Saturday, June 1, 2013

Made in Heaven


I am guessing that the ZZ Top song “Sharp Dressed Man” is not a tune you would expect to hear in a church, especially in the sanctuary. But its sheer exuberance fit so well as part of our High School Youth Group’s Talent show last month, as members old and young alike got up in the bright lights of the chancel and shared gifts ranging from singing to story-telling to stand-up comedy. We do have a wonderfully talented congregation!

The show was just one of many special occasions that filled the month of May. June too will have its share of celebrations, as you’ll read about elsewhere in this newsletter. In addition to everything else that will fill the calendar this month, I’ll finish leading my Adult Education class on what the Bible does and does not teach us about marriage.

What we’ve learned the past few weeks is that there is surprisingly little in the Bible that speaks directly to marriage. We also discovered that the church’s involvement in marriage is relatively recent. And we learned that our Book of Confessions and Book of Common Worship are our most helpful resources, teaching us that: “marriage is a union, in which two people commit themselves to a mutually shared life, in which they respond to each other in sensitive and lifelong concern. In marriage a woman and a man belong to each other, and with affection and tenderness freely give themselves to each other as they help and comfort each other.”

The Reverend Peter Marshall captured the essence of marriage perfectly with his words: “A marriage made in heaven is one where a man and a woman become more richly themselves together than the chances are either of them could ever have managed to become alone.”

In a time when fully half of all marriages end in divorce, marriages that succeed are built on a foundation not only of love, but of respect, interest, compassion, patience and goodness, where each partner takes a strong interest in the other as friend as well as spouse.  Communication is vital to a healthy marriage; couples who don’t talk, who don’t share, who don’t make time for one another will inevitably drift away from one another.
 


Anticipating marriage? Newly wed? Celebrating a 20th? 40th? Even a 50th anniversary? It is those couples who “freely give themselves to each other”, who “help and comfort each other”, who work to build a “mutually-shared life”, who “forgive even as they are themselves forgiven”, and who “clothe themselves with love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony” who will find ample reasons to celebrate year after year.


Grace & peace,
Pastor Skip