44 This Momentary Marriage
shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give
glory to your Father who is in heaven" (Matt. 5:16). Paul makes the
same point: "Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to
the glory of God" (1 Cor. 10:31). All of life, not just marriage, is meant
to showcase the glory of God, including the glory of his all-satisfying
grace.
But marriage is designed to be a unique display of God's covenant
grace because, unlike all other human relationships, the husband and
wife are bound by covenant into the closest possible relationship for
a lifetime. There are unique roles of headship and submission. Those
distinct roles are not the focus in this chapter. That will come later.1
Here I want to consider husband and wife simply as Christians. Before a
man and woman can live out the unique roles of headship and submis-
sion in a biblical and gracious way, they must experience what it means
to build their lives on the vertical experience of God's forgiveness and
justification and promised help, and then bend it out horizontally to
their spouse. That's the focus in this chapter.
Or to put it in the terms of the previous chapter: The key to being
naked and not ashamed (Gen. 2:25)—when, in fact, a husband and a
wife do many things that they should be ashamed of—is the experience
of God's vertical forgiving, justifying grace bent out horizontally to each
other and displayed to the world.
Is the Wrath of God Relevant for Marriage?
Briefly, let's see the foundation for this truth in Colossians. We will
start with Colossians 3:6: "On account of these the wrath of God
is coming." If you say, "The last thing I want to hear about in my
troubled marriage is the wrath of God," you are like a frustrated
fisherman on the western coast of Indonesia on December 26, 2004,
saying, "The last thing I want to hear about in my troubled fishing
business is a tsunami."
A profound understanding and fear of God's wrath is exactly what
many marriages need, because without it, the gospel is diluted down
to mere human relations and loses its biblical glory. Without a biblical
1See Chapters 6–8.
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