I
once preached what I thought was a really good sermon about marriage. My
basic point was that that commitment had ceased to be a value in our
culture.
So
the very next Sunday I was again standing at the church door greeting my
congregation. I woman I thought a lot of came up to me, shook my hand as
she always did, and said, “Father, I want you to know that I’ve been thinking a
lot about your sermon last week. And I’ve decided to divorce my
husband.” Now her husband may very well have needed divorcing. I
don’t really know. Still, it was not exactly the result I was going
for.
Divorce,
to be sure, is sometimes a necessary evil. It is sometimes something
simply unavoidable. It is sometimes something that is actually in the
best interests of the people involved, particularly when there is abuse of some
kind. Over my years as a priest, I have found myself on occasion
encouraging someone to take the necessary steps to protect herself and her
children. I have, on occasion, asked people to stop and both think and
pray carefully about what they were doing, although I’ve never tried to tell
someone what they should do when it comes to marriage and divorce.
This
week’s gospel reading is Jesus’ teaching about marriage and divorce. It
is often misunderstood, particularly in two ways. For one thing, even
Jesus does not say divorce is never permissible. He characterizes it as
regrettable and a concession to human hardness of heart. What Jesus said
is that remarriage after divorce is impermissible. Nor did Jesus say that
remarriage after divorce was permissible if one acknowledged fault in the
failure of the first marriage. He just said it was impermissible.
Period.
Southerners have an expression for this. This is the point at which Jesus has done gone from preachin’ and gone to meddlin’.
Southerners have an expression for this. This is the point at which Jesus has done gone from preachin’ and gone to meddlin’.
Given
how clearly Jesus spoke, it is amazing, is it not, that I have never heard a
sermon preached evil of remarriage. I’ve heard sermons preached about the
evils of a lot of things and about a lot of sexual practices but not once about
remarriage. Remarriage is something we not only allow; we celebrate
it.
Generally speaking, we look at second marriages as a second chance at life and a second chance at love. Second chances are generally something we think people ought to have. People do stupid things sometimes. They ought to have another chance. People make mistakes. They ought to have another chance. People even sometimes end up divorced through no fault of their own. They ought to have a second chance. People get hurt by our human tendency to hardness of heart. They ought to have a second chance.
Generally speaking, we look at second marriages as a second chance at life and a second chance at love. Second chances are generally something we think people ought to have. People do stupid things sometimes. They ought to have another chance. People make mistakes. They ought to have another chance. People even sometimes end up divorced through no fault of their own. They ought to have a second chance. People get hurt by our human tendency to hardness of heart. They ought to have a second chance.
And
doesn’t this have something to do with why I’ve never heard a sermon against
remarriage? The explicit words of Jesus notwithstanding, followers of Jesus,
precisely because they are trying to be followers of Jesus, have an immense
capacity to seek compassion. They have an immense capacity to seek
mercy. They have an immense capacity to seek forgiveness.
They have an immense capacity to seek love. They take seriously that
Jesus said, not to give just a second chance, but to give seventy times seven
chances. That is one of the things that makes me want to be a Christian.
The
only thing that worries me is when our capacity to seek compassion, mercy, forgiveness,
and love tends to be greater with respect to our own situations in life than
with respect to someone else’s. We have made an enormous exception to the
words of Scripture that have a tendency to benefit ourselves. I have a
hard time seeing Jesus as having a problem with that. The problem comes
when we make an enormous exception to the words of Scripture to benefit
ourselves, to give ourselves a loophole in the law, but refuse to do that for
others. And that, my friends, is something I do think Jesus has a problem
with—a big problem.
Peace,