Showing posts with label Divorce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Divorce. Show all posts

Saturday, August 2, 2014

God of Scandal



I met my fiance Diane at a Charismatic Episcopal Church about seven years ago. In case you aren't familiar with the CEC, (most people aren't), imagine smooshing together an Assembly of God congregation with a Catholic church that rejects the Pope and wants it's male priests to be able to marry. If you can do that, you'll have a pretty good idea of what it's like. The CEC features liturgical services; a patriarchal, socially conservative structure with no ordination of women and governance by an all-male Rector's Council; contemporary worship music; and prayer in tongues. Incense burns, bells ring, prophecies are spoken, and occasionally a worshiper falls to the ground, slain.

It's a cafeteria tray full of carefully selected Christian tidbits.

I helped found the church from the rubble of a fractured Presbyterian congregation. I spent hundreds of hours searching for space and preparing it for holy use, developing printed material for the services and for marketing, building a website, writing newsletters, teaching classes, leading Bible studies, participating in strategic visioning and planning, and assisting the Rector's Council. I was so deeply involved in so many things that we eventually made up a title for my role.

I loved and served that church and it's people with my whole heart.

Throughout those years the priest grew to be my best friend. In my eyes he could do no wrong and I worked hard to further his goals and those of the Rector's Council. We met often as friends and as co-laborers.

I attended church alone, having come to my faith solo at age 38. My husband didn't understand the seismic shift which picked up pace as the years passed, morphing me from a broken and unhappy near-alcoholic to a bustling, smoldering brand, consumed with a love that didn't include him (by his choice.) Our marriage had always been rocky, and while the shift improved many things as I strove to be the Proverbs 31 wife, it introduced new problems and left old ones unresolved. We'd built a foundation on infidelity, substance abuse, and mutual distrust, and it couldn't hold up under the pressure of change.

But God was working, even as our life together turned increasingly brittle.

During this time frame I met Diane. Her family was new to the area, and she came to our church ready to plunge in. She attended all the extra curricular events, participated in all the women's Bible study groups, and volunteered for any work that needed doing. Over time, she also began stepping into leadership.

Our friendship grew as her own marriage floundered and failed after many years of sorrow and struggle. By the time the final detonation of my marriage sounded, Diane's husband had already moved out, and I moved in. The timing was orchestrated so perfectly that we could hear the strings tuning even through the tortured screaming of marital collapse.

Our poor church didn't know what to do with us. Divorce was verboten under the most straight-forward of circumstances, so they had no clue how to manage the scandalous questions about our relationship that were carried on the humid breeze of murmuring. My sycophantic, disordered relationship with my beloved priest disintegrated, creating an additional untethering that felt naked and painful.

The result was scandal. So much so that we were asked to stop coming even to the poorly attended Wednesday night Eucharistic service.

In addition to being heartbroken, Diane and I were ourselves scandalized by the shift from friendship to one-ness. I was extremely Catholic in theology and had been writing about the sacredness of sexuality for years. Diane was a solidly trained Baptist girl who believed that homosexuals were doomed to hell. We didn't understand, but we knew that we knew that we knew our coming together was divinely ordained and divinely orchestrated.

In the four years that have passed since those tumultuous days I have prayed often for forgiveness about the scandal that resulted, asking God what I should do about it. A new priest leads the church now. He was in training when it all happened, and recently began to engage in dialog with us. His reaching out resulted in my praying the same prayer anew.

And when I did, I received a revelation:  

God works through scandal. 

Think about that for a minute.

The biblical history of God and His people is rife with the stuff. Consider Joshua's men being saved by the prostitute Rahab: scandalous. Consider Mary's pregnancy out of wedlock: scandalous. Consider Jesus' repeated violation of law, a reality so scandalous most Christians won't admit it even happened. Consider Jesus' shocking demand that we eat His body and drink His blood, a scandal which caused many of His followers to desert Him.

And these are just a few examples.

Our God works through scandal. He is the very God of scandal, uprooting social norms and throwing over tablefulls of accepted behaviors. He brings about miraculous change and growth through it.

In the week that has passed since this realization, I've been able to relax in a way I'd not been able to do since my marriage took its final, shuddering breaths. My conscience can rest, knowing that the great God of all gods has worked through the very scandal He and Diane and I co-created. He is doing amazing work now. I don't have to try to repair it. In fact, I'm not supposed to.

Perhaps Diane and I will be called to visit that church some day, to attend a funeral, or to speak about the magnificent, confounding, scandalous workings of He who is Love. If that day comes, I'll find the courage to do what I am called to do.

But for now I know that all I have to do is wait for that call.

He is doing the rest.

Monday, October 8, 2012

What God has joined together...


The gospel reading for yesterday was Mark 10:2-16. The priest focused part of her sermon on verses 2 through 12, which read:
And Pharisees came up and in order to test him asked, "Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife?" 3 He answered them, "What did Moses command you?" 4 They said, "Moses allowed a man to write a certificate of divorce, and to put her away." 5 But Jesus said to them, "For your hardness of heart he wrote you this commandment. 6 But from the beginning of creation, 'God made them male and female.' 7 'For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, 8 and the two shall become one flesh.' So they are no longer two but one flesh. 9 What therefore God has joined together, let not man put asunder." 10 And in the house the disciples asked him again about this matter. 11 And he said to them, "Whoever divorces his wife and marries another, commits adultery against her; 12 and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she commits adultery." 
Two things struck me about the passage, in relation to Marriage Revolution.

The first comes in verse 9, and in particular, the phrase about what God has joined together. 

In the past, I'd thought this referred to anyone who was married; if you ended up marrying, surely it was God's will, because marriage is a God-thing and a church thing.

But I realized that this thinking isn't quite right. Sure, He permits us to marry whoever we want. We have free will, and free choice. When you marry, it definitely falls within his permissive will. But then again, so does sin. He permits many things. Not all marriages fall under his ordained will however. Not all matches are made (literally) in heaven. Many, many marriages come as a result of us not listening to the voice of reason, whether it be spoken directly by the Spirit, or indirectly through friends, families, and our own logic.

So that's the first part of my realization; that just because you are married doesn't mean God directed it to happen.

The second part is a bit more nuanced. I'm a lover of the sacramental, and hold the sacraments in high esteem, so the idea of undoing a sacrament is difficult for me. I thought that all Christian traditions considered marriage a sacrament. Turns out that in Protestant denominations (including Anglicanism) it is not. 

Strike two against my fundamental thinking.

Even within the Catholic and Eastern traditions, which hold marriage as sacrament, there is an issue which shakes my thinking. Unlike the other sacraments, which have an ordained clergy member officiating, the spouses themselves are the ministers of the sacrament of marriage. They officiate. And this seems to pull it even further out of the realm of what I'd viewed it to be.

Is it any surprise that half of our marriages end in divorce? We are not uniting as couples that God chose from His heavenly throne, we are most often not married sacramentally, and even in a sacramental union we are being our own ministers rather than joining with a priest in persona Christi to knit a chord of three.

My notions about the sacramental quality of marriage have fallen by the wayside. 

That doesn't mean that I don't believe what He says in verse 9: "Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate." 

Woe be it to any who would do so. 

What has shifted is in my understanding of what God's joining together means. I think there are very, very few couples for which this description fits.

And that's the crux of the problem.



Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The Ancient Problem of Divorce


The challenges of matrimony are obviously nothing new.

Babylonian Talmudic texts (fourth century?) talk about divorce, saying:

"There are four minds in the bed of a divorced man who marries a divorced woman."

Monday, July 30, 2012

Oscar Wilde on Divorce

"One divorce may be regarded as a misfortune, but two begins to smack of carelessness."

--Oscar Wilde

(Note: This is not intended as a judgement of divorcees, I'm simply collecting marriage and divorce quotes and found this one interesting. I ran across it in Elizabeth Gilbert's book "Committed", where she explains her reluctance to remarry after divorcing. Considering the assessments of others at a second wedding ceremony was one of the discouragements.)