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Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts

Thursday, August 1, 2019

YOU CAN DO BETTER (audio)

From Romans 7:1-6, this message in our preaching series in the book or Romans is called: YOU CAN DO BETTER.

Listen well.


If you can’t get the audio on your device, visit the main podcast page at http://revandersongraves.podomatic.com/   

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a pastor, writer, community organizer, and consultant  

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this blog with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar. 


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Bailey Tabernacle CME Church
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Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35401

Saturday, April 28, 2018

DADDY ISSUES, a lesson from Moses' childhood


blogging Exodus 2

Moses was born into the tribe of Levi, the clan that would become the hereditary priesthood of Israel; but when Moses was born, the Levites weren’t priests.  They were the minor clan descended from a disgraced ancestor (Genesis 49:5-7) among a community of slaves.  Moses and his siblings were spiritually anointed.  The eldest, Miriam, became a prophetess; Aaron, the middle child, became the first high priest of Israel; and Moses, the baby, was . . . well, Moses! 

But family life wasn’t all prayer meetings and praise services. 

First, they were all slaves.  And,  on top of that, Daddy was basically an absentee father. 

Moses’ MOTHER hid him from Pharaoh’s death squads.  Moses’ SISTER followed the basket floating down the Nile.  They arranged to keep Moses until he was weaned.   But Daddy?  Amram, Moses’ father, didn’t fight Pharaoh’s guards when they came to investigate reports of an infant birth.  He didn’t help hide the baby.  From the information in Scripture, Amram didn’t do anything.


Maybe he was emotionally disconnected.  Maybe he was worked so hard by his Egyptian overseers that he couldn’t participate in home life.  And maybe slavery broke him.  Maybe they so completely whipped away his hope that he couldn’t even find inspiration in the lives of his children. 

Does this sound familiar?



Don’t believe the lie that broken families is something new to to our times or unique to our ethnicity.

The Bible reports that enslavement and ethnic oppression are designed to breaks men.     When the spirits of the men are broken, women HAVE to step up.  Matriarchy isn’t a new  or progressive paradigm for the family.  Matriarchy is basic survival for oppressed peoples.  


Despite all of this, Miriam, Aaron, and Moses became the leaders of a movement that emancipated a nation of slaves and composed the foundational texts of the Gospel.  Moses’ story proves that the children of brokenness don’t have to become the parents of brokenness. 

To overcome the brokenness you inherited, you have to acknowledge your parents’ sins as sins.     
Exodus 6: 20 states that Moses’ father and mother were nephew and auntie.  
Now Amram took for himself Jochebed, his father’s sister, as wife; and she bore him Aaron and Moses. And the years of the life of Amram were one hundred and thirty-seven (Exodus 6:20).

Up to this point in the Old Testament, marrying such close relatives was uncommon.  Jacob and Isaac married cousins.   Abraham and Sarah were half-brother and sister. 

Yeah, I know.  Eww.

At one point, while dictating the Law to the children of Israel in the wilderness, Moses the great prophet said: 
 The nakedness of your sister, the daughter of your father, or the daughter of your mother, whether born at home or elsewhere, their nakedness you shall not uncover. . .   You shall not uncover the nakedness of your father’s sister; she is near of kin to your father. You shall not uncover the nakedness of your mother’s sister, for she is near of kin to your mother (Leviticus 18:9, 12-13).

That's a euphemistic way of saying:  God doesn’t want men  hooking up with their aunties. 

Moses looked at his family, listened to God, and said to his people:  God made my sister, and my brother, and me in His image.  He protected us, filled us with His anointing, and called us to leadership.  We are not mistakes.  But the way our parents got together, the structure of their relationship?  That wasn’t right.   The founders of our nation did great things and were mightily blessed.  But the structure of their relationship?   That was sinful. 

Good things came from it.  Great people came from it, but that doesn’t make it right.     

God freed Israel from slavery and said to them, “Now that you’re free be better than your ancestors were.”

This was a hard truth for Moses to speak.  A hard truth for me to speak.  You see, my daddy didn’t always do right, but the Lord says that my siblings and I are not mistakes.  He loves us.  He blessed us.  He brought us thus far along the way, but He does  want us perpetuate the same dysfunction in which our forefathers lived.

It’s a difficult thing:  to confess that you, your family, or maybe even your entire nation was conceived in sin and shaped in iniquity. 

Difficult but necessary. 

Moses’ story shows us that generational greatness requires us to learn our my fathers’ sins, not repeat our fathers’ sins.  We need to stop encouraging our children in lifestyles that political pharaoh and spiritual pharaoh designed to break our people. 

We celebrate survivors.  We honor the  strength of our sisters who did what had to be done when their man wouldn’t.  We glory in the beauty and potential of our children, regardless how they became our children.  And we teach our children the truth so they and all our descendants can walk into their best lives because of the kinds of families they built not despite the kinds of families they built.    


--Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama. He writes a blog called A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this ministry with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064

Friday, August 18, 2017

BOUGIE BABIES AND BUILDING YOUR TRIBE

blogging Genesis 24

Isaac was his mother’s only child, born in her twilight years.  She had Isaac’s only sibling thrown out of the house because the older kid had laughed at her baby (Genesis 21:9,10).  Abraham and Sarah were wealthy, powerful, and highly respected (Genesis 23:6; 24:1). When Sarah died, Isaac was 37, rich, single, and living at home.   He was a bourgeois mama’s boy.


As soon as the Sarah’s funeral was over, Abraham set about marrying off his man-child.

Abraham called his oldest and most trusted servant and made the man swear a solemn oath to go to Mesopotamia and convince one of Abraham’s nieces or cousins to come back to Canaan and marry Isaac.

 So Abraham said to the oldest servant of his house, who ruled over all that he had, “Please, put your hand under my thigh, and I will make you swear by the Lord, the God of heaven and the God of the earth, that you will not take a wife for my son from the daughters of the Canaanites, among whom I dwell; but you shall go to my country and to my family, and take a wife for my son Isaac.” (Genesis 24:2-4)    

Putting “your hand under my thigh” is probably a euphemism for putting your hand under my loins, which is a euphemism for . . .  Abraham made his servant swear on his -----umm, man-parts.
Abraham’s manhood, his destiny, his legacy, the success or failure of thousands of miles and over a hundred years fighting, shepherding, and hustling as a nomad all hinged on the next generation.  And the next generation depended on getting a spoiled mama’s boy married to the right woman and
getting them moved into the right neighborhood.

I know.  Sounds really bourgeoise, but Abraham was as “real” as it gets.   He lived across national, ethnic, and socio-economic lines.  His second wife was an Egyptian slave girl.  His third wife was Canaanite.  He made friends and did business with everybody.  Before his first son was born, Abraham had willed all his possessions to a Syrian employee (Genesis 15:2).    But, Abraham thought that his son was too good for a Canaanite wife, and too good for a house in his old neighborhoods in Mesopotamia.

. . . you will not take a wife for my son from the daughters of the Canaanites, among whom I dwell but you shall go to my country and to my family, and take a wife for my son Isaac. . . only do not take my son back there (Genesis 24:3, 4, 8).

Abraham wasn’t bourgeois, but he wanted bourgeoise for his son, which is an unflattering way of saying that Abraham wanted Isaac to have a different TRIBE


The tribe of Abraham and Isaac wouldn’t be designated solely by ethnicity though biological connections and genealogies would be important to the tribe.  The tribe of Abraham and Isaac wouldn’t be fixed by geography, though the land was a critical part of their identity.  Nor would the tribe be a copy and paste of the dominant cultural influences in the area, albeit Canaanite, African, and Near Eastern societies would contribute mightily to the new tribe’s flavor and flow.  The tribe of Abraham and Isaac would be theological brothers to the Salemites who worshipped the true God under Melchizedek (Genesis 14:18-20), but they wouldn’t join the Salemites.    The tribe of Isaac and Abraham the Hebrew (Genesis 14:13) would be in some ways like all those other people-groups but the sum of the new tribe would be completely different, something new.

Abraham’s life was defined by God’s Word, God’s spoken promise to make of him a great nation.  The tribe of Abraham and Isaac and Isaac’s children would become a new people, a new nation defined by the Word of God which they would come to know as the Law, the Scriptures.

Did any people ever hear the voice of God speaking out of the midst of the fire, as you have heard, and live? . . . 40 You shall therefore keep His statutes and His commandments which I command you today, that it may go well with you and with your children after you, and that you may prolong your days in the land which the Lord your God is giving you for all time (Deuteronomy 4:33, 40).

Israel, the Jews, the chosen people claim as their inheritance the promises of Abraham, promises made by the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob.  Abraham succeeded in building his tribe, his nation through Isaac and Isaac’s son Jacob.    

They are Israelites, and to them belong the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving of the law, the worship, and the promises. To them belong the patriarchs, and from their race, according to the flesh, is the Christ, who is God over all, blessed forever. Amen (Romans 9:4-5, ESV).

But Abraham’s tribe became something bigger than bourgeoise.  God fulfilled the most powerful clause in the Abrahamic covenant: 18 In your seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed (Genesis 22:18).

Through faith in Jesus Christ, Son of God and descendant of Abraham Isaac and Jacob according to the flesh, we non-Hebrews, non-Israelites are made heirs of the promises of Abraham. 

It’s good to be “real.”  You should own your past sins, know how to handle yourself in fight, and maintain a formidable reputation in all circles, even among the heathens. 

Give your children genuine respect and agape love for people across every demographic but train them to be an outsider to the culture of easy sin around them.  Teach your kids the faults and failures in their family and ethnic history, and but don’t define them by those faults and failings.   You can’t usually pick spouses like Abraham did, but you can choose to center your children’s identity in God. 

If you do your life right, your kids will be spoiled (with blessings and security and opportunity you didn’t have).  

If you were successful your children will be a bit more bourgeois; make sure they’re also more firmly grounded in the Word of God. 

If all of us do that, we’ll be fathers and mothers of a great nation. 
 Image result for PROUD FATHER FREAKING AWESOME SONImage result for PROUD FATHER FREAKING AWESOME DAUGHTER
---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

Click here to support this ministry with a donation.  Or go to andersontgraves.blogspot.com and click on the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064


Wednesday, May 10, 2017

INVISIBLE WOMEN, part 3 of 3: "Treat Her Like a Lady"



First off, the Bible only directs wives to submit to their legal husbands NOT women as a species to submit to men in general.  The Bible does not grant  men in general authority over women in general.  Historically, men dominated all institutions, and the Bible faithfully records that tradition. But, except for fathers and husbands, God never COMMANDS women to submit to all men. 


 Also, and this is critically important, the Bible only talks about a wife submitting to her husband (as, Ephesians 5;21, they submit to one another), NEVER about a girlfriend submitting to her boyfriend.
As my wife has been known to explain, “You ain’t my daddy and you ain’t my husband.” As, I’ve been known to explain, “You other dudes can kick rocks.”


And as for husbands: in his letter to the Colossian church, Paul, the bachelor who had a low personal opinion of marriage, was compelled by the Holy Spirit to issue this command:   Husbands, love your wives, and do not be harsh with them (3:19).

Let me rephrase that.

GOD said that men are not allowed to be mean to our wives.

In the Old Testament book of Malachi, God rebuked His people for their idolatry, and corruption, but then God turned and said, “And let Me tell you another thing you do that REALLY ticks Me off!   You come to church crying at the altar, praying and begging.  But I don’t listen.  And you’re like ‘Why?  Why won’t God listen to our prayers?’ And I’m like ‘Because I see how you mistreat your wives.’ “

And this is the second thing you do: You cover the altar of the Lord with tears, with weeping and crying; so He does not regard the offering anymore, nor receive it with goodwill from your hands.
Yet you say, “For what reason?”
Because the Lord has been witness between you and the wife of your youth, with whom you have dealt treacherously.  Yet she is your companion And your wife by covenant. (Malachi 2: 13, 14)

GOD SAID that it pisses Him off when husbands mistreat their wives. 

It’s a sin for a man to abuse or wrong his wife.  Literally a sin.  A sin so terrible, so personally offensive to God, that when a man does his wife wrong, God doesn’t even want to hear that man’s prayers.  And just in case you missed that in the Old Testament, God repeated it in the New Testament. 

Likewise, husbands, live with your wives in an understanding way, showing honor to the woman as the weaker vessel, since they are heirs with you of the grace of life, so that your prayers may not be hindered. (1 Peter 3:7)

Peter, a husband and Jesus' closest personal friend, asserted that my eternal inheritance is somehow tied to how good I am to my wife.   God commands me to try to understand Sheila. God requires me to honor her. 

Point blank, a husband who mistreats his wife jeopardizes his relationship with God. 

. . . Therefore take heed to your spirit, and let none deal treacherously with the wife of his youth. (Malachi 2: 15)

So, there is no way that the same God who said, “Don’t even talk to me if you’re being mean to your wife,” is O.K. with domestic abuse.  There is no way, that “submit to your husband” means let that dude beat you up.   There is no way that God intended being the head of your family to  mean hitting your wife upside the head.     

God used  Paul the bachelor to command husbands to love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her.


We yell so much over the submit verses that we don’t hear God telling husbands to treat their wives like they want to be treated.

So husbands ought to love their own wives as their own bodies; he who loves his wife loves himself.  For no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as the Lord does the church.  (Ephesians 5:28, 29)

No dude wants to be beaten up or degraded.  So ---- don’t do that to women.  GOD SAID, “Don’t do that to women.”

No man wants to be bankrupted by his spouse or left to care for his children without the means to provide for them.  So GOD SAID, “Don’t do that to women.”

But if anyone does not provide for his own, and especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever. (1 Timothy 5:8)

Wives are God’s gift to men.  (Bro, if you picked up the wrong one, I’m sorry but that’s your fault.)  As with all Divine gifts I am steward of my wife’s heart for a time, but at the end of time I’m required to present Sheila to God in better condition that I received her.  That’s another part of Ephesians 5 we skip over.

. . . that He might present her to Himself a glorious church, not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, but that she should be holy and without blemish. (Ephesians 5:27)


(And no, that verse does not require husbands to cover plastic surgery or botox.)

Yes, many men abuse women.  And, yes, way too frickin’ many of them are professed Christians.  But.  BIBLICAL Christianity prohibits domestic abuse.  GOD clearly, explicitly, and repeatedly commands men to be good, Christ-like husbands who protect the bodies of their wives, provide for them, and love them with the understanding and grace that Jesus showed to us. 

Any man who does otherwise and calls himself a Christian is lying on God.


---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

You can help support this ministry with a donation. Or, by clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064 

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

HUSBANDS vs. BOYFRIENDS



Jesus said to her, “Go, call your husband, and come here.”
The woman answered him, “I have no husband.” Jesus said to her, “You are right in saying, ‘I have no husband’; for you have had five husbands, and the one you now have is not your husband. What you have said is true.”
The woman said to Him, “Sir, I perceive that You are a prophet.” (John 4:16-18)

What did Jesus say that was “prophetic”?  

He’d already told her about living water as the gift of God (verses 10-15); but that didn’t seem to be enough for the woman to identify Jesus as a prophet.  The final clue for the Samaritan woman at the well was Jesus’ Divine knowledge of her romantic history, including a prophetically accurate update on her current relationship status: “The one you now have is NOT your husband.”

There is a PROPHETIC DIFFERENCE between having a boyfriend and having a husband. 

In Scripture the closest equivalent to boyfriend or girlfriend are references to lovers, suitors, and concubines.  Lovers were often associated with adultery.  They were the side-chicks and side-dudes.  (Ezekiel 16; Hosea 2 & 3).  A suitor was a man looking for a wife, like Jacob pursuing Rachel in Genesis 29.  A concubine was like a legal live-in girlfriend. 

For a boyfriend-and-girlfriend living together, spiritually speaking she’s not his wifey, she’s his concubine.  Concubines don’t have the same authority as a wife.

Which doesn’t mean that you don’t really love each other.  Nothing in the record of John chapter 4 implies that the Samaritan woman’s 1st century live-in boyfriend didn’t love her.  Later in the story, we learn that the woman had enough social prestige to convince the male leaders of her Samaritan village to come out and listen to this traveling Jew she’d just met; so her situation was as at least as socially acceptable in that context as living together is now.  It’s not necessarily about feelings, legal status, or what’s culturally acceptable.

It’s already fashionable to say, “We’re basically married” or “We love each other like we’re married.”  Your social circle may totally accept your relationship like that, but Jesus knows that “The one you now have is NOT your husband.”

The distinction between husband-wife and boyfriend-girlfriend is spiritual. 

From Genesis to Revelations, God reserved special blessings for the husband-wife relationship.  Whenever God applies special blessings, He also sets special expectations.

God expects husbands to give exclusive priority to their wives.  Prophetically, Adam who had no biological parents, declared that “a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh” (Genesis 2:24).  A husband should put his wife before his own mama.  Scripture does not require that exclusivity of lovers, suitors, or the keepers of concubines. 

God expects special honor for the institution of marriage.
“Let marriage be held in honor among all, and let the marriage bed be undefiled” (Hebrews 13: 4).  The Holy Spirit makes it clear that the honor due to marriage doesn’t extend to other romances.  Hollywood might celebrate passion outside of marriage but in the rest of Hebrews 13: 4 says, “for God will judge the sexually immoral and adulterous.”

God expects husbands and wives to do it (You know, “it.”) riiiight!
The husband should give to his wife her conjugal rights, and likewise the wife to her husband. For the wife does not have authority over her own body, but the husband does… Do not deprive one another, except perhaps by agreement for a limited time, that you may devote yourselves to prayer; but then come together again…(1 Corinthians 7:2-5).  One of the most ingenious and evil tricks of Evil has been the propaganda that portrays any sex outside of marriage as more desirable that sex within marriage.  People say, “If we get married then we’ll get bored.”  That rule is written in Hollywood scripts but it is not written in Holy Scripture. 

God expects husbands to honor, protect, and understand their wives
Husbands, likewise, dwell with them with understanding, giving honor to the wife, as to the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of life, that your prayers may not be hindered. (1 Peter 3: 7).  God says that a husband who isn’t understanding and honoring to his wife, that may might as well stop praying because God will stop listening.  A girlfriend can’t claim that promise against her man.

God expects husbands to love with self-sacrificial love.
“Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her” (Ephesians 5:25).  Through Scripture God repeatedly commands husbands to love, to give love, to be loving.  A husband must be willing to die for his wife because Jesus died for the church.  A husband must want his wife to be stronger and better because of their relationship, because Jesus came to build up a church “without spot or wrinkle or any such thing, but that she should be holy and without blemish” (Ephesians 5: 27).  A husband must build his wife up so strong that “the gates of Hades shall not prevail against [her]” (Matthew 16: 18).  A girlfriend may want that from her boyfriend.  She may rightly look for evidence of it as their relationship develops.  But no girlfriend can claim it from her boyfriend, not in the name of Jesus.

God has special expectations of husbands because marriage is a special representation of God’s redeeming relationship to mankind.
‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.’ This is a great mystery, but I speak concerning Christ and the church” (Ephesians 5: 31, 32). 

Within a marriage, you can pray these expectations because God recognizes them.  Within a boyfriend-girlfriend relationship you can look for evidence of these expectations.  You can pressure your man to act like a husband.  But, if you’re not married, you don’t have the spiritual authority to claim or complain about exclusive priority, special honor, sexual satisfaction, protection, understanding, honor, or love.

All of those things are husband responsibilities.  Girlfriends don’t have the spiritual authority to set husband expectations for their boyfriends.

The flip-side of this is that any husband who doesn’t give his wife exclusive priority, special honor, sexual satisfaction, protection, understanding, honor, and self-sacrificing love--- that husband is living outside of God’s will.  We accept that violation and call it thug-love, or keeping it real, or “a man being a man.”   The Bible calls it sin. 

“But if anyone does not provide for his own, and especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.” (1 Timothy 5: 8)

Husbands who act like boyfriends forfeit their spiritual authority.  “for if a man does not know how to rule his own house, how will he take care of the church of God?” (1 Timothy 3: 5)

The rate of divorce and dysfunction in Christian families is high and climbing because husbands are fulfilling boyfriend expectations and boyfriends are trying to fulfill husband expectations, and all the adults involved are praying but not seeing breakthroughs because none of them has the spiritual authority necessary to overcome the brokenness.

Now if you never pray, or expect God to bless you, if you never  seek God’s favor, or need God’s guidance, or depend on God to deliver, heal, or protect you --- then none of this will make a bit of difference to you. 

But. 

If you are a Christian the difference between a boyfriend and a husband matters.  If you’re a Christian you understand that you absolutely need God’s favor to successfully build a family because “Unless the Lord builds the house, they labor in vain who build it” (Psalm 127: 1).

When men become husbands and act according to God’s expectations for husbands, brothers will have the spiritual authority to bind and loose in their homes.  When women stop having boyfriend expectations for their husbands and husband expectations for their boyfriends, then sisters will rediscover their spiritual authority and finally begin to see the changes they've been trying to declare and decree over themselves.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

Email atgravestwo2@aol.com
Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 
#Awordtothewise

You can help support this ministry with a donation to Miles Chapel CME Church.

You can help support Rev. Graves’ work by visiting his personal blog and clicking the DONATE button on the right-hand sidebar.

Support by check or money order may be mailed to 
Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132

Fairfield, Al 35064

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

THE WAY TO HEAVEN: GOOD OLE-FASHIONED LOVE


I heard a televangelist say, “To get into Heaven, it doesn’t matter what you do. All that matters is that God loves you.”

That’s beautiful.
Wrong.
But beautiful.

We tend to superimpose our modern cultural views of “love” on God, but you have to remember that when it comes to love and relationships, God is old-fashioned.

In the old days of courtship, an unmarried couple would meet in a designated area belonging to the family and under elders’ supervision: the outside of the tent, the parlor of the home, the courtyard.  In the old-fashioned system, love got you into the house, but only marriage would get you into the bedroom.

Heaven is eternal, intimate cohabitation with God Himself.  Jesus described our place in Heaven as a personal mansion-sized room where we are at home with the Lord (John 14: 2). 

The world is the Lord’s footstool (Matthew 5:35).  The church is the house of God (1 Timothy 3: 15).  But Heaven--- Heaven is the bedroom. 

As a human institution operating in a fallen world, the church is made up of people who SAY that they love God, but “love” doesn’t mean the same thing to everyone who uses it.

The love God wants with His church is the old-fashioned love between husband and wife. (2 Corinthians 11: 2; Ephesians 5: 25; Revelations 19: 7-9; Revelations 22: 10)

That old-fashioned marriage love is exclusive, submissive, better-or-worse, sickness-or-healing, prosperity-or-poverty, and explicitly committed.  

You can hang out in God’s presence and enjoy His company and “love” Him without being committed in the old-fashioned sense. But it won’t get you into the bedroom of Heaven.

God’s just old-fashioned like that.

I know we’re not old-fashioned anymore, but think about what you expect in a modern marriage.

Does the way the other person treats YOU matter?

If your spouse ignored your every request for time and attention, would it affect your relationship?

O My people, what have I done to you? And how have I wearied you? Testify against Me. (Micah 6: 3)

If your spouse regularly violated your marriage vows, and then came home saying they had no regrets because it would all work out for good anyway---- would it affect your relationship?

Surely, as a wife treacherously departs from her husband, so have you dealt treacherously with Me, O house of Israel,” says the Lord. (Jeremiah 3: 20)

If the wearer of your marriage ring praised you in public but demanded that you give them money every time they did so, would that wear on your heart?  Would it affect the prospects of your marriage?

Hypocrites! Well did Isaiah prophesy about you, saying:These people draw near to Me with their mouth, and honor Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me.And in vain they worship Me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.’ (Matthew 15: 7-9)

If your spouse treated you like this  while you spent your money building a new and bigger house, would you not reconsider whether or not this spouse was the other name you wanted to put on the deed?

I was crushed by their adulterous heart which has departed from Me, and by their eyes which play the harlot after their idols; they will loathe themselves for the evils which they committed in all their abominations.  And they shall know that I am the Lord; I have not said in vain that I would bring this calamity upon them.” (Ezekiel 6: 9, 10)

Modern or old-fashioned, our actions affect the nature and direction of the relationship.

God loves us.  He loves us all no matter what, but what we do affects the kind of relationship God will have with us.   

Ya’ll know Galatians 6: 7?  “Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows, that he will also reap. “

That verse isn’t about money.  It’s about whether we choose faithfulness in spirit or spiritual adultery through the flesh.

For he who sows to his flesh will of the flesh reap corruption, but he who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everlasting life. (Galatians 6: 8)

In other words, God loves us, but unlike humans, love doesn’t make God stupid. God is not mocked.

Our actions/works cannot get us into Heaven.  All that matters is our relationship with God through Jesus Christ.  But in the context of that relationship, what we do matters A LOT.

Jesus answered and said to him, “If anyone loves Me, he will keep My word; and My Father will love him, and We will come to him and make Our home with him. He who does not love Me does not keep My words; and the word which you hear is not Mine but the Father’s who sent Me.” (John 14: 23, 24)

Our choices demonstrate whether our love and commitment is sincere in the old-fashioned sense or just some modern thing we profess so we can live in the new house not made with man’s hands.

God has old-fashioned expectations for our “love.”  So be as good to God as you’d want your spouse to be to you.

---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Miles Chapel CME Church in Fairfield, Alabama;  executive director of the Substance Abuse Youth Networking Organization (SAYNO);  and director of rural leadership development for the National Institute for Human Development (NIHD).

Subscribe to my personal blog  www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com .

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Miles Chapel CME Church
P O Box 132
Fairfield, Al 35064