NEW

2020-02-26 to 28 Pictures: Charleston, South Carolina

One of the few upsides of having to cancel our Spring Break trip last March at the onset of the pandemic is that we are "stuck" with a rather large voucher from one of those discount airlines. Last autumn, Tricia and I spent a weekend in Savannah, Georgia and had a...

A John 3:16 Craft for Kids

John 3:16 is one of the most well known and reassuring verses in the Bible. For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.John 3:16 (NIV) The following is a little craft I threw...

2020-03-01 Pictures: Lyndsey’s College Signing Day

This afternoon Lyndsey made it official, signing her letter of intent to play college basketball for the Hiram College Terriers starting next year. While she made the decision and committed to Hiram before Christmas, she has been looking forward to this day since her...

2020-02-13 Pictures: Lyndsey’s 18th Birthday

I am little behind on posting photos. These are some of my favorites from a couple of weekends ago when we got a chance to celebrate Lyndsey's 18th birthday. It's hard to believe that my little girl is officially an adult. It was nice to have the family all back...

What is DOCTRINE?

Introduction I love working with kids, and I love teaching them hard concepts in ways they can understand. To that end, for years I have been working on a dictionary of theological terms for kids and teens. In sharing those definitions, there seemed no better place to...

If You Want It Done Right

In all likelihood, you know how the phrase ends: If you want it done right, DO IT YOURSELF! This is a bit of a mantra for me, and frankly, something that I struggle with daily both in leadership and in my Christian walk.  In theory, this is easy to accept. ...

What Does God Hate?

This is the little and humble post that started it all. I happened to be reading through my Bible, and this passage impacted me so much that I posted a little blurb about it on Facebook. That was July 28, 2008, and I've been writing and sharing ever since. (Maybe...

A Glimpse Into God’s View of Divorce

DivorceToday’s post is about divorce and the impact of divorce on kids.  It is the beginning of what I hope will be series of articles over the next several months on the general issue of marriage and divorce.  I hope to cover a biblical view of divorce, statistics related to divorce, the impact of divorce on children, and much more.  I do not know why God has laid this on my heart to explore and discuss this issue.  Though I lost my mother when I was six years old, my parents were not divorced and my father and step-mother have now been married for over 20 years.  By the grace of God, I am not divorced.  So, I do not write with a first-hand knowledge of the emotions which accompany divorce.  I think that this is both a positive and a negative.  That said, God has increasingly laid this issue on my heart and so I will move forward in obedience to God.

I feel like an article like this (or a series of articles like these) needs to have some sort of disclaimer – not a disclaimer of God’s Word which is true and infallible and needs no disclaimer – but a disclaimer as to the intent and purpose of the article.  I believe that the Bible is clear – divorce is a sin and God’s plan is a plan of reconciliation.  I also believe that the Bible is the revelation of God who is the ultimate in authority in our lives.  Divorce is not the worst of all sins or an unforgivable sin, but it is a sin (in most cases), and the church has for the most part abdicated its responsibility and mislead its people in not calling it a sin.  It is a sin like all others that needs to be repented of like all others.  And, like other sins, it it the reason the Christ died on the cross.

That said, if you have been divorced, God does not love you any more or less than if you have not.  This is not an article about why you or anyone else should, or should not, have gotten divorced.  It is not an article meant to condemn you if you have been divorced.  If we are in Christ, we have been given his righteousness, and that is what God sees when he looks at us.  This is not an article meant to point out the speck in your eye while ignoring the plank in my own eye.  It is an article about God’s plan and the impact that divorce has on that plan.  It is, I hope, and article which will make people take a second to think about the implications of divorce both on families and on the church.

I will cover a more thorough look at the biblical view of divorce in a later article, but I was doing my daily Bible reading the other day when I happened upon the following verses from the book of Malachi:

13 And this second thing you do. You cover the Lord’s altar with tears, with weeping and groaning because he no longer regards the offering or accepts it with favor from your hand. 14 But you say, “Why does he not?” Because the Lord was witness between you and the wife of your youth, to whom you have been faithless, though she is your companion and your wife by covenant.  15 Did he not make them one, with a portion of the Spirit in their union? And what was the one God seeking? Godly offspring. So guard yourselves in your spirit, and let none of you be faithless to the wife of your youth. 16“For the man who does not love his wife but divorces her, says the LORD, the God of Israel, covers his garment with violence, says the LORD of hosts. So guard yourselves in your spirit, and do not be faithless.” [Malachi 2:13-16 ESV]

I had read these verses a number of times before, but as often happens, this time God drew something very specific up off the pages (computer screen actually) and into my head and heart.  I will get to that in just a minute, but let’s have a look at the verse.  While clearly written to the men at that time, I think the principals are aptly applied to both men and women in today’s society.  The Israelites were upset that God was not accepting of their sacrifices.  The modern day equivalent would be a strain in our relationship with God.  The Israelites were confused by why this was happening, but verse 14 makes it clear.  They had been faithless with their wives – violating not just a marriage contract between the bride and groom but the covenant entered into between God, the bride and the groom.  God’s view of marriage is far higher than the human view that says it is an institution which two people entered and therefore should be able to exit.  God gave marriage to his people for a reason, and when we get married we covenant not only with our spouse, but also with God.  Imagine our displeasure should God ever choose to violate the covenants he made with us.  Fortunately for us, God never changes and would not violate such a covenant.  We, however, in a culture of “no fault” divorce repeatedly violate the convents we make with God.  If it any wonder that this negatively affects our relationship with Him?

The next verse starts in the form of a rhetorical question, “Didn’t God make a husband and wife one when they got married?  Didn’t God unite their spirits?”  God had a purpose in creating marriage as an institution, and he has a purpose in creating each individual marriage.  When we get divorced, we are essentially telling God that his plan is insufficient for our lives.  It was the next statement that really struck me though as a Dad and as someone who works with kids.  Why did God create marriage as a covenant between himself a man and a woman?  Why does God meld them into one?  What is the ultimate outcome that God desires?  What does God seek in the marriage covenant?  He seeks Godly offspring.  God has ordained marriage as a union in which a man and a woman pass along spiritual truth to their children.  Verses like Deuteronomy 6 make that clear.  So, when we divorce we interfere with God’s plan for transmitting his truth from generation to generation.  Despite all the cultural pressure that lies to us and says “kids will be better off with two happy parents who aren’t fighting than two married parents who fight,” it is clear that God says the best place for a child is with both of his parents.  When it comes to issues like marriage and divorce, it is high time that we started to listen to the truth of scripture rather than the lies of the enemy.

The command of God is clear, “let none of you be faithless to the wife of your youth.”  God’s kids are too important to him to put their spiritual destiny at risk.  I am reminded of the following verse:

Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him if a great millstone were hung around his neck and he were thrown into the sea. [Mark 9:42]

So, what can we take away from this verse?

  1. Marriage is a covenant between two spouses and God.
  2. Marriage is important to God.
  3. God intended marriage to produce Godly offspring.
  4. Divorce interferes with God’s plans for you and for your kids.
  5. Divorce is contrary to God’s will.
  6. Divorce is sin.

What do you think?  What impacts of divorce have you seen on kids in your ministry?  How have you dealt with those impacts?

To see this article on the original blog and join the conversation there, please click here.

Previous

Next