Deuteronomy 24
In Genesis 2, God said that it was not good for Adam to
be alone. The solution to that “not good” came in the creation of
the woman. At the end of the day, the Lord spoke the words “very
good” over all His works of creation.
But the world changed in Genesis 3 as the man and the
woman became partners in hearing the voice of an enemy rather than
the voice of God. With the fall of mankind, sin polluted every
relationship, even marriage. Various lusts began to carry the
descendants of Adam and Eve in ways of life that brought more death.
Yet the Lord's eternal purpose for His people was life,
not death. Another marriage would eventually be made by a much better
husband, That relationship between Christ and the church would be
free of the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of
life, for Jesus would sanctify His bride. One day she would be
without spot or blemish or any such thing, for Christ would fully
cleanse her by His Word and Spirit.
In the days of preparation for the coming of this great
Husband, God gave Israel a Law which could have worked for great
blessing in the land if the people of God had followed it. But they
would not limit their passions. They pursued entangling affections
despite His warnings that they would pollute the land by their
unbridled desires.
By the time the Messiah came, Israel had such a casual
attitude about divorce, that the religious leaders seemed to have
lost sight of what marriage was. They had forgotten about the gift of
Eve for Adam in the beginning, and they were using Moses' prohibition
against repeated divorce and remarriage as if it were a blanket
endorsement of divorce.
Even today in the church, evil is sometimes celebrated
as the greatest good, and the promise of the eternal marriage between
the Son of God and His bride seems very distant. Some are preaching
boldly about the blessings of fleshly desires, while ordinary
Christians are a little embarrassed about having an eager affection
for Christ as their ultimate Husband. In the world outside of the
church, lust is openly celebrated as the frank theme of so much
entertainment, and shame has become the enemy. Holy faithfulness
seems unnatural and even unhealthy.
How can we recover from such depravity? We need a new
spirit growing in us, the Spirit of holiness. This will not come from
the Law of Moses but from the gift of our faithful covenant Husband
who has a perfectly chaste love for us as His bride.
The joy of a new marriage was guarded in the Law of
Israel. A young man was protected from military service and other
public duties for one year, so that he could love his wife and be
happy together with her in the fruitfulness of this new relationship.
There is something beautiful here that testifies to a world of life
and a newness of love that will never fade away.
Here below as we try to manage the sad damage of sin
upon a dying world, Israel had laws against taking a poor family's
way of providing food for themselves. The Law warned about the
penalty for stealing a fellow Israelite. There were laws to contain
disease, greed, and abuse of all kinds.
But who can heal our diseased hearts that glory in our
shame? How do we recover purity when we are convinced that every
eager affection is good?
Have we forgotten the consequences of Adam's sin?We need
to remember what that one sin, and our many sins that followed, meant
to our faithful eternal husband. His young life was cut off from the
face of the earth. The cross reminds us of the seriousness of our
impurity.
But our loyal Husband has come to save us. He defeated
every enemy that threatened the blessing of His new bride. His
resurrection power can defeat enslaving sin within us, and restore us
to the holiness that He is giving to His family today and forever.
Ask Him for the gift of holy wisdom for living a new
life. Your life on earth does not have to be a perverse carnival
celebrating every fleshly impulse. By the power of Jesus Christ
within you, you can live a life of willing submission to the perfect
Husband who saved you by His death.
1 Comments:
Now this is a marriage made in heaven. We run from Him and are unfaithful and yet He doesn't think about divorcing us. Blessed assurance. Sis
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