God is a covenant God, and He created marriage as a covenant. So before we
can understand what marriage is, we need to learn what covenant is. Without
the binding commitment of a covenant, a marriage is only a promise on paper,
which moths and rust can destroy. (Matthew 6:19-20)
CONTRACT OR COVENANT?
Once upon a time, in much of the world, including the land that is now the
United States, the covenant was the standard form of agreement between two
parties. It seems that as society became more civilized, we forgot how to
act toward our fellow man, and our spouses too. Look at the modern marriage
contract, complete with pre-nuptial agreement. After all, we can try it out,
and if it doesn’t work, there’s no risk to anyone.
What ever happened to that “till death do us part” stuff from the wedding
vows? If marriage is to last long enough to truly become “one flesh” then
there needs to be something more binding than a piece of paper to hold it
together. When God appeared to Abram, He came to “...establish My covenant
between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an
everlasting covenant...” (Genesis 17:7). Everlasting covenant.
What would make a covenant, or any agreement involving man everlasting?
In a covenant, the root concept is commitment. Commitment unto death. If
you and I are in covenant, and you have a need, and I am able to fulfill
it, there wouldn’t even be any thought about “Should I?” I would desire to
meet the need even at the expense of not meeting my own needs.
Covenants are commonly referred to as “blood covenants.” That is because
“cutting” (entering into) a covenant requires the shedding of blood.
Blood covenants are permanent because of the shedding of blood. There is
something about blood that burns itself into our memory, in such a way that
it can’t be erased. The blood burns into our memory a constant reminder of
the covenant we entered into. There is no way we can conveniently forget
our covenant partner.
It is a well known fact that without blood, it is impossible to live.
“For the life of the flesh is in the blood...” (Leviticus
17:11). Remove the blood from any creature, and you have taken the
life out of it. “...for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the
soul.” (Leviticus 17:11). The blood-life offering, given
on the altar, before God, washes away the sin, and reestablishes covenant
with God. As Christians, this covenant sacrifice comes not from animals,
“But with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish or
spot.” (1 Peter 1:19).
ANATOMY OF A COVENANT
Covenants were created by God. The first mention of the word covenant is
in Genesis chapter six, when God first spoke to Noah. However, this was not
the first covenant that God established. Each dispensation has had its own
covenant, starting with Adam. They don’t eliminate the former covenants,
just add more of God’s grace to us.
Any covenant that God established with man was caused by His love for us,
and our need for His intervention into our lives. In early cultures (the
time of Abraham and Noah) mankind understood the covenant relationship, and
could relate to God through it. People and families would enter into a covenant
whenever a binding agreement was needed. Generally, if two families entered
into a covenant, it would not be because of common strengths, but complimentary
weaknesses. They would enter into the covenant in order to gain the strength
of the other party.
In marriage, it is often said that “opposites attract”. This attraction comes
from needs and weaknesses that the other party is able to fulfill. If we
enter into covenant with someone who has the same strengths as we do, we
gain nothing by the covenant.
Before we go any further, it’s important that we clarify something. When
one enters into a covenant, they are joining into a relationship. Not just
a superficial relationship either, but as deep and strong as two people are
able to make it. This requires taking time to know your covenant partner.
God entered into covenant with man. Therefore, He is jealous of our time
with Him, time that we should desire to spend time getting to know everything
about Him. He has spent the time to number the very hairs on our heads,
(Matthew 10:30; Luke 12:7) it is only right that we reciprocate
and learn to know Him.
Before two parties could enter this covenant, a lot of talking had to be
done. You couldn’t just jump into a covenant. At least, not if you were very
smart. To be able to fulfill the covenant relationship, you had to really
know the other person. What their needs were, their likes and dislikes, and
even how they did things. Most of all, it was important to make sure that
your beliefs agreed. If one followed Jehovah, and the other Baal, then there
wasn’t any common ground. How can you expect God to bless any relationship
that is “unequally yoked”? It’s one thing if the unequalness happens after
the fact, but something totally different when you blindly walk into it.
The other thing that needed discussion was the terms of the covenant. What
was each person or family bringing into the relationship? What did they expect
to get out of it? Who was going to be responsible for doing what? How were
their financial needs to be met? These were all important issues, and if
they weren’t settled up front, could cause major problems later.
These items weren’t discussed from the viewpoint of what each expected to
get, but rather, what each expected to give. Remember earlier, we said that
a covenant was a relationship. We need to add a word to that relationship,
it is love. We’ll discuss this more later on. But for now, just remember
that true love is giving - not getting. So each party was looking for ways
to help the other, while making sure that the needs of the whole were met.
LIVING IN HACEED
When people enter into a true covenant they really needs very few rules to
go by. This is because the relationship is based on Haceed. The concept of
haceed is so central to a covenant that it defines their lives. Every action
that they take will reflect the haceed they have for each other.
What is haceed, you ask? Well, haceed is love. But, not love as we know it
in this country. Not the, “I love my car, I love chocolate, and I love my
spouse too.” I’m sure you’ve heard people say things like that. If I were
the spouse, I wouldn’t put much stock in that love. Besides, people who say
things like this probably love their car more than their spouse.
Unfortunately, haceed doesn’t really translate into English. We only have
one word for love, where Greek, for example, has five; each meaning a different
type of love. The best translation I have come up with is “an overwhelming
desire to give of yourself, to the other person, for their benefit, regardless
of the cost to yourself.”
Read that over a couple of times; it’s quite a mouth full.
Do you see where the priority is? It isn’t in self, but in the other person.
Looking for ways and opportunities to meet their needs and desires. Looking
for opportunities to give.
This type of love doesn’t exactly fit in with our “look out for number one”
society. It’s a totally unselfish love. A totally giving love. A totally
unconditional love. It requires 100%, all the time, no matter what.
When was the last time you saw someone be that giving of themselves?
“Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends.” (John 15:13) Laying down your life doesn’t only
mean death, although dying for another can be an expression of haceed. Laying
down one’s life is putting other’s needs and desires before your own. You
see, love always gives.
When Jesus went to the cross, He gave 100%. We know from His own words that
He didn’t want to go to the cross. But that wasn’t paramount in His life.
He set aside His will for the Father’s. “Father, if thou be willing, remove
this cup from me: nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done.” (Luke
22:42) haceed won out over his own desires. Jesus’ haceed for the
father, and God’s haceed for us.
Haceed is totally unconditional. “But God commandeth his love toward us,
in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” (Romans 5:8)
There was no reason for God to love us, and we couldn’t do anything
to give Him a reason to love us. Yet He, in His divine haceed loved us. Loved
us so much that He was willing to go to the cross for us.
Since God is omnipotent, He knew He would have to go to the cross for us
before He even created us. Yet He is so full of haceed for “God is Love”
(1 John 4:8; 16), that He went ahead with creation. He knew
the cost and was willing to pay it.
Unfortunately, we’ve lost this concept in our society. When the Bible was
translated into English and other modern languages, there wasn’t a word to
use for haceed. So, the translators substituted “tender mercy”,
“grace”, or “loving kindness”. Those are actually rather wimpy translations.
For instance: “His mercy endureth forever” (Psalm 136 - several
places), doesn’t have anywhere near the impact as “His haceed endureth
forever.”
In Greek, the word for haceed is “agape”. Jesus had to show His disciples
what this word meant. Oh, yeah, they had it in their language, but nobody
had seen it demonstrated.
When I started getting an understanding of covenant, I went looking through
my concordance for the places where haceed should be. What an eye opener!
Verses that I had read before came alive in a new and exciting way. I had
never understood that my God had an overwhelming desire to give of Himself
for me. Oh sure, I had heard He loved me, but not with this type of intensity.
God desires to show his haceed to us. As partakers in His covenant, He desires
for us to show haceed toward one another, for Jesus said: “This is my
commandment, That ye love one another, as I have loved you. (John 15:12)
The word for love here is “agape/haceed.”
HACEED IN MARRIAGE
Many of the parts to the covenant ceremony are included in our modern day
marriage ceremony, without our even realizing it. For example, the covenant
meal is the wedding reception, complete with the covenant partners feeding
each other the bread (cake) and wine (champagne). We all laugh about how
they smear the cake onto each other’s faces, ignoring the deeper meaning.
Since marriage is a covenant, it must operate in haceed. It is only when
we begin to show haceed to our spouses that we begin to fulfill the terms
of that covenant. We must die to self, just as Jesus did, and as Paul did,
allowing God’s love to show through us. “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless
I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live
in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave
Himself for me.” (Galatians 2:20) |