Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Submit to One Another
Episode Date: June 28, 2024Whenever we listen or read about marriage we bring our own filters. We have filters based on our experiences and cultures. So before we pick at this passage in Ephesians 5, let’s stand back and cons...ider that the passage presents a view of marriage that may be challenging to our very filters. Because the biblical model of marriage is neither optimistic nor pessimistic about human nature, and it’s neither traditional nor modern. Let’s look at it. The model of marriage in this passage has three things to it: 1) a power, 2) a purpose, and 3) a pointer. This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on August 16, 1998. Series: Ephesians – God’s New Society. Scripture: Ephesians 5:21-33. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.
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The scripture reading is from Ephesians chapter 5 verses 21 through 33. Submit to one another
out of reverence for Christ. Wives, submit to your husbands as to the Lord. For the husband
is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body,
of which he is a savior.
Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in everything.
Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her,
to make her holy,
cleansing her by the washing with water through the word and to present her to himself as a radiant church
without stain or wrinkle or any other blemish, but holy and blameless.
In this same way, husbands ought to love their wives as their own bodies.
He who loves his wife loves himself. After all, no one ever hated his own body, but he feeds and cares for it just as Christ does the Church, for we are members of his body. For this reason
a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two
will become one flesh. This is a profound
mystery but I am talking about Christ and the church. However, each one of you also
must love his wife as he loves himself and the wife must respect her husband. This is
God's word.
Now this is a profound text, a profound mystery.
Marriage is a deep subject.
Many times my wife and I have fallen into bed at night exhausted from a hard day of
marriage and have said, this is a great mystery.
And it is, there's a lot to marriage and as some of you know about six, seven years
ago in the evening service I preached a series of nine sermons on this text which you can
still get from the tape ministry.
And they're popular for some reason, I'm not sure why.
And I can't possibly hope to go into all the details and answer all the questions that
arose in your mind as we went through this.
But that's one of the places where you probably will hear, you'll get a lot more details.
It's too profound to handle quickly, but there's advantages to looking over from the,
and get the big picture of the overall view of the passage.
And there is a, let me just say something before we actually get into it.
It's very hard to listen to this passage or any passage on marriage because whenever you
listen or read about marriage, we bring filters to it.
A filter, well, what do I mean?
We listen to this through filters.
We have psychological filters.
If you've had a bad marriage or if you were raised by a bad marriage, then when you see
the word, when you hear a husband say to a wife or you hear somebody say, I love you,
you might hear it, I want to control you because that's what you heard in the marriage you're
familiar with.
You say, that's a psychological filter.
But in all fairness, if you've come from a good marriage, if you were raised by a great
marriage, for example, you came out of a great marriage, you might be naive about marriage.
You might be naively optimistic about it.
I mean, there's filters.
And then there's cultural filters, not just psychological filters.
As we'll get to in a second, you might come from a traditional culture in which the purpose
of marriage is to fulfill social functions.
Or you might come from the Western individualistic culture where the purpose of marriage is to
fulfill personal feelings.
And if you come from the traditional model, you have a filter, and when you read this
text, you love the word submit, and you either don't understand or you might even laugh at the word love.
But if you come from a Western grid, you love the word love, you get excited about that,
but you're really upset about the word, or at least uncomfortable about the word submit.
Why? Because you see, if you can read through this passage, and some things you like and some things you don't, it's your filter talking.
That's the reason why, your filter. Some of it you're filtering out, some of it you're filtering in.
But, before you start to pick and choose this passage to death, I ask, I beg that you would stand back and consider that this is a view of marriage, a model of marriage
that is maybe challenging your whole filter.
I mean, before you start to pick and choose it, let it challenge your filter itself.
Look at it as a whole, because the biblical model of marriage is not traditional or modern.
It's not.
It's not optimistic or pessimistic about human nature.
It's not. So let's listen to it.
Now the biblical model of marriage in this passage has three things to it. The Christian model of marriage
has a power, a purpose, and a pointer to it.
A power, a purpose, and a pointer.
Okay.
Let's take a look at them. I always try to make the first point quick A power, a purpose, and a pointer.
Let's take a look at them.
I always try to make the first point quick so people feel like we're making progress.
So let's do this.
First of all, there's a power to it.
In fact, even though all three principles are out here in the whole text, they're also
embodied in verse 21.
The power you see in the word out of, marriage is out of. The purpose, submit
to one another. And the pointer, out of reverence to Christ.
First of all, the power, out of. Now, let me do a little grammar on you. Little grammar.
Verse 21 is often called a bridge verse between two subjects.
If you were here last week, you know that there's a passage, verse 18 to 21, that's about being filled with a spirit.
And then in verse 22, it seems like we have another subject, another topic, and that is marriage.
And verse 22 is seen as a kind of bridge between the two. But I think that's wrong.
And if you look carefully at the grammar, you would see that.
Would you just give me 60 seconds and bear with me?
Verse 21, though in English text, it's made a separate sentence for readability.
Verse 21 is the last clause in a sentence that started back in verse 18 about being
filled with the Spirit.
Verse 21 is not a bridge, it's part of the passage.
In fact, let me read it to you literally.
Here's literally what it says in the Greek, verse 18, it goes like this.
Do not get drunk with wine, which is excess, but be filled with the Spirit, speaking to
one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your hearts to the Lord,
giving thanks always to God the Father for everything in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,
and submitting to one another out of reverence for Christ.
So verse 21 is talking about, it's part of that clause.
So you say, well, it's part of the first subject.
Ah, but wait a minute.
On the other hand, when you look at verse 22, another thing the translators have did.
In verse 22, verse 21, you have the word submit, right?
And in verse 22, you have the word submit.
Ah, but the English translators had to do that
for readability.
The verse 22 does not have the verb submit in it.
It uses the verb in verse 21.
In other words, literally, Paul says, submitting to one another out
of reverence for Christ, wives to your husbands, and then it goes on. What does
that mean? There is no division. There is not a two subjects. I mean we had to
divide it up somewhere, right? You have the sermon on the filling of the
Spirit, you have the sermon on the marriage, but that's not really what Paul's
talking about. There is no division here. Paul does not say, I've talked to you
about the Holy Spirit, now I'm going to talk to you about marriage. Oh no. What he is saying
is the biblical model I'm about to give you flows directly out of the radical new approach
to human relationships, the new music in your heart, the new life
of pervasive gratitude and unselfishness that comes from being filled with the Spirit.
What Paul is really saying, let me paraphrase it.
Paul's not saying, I talked to you about the fullness of the Spirit, now I want to
talk to you about marriage.
He says, if you have the fullness of the Spirit down, this is what marriage will be.
Just as an illustration, this is not another subject. This is still
talking about the fullness of the Spirit. Well, you say, why, what? Now tell me, what's
the whole point? Here's the point. The biblical model of marriage won't work without the
fullness of the Spirit. Paul is saying, the wild and crazy and deep way I am calling you
to be married has the fullness
of the Spirit as the absolute prerequisite. Now let me put it to you this way. Here's
what Paul's saying. Many times you'll see things happening on TV, stunts or magic tricks
or something, and the commentator always says, boys and girls, don't try this at home. You
don't have the right equipment. Don't try this at home. You know what Paul is saying here? Before he starts to say wives do this and husbands do this, he is saying
don't try this at home. What he's saying is don't try this without the Holy Spirit.
Let me apply this briefly. Look, marriage is for everybody. Genesis 2 tells us that. God gave marriage to Adam and Eve.
He gave it to humanity. In fact, down there in verse 31, Genesis 2 is quoted,
a man shall leave his father and mother in cleave to his wife. That's from Genesis 2.
And we know therefore marriage is for everybody. And we also know that God wants
everybody who's in marriage, whether you believe in God or not,
to leave Cleveland, become one.
In other words, he wants everybody in marriage
to be faithful to each other and loving and so on.
But beyond that, the details that Paul gives us here
are not regulations for everybody.
They are challenges for Christians. Let me be
real specific. I'm not looking at any other verse, but I'm telling you what this verse
is doing. This verse is not telling the world how their marriages should go. Let me be real
specific. This verse, Paul is not calling all the women of the world to submit to all
the men. In fact, he's not even, not here, he is not calling all the women of the world to submit to all the men. In fact, he's not even not here. He is not calling all the wives of the world to submit to all their husbands.
He is saying, if you have the fullness of spirit, you can do something that's wild
and deep, but don't try this without the proper equipment. That's what he's doing.
And therefore, he is saying there's a power,
there's a prerequisite, excuse me.
There's a power and there's a prerequisite here.
The fullness of the spirit,
without it, this model won't work.
So this is not a model for everybody.
This is a model for people who say,
you've got this down, now here's what can happen.
As I'm gonna come back to you in a sense,
Paul realizes, Paul almost is creating firewalls here.
He is saying, make sure these things are in place
before you try this.
So that's the first thing.
Now by the way, that doesn't mean I can say,
gee honey, I'm not filled with the spirit this week,
I guess I don't have to love you.
That's not what we're talking about.
This is not a condition for your duties, this is a condition for the success of your duties.
This is a condition for the model.
So first there's the power.
But now secondly, and this is kind of the heart of it, the heart of the model is the
purpose.
There is a special purpose that Paul says, that the Bible says, that
God gives us, really, very much throughout. That what makes biblical marriage different
is the purpose of it. I mean, that's what, what is it for? What you think marriage is
for will determine everything, really, about it.
Now before we say what the biblical purpose is, let me just tell you
what historically the world has said. Cultural historians across the spectrum, to my surprise
as I was studying this this week, have a remarkable amount of consensus about the fact there have
really been two, basically two historical answers to the question, what is marriage for? What's its purpose? And the first thing marriage
is for, the first answer that has really been dominant for centuries, though not as much
now, was what's called the dynastic view of marriage. And the dynastic view of marriage
says the purpose of marriage is to fulfill social functions, social duties.
You choose your spouse to get to the place
where you want to be, your position economically
and socially you want to be.
You choose your spouse to get you the family
you want to have and the children you want to have.
And you don't base it on romance and passion.
Romance and passion is nice if you get it, but what you want is that social commitment
and you stay loyal, see?
And therefore, in fact, what they would say is, look, marriage isn't about love.
It's nice if you can get it.
The important thing is you get in there and you make that commitment and you're true to
your social obligations and you get the family you want, you get the position you want, and you choose a spouse that way.
This is one of the reasons why in the traditional view of marriage, you never, I'll get back
to this in a minute, you never get a divorce.
Why do you need a divorce?
You have your mistress.
You have, you know, you get romance where you want to get.
Romance, I mean, that's not what marriage is basically about.
Marriage is about fulfilling social duty and obligations.
This is, by the way, this is the ancient way.
This is the old way.
See, the old way said, love and marriage, love and marriage, do not go together like a horse in carriage.
I remember when the French leader Mitterrand died, his wife and
his mistress were both at the funeral. And it was so silly, American commentators had
the tendency to say, ah, you see, the Europeans are so much more progressive. You know, we
Americans are so pure and progressive. That's the old approach. See, love and marriage,
love and marriage don't go together like a horse and carriage.
You have the horse over here, you have the carriage over here, they both come to the
funeral.
But you don't need to keep them together.
They're not together.
That's the old approach.
Why would anybody who wanted a divorce, anybody who wanted a divorce, clearly got married
for love.
Are you an idiot?
Why would you go through, you know, see in the old way you never got married for love. Are you idiots?
Why would you go through, you know, see in the old way you never got a divorce.
Why would you do that? Why would you put your children through that?
Why would you put your family through that?
The complications, the humiliations, the pain, the suffering, why would you do that?
I mean, if you're going to get a divorce that clearly shows you got married for love.
Are you a fool? What are you thinking about?
What kind of society will we have that way? That's the old way.
Okay, but then the cultural consensus has changed, at least in the West. And since the
Enlightenment, the dynastic approach which said we get married to fulfill social obligations
has given way to the romantic ideal, which is that you get married to fulfill social obligations has given way to the romantic ideal
which is that you get married to fulfill personal feelings desires and dreams and
what's interesting is that the the dynastic approach said the important thing is
Commitment and if you get romance great the commitment the new approach is
Romance and passion if you get commitment, that's nice, but you. The new approach is romance and passion.
If you can get commitment, that's nice,
but you don't really expect that.
Okay?
You don't truly expect it.
You really want, of course, is the passion,
but you don't get that commitment.
I mean, that'd be awfully nice.
That is the reason why you have
such a different view of divorce.
The reason that in the traditional approach,
you never had a divorce is you said, well, what's love got to do with it?
And in the new approach, you said, well, if the passion's gone and the love is gone,
there's no marriage left.
Do they look different?
They're not.
Do they look utterly different?
Some of you, if your parents came from traditional societies,
but you were raised
here, when you came to tell them who you were going to marry and they went through the roof,
you were living a thousand years of cultural history in one lifetime. Because you were
choosing not on the basis of social expectations but on the basis of your passions and they
wanted you to choose not passions, come on, you'll get used to to it you do what you need to do to get to the position socially and
economically you want to be and to get the children and so forth but as
different as they seem at bottom they're the same because actually they're not
different ah but didn't you say they have different purposes one says social
obligation others says personal fulfillment but the whole point in both different. Ah, but didn't you say they have different purposes? One says social obligation,
others say personal fulfillment. But the whole point in both cases, the purpose of marriage
is to fulfill me. The purpose of marriage is not to serve my spouse, but to find a spouse
that's useful, to get me where I want to be. As long as I have that, I've got a marriage,
and if I don't, if I'm not getting my needs fulfilled really there's no marriage.
And that's the reason why both the old and the new, both the dynastic and the romantic ideal, both think it is ridiculous
to think that passion and lifelong commitment are compatible.
The dynastic approach says lifelong commitment but passion. I mean you're not going to get that. Maybe you will, but not usually. And the new approach says, passion, but lifelong commitment. Well,
I mean, you're not going to get that. Maybe you can, but not usually. They both agree.
Those two things are incompatible. You can't have both. You can't expect both. Because
bottom line, they're both saying, the purpose of marriage is to fulfill me. Now the Bible says, and your hearts know, that we've got to have both.
We long to have both.
We must have both.
Even in this very text, the Bible shows that you have to have both.
If you go back to the Genesis 2, where it says, leave and cleave, I can't do the exegesis
for you right here, but leave means the lifelong commitment and cleave means the passion.
Or right here, here's Jesus Christ, and well, we'll get to that in a second, here's the
husband, give yourself, see verse 26?
That's the crucifixion by the way. That's abandonment. That's lifelong commitment.
But then there's the light, the radiance, the ravishing, the ravished with the beauty.
Listen, not only does the Bible say those two have to be together, but our hearts have
to have them. We want truth and love. We want faithfulness and passion. We want respect
and intimacy. In fact, the Bible goes this far.
It doesn't just simply say
that you have to keep compassion and commitment together.
It says passion isn't really passion
if you're not willing to commit,
and commitment isn't really commitment
if you're not passionate.
These two things have got to come together.
Why can they?
And the Bible says they can
if you choose a different purpose.
And you know what the purpose is? This is only something possible for Christians, really.
I mean, as I'm going to show you. And I am not trying to say only Christians can have happy marriages.
It's much more complex than that. But the purpose that is given to us here is this.
The purpose of marriage is not to fulfill me socially, fulfill me
emotionally. The purpose of marriage is to serve your spouse with a vision for his or
her future glory. The purpose of marriage is to say, I see something glorious that God
something glorious that God is doing in you. I believe I am both attracted
and called to enable that process, to work with Jesus Christ in that process.
And that's where I want to go. That's what I want to do.
Now you see that is very different. You don't just look at the person as they are.
You look at the person as they are going to be.
And you don't say, here's how I can, you can use,
pardon me, how you can be useful to me.
But you come and say, I find in myself a passion
to make myself useful to you.
And to the one who is working in your life.
Now someone says, how does that work?
Let me break it down for you.
Submit to one another,
which is a very, very different approach, than use one another. The whole idea is you
serve one another, you submit to one another, rather than use one another. Well, let me
break it down for you. The purpose of marriage is to do three things. Submit to one other's
needs, differences, and glory. Okay, first of all needs. The word submit
is a military word. Now somebody says, wait a minute,
I'm looking at verse 21. The word submit is a military word.
And a military word that means you give up your individual rights for the common good.
I mean that's the way it is in the army. The reason you don't go to bed when
you want, get up when you want, you don't march when you want, you don't do drills when
you want, why? Because you're part of a bigger whole and we're going to die if you think
like that. And therefore you have to serve the common good. Now what this is saying is simply this. The rule of thumb in marriage is you always serve the needs of your spouse before your
own.
You always serve the needs of your spouse before your own.
Now, right away somebody says, oh, does that mean you let the other spouse walk all over
you?
You weren't listening.
No. Here's why. Does your spouse need to walk all over you?
Is that good for him or her? Does your spouse need to abuse you? Is that good for him or
her? Absolutely not. And therefore, confrontation is the best way to tell whether you have a
biblical and not a selfish submissive servant attitude. If you never confront your
spouse, you know why? Because you put your need for peace and comfort over that person's
need for the truth and for healing and perspective that would come from the truth. Or if you
find that you do confront but you do it ineffectively and your spouse gets
more aggravated and resentful, it's because you've actually put your need to tell the
person off over the person's need for patient handling.
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A truly submissive person is constantly confronting and often being totally quiet.
It's not when it says, submit to one another, when it when the Bible says, serve the needs of your spouse rather than your own, it is not saying be passive or be active.
It's saying choose your passivity and choose your activity on the basis of the needs of
the other person.
That means in many cases you are extremely confrontive.
If I've ever heard anybody and I have say, I've just given it, given to my spouse and
now I've got to do something for me.
You'd only say that if you've been selfishly submissive.
If you've been submissive because you want to feel virtuous or because you just wanted
peace.
Selfish submission eventually makes you want to explode.
But truly selfless submission means that you've been telling the person off all along.
But you've been doing it in a winsome way because you're not trying to win.
You care.
You love.
So the first thing you have to do is you have to serve one another's, you have to submit
to one another's needs.
Same thing.
Secondly, you have to serve or submit to one another's differences.
Now you're going to have to help me here Because this is not the main point of the passage,
but it's a big hot issue now.
So you're gonna have to moderate your interest
and you're gonna have to moderate your emotions
as I tell you what it's saying.
Notice husbands and wives don't get the same verbs.
Husbands love, wives respect, okay?
Husbands give, wives respect. Husbands give, wives submit. And even though the word submit is
an overall saying you have to make sure that you're serving in everything you do, both
husbands and wives, it's very, very clear in verse 22 that Paul is saying just as Christ
has authority over the church, so the husband has authority over the wife in the marriage.
This is the thing that Paul's inviting people into if they have the whole fullness of the
Spirit.
Now right away people say, what?
Isn't that, doesn't that open a person to abuse?
Yes, of course.
And that's the reason why there's all these firewalls around it.
There's many, many firewalls.
But first, before I tell you what the firewalls are, let me tell you what it's saying. Why does it say, a husband and a wife will leave
Cleve and become one flesh? Now, why one flesh? That word in both Greek and Hebrew is deeply ambiguous, very ambiguous, because that word
can mean body or it can mean person.
Obviously the word flesh can mean body, but it can also mean purpose, as when God says,
I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh, meaning all persons.
So what is it saying?
That when a husband and wife get married, they become one body, or does it mean they
become one person?
And the answer is yes.
And here's what it must mean.
Physically, a male and a female body literally interlocks.
They become one body because the husband physically moves out and into and toward and the wife
receives.
But this must mean, and what the Bible is saying
here is that there is an extension of the maleness of your body and the femaleness of
your body into your soul. That it is not an accident that our souls, it's not that our
souls have no reference to our bodies at all, but rather there's an extension. In other
words, what the Bible teaches is,
just as it is natural physically for a husband to move toward his wife, so in terms of soul,
it's natural for him to move toward his wife emotionally and relationally. And just as
physically it's right for the wife to receive her husband, so it means that emotionally
and relationally there is a sense
in which she receives her husband. In other words, what happens physically must be and
is mirrored at some point spiritually, psychologically, emotionally. Or, another way to put it is
this, this is what CSO has called the great dance. Look, if two people are up here and
we're not dancing face to face but side by side, we can both have our right, that's
a left, left foot, right foot, see? And my partner, we can both do left together, we
can both do right together. But if we're intimately dancing, if we're facing each other dancing,
If we're facing each other dancing, we cannot possibly do
the very same thing. We have to complement each other.
When I go forward with my left, he or she's got to go back
with that same foot.
In other words, instead of identical and equivalent movements, there have to be
complementary and harmonious movements. And what C.S. Lewis Gough says is at some deep level, there's a difference between male and female
that creates a soul interlocking just like there's a physical interlocking.
And this interlocking must be far deeper than anything possible between two people of the
same sex and far deeper than two people of opposite sex who are not
in a lifelong commitment of both body and soul to each other.
Now how do you get that?
See what Paul is trying to say is there is a way to have an interlocking of maleness
and femaleness, a complementary interlocking of your gender differences of soul, just as there is a complementary interlocking of gender differences of body.
That's what it must mean.
How do you get that?
Now what I'm about to tell you is an extremely practical principle, but when I first say
it, you're going to say, you're not going to think it is.
I'm just warning you.
Let me tell you what the practical principle is.
We get no details at all.
One of the dangerous things about this text in the hands of a conservative, can I tell you this?
Let me tell you what the dangerous thing about this is.
When a conservative hears somebody say, wives submit to their husband, say, right, that's what I believe, that means,
and I always want to say, yeah, what does that mean?
And as soon as he goes on, she goes on, he goes on,
as soon as that person goes on,
that person goes and says this,
well, that means that wives shouldn't work.
Well, what about Proverbs 31
that says wives should be businessmen, women?
Well, the person says that means that wives should raise children. But what about the next part of this chapter that says fathers and mothers together have
the responsibility of raising the children?
Well, that means husbands cut the grass.
You see, there are no details.
There are none.
And what's really dangerous is, if you bring your filter and your preference,
you prefer a wife not to work. You prefer the wife to take the main responsibility with the children.
You prefer that. You read this and you read that.
Right in you think, I have a biblical warrant for what I'm doing. No, you don't.
Let me give you this practical principle again.
If a husband, if a man and a woman, as they're getting married, decide that the husband will have final authority and they come to a mutual
agreement on what that is, whatever that is, that will create that
interlockingness of deep maleness and femaleness.
The Bible doesn't give you details. You know why? Because nobody has the right to impose
what those details are. That has to be worked out mutually.
Husband doesn't come in and say, I'm the authority, therefore. No. You see, the husband
has authority like Christ has authority, who gave himself, who's crucified for us,
which means the husband can never ever ever use whatever that authority is to serve himself,
ever, to please himself, ever, to meet his own needs, ever.
What does that mean?
In the very very beginning, in the very beginning, in the dating or in the engagement or in the
beginning of the marriage, it means that when you actually get together, you look at each
other and say, we have to decide what this means, we have to mutually agree on it.
And once we do that, whatever that is, we can't negotiate the principle,
we can negotiate all the details.
And if you do that implicitly even or explicitly,
that the gender differences kick in.
I'm going to give you just one example, just so you have one,
but you have to promise
not to take this as the paradigm.
Kathy and I, day in and day out, we work by consensus, in partnership, and fairly infrequently
when a decision has to be made, has to be not put off, and we cannot agree, then it's my job to make that decision.
And if I ever use my authority just to please myself,
it's my wife's job as a submissive wife
to come at me tooth and nail until I see the truth,
but in a way that doesn't destroy the relationship.
Otherwise she wouldn't be what?
She wouldn't be serving me.
And what we've done, we've decided that. And beyond that there's really very little in
the way of differentiation at all. And you say, well that's not much, but it's
been enough for us. I mean, I always say this when I get to this subject. My wife
and I are not gender-typed. I'm not a macho person. She is not frilly. And yet,
that has been enough for us to get in touch with a maleness and a femaleness
that we didn't know we had.
And that has been enough to unlock the gender differences that our culture is very, very
unable to help us with.
And I'm kind of unable to help you with, really.
And it has enabled us to develop that wonderful unity on the way to what?
The third thing.
You submit to each other's needs, you submit to each other's needs you submit to each
other's differences, but then lastly
You submit to the each other's glory
In this text in the heart of the text though. It happens when he's talking about the husband
He's not talking about the husband. He's therefore talking about Jesus and therefore. He's giving us a model for everybody for both husband and wife
talking about Jesus and therefore he's giving us a model for everybody, for both husband and wife. Paul suddenly in the middle of verse 25 he rockets to Jesus and this is what he
says. He says, if you want a marriage that sings, let's look at what the purpose of
Jesus' marriage is because Jesus has united us, because Jesus is in covenant with us,
because Jesus loves us.
And what is it that turns his crank? What is the purpose? Why did he get incarnated? Why did he die? Why did he rise? Why does he not rule in the world? Why is he doing everything? And here is the answer.
To present you, to present us radiant, unblemished, spotless, beautiful. Jesus Christ does not just see us as we are,
He sees us as we can be, as we were designed to be. Jesus Christ, His vision, He sees us
as the beautiful gem God cut us to be and he's trying to put us in the setting.
He sees us as the incredible melody God composed us to be and he's trying to work us into the symphony.
And Jesus Christ sees what we are and he has a passion. Everything he's doing is to bring us to what God wants us to be.
Now this is a completely different approach but here we go. When
Christians want to form a marriage on the basis of this, either before they get
married as they're about to get married or after they're married and they
finally figure it out, they look at each other and they turn around and this is
what they say, I see what God is doing in you. I'm attracted to it, I love it, I
want to be part of it. I renounce the shadow, I renounce the darkness, and I bind myself to you to take a journey
to the throne so one day we can present each other to him."
Marriage the epic. Marriage the adventure. Not marriage the beautiful world of feelings,
nor marriage the drudge of duty, marriage the epic.
And what does this mean?
I'll tell you what this means.
First of all, this completely changes how you choose a spouse.
Now look, in Christian circles, boy, I'll tell you,
in Christian circles you have it, look, there's the old way.
I find somebody who helps me get to where I want economically and socially.
And there's the new way. I find somebody who just passionately
raises my passions and my romantic feelings.
And then there's the New York way,
where you try to wait for somebody who can do both,
which is the reason why you wait forever.
And then of course there's this,
and then of course there's the pseudo-Christian way
in which you basically go after somebody
because of sexual chemistry
or because of the money they make,
and you gussy it up in spiritual language, and you say, I just love what God's doing in your life.
But the way in which you really should find somebody to marry, here's a couple tests. Number one, first of all, you're able, you've got the insight from God to see through the
caterpillar into the butterfly.
You know the person almost, you see the direction that person's going and you have insight.
You have insight.
And if this is a good person for you to marry, then when you talk to this person, this person
understands you, really understands you, maybe a little better than you understand yourself. And secondly, this person has a growing combination of acceptance and resistance
that makes you want to climb up, makes you want to be better than you are. Now you know
what I mean by acceptance and resistance? Some people only resist. They're always criticizing and you never feel
you can please them and they're trying to make you somebody they can love.
And other people would only accept, which means they're just afraid you're going to leave them.
But you see, if you only accept or only resist, it means you're really serving yourself.
But what Jesus Christ has done in the gospel and only in the gospel is he says,
I've died for you and I make you acceptable in my righteousness.
And now, not in order to make you acceptable because I am ravished with you,
because I love you for who you are, I resist the sins and I resist the flaws
and I resist all the things that keep you from being the glorious one that God wants you to be.
And that combination of resistance and acceptance, which only comes from you having experienced
resistance and acceptance from Christ.
When you get into a relationship like that, both of you are making the other one want
to reach up. If your relationship with God is,
if I try hard enough to be good, maybe God will love me,
means that you're working very hard to criticize yourself,
you don't know you're acceptable,
and you're gonna get into marriage,
and you won't have experienced that from God,
therefore you're not gonna be able to give it in marriage.
You're either going to be, you're going to shut up because you're afraid to say anything
or else you're going to come out and you're going to resist and you're going to make the other person feel undermined.
But when two people who have experienced the acceptance and resistance of Christ,
Christ says, now there's no condemnation for you, but I'm going to cleanse you
because I see the beauty that you are.
When you've experienced that,
when you've seen that he is ravished with you,
you can turn around and give it to somebody else.
If you're living like that,
both the lifelong commitment and the passion
can be compatible.
Now, lastly, somebody says,
this is really interesting.
Over here you have the wrong view,
over here you have the wrong,
this is typical Tim Keller sermon,
and here's the right view.
Everything fits together,
but tomorrow's Monday for crying out loud.
How do I do it?
And the answer is, in the text, we're pointed.
Marriage is a pointer.
Marriage says, this is a great mystery, but it's pointing to Christ.
Marriage says, the biblical view of marriage says,
you do this only out of reverence for Christ.
The word reverence, what a namby-pamby word.
The word reverence is sort of hallmark reading card kind of thing,
but that's what it means.
But the actual word there, the translators again were sort of stuck,
is the word fear.
Submit to one another out of fear of Christ. What does that mean? Well see the word fear in the Bible means awe-inspired love.
Amazement. If you just believe in Christ in general,
you say, yeah, I know, he forgave me so I guess I ought to be forgiving.
It says here, by the power of the Holy Spirit, if you are filled with amazement at what Christ
has done for you, then you will not look to your spouse or to your prospective spouses
as saviors.
It does not say, submit to one another out of reverence for one another. If you get into marriage saying,
ah, now I'm acceptable. If I get married then I'll be happy. If this person loves me then I'll know I'm lovely.
That means you're submitting to one another out of reverence for one another, which really means you're using that person to feel good about yourself,
which means you're looking to that person as the Savior, and that's the reason why your marriage is undermined? That's the reason
why you're so devastated that you're not married? Unless you see marriage as a pointer
beyond itself, you'll make an eye out of marriage, and it'll ruin your life, and you'll ruin
whoever you're in it with. No, no. What you have to say is,
if this one is ravished with me,
he's committed to me,
he loves me,
then because I'm pointed by marriage beyond itself,
I'll be able to live in marriage
in a way that really sings and that really helps everybody in it.
So, if you are not married and you're devastated about it,
just remember, do you believe in Jesus?
Someday, you'll stand before the only altar that will really fulfill you
and you'll be dressed in a way, it won't be dressed beautifully
because you spent thousands of dollars someplace,
but because your soul is perfect crystal and you will be espoused.
You will fall into the arms of the only spouse that will ever fulfill you and that's even true
for those of us who've got good marriages, so don't envy us too far. If you are married
to a non-Christian, be careful. That's hard, but some of your unhappiness may be because you have made an
idol out of marriage and you said, if only I had a Christian spouse, then I'd be perfectly
fulfilled. You're forgetting the pointer. Until you let marriage point you beyond marriage,
you'll be lousy in it. And to those of you who aren't, you're not sure you're Christians and you
say, why did I just get this whole thing on Christian marriage? I don't know. What does
this tell me? I'll tell you what it tells you. You need a God, but not just any God,
you need a God who is a lover. You need a God who comes deeply into your life and from
whom you can experience intimate love on your heart. Now there really isn't any other God that is offered like the Christian God.
And unless you get a God who is a lover, you will make gods out of lovers, or else, out of fear of that,
you'll have nothing but sexual encounters. You need this God. You need a God who is a spouse. Marriage is a pointer. This is a great mystery, but it
speaks of Christ in the church. Let's pray. Our Father, we thank you that you've given
us so much today to think about. And I pray that because of the fullness of the passage,
that you would, by your Holy Spirit take every
person who's here and wing into their hearts those aspects of those parts of the text that
they need to understand and hear. We pray Lord most of all that you would help us to
look forward to our great wedding day, the wedding feast of the Lamb, and help us to
live in light of that, whether we're married, whether we're unmarried,
and whether we're struggling in our married or unmarried states. We know that that's what we
need. Not a change in our circumstances, but deepening of our relationship with you. Thank
you for that. We pray all this in Jesus' name. Amen. Thanks for listening to today's teaching.
We trust you were encouraged by it and that it gives you new insight into how you can
apply God's Word to your life.
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Today's sermon was recorded in 1998.
The sermons and talks you hear
on the Gospel in Life podcast were preached
from 1989 to 2017, while Dr. Keller was senior pastor
at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.