"Every
article I've written has been put upon my heart to convict me first among others
whom I wish to serve. By God's grace alone do I write these words in the hope
that they will keep some brother or sister from making the same mistakes that
I already have made." - K. Gilliard, 2001
Hating Sin
and Desiring God: Signs of Christian Maturity In Relationships and a Quest for
Purity
Kerry
Gilliard
Theologically
Correct dot Com Ministries
"Every
article I've written has been put upon my heart to convict me first among others
whom I wish to serve. By God's grace alone do I write these words in the hope
that they will keep some brother or sister from making the same mistakes that
I already have made." - K. Gilliard, 2001
When I originally wrote
this piece, the Lord used it to set a spark underneath of a few dozen folks
I know (myself included). Others forwarded it along as my personal testimony
in the area of relationships. Since then (and it's only been three months or
so), I've grown more. I've finally taken the time to put together a 'cleaned
up' and expanded version of this- hopefully, if you've been through a relationship
with an unsaved person or even with a believer who wasn't 'growing' and whose
influence was drawing you 'backward' in your walk with Christ, this will give
you something to meditate on.
At the beginning of the
year, I encountered something which I now KNOW to be a definite sign of growth
in Christ. I 'found' it over the course of two days earlier this year when in
contact with some old friends and while meditating on the Word of God. There
exists in me now, a loathing- a pure DISGUST, for secular relationships the
way they are carried on (aka 'the dating scene'). Let me relate to you all a
story.....
One
friday night in January (2001), one of my ex-girlfriends gave me a hollar on
my cell phone. Now let me give you some background- in the latter part of last
year (2000), I dealt with some severe issues relating to two of my ex-girls,
mostly in relation to sex. While it had been a long period of time (months)
since I'd been with either of them intimately, I maintained contact with both
of them as 'friends'. Really *smile*. Despite doing things outside of God's
will, I did manage to develop some decent friendships with them. Well, I
was only fooling myself. Both of them existed as ever-present temptations
and I knew well that both were just one phone call or car ride away. Paul spoke
wisely when he said "DO NOT BE DECIEVED: BAD COMPANY CORRUPTS GOOD HABITS"
(1 Cor. 15:33). With that, I decided to withdraw myself from the presence of
both women.
Now, I'd been keeping my
distance from this particular woman as part of my committment to 'cut off some
legs and eyes that cause me to stumble' (Matthew 5:29-30). However, keeping
in contact with her or 'hearing' something about her every once in a while was
kind of inevitable (since she's in my fraternity's sister organization), but
for the most part, I didn't talk to her unless she called me.
Well, that one particular
night, she gave me a call- just to talk and see what I've been up to. It'd been
a few weeks since I'd talked to her at length (or at all!), so I figured I'd
be nice and not just kick her to the curb. We talked for a few, then I had to
bounce, so I told her I'd call her back. Being the nice guy that I am, I called
her back about an hour later. She informed me she was on the phone with someone
new who now had 'priveleged status' (the same status I used to have when she
and I dated). To make a long story short, I asked who, she informed me it was
someone I knew from another fraternity. I found out it was someone I knew from
another internet discussion board I used to hang out on (my ex now hangs out
on a related discussion board, which is how she ran into him).
From the time she told
me who it was, a feeling of disgust overwhelmed me at even the thought of HER.
I told her 'eeeuuww!! That's nasty!'. She didn't understand my reaction, so
of course, she asked why. I said 'well, he used to date/sleep with an old girlfriend
of mine before I dated her (from about 4 years back)'. She responded 'yeah?
and?'. I thought to myself 'oh yeah, you don't view sex the same way I do.'
I told her 'well, if that don't look nasty to you....'. We parted ways,
and I proceeded to erase all of my digital records of her cell phone number
and home number. I'm not talking to her anymore.
My feeling of disgust wasn't
so much about her being with someone else, but in the fact of all this 'mixing
of essences', so to speak.... Let's take a trek to scripture for a second: Paul
speaks on this very topic in 1 Corinthians 6. He writes:
"....Now the body
is NOT for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body.
Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I then take
the members of Christ and make them members of a harlot? CERTAINLY NOT! Or
do you not know that he who is joined to a harlot is one body with her? For
'The two," He says, "shall become one flesh." But he who is
joined to the Lord is one spirit with Him. " (1 Cor. 6:13b, 15-17, NKJV).
The power of these verses
(among others) hit me over the head with the force of a runaway train that night-
not that I didn't already know this, but it hit me AGAIN- as if for the first
time. Those of you in the body of Christ who are sexually active outside of
marriage- consider this: everyone you sleep with, you literally 'become one'
with that person in essence (that is, on a spiritual level as well as a physical
level), which is why God calls adultery, fornication and ALL sexual sins 'abominations'
(thoroughly disgusting, repulsive and hideous to put it lightly) in 1 Cor. 6:9-10.
Consider something further
(which I've written about in part on my ministry website): Every covenant in
scripture is consumated/initiated with blood. In the garden of Eden, God killed
animals and used their skins as coverings for Adam and Eve. In the wilderness,
Abraham found a ram to sacrifice in place of his son. With Moses, we have the
Levitical priesthood (Lev. 17:11). All of these culminated in the greatest sacrifice-
Christ shedding His blood as the offering in the place of the believer in the
New Testament (Luke 22:19-20, 1 John 1:9, c.f. Hebrews 9:19-28). The marriage
covenant is the same- it is an agreement (covenant) between two or more parties
(God-Husband-Wife). It is initiated by a blood sacrifice (take a guess).
So who are we- finite
creations- to take what God blessed and ordained as good in the garden of
Eden, spoke of approvingly in an entire book of scripture (Song of Solomon),
said and husband and wife shouldn't deny each other except for short periods
of fasting and praying (1 Cor. 7:5), said is 'honorable and that the bed is
undefiled' (Heb. 13:4)- who are we to use the excuse of 'cheap grace' (sin and
repent, sin and repent, repeat ad infinitum) to defile and abuse what God has
labeled holy, sacred and honorable? Who are we to enter into 'half-covenants'
which expire as soon as we lose interest in the other person's body?
Selah.
Over the past few months,
the Lord has blessed my personal growth in Christ with more and more things
and people to aid and support me. My view of relationships has been radically
changed over the past few months (partly due to Josh Harris's books 'I've Kissed
Dating Goodbye' and 'Boy Meets Girl: Say Hello to Courtship' - http://www.joshharris.net),
but even before all of this, I've been gaining more and knowledge of the biblical
doctrine of sexuality.
As I said before, every
article I write (including this one) is a result of the Lord convicting me about
my own falling short in a particular area. Part of me looks at myself with that
same level of disgust because of my past sexual relationships - not because
I still carry the guilt of what I've done in the past, but because of what I've
lost since then. The purity of sex and what it represents was designed
by God to be GOOD (yes, 'GOOD' in that way), but it was designed
for a husband and wife.
I think of all the bits
and pieces of emotional and physical intimacy that I've WASTED on people who
are now no more than memories (or even worse - SCREEN NAMES on AOL) that I have
no intention of returning to, nor they to me. I think of all the times I've
allowed myself to grow emotionally close to others too soon and too much (all
without a REAL commitment, since the only REAL and LASTING commitment is marriage)
only to come away with baggage. I think of all the people I've used for my emotional
and physical gratification, even with 'good intentions' and realize it was all
in vain. I think of all the times I've said 'those three words' and ended up
separated from that person later on.
I know that the blood of
Christ cleanses me from all sin (1 John 1:9) and that my salvation is secure
in Christ and cannot be 'lost'. I know that unconfessed sin and habitual sinning
as a 'lifestyle' hampers my fellowship and stunts my spiritual growth and daily
sanctification. So in those areas, I'm pretty much skraight. I don't harbor
guilt- I grieve. And when I think of my ex and other friends like
her whom I still have some related contact to and what they're all putting themselves
through, I grieve for them too.
What do I see out of this
whole thing? Well, I see some good out of this. First off, to have a disgust
for things which God calls bad and an abomination is a good thing. My
field (music education) usually has me listening to the radio for stuff to write
up for the marching and pep bands, but even today, I found myself flipping more
and more to the Christian stations just to keep from hearing some of the trash
pumped over the radio (from a musician's standpoint, most of that stuff today
is vaccuous anyway....). That is a manifestation of a desire for something godly.
I find myself (and thankfully
my best friend Melvin is praying for this too!) now praying that God take out
people out of my life who will not contribute to my growth in Christ. I've been
on this track for quite a while now, since a few of you (who know me personally)
know about me cutting ties with folks and the related stresses there over the
past few months. Now I find in myself, a desire for relationships the way God
views them - brotherly and with respect, protection and purity toward members
of the opposite sex, being careful not to awaken passion before its' time (Song
of Sol. 2:7- that's emotional AND physical).
I am learning- daily- to
find my JOY and satisfaction in God and not in the emotional pleasures of having
a member of the opposite sex stroke my ego for a while. Many believers, still
stuck on the world's system of doing things, grow discontented with the gift
of singleness and rush off to marriage or into unhealthy or sometimes unequally
yoked relationships (2 Cor. 6:14-18) with people who deter them from serving
God. While I sometimes do still deal with being 'alone', I realize that contentment
with whatever state we are in - whether it be 'single' or 'married' (there is
no 'dating' in the Bible, but that's another article for my website....*grin*)
is a blessing from God (1 Cor. 7:27,32-34). If you are not satisfied or 'complete'
serving God single, you won't find that 'completeness' being married to someone.
I say all this to say -
I am learning to desire God.
I hope this little 'soapbox
sermon' serves to show a few of you some things you haven't seen before and
awaken a desire in you to serve God and truly DESIRE Him and His righteousness.
When you start getting there, you begin to view as evil what God views as evil.
You begin to view as good what God views as good. You grow a desire to serve
Him. Pray for it. Seek it. Hunt for it. Search the scriptures daily and
diligently for it.
And know this- God will
bless your growth in Christ beyond anything you can possibly conceive. And when
HE puts that person in your life who has that same desire for God that you do
and you both become one, you can not only enjoy serving God together, you can
truly enjoy EACH OTHER the way God intended.
Delight yourself in THE
LORD and He will give you the desires of your heart, says David in Psalm 37:4.
Read that closely and think about it- if your delight is in the Lord, your desires
will be to those things which are well pleasing to God- your desires will be
to do His will (NOT YOUR WILL!). If the desires of your heart are the same as
the desires of God, who's the winner?
Selah.
Kerry
Gilliard is the Founder/Director of Theologically Correct dot Com Ministries
in Maryland. His website is dedicated to articulating and defending the Christian
faith and promoting a Christian worldview. You can reach him at http://theologicallycorrect.com.