jQuery Slider

You are here

How much of God do you want?

How much of God do you want?

Dr. Ken Chant
http://www.visioncolleges.net
April 30, 2103

In the end, it must be everything or it will be nothing. We are not free to pick and choose among the promises and commands of God. We cannot embrace one promise but disdain another; we cannot express willingness to obey God here, but not there; we cannot desire this blessing from the Father while rejecting that.

Think for a moment - how long will a marriage last if one spouse says to the other: "I want only some of your love, some of your care, some of your strength"?

How absurd. Two people who love each other want all of each other; they cannot be content either with a half-given or half-received love; it must be all or nothing, else their protestations of true love are a mockery.

There are two powerful elements in a long-lasting marital union; two things that probably express the greatest gifts that the partners expect from and can give to each other -

There is the gift that the husband gives to his wife - that is, a total commitment both to the permanency of the union and to the happiness of his wife.

A good wife wants to know that her husband truly meant it when he vowed to "cleave only unto her, for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, till death us do part." She is entitled to the security that comes from knowing her husband is committed to the permanency of their marriage. Her love for him will flourish best in an environment of knowing that his deepest desire is not to extract happiness from her, but rather to bring it to her. When he fulfils these things, a godly husband makes himself a type-picture of God; he becomes to his wife what Christ wishes to be to the Church.

There is the gift that the wife gives to her husband - that is, a loving abandonment to the desire of her husband, knowing that she can trust him utterly to do her no harm.

There is perhaps no more sacred, nor more prized gift that a virtuous woman can give to her husband than an uninhibited surrender to his love, a yielding that he knows she would rather die than offer to any other man. In this she shows both the depth of her love for him, and the degree of her trust in him. Thus she becomes a picture of the relationship the Church should have with Christ.

There is no limit to what God can do for you, through you, with you, if you are available to everything he has for you.

END

Subscribe
Get a bi-weekly summary of Anglican news from around the world.
comments powered by Disqus
Trinity School for Ministry
Go To Top