Marriage: God's Design

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The following message by Alistair  Begg is made available by Truth For   Life. For more information visit  us online at truthforlife.org. I’m going to read from the Gospel of John and  chapter 8, and if you care to follow along,   I invite you turn there. John chapter  8—actually, reading from John 7:53:  “They went each to his own house, but Jesus went  to the Mount of Olives. Early in the morning he   came again to the temple. All the people came to  him, and he sat down and taught them. The scribes   and the Pharisees brought a woman who had been  caught in adultery, and placing her in the midst   they said to him, ‘Teacher, this woman has been  caught in the act of adultery. Now in the Law,   Moses commanded us to stone such women. So what  do you say?’ This they said to test him, that they   might have some charge to bring against him. Jesus  bent down and wrote with his finger on the ground.   And as they continued to ask him, he stood up and  said to them, ‘Let him who is without sin among   you be the first to throw a stone at her.’ And  once more he bent down and wrote on the ground.   But when they heard it, they went away one by one,  beginning with the older ones, and Jesus was left   alone with the woman standing before him. Jesus  stood up and said to her, ‘Woman, where are they?   Has no one condemned you?’ She said, ‘No one,  Lord.’ And Jesus said, ‘Neither do I condemn you;   go, and from now on sin no more.’” And as we turn to the Bible,   let’s turn to God and ask for his help: Father, what we do not know, please teach   us. What we do not have, please give us. What we  are not, please make us. For Jesus’ sake. Amen.  Well, the verses to which I should like to draw  your attention are the final three in Ephesians 5:   “‘Therefore a man shall leave his father and  mother and hold fast to his wife,’” or be   united to his wife, “‘and the two shall become one  flesh.’ This mystery is profound, and I am saying   that it refers to Christ and the church. However,  let each one of you love his wife as himself, and   let the wife see that she respects her husband.” In each of these studies—and there’ve been a few   of them—we’ve noted the way in which the  instruction of Paul is not grounded in the   culture of first-century Ephesus but is actually  grounded in creation itself. The reason that is   so important is in part because it is not uncommon  for people, when we are willing to talk concerning   what the Bible says—in this case about marriage  and husbands and wives—for the response to be,   “Well, of course, we know that that was written a  long, long time ago in a very different place from   now. It was all about first-century culture,  and we live now in the twenty-first century,   and therefore, presumably, we wouldn’t want  to make application of it in the way that you   suggest.” Well, of course, that’s why it’s very,  very important that Paul is not arguing from   the culture of the first century, but he’s  arguing from the beginning of time itself.  In other words, he’s doing what Jesus himself  did. You remember on one occasion the Pharisees   came to Jesus, and they had a question for him  about divorce. They were trying to trap him,   as in the passage that we just read from John  chapter 8. And they said, “Is it lawful for a man   to divorce his wife for any cause?” And Jesus’  reply goes right to the doctrine of creation:   “Have you not read,” he said, “that he who created  them from the beginning made them male and female,   and said, ‘Therefore a man shall leave his father  and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and the   two [will] become one flesh’? … What therefore  God has joined together, let not man separate.”  Now, this is the realm of our  study, and as I say, this,   I think, will conclude it for the time being. I found it helpful in my study this week to   create an acrostic for myself just to try and  keep my mind in line, and hopefully it will be   helpful to you. It is simply one word, in plural,  a springtime flower: TULIPS. TULIPS. Okay? That is   T-U-L-I-P-S. I know some of you say, “toolips,”  but that would actually be T-O-O-L-I-P-S, and   so—but you gotta figure that out for yourselves.  One of my grandchildren always wants me to say,   “What day is it?” when it’s Tuesday, and  I always say, “Tuesday,” she says, “No,   it’s Toosday,” and I said, “Nah, it’s not  Toosday. that would be T-O-O… It’s Tuesday,   it’s…” Anyway, that’s by the way. So, it’s TULIPS. TULIPS. T-U-L-I-P-S.  The first letter stands for the word  theology. T for theology. All right?  One of the dangers in addressing marriage,  particularly as we think of it in relationship   to ourselves, is the temptation to divorce the  practical from the theological or the biblical.   When we use the word theology, we’re just talking  about God, Theos, and the Word of God and the plan   and purpose of God, viewing things, if you  like, not from the perspective of ourselves   looking up as much as viewing it from the  revelation of God in speaking to us. It’s very,   very important that we don’t divorce the two.  And that is why on each occasion we have gone   almost directly to the thirty-second verse,  which gives us, if you like, the underpinning   theological principle that Paul is driving  home: “The mystery,” he says, “that I’m talking   about is a profound mystery.” Marriage itself, of  course, is profound in many matters. But he says,   “I’m referring to Christ and to the church.” He has prayed earlier for those who are reading   his letter that the eyes of their understanding  may be enlightened and that they might be   enlightened by the Holy Spirit. In other words,  it’s a reminder to us that we can read the Bible   and we can understand English and we can see what  it says and yet not be enlightened by it. We can   just sit and go through it, and it doesn’t go  over our heads, but it doesn’t really do very   much at all. So it is a strange and wonderful day  when suddenly the Bible starts to burn into us,   starts to engage us, starts to call us to  attention, if you like. And so Paul is praying   that that might happen to them as they read  this letter. And for us as we read the letter,   we’re praying the very same thing. And so, as our  eyes are enlightened—as the eyes of our hearts   are enlightened—then it will enable us to think of  marriage not simply in terms of the practicalities   of it, which, of course, are important to us  all, but rather, and more foundationally, to   God’s plan and God’s purpose in marriage itself. And what I hope has come home to us is that Paul,   without doing a disservice to all that we enjoy in  marriage, he is making the point that his focus is   not on marital happiness as much as it is on the  wonder of this ultimate marriage, the marriage   that is between Christ and the church. And that’s  why, earlier on, he has spoken about this amazing   mystery that has been hidden from long gone by  and now has been revealed, whereby people who   were formerly enemies to one another—especially  the Jew and the gentile—and who were by the same   token enemies of God have now found themselves  reconciled to God and reconciled to one another,   and they are now a mysterious group of people. And  the mystery is that God has taken what is diverse   and different and antagonistic and has fused  it in the wonder of the love of the Lord Jesus   Christ. And so Paul is saying, here is the sort  of embedded mystery within the mystery—namely,   that in Christian marriage, when two  forgiven sinners live together in harmony,   then that relationship points beyond itself to  the great mystery, which is the fact that God   in Jesus would love those who had by nature turned  our backs on him and were indifferent to him. What   a great mystery, that he would then give himself  up in order that we might find our life in him!  Now, it is this that he’s been driving home.  One of my friends in England puts it very,   very well in a brief quote. He says, “The power  of the gospel to motivate a Christian wife to   submissively support her husband and to motivate a  Christian husband to sacrificially love his wife,   despite their sins and their differences, provides  a powerful witness in our earthly churches of the   victory of God over the spiritual forces of  evil in the heavenly places.” In other words,   in a culture such as our own that is  fractured and broken at the micro level,   the very reality of a couple doing their best by  the enabling grace of God to live as God intends   provides a peculiar opportunity to give an answer  to those who ask a reason for the hope we have.  And so often, I think, we’re tempted to mug up  the necessary material for sort of evangelistic   endeavor—which, of course, is all wonderful  and good to do, and we should do—but I think   many of us are tempted to miss the fact that just  actually by conducting ourselves in a restaurant,   or in a movie theatre, or in the  context of public transportation,   or in the dialogue of everyday life—that in an  unwitting way people are going, “What’s going   on with them? Does she really defer to her husband  in that way? Does he apparently lead her with such   kindness?” That’s the theology that underpins it. T for theology, and then U for unity. Unity. You   say, “Well, it goes without saying. We understand:  you can’t have marriage without unity.” But,   you know, if you think about it, our culture holds  fairly lightly to that notion, if it gives any   attention to it at all. Instead of the emphasis  being on the union and the fact that we have now   come together as a new unit in society, we tend  to make sure that we are very keen to establish   our own identity—you know, “I am my own person.  I mean, don’t you forget. I may be your wife,   but I am me!” Of course, that’s true. “I may  be your husband. I did my exercise before I   married you, and by golly, I’ll do my exercise  now that I have married you. I have my own life;   I have my own things to do. You do your thing,  I’ll do my thing, we’ll try and get together   once or twice every evening, and we’ll move  on as best we can.” That doesn’t sound like   a union, does it? Not a very good one. You know, I know that certain people, for   the matters of life and in a medical practice or  in law or something, the wife for some reason may   have determined that it is unhelpful to actually  go under her husband’s name in marriage. I get   that. But the desire on the part of the wife to  neglect and to negate the very expression of union   by not wanting to take the name of her husband  is just another indication of a sort of fierce   individuality. Instead of it being “we two are  one,” then is “we two are two.” And it’s not that   individuality is then lost in marriage but that  our individual lives are transformed by marriage,   because we’re no longer what we once were. Now, this union, which is expressed here—“For   this reason a man will leave his father and mother  and be united to his wife,” or “hold fast to his   wife”—let’s just acknowledge what it is. First  of all, it is a voluntary union. You don’t get   married by an act of Parliament—someone tells you,  “You go marry her.” No. Even in situations where   there is arranged marriages, there is still  the opportunity, in the best of cases, for a   voluntary response to the influence of parental  structure. By and large, most of us understand   perfectly clearly that the union into which we  have entered in marriage is a voluntary union.  It’s a voluntary union between one man and  one woman. It’s a voluntary union between one   man and one woman from different families. You  can’t marry your sister. It’s a voluntary union   between one man and one woman from different  families, and it is heterosexual and it is   monogamous. This is marriage, and nothing  else is marriage. That’s what the Bible says.  In making vows to one another, the voluntary union  is at the same time a public union—that the vows   that are made in marriage are declared before  witnesses. And it is in the context of those   witnesses that the couple is married. And it is  that public dimension which declares them married,   not their private emotions. No matter what we  feel on the day we are married—if you came down   the aisle and you were scared to death,  or you were thinking about buying a boat,   or whatever was going on in your mind—the fact of  the matter is, when the guy said to you, “Do you?”   and you said, “I do,” and she said, “I do,” and  you did, and you’re done. You are married. Now,   whether you like it or not, you’re married! That’s how marriage is. All marriage! That’s how   marriage works, whether it’s Christian marriage  or secular marriage or Muslim marriage. Everybody   knows. Bill was single; Bill is no longer single.  Why? Because he got married. So marriage is not   some ill-defined notion of cohabitation—a sort of  experimental liaison that lasts for a few months   or a few weeks, whereby a couple can experiment in  every dimension of life and then decide whether,   having test-driven the automobile, they really  want it or not. No. That is not marriage.  Here is the man; he left his mom and dad. Why?  He loves this girl. He loves her enough to make   a public, voluntary commitment before the world  to live with her in lifelong faithfulness. That’s   what marriage is! It’s not about sleeping with  people. It is the public, voluntary union before   God and before this congregation: “I now declare  you what you have never been to this point in your   life—namely, husband and wife.” The state  acknowledges it, society acknowledges it,   and the church acknowledges it. And so do  your old girlfriends. And so do your old   boyfriends. Everything has changed. Theology. Unity. Thirdly, loyalty.   Loyalty. You say, “Well, we don’t really need  to say much about loyalty, do we?” Well, yes,   I think we do. Because the loyalty to which  he’s referring here is a new loyalty. You see,   up until you get married, your loyalty’s to  your mom and dad: “Honor your father and mother,   that your days may be long upon the earth, which  the Lord your God gives you.” Right? That’s the   relationship. Your parents, as we’re going to see  in Ephesians 6, stand in the place of God before   you. And therefore, you obey your parents, and  you love your parents, and you have a relationship   with your parents that is distinct from any other  relationship. But on the day that you are married,   that changes. And from that day there is a  new loyalty. A new loyalty. It’s not that   marriage breaks the filial relationship between  your mom and dad, but it changes it. Indeed,   if it doesn’t change it, then your marriage is  in for real trouble. Because in order for that   loyalty to be both established and maintained, it  involves the man and the woman doing what needs   to be done—namely, leaving. Leaving. Leaving  physically, emotionally, financially. And it   involves on the part of the parents being prepared  to renounce their rights and to relinquish their   hold upon their son or their daughter. Now, in forty years of pastoral ministry,   I can give you chapter and verse, if you’re  interested, in the craziness that ensues when   one or both parties just flat-out refuse to  do what the Bible says. And it would be a   poor use of time to run through a litany  of that. The point is straightforward:   unless that loyalty is transferred there—unless,  if you like, that umbilical cord is broken;   unless those apron strings are cut between the  boy and his mom; unless the peculiar affection   between daddy and the daughter is clearly now  changed so that the husband of that daughter,   whom I as the dad have loved with a passion  and continue to love, but I no longer have   the same responsibility, I no longer have the  same rights… all of that has changed. And as   painful and as wonderful as it is, it is because  they now have a new loyalty. Why? Because of the   theology. Because of the unity. The loyalty. I for intimacy. Intimacy: “A man [will] leave   his father and mother and hold fast to his  wife, and the two shall become one flesh.” Now,   let me just point out to you that the order here  is important. In fact, it’s vitally important.   What is being made perfectly clear to us is this:  that the public promise is to precede the private   pleasure. Okay? The public promise precedes the  private pleasure. You see, I don’t want to hear   from somebody who’s telling me that he really  loves my daughter—he really loves my daughter   enough to sleep with her—but he doesn’t love her  enough to stand up in front of the world and say,   “I commit myself publicly, unequivocally, to  a lifelong companionship with your daughter,   resisting everyone and everyone else that would  ever come to break and sever the loyalty that   exists between us.” If you don’t love her enough  to do that, you do not love her enough to do that,   no matter what the culture says to you. Because the Bible is perfect, and God’s   way is perfect. The stop signs that kept you  from collision this morning were not there to   make your journey tedious and difficult; it was to  make your journey safe. And all of the structure   that is given in the context of the created order  of the world is there by the design of God. The   scientists that are here this morning have been  able to do science because of the physical reality   and boundaries that exist in the universe that  God has made—that they are able to distinguish   between one artery from another, that they’re able  to move and to do these things. In the same way,   God has created moral boundaries, and these  moral boundaries are there in order that   we might enter fully into that which he loves  to provide for us in the context of marriage.  What does this mean? Well, it means at least  this: that the only safe and satisfying place   for sex is within the security of a lifelong  companionship—not in the shifting shadows   of a part-time, short-term experiment. And the  havoc that is part and parcel of people’s lives,   simply on account of being unwilling to bow  the knee to the instruction of the Bible,   is absolutely clear for all to see. This is not the occasion—this is not the   time in this kind of context—for me to work my way  through this. I feel uncomfortable with youngsters   here in addressing these things. But I want you  to know that when we reject God’s perfect plan,   then obviously—history teaches us this, and  a morning newspaper, and certainly a magazine   from the grocery store teaches us—that when  we reject God’s perfect plan in this matter,   we enter a world of chaos, of disease,  of self-serving, self-satisfying sex.   That’s the world. And that’s where people live. In a quite fascinating book by a Jewish lady in   the UK, Melanie Phillips, she addresses the  issue of the cultural revolution. And she,   writing as a Jewish person, observes at one  point, in what she refers to as “The Attack   on Western Civilization”—she’s commenting on when  morality became privatized so that people said,   “Well, it doesn’t really matter, you know, what  you’re doing, as long as you’re doing it in the   silence and privacy of your own home”: When morality became privatized, [when]   “what is right” and “what is true” turned into  “what is right or true for me.” Instead [then] of   the moral codes acting as [controls] on people’s  appetites, “anything goes” became the only song   in the secular hymnbook. With external authority  rejected, it was feelings rather than reason that   became the supreme arbiters of behavior. As  taboos fell like ninepins, only religiously   based moral judgment was deemed taboo. … So behavior with harmful consequences for   others or for society in general, such as sexual  promiscuity or having children without fathers,   was treated as normal. Correspondingly,  those who advocated mainstream, normative   values such as fidelity, chastity or duty were  accused of bigotry because they made those who   did not uphold these values feel bad about  themselves—[which is] now the ultimate sin.  That is the only great sin now. You just can’t  make somebody feel bad about themselves—especially   if you’re going to hold any kind of moral order. Alternative lifestyles became mainstream … the   counterculture became the [culture]. …  Because of the absolute taboo against   hurting [other] people’s feelings, the  very idea of normative behavior had to   be abolished so that no one would feel abnormal. That’s the only way you’re going to be able to do   this. There can be no moral boundary, no moral  norm, no absolute standard of moral rectitude,   no understanding of who is married or who is  unmarried or what marriage means, or anything at   all. In order to make sure that we preserve the  feelings of everybody who wants to do whatever   they choose to do, then we’re going to have to  make sure that since we don’t want anyone to feel   abnormal, we’ll have to make everything normal. Now, all of this sounds—it sounds tough,   doesn’t it? And it is tough. It’s tough to say.  People have been saying to me all the way through,   “Do you know how tough it is to listen to these  sermons?” And I told them, “Yeah, I’ve heard them,   I have. I’ve been listening to them.” So  let us, as we think about this, just make   two points that are vitally important to make. Number one, that God’s grace enables us to live   as God intends. It is God’s grace that enables  us to live as God intends. In other words,   what we have in the Bible is not just  a series of ethical demands—you know,   “Try and do this and do that and do that and do  that, and don’t do that and don’t do that.” No,   what we have in the Bible is not a means, in the  Ten Commandments, to climb up a ladder to God,   but the Ten Commandments actually show us how  desperately we’re in need of somebody to do   for us what we can’t do for ourselves. And it  is the enabling grace of God that helps us to   live as he intends, all day, every day. And at the same time, it is God’s grace   that extends forgiveness and restoration  for those whose sexual pasts are spoiled.   So it is God’s grace that both enables me to  live as he intends, and it is his grace which   grants forgiveness and restoration when I look  over my shoulder and realize where I’ve been.  But let’s not kid ourselves. All of us are  guilty in this realm, by thought or desire,   if not in deed. In other words—and that’s why I  read from John 8—none of us should be reaching   down into the ground to find a large stone. And  the older guys will probably be leaving first.  Well, two to go. P. P for priority. Priority. What  priority? Well, I think verse 33 is just, if you   like, Paul’s summation—even here in English, with  the introduction of it with the word “however,”   comma. He’s gone through all of this, and then  he says—I think essentially what he’s saying is,   “In practice, what I’ve been saying to you amounts  to this. Here’s your priority: love your wife;   respect your husband. Love your wife; respect  your husband. Instead of focusing on your status,   your position, your rights, instead of  thrusting upon your partner the obligations,   make it a priority, husbands, to give  yourself up in loving and leading your wife.”  Put that at the top of your notebook for tomorrow  morning, Monday. What do we have in that big book   that you all have? Maybe you don’t; now you have  a phone or something. But anyway… I’ve never been   good on that. I’m not a good lister. But I’m  always impressed when I sit next to somebody   on the plane, and they got their whole life  organized, and mine is not organized, and…   But put right on the top—what do you have on the  top? Instead of, like, “Go to the gym,” you know:   “Give myself up to lead my wife.” And put that  in for March, April, May—the rest of my life.  Ladies, you prepared to take it out, write it  up there on the thing? “What is my priority?   I’m going to give myself up in deferring as  a wife to my husband’s leadership—even though   in the back of my mind I find myself  saying, ‘I don’t want to.’” You know,   or whatever it is—“He’s a pain in the neck.” Well… No, you see, the issue in it is—and that’s   why verse 32 is so important—it’s ’cause we’re all  going to be gone. One of us will die, we’ll both   die, the marriage will be over, the song will  have been sung, the story will have been told,   our gospel will have been written. And it will  have been written for our children and for our   grandchildren; it will have been written for our  neighbors and our friends—not necessarily in our   ability to exegete the Bible or to explain the  peculiar natures of a theological principle. But   the real test will be in the evangelistic thrust  of a husband and a wife who said together on a   routine basis, “Dear loving Lord, please help  us to live as you intend, so that the love of   Christ for his church may be displayed through  my love for Sue.” That’s it there in a nutshell:   that the love of Christ for his church might be  seen in microcosm in the husband’s love for his   wife, and that the submission of the church to  Christ might be revealed in the submission of   a wife to her husband. It’s just so vast. It’s  so wonderful. It’s so possible, by God’s grace.  That brings us to S. S for sanctity. Sanctity.  Which, of course, is a good word. You won’t find   it used much these days, because it’s too  challenging. Maybe we just give ourselves   one verse as we draw to a close; that would be  Hebrews 13:4: “Let marriage be held in honor   among all … let the marriage bed be undefiled,  for God will judge the sexually immoral and [the]   adulterous.” In other words, here’s the safety  clause: “Don’t do this!” God is providing for   our safety and for our enjoyment. The sanctity of  marriage is grounded in the intimacy of the union.  And if you think that somehow or another God pays  scant attention to this, then go read Song of   Solomon, and realize what God has provided there  in terms of the celebration of intimacy. If we   are tempted to think that God is able to wink at  the times when we simply disregard these things   and that it doesn’t really matter at all—after  all, we can do as we please—then not only Song of   Solomon should be read, but the book of Proverbs  should be read. And there we could ponder the   devastation that accompanies every attempt to live  a life outside the boundaries of God. Proverbs 5,   the warnings of Solomon to his son; he says to  him, “Son, you don’t want to do this. I mean,   this is bad, it is wrong, it will harm you.”  It’s Proverbs 5. You can read from 11 on:   “At the end of your life you groan, when  your flesh and [your] body are consumed.”  When he writes to his son, he says,  “Listen, can you carry fire in your chest   without your clothes being burned?” The boy goes, “No, of course not.”  He said, “Well, listen.  Listen. God’s way is best.”  No matter what our culture may contend, we  know that we are actually hard-wired as men   and women—we are hard-wired, constituted in such  a way—as to want sexual loyalty. It’s built into   us. The fact that there are people who want to  talk in terms of polygamy—and you read these   things in the press every so often—the deviation  that is represented in that is so peculiar and so   wrong that it is completely out of the mainstream.  The average person knows in themselves, “I want   her all to me! There is a Reserved sign on her.  There is a Reserved sign on me.” And therefore,   there is a distinct, embedded opposition to  that which intrudes upon that very circumstance.  And apart from God’s grace—apart from God’s  grace—then the story, which is represented in   all kinds of ways… I mean, I remember when  the when the movie Out of Africa came out,   and everyone told me, “Oh, Out of Africa, what a  beautiful movie, and beautiful music. Ooo, it was   a nice music and everything.” The whole story  was about adultery! The whole movie! I’d say,   “What, you want to sit in there and tell me  you think this is a good movie? What is good   about this? What if she was your wife?  What if he was your husband?” You say,   “Well, now you’re going to start your  talk all over again.” Well, maybe,   yes! Because it’s theology! It’s theology! No. We are constituted in that way. And when   we violate that, then the story is the  same everywhere and every day: jealousy,   hatred, violence, misery, depression, suicide.  Jealousy, hatred, violence, misery, depression,   suicide. Take a magazine. Take any magazine.  Read The Times, as I’ve read it this week.  Listen: The law of the LORD   is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony  of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple. The statutes of the LORD are right, rejoicing  the heart: the commandment[s] of the LORD [are]   pure … and righteous altogether. “As for God, his way is perfect.”  If you’ve been reading Murray M’Cheyne, you’ve  been reading Job, as I have been. And perhaps   you’ve found verses in there that you never  noticed before. And I wrote one down this week so   that I wouldn’t forget it, Job 22:21. And one of  Job’s friends says to Job this: “Agree with God…”  Agree with God, and be at peace;  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  Receive instruction from his mouth,  and lay up his words [upon] your heart.  Have you found the peace that comes from  agreeing with God? You may today. Agree with God,   what he says about the rebellion of our  hearts—that we’re sinful. Agree with what   God says about providing in Jesus a wonderful  Savior—that although we’re sinful and separated,   that he loved us enough to send us a Savior.  Agree with what the Bible says about what it   means not simply to be intellectually engaged  with the idea but actually to entrust our lives   to the God who loves us and who has sent his  Son for us. Agree with God, and be at peace.  Father, we thank you that we can never  exhaust the wisdom of your Word. And   I pray now that the words of my mouth spoken  and the meditation of our hearts may be found   acceptable in your sight. Lord, you are our  only strength and our only redeemer. Amen. This message was brought to you from Truth For  Life where the learning is for living. To learn   more about Truth For Life with Alistair  Begg visit us online at truthforlife.org
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Channel: Alistair Begg
Views: 22,817
Rating: 4.9219513 out of 5
Keywords: Truth For Life, Alistair Begg, Marriage, Biblical Womanhood, Biblical Manhood, Wives, Husbands, Christian living, Grace, Grace of God, Secular Culture
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Length: 40min 43sec (2443 seconds)
Published: Wed Feb 28 2018
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