So what are some common things that cause our definition of love to detour from a Biblical definition? Identifying the cause is the first step toward healing. To start, we must go back to the beginning.
Sin in the Garden of Eden caused a breakdown in the first marriage. Adam failed to fulfill his mandate to safeguard the Garden by allowing the Serpent to enter. And rather than (opposed to) heeding the edict of God, he chose to follow the leading of his wife. The Serpent deceived Eve when she attempted to elevate her own status, beauty, and knowledge (Genesis 3:4).
God’s solution to the problem of sin was and is quite brilliant. Woman would now bear the Messiah (seed) who, thru His own suffering (bruise), would crush the head (authority) of the Serpent (Satan, Genesis 3:15). In the pain of childbirth, Woman would gain an insight into the Creative Nature of God, each birth a prophetic step toward the coming of the Messiah and the redemption of Mankind. It is in response to the first birth that Eve becomes the first person to call God by His personal name, Yahweh (Genesis 4:1). Eve’s desire would now be set toward her husband recognizing that her prophetic destiny could not be fulfilled without submission to his leadership (Genesis 3:16).
Man would now toil to provide for his wife and family, recognizing a mandate to rule over them both to lead and to safeguard (Genesis 3:17-19). Bound together by a God ordained inter-dependence (not to be confused with co-dependency), man and woman would now walk together in life as carriers of Destiny. What could go wrong?
Unfortunately, sin was still in the picture. Through the generations, sin would twist the order established by God and produce our first and most common causes of relational breakdowns. For Woman, God’s solution was designed both to protect her from the abuse of her own desires (will-full, emotional, & intellectual) by putting her in a place where her desires were submitted to her husband. And both thru the submission of her desires and thru maternity, Woman would learn to call of the name of Lord (trust in, rely on the Lord).
In opposition, our culture now defines a woman’s worth based on her status, beauty, and knowledge (the very sin that got Eve in trouble). Of course the people defining what status is acceptable, what is defined as beautiful, and what women are allowed to do with knowledge are men. This means that men now control a woman’s sense of acceptance and self worth. Women, from an early age, are taught that without affirmation of status, beauty, and knowledge from a man (father figure), they are not worth anything. As they come of age a desire toward their husband is replaced with destiny dependent on a man.
For man, the need to provide for his family was designed to provoke his natural desire to lead and safeguard them. As man works to rule his family, he is signing himself up for a mission that he cannot achieve without a dependence on God. God would be his role model for how to lead, how to provide, and how to love. Man would be protected from the tendency to advocate the role of leadership to his wife and would now be driven to seek and rely upon the Lord.
Our culture now defines a man’s worth based on his performance. Men are seen as only being worth their ability to perform sexually, financially, and practically. Men are taught from an early age that their sense of acceptance and self worth is based on their ability to perform. As men come of age, they transfer this need for performance-based acceptance into their relationship with God and their relationships with women. Men look to women to determine whether or not they are performing enough to be worth something.
In this ‘sin-full’ model, women are now dependent on men for their sense of value and self worth. Men are now dependent on women to affirm their performance and validate their sense of acceptance. And rather than turning to God, men and women turn to each other (co-dependency instead of interdependence). God restructured romantic relationships in the Garden so that they would foster a dependence upon Him. But now, twisted by sin, these same relationships can become a barrier to a relationship with God.
Rightly seen and rightly executed, a relationship between a man and a woman (in context as discussed last week) can produce and foster a revelation of and dependence upon God. But God never intended for women to look to men for their sense of value and self worth (worship). God never intended for men to look to women to validate their performance, provide acceptance, and affirm self worth (fatherhood). These are roles ultimately reserved for God.
Ladies, Psalm 139:14 states that you are “fearfully and wonderfully made”. You are wonderfully made because God created you that way. No man will ever be able to affirm your beauty, status, and fulfill your desire for knowledge because man did not create you. And knowing that you are wonderful should produce a fear or reverence recognizing that you were ultimately created not for the pleasure of a man, but for the pleasure of the God who created you. It is ultimately God who gives life and your destiny is solely and securely dependent upon him.
Fellas, Romans 5:8 says that, “God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” When you were unable to perform, God did what you could not. He loves you and chooses to accept you based on Christ’s performance at Calvary. There is nothing that you can do to earn it. Women will never be able to affirm your worth as a son so stop looking for them to do so. You have a Father in Heaven who loves you and accepts you without any expectation or requirement for you to perform. His love is a free gift.
If we are going to heal our relationships with each other, we need to first start by healing our relationship with God. Give him the worship (place of honor, trust, and dependence) that He alone deserves. It is only from the source of a life of worshipping God that we can draw the strength and insight we need to properly love each other.