of marriage did you have when you began?  Where did that come from?

How were these expectations changed by the reality of marriage?

Have you seen personal change for the better in your spouse which you can encourage them about?

Do you have a sense of where the LORD is calling you to die?  Pray together about it (using Ps 139).

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What is a marriage? Gospel presentation

One man and one woman bound together the way Christ is united to His church.

It is a gospel proclamation:

"All that I am I give to you, all that I have I share with you."

Christ says that to you.  Do you know this to be true?

Now you say it to each other...

... and the world looks on and sees the gospel.

Your marriage preaches

For good or ill!  But you can't stop it preaching

You may be preaching a lousy Christ to your wife, but you can't stop preaching Christ to her

You may be preaching a lousy gospel to the world, but you can't stop preaching

Marriage is momentary.

We think that Christ and the church is like marriage.

No - Christ and the church is the true marriage.  We've got the copy.

You marriage therefore is not ultimate

Remember - you will not be married to your spouse in heaven (You'll be great friends though!)

We are not to build a World of Our Own.

The dangers of feeding each other’s sins - Ephesians 2:3!

Interlocking neuroses!

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DISCUSSION 2

How do you feel about the fact your marriage preaches the gospel?

How do you feel about the fact your marriage is momentary?

Are you in danger of seeking too much from your marriage / your spouse?

Are you aware of areas where you demand or allow sinful patterns in your marriage?  What needs to change in you to address this?

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What is a marriage?  Covenant union.

God’s covenant “I will be your God, you will be my people”

Unconditional love – ‘I love you because I love you.’

Deuteronomy 7:7-8

Conditionality is the Killer!!

Think of ways in which you approach your spouse conditionally.

Usually resentment will be a good indicator of prior conditionality.

A troubled couple say "We don't love each other any more."  The solution: "Love each other then!"

“Don’t love her because she’s beautiful, love her to make her beautiful.”

Unconditional love has power to cleanse and rename  (Eph 5:26; Isaiah 62:4)

Vision for your spouse is crucial - Christ works with a vision for the church

In the context of unconditional love, there is the power to reshape our identity.

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HOMEWORK

Individually, think and pray through the following questions (keeping in mind Eph 2:3)

What are my cravings?

How am I using my spouse to gratify them?

What is the shape of my flesh?  Am I naturally needy, closed, loud, withdrawn, sharp, cold, lazy, driven?

How does this affect my spouse?  How does it play out in the marriage?

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Together, read through Ephesians 5:22-33:

How are husband and wife supposed to be different?

How are husband and wife supposed to be united?

How are we going?  Are we different where we need to be different? And one where we need to be one?

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15

Last time we saw that a married couple are supposed to be one.  But not every kind of oneness is healthy.  So what kind of oneness should we pursue?

Our way forward is to examine the oneness of the triune God.  In part one we thought about the missio Dei.  The Father, Son and Spirit share a oneness that includes and is upheld by an outgoing spreading goodness.  Their oneness is in mission.  Our marriages should be the same.  We have a unity that is going somewhere.  We don't 'live in a world of our own' but our oneness is for the sake of mission and mission for the sake of a proper unity.

In this post we'll think a bit more about the unity of the trinity.  In particular we'll think about how an orthodox account of the trinity avoids certain heresies that can be mapped onto recognizable marital problems.

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How to avoid Trinitarian heresies

Any orthodox account of the trinity needs to be able to answer three questions.  How are the three Persons united?  How are they distinct?  And how are they equal?

If you can only answer one of these questions well you're at the corner of the triangle and you don't really have any kind of trinity.

If you can answer all three questions well you are inside the triangle - hopefully in the centre.  You are orthodox.

If you can only answer two of them then you're at A, B or C - along one of the sides of the triangle.  You have two aspects of a good trinitarian theology but not three.  In other words, you're a heretic.

At position A you have subordinationism (also known as Arianism).  Here the Persons are united and distinct but not equal.  So Jesus is the first creature.  God still mediates all his business with creation through him.  But actually Jesus is on the creature side of the Creator-creature line.  He is decidedly inferior to God.

At position B you have tritheism.  Here the Persons are distinct and equal but not united.  You have effectively three gods.  They might defer to each other and work really well as a team.  But there's no substantial unity.

At position C you have modalism (also known as Sabellianism).  Here the Persons are united and equal but not distinct.  Effectively you have only one Person who wears different masks at different times.  The oneness is an all-consuming oneness that swallows up any ideas of difference/otherness/mutuality etc.

Where you want to be is in the centre of the triangle.  There you can respond to all the questions with the same answer:

How are the Persons united?  Asymmetrical mutual indwelling (i.e. love!)

How are the Persons distinct?  Asymmetrical mutual indwelling (i.e. love!)

How are the Persons equal?  Asymmetrical mutual indwelling (i.e. love!)

But if you get this wrong you drift away from the centre and towards one of the heresies.

I would suggest that if you attempt to answer those three questions in three quite different ways you'll run into trouble.  But that's a different post.

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How to avoid Marital heresies

Now there are two relationships especially in which we share in this kind of loving, mutual indwelling.  The relationship of Christ and the church.  And the relationship of husband and wife.

In this post we'll limit ourselves to the marriage side of things (though obviously this is derivative of the Christ-church relationship).

So let's think about what it means in marriage to have a healthy sense of unity, distinction and equality.

It's worth asking the questions of your own marriage:

On Unity:

Is there an intimacy between you deeper than what you experience in any other human relationship?

Do you have a oneness that is going somewhere (hopefully the same place!)?

To put it another way, Do you have a sense of 'face-to-face' unity and 'side-by-side' unity?

On Equality:

Do you look at your spouse as your equal?  Do you honour them, upholding and valuing them in love?  Or is there a sense of superiority - contempt even - residing in your heart?

Do you both play an equal part in where you're going as a couple?  (Even though according to different roles)

On Distinction:

Does your relationship foster or smother distinctive strengths in each other?

Does your marriage foster or smother distinctive roles of head and body?

We have to die to our selfish, individualist selves when we marry.  But as you serve one another in love, is your relationship drawing out the real you?

If you're doing well in only one of these categories, it's unlikely you actually have a marriage!  If you're doing well in all three then hopefully the distinction, equality and unity are mutually informing each other in a healthy way.  If you've got two but not three of these areas covered (which is where all marriages tend to be to one degree or another) then you've got problems.

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What do Marital heresies look like?

These are the kinds of 'heretical' marriages we tend towards:

At position A we have the Arian marriage: unity and distinction but not equality.  This might take the form of  a Noble Rescuer married to a Poor Unfortunate.  Or an Abuser and a Victim.  Or your garden variety Superior Patroniser and their Silent Admirer.  Here we have the mystery of how such unity is maintained amidst all this inequality.  But codependency is a fascinating study!

There are all sorts of no-go areas within and outside the marriage since the power structure must be maintained.

The danger of an affair here is either the arrogance of the more powerful partner who feels entitled to it, or the amazement of the weaker partner to find someone "who actually respects me!"

In traditional churches, Arian marriages may go unnoticed as a problem.

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At position B we have the tritheist marriage: equal and distinct but not united.  The couple run on parallel tracks, more like a working co-operative than a marriage.  There is no 'face to face' closeness and this might well stem from a deep fear of personal intimacy.

In all this shallow engagement, the danger of an affair is the distinct possibility that either one will find someone "who actually touches my soul!"

In busy churches, tritheist marriages may go unnoticed as a problem.

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At position C we have the modalist marriage: united and equal but not distinct.  Here the couple get lost in each other.  Not in the Christ-like way of losing your life in order to gain it.  This is more like strategic people-pleasing, but they may not be aware they do it.  They won't really know who they are but tend to think and act in the collective.

They have learnt well the no-go areas within the marriage and are very threatened by no-go areas outside it.

In these marriages there may be an abiding fear of an affair that is completely unjustified.  But the danger of the affair comes when one of them finds someone "who actually appreciates my gifts!"

In nice churches, modalist marriages may go unnoticed as a problem.

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Now these are sweeping generalizations and there are massive margins for error.  I'd be glad to hear any feedback you might have.  But, as with trinitarian theology, it's always good to be aware of which particular heresy you're most in danger of falling into.

It also means, when faced with a Superior Patroniser, you don't have to call them a smug git.  You can call them an Arian!

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6

Husband and wife are meant to be one.  Nothing could be clearer.

Matthew 19:5-6:

The two shall become one flesh.

They are no longer two but one.

God has joined together.

Let man not separate.

Oneness is a priority for married couples.  The question is - what kind of oneness?  Because not every kind of unity is good unity.

We've thought a little bit about one kind of dysfunctional unity - a couple feeding each other's sins.

Or there's the Rescuer-Victim relationship or the Abuser-Victim relationship where the spouses can express and really feel a deep oneness.  It's a sick oneness, but a oneness nonetheless.

Then there's the pathologically jealous spouse who is forever suspecting infidelity because their partner has interests outside the home.  They are looking for a kind of unity.

Or there's the subtle and unspoken compromises we make with our spouses - I won't challenge you here, if you don't challenge me there. For the sake of unity we decide not to 'rock the boat'.

Or there's the couple who sing the Seeker's song:

Close the door, light the light, we're staying home tonight

Far away from the bustle and the bright city lights

Let them all fade away, just leave us alone

And we'll live in a world of our own

We'll build a world of our own, that no one else will share

All our sorrows we'll leave far be-hind us there

And I know that you'll find, there'll be peace of mind

When we live in a world of our own

Here's unity for unity's sake, with nothing larger to guide or direct them.

So unity in a marriage is not good in itself.  There are some really unhealthy ways in which the two can become one.  So what kind of oneness does Jesus want us to have?

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The trouble with all the above concepts of unity is that none of them model God's unity.  In this post and the next we will address that problem.  In this post we'll think about how God's unity models to us a union that's not for its own sake.  In the next post we'll think about how the Trinity models a unity that is held together with distinctions in equality.

So, first, the unity of the triune God is not unity simply for its own sake.  It's a unity that's going somewhere.  This is what the missio Dei is all about.  God is the ultimate Missionary.  His very being is a sending forth of Self in His Son and Spirit.  To wind the clock back into the depths of eternity you find that God is always the Sending God.  There is not a God who then decides to go out on mission.  There is only the Missionary God - the God who speaks His Word / shines His Light / sends His Son.  This is not just what He does - it's Who He is.  God's unity is a relational unity of Persons who go out and draw in.  God's unity is (in Richard Sibbes' phrase) a "spreading goodness".  It is of the nature of this unity to be on the move.  On mission even.  And it's of the nature of this overflowing unity to draw others in.  It's not a unity that excludes others, but a unity that seeks to bring more into its own way of love. God's unity is a unity on mission.

And this is the kind of unity we are to look for in marriage.  Our unity is not supposed to be one that closes the door so we can 'live in a world of our own'.  It's a oneness that is for others.  For natural children and spiritual children - those drawn to the Father through our marital witness to Christ.

This paints our marriages on a far larger canvas.  The purpose is not simply to become one.  The purpose is to have a oneness that's going somewhere - i.e. a oneness that witnesses Christ to the world.  An undefined oneness can easily turn into idolatry.

(Note that this is exactly parallel to unity in the church - ecumenism for ecumenism's sake is not the unity which we should seek.  We pursue unity in mission - not unity in unity.)

And just as God's unity is a habitable unity - opened out in the Spirit to those adopted in the Son, so our marriages are to be habitable unities - opened out to spiritual and natural children.

We shouldn't pursue a oneness that then has mission as an afterthought.  We should pursue a missionary oneness - a oneness for the sake of mission and a mission that forges and reinforces the oneness.

If we pursue this kind of oneness, when the time is right we'll be able to challenge sin and complacency in marriage.  If done in wisdom and love, such challenges don't compromise but rather uphold true marital unity.

If we pursue this kind of oneness, interests outside the home won't be thought of as intrinsically threatening but quite possibly as opportunities for our missionary oneness.

If we pursue this kind of oneness, we won't make our marriages into our own private heaven - seeking the kind of relational nourishment that can and should only come from Christ.  Instead we will experience the kind of healthy marital oneness that exists for a purpose far more fulfilling than cosy nights in.

More later...

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I've just realised my Thursday re-post was something I had already reposted just 6 months ago.  Sorry about that.  That really is cheating.  Here - have something that didn't make it into the marriage course on Monday.

Dita Von Teese (whose marriage to Marilyn Manson lasted one year) said this about marriage vows:

I love the ritual of being married but if I married again I'd change the vows from 'Til death us do part' to 'I'm really in love with you right now.'

Which is yet another reason why I'm glad I made my marriage vows in the form "I will".

Is it true, my American friends, that you usually use the form "I do" for wedding vows?  Is that really the best form for a covenant oath?

But really, I'm in no position to judge.  I used the Book of Common Prayer vows for my wedding, which involves the promise to 'worship' my wife.  I distinctly remember Tim VB talking me into this.  I kept saying "But Tim, aren't there commandments against this?" And he just said "Nah, do it!"

I'm easily led astray.

What about you, did you vow anything interesting to your spouse?

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