INTRODUCTION
When I began writing this book, Amazon.com listed for sale 151,000 books on marriage; 27,000 books on dating; almost 12,000 books on attraction; and more than 190,000 books on sex. On the page listing books on the subject of marriage, the “sponsored links” suggested pages on topics such as “aggressive divorce” and “divorce help for women,” among others. Clearly, we are a culture simultaneously obsessed with relationships and sex, but dysfunctional in our approaches to them.
In the church I pastor, I am continually bombarded with questions about how dating should work, and we spend thousands of hours a year in premarital and marital counseling. Although there appears to be a deep desire to approach dating, marriage, and sex in a way that pleases God, there nevertheless seems to be a profound lack of wisdom and practical know-how. There is a sizable gap between our understanding of the gospel and our knowledge of the Scriptures on one hand and our application of that knowledge on the other. The sheer amount of confusion, heartbreak, and fear that I have witnessed at The Village Church in regard to romantic relationships and sex provides my primary motivation for writing this book.
But it is not enough to continually restate the problems. Christian culture does not lack for well-meaning hand-wringing in the areas of sexual morality, and the unbelieving world is not necessarily unclear on where the church stands in these areas either. It is also not enough to simply offer practical help on the topics of communication, romance, and sexuality. Practical help is—well, helpful—and I want to share some wisdom in those areas with you. But practical steps take us only so far without the right motivations and the right character. Any truly biblical treatment of these subjects must go deeper than outward application. The Holy Spirit is first dedicated to our inward transformation. And the good news is that God is committed to this work.
Yes, there is good news amid all the confusion surrounding romance, marriage, and sex. And it’s actually found in the first sentence of the Bible: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”1 That simple yet profound sentence gives us the authoritative lens through which to see the world. The universe that you and I inhabit was created and ordered and is sovereignly governed by a good Creator-God. One of the implications of this truth is that there is now wisdom woven into the very fabric of life that, if submitted to, makes life “to the full” possible.2
But submission to this wisdom doesn’t come easily. Two chapters into the book of Genesis, we see sin’s arrival wreaking havoc on the creative order, poisoning every earthly relationship—beginning with Adam’s marriage to Eve. Where the relationship between man and woman was originally one of joyful exuberance and complementarity, sin made it confusing, fraught with conflict, and at times extremely painful.
This is not the way God designed the world to run. And yet, a mistake Christians often make is confusing the perversion for the design. We see all the pain and anxiety that result from relationships in conflict, particularly in the areas of sex and sexuality, and we begin to treat sex and the desire for it as bad in and of themselves. But the ways we abuse a thing do not negate the value of that thing. Misuse does not disprove the proper use. So when the Scriptures say that God scooped the dirt up from the ground and shaped man, we acknowledge that this means all of him. I’m not trying to be crass here, but when God shaped the man, he gave the man a penis. It wasn’t the Devil who did that. God didn’t mold most of the man and then let Satan add his own touch. Neither did Satan sneak in and alter God’s good creation.
No, for whatever power the Devil has, he is still not a creator; he just perverts and twists God’s good designs. God put the penis on the man, and he put the testicles on the man, and he filled those testicles with sperm. He created all tissue—some that would expand, some that would secrete; he filled the man with testosterone that would drive much of his life. From the beginning, this was God’s idea. Then he sent the man out filled with testosterone to walk through all creation and name the animals, to exercise God-given authority. When Adam was done with that, before sin entered the world, God said, “It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him a helper fit for him.”3
I want to say it again: God’s the one who created and wired this whole thing. In Genesis 2, sin hadn’t even entered the world yet, and God said it wasn’t good for Adam to be alone. So he knocked him out, pulled out a rib, and shaped the woman. And as he shaped the woman differently, he gave her larger breasts, rounder hips, and a vagina. He filled the woman with a different hormone, estrogen. The woman’s body was not the Devil’s idea; it was all God’s doing.
When Adam woke up, he looked at the woman, and the whole literary form shifted. He began to sing. Adam had been naming the animals—camel, donkey, horse, fish—and then he broke into song when he saw the woman. “This at last,” his song began, as if he had been longing for some undefined fulfillment all along. After all, there had been no helper found suitable for him among the animal world. But this creature? “At last!”
He named her woman, which from the Hebrew essentially means “out of me” or “mine.” How profound is that? After he named all the animals, he sang the first love song the moment he laid eyes on Eve. He sang, “Mine.” This is itself a foretaste of the declaration in the Song of Solomon, “My beloved is mine, and I am his.”4
As Genesis 2 closes, we see God’s plan for relationships and sex. He says that the man and the woman “were both naked and were not ashamed.”5 Think for a minute about that verse, and especially the phrase “naked and … not ashamed.” It’s clear in the text that they are physically naked, but it is also clear that the relationship Adam and Eve have—the one that is God’s good design for us—is that of a man and a woman serving the Lord together, with nothing to fear and nothing to hide, with everything to be glad about in God, including this good gift of each for the other in the covenant of marriage.
God also commanded the man and the woman to “be fruitful and multiply.”6 God gave them the gift of sex. In the physical body, sexual intercourse wasn’t some random happening. No, this, too, was God’s gift. “Be fruitful and multiply; enjoy one another.”
Sex and the families it produces are part of God’s blessing. From the initial attraction to the covenant marriage that sanctions sex, from the thrill of the romantic chase to the consummate pleasure of the marriage bed, God designed it all, ordered it all, blessed it all.
It is imperative that you understand this important point before we get too far into this book. It is necessary, for the understanding of all God has made, to know that God intentionally made the universe in a way that brings him great glory and us great joy.
God’s good design when it comes to gender and relationships and sex is for all of these things to work rhythmically together in such a way that men and women experience the deepest amount of joy possible while at the same time glorifying God at the highest level possible. The longing in a single person’s heart for a wife or a husband finds its root in God’s glory.
Wouldn’t it be nice if it still worked the way it did in Genesis? Men, if you got up from a nap and there she was! No games, no confusion, no risk. Just “the one” standing before you, glowing with God’s delight. Women, can you wrap your minds around a relationship built on clarity and trust, all for your joy and God’s glory? No broken hearts, no mind games, no toying with your emotions. Just serving the Lord with a man who delights in God all the more because God gave him you. What a stunning dynamic God’s relational order would create! This is what Adam and Eve enjoyed. Pure, uninhibited, harmonious, glory-filled rapture with each other through pure, uninhibited, harmonious, glory-filled relationship with God.
So what happened? Well, Genesis 3 happened. We discover there that sin entered the world through Adam’s and Eve’s disobedience, fracturing the harmony and disrupting and disgracing the rhythm. Think of a really loud electric guitar that’s not playing correctly in a band. It’s discordant and distracting. You can sort of sense how the song was meant to be played, but the dissonance is obscuring the beauty, the harmony. The guitarist might not even know he’s off.
Similarly, sometimes we are pursuing God’s good gifts in ways he has not designed them to be pursued, outside the bounds of the glory of his righteousness. We may think we are joining in a beautiful song, but we are actually contributing to the disharmony of the fallen world. A gift that is beautiful, good, perfect, and purposed for our joy may instead begin to harm us (if not kill us) while we try to enjoy the residual good in it.
I’ll give you some examples.
Wine, which the Scriptures say is from the Lord and for people to enjoy, eventually can give way to alcoholism when pursued for its own sake. Food, which is from the Lord and given to humanity for both sustenance and enjoyment, becomes gluttony when pursued self-centeredly. Every good gift God gives us, in fact, becomes an idol when we pursue it for its own sake and for our ultimate pleasure and glory. This is true of good gifts, such as family and children and even church. And it is certainly true of gifts designed to facilitate pleasure, such as food and drink and sex. When sin entered the world, what was meant to lead people to the worship of God became something with the potential to harm.
Sex is a gift from God. It is meant to nurture intimacy in a marriage and forge a bonding of souls. Unfortunately, sex in our culture has become almost exclusively a physical thing. We’ve made the word love a junk-drawer word. It’s the word that means everything. People will say they “love” their children but also that they “love” their dogs. Surely they don’t mean the same thing. A husband who “loves” his wife but also “loves” his favorite NFL team isn’t saying the same thing.
In the Hebrew lexicon, there are multiple words for love, but one of my favorites is the word dod. Although it is often rendered “love,” dod refers specifically to sexual love and is better translated as “lovemaking” or “caresses.” It carries the meaning, as Paul House said, of two souls mingling together.7
God’s plan is for a man and a woman in the bond of the marriage covenant to have their souls—not just their bodies—become one.
Sounds amazing, doesn’t it? A mingling of souls. I want to know how we get there, don’t you?
The source of that kind of joy and fulfillment is the same source for all sin’s remedy. If we backtrack to the reason we got into all this mess, we can connect the dots to see God’s promise of the way out. The reason we struggle in relationships, marriage, and sex is because we are sinners. Therefore, the antidote for our sin must be the antidote for our struggles.
Relationships, sex, and intimacy are God’s ideas, and even though our selfish rebellion fractured God’s good design, God reconciled everything back to himself through the life, death, and resurrection of his Son, Jesus Christ. This includes sex and relationships! Our gracious God has not left us in the dark.
Right there in the middle of the Bible, he inspired five books we have traditionally called “the Wisdom Books”—Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Songs. These books of divine wisdom reveal to us in song and poetry and dialogue the Lord’s beautiful ways of living and dying and everything in between. And in that fifth Wisdom Book, the Song of Songs (or the Song of Solomon), we watch a couple navigate the age-old pursuit of romance—the pursuit, actually, of one another—as they fight for purity against their flesh, embrace the gracious covenant of marriage, celebrate the amazing gift of sex, and learn how to gracefully grow old together. All the while they disagree honorably, encourage constantly, and keep the fires of a godly romance burning.
The bride and her groom do all of this in a way that gives God glory and brings themselves great joy and deep intimacy. We would do well to watch and imitate them. Now, I don’t think the Song is a Christian guide to dating. I don’t really think there is such a thing. Charles Spurgeon, the “Prince of Preachers,” did say this about the Song of Songs:
This Book stands like the tree of life in the midst of the garden, and no man shall ever be able to pluck its fruit, and eat thereof, until first he has been brought by Christ past the sword of the cherubim, and led to rejoice in the love which hath delivered him from death. The Song of Solomon is only to be comprehended by the men whose standing is within the veil. The outer-court worshippers, and even those who only enter the court of the priests, think the Book a very strange one; but they who come very near to Christ can often see in this Song of Solomon the only expression which their love to their Lord desires.8
Spurgeon was saying that only those aware of the steadfast love of God found in Christ could fully understand the type of ferociously committed love we see in the Song. So, again, although this is no Christian dating guide, it is clear from the book that there is a wise way to approach the opposite sex and that there is a foolish way. What we see in the Song is saturated with wisdom, and the believer in Christ will be reminded of the nurturing, patient, steadfast love of our Savior.
A quick confession: I have been with my wife, Lauren, for seventeen years. We dated for a year, courted for six months, were engaged for another six months, and have been married for fifteen years. Unfortunately, Lauren and I didn’t follow quite a bit of what we’re about to walk through in this book. You might think this makes me a hypocrite, that what I wrote isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on. But I would argue that this hard-learned reality actually makes me more confident in what I am writing. We have personally experienced some of the heartbreak, confusion, and frustration that result from going with the flow of modern relational dynamics.
I am aware of the multiple ways I failed to lead us as a couple. But I’m also aware—vividly so—of how God’s merciful gospel redeemed many of the foolish decisions we made and brought incredible healing to our hearts. But I pray that you will not presume upon the Lord and do whatever you want because you believe he will “fix it all” by his grace in the future. Grace does not make sin safe.
Grace does make sinners safe. The grace of God in Jesus Christ, the sinless Bridegroom who laid down his life for the church in order to present her as blameless to the Father in great glory, so secures the children of God who make up this bride that they need not fear, as Luther said, “sinning boldly.” Luther wasn’t encouraging us to walk in ways that are contrary to the commands of God. Rather, he was reminding us that regardless of whatever perversions we are guilty of, God’s grace covers that perversion, and we are encouraged to run to him and not from him. We can come just as we are to Jesus Christ; he does not love some future version of us, but he loves the real us, the wounded us, the messy us, the broken us. And what we learn in the Song of Songs is that a marriage shaped according to this gospel of grace, forged over years of hard-earned trust and forgiveness, can be an unsafe place for sin but a very safe place for sinners.
In a gospel-centered marriage, when two souls are mingled together with the Holy Spirit’s leading, we find confirmation after confirmation that grace is true, that grace is real—that we can be really, truly, deeply known and at the same time really, truly, deeply loved.