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A
NON-VALENTINE MESSAGE
By the time February comes each year, many
people look with anticipation to the celebration
occurring on the fourteenth of the month. I refer to Saint
Valentine’s Day. When I was a child in public school (an option
I would never recommend or even endorse today), each year
we would prepare and distribute our "Valentine’s cards"
to other students in the class. I can recall the colored shoebox
with opening at the top that would accommodate the thirty
cards of the other students. Later I discovered that the holiday
was a favorite one of "lovers" all around—whether
married or unmarried. Valentine’s cards, boxes of candy, bouquets
of flowers, and other commercial trappings added to the day’s
significance. Valentine’s Day dances and parties are also
popular on this annual holiday.
As followers of Christ Jesus,
we do not claim the Catholic "Saint" Valentine as a true saint of
God and do not honor in a special way this third century religious
martyr with this name. We really know very little about this
man and some even doubt that he existed. On the other hand,
some say that there were two priests with this name, both
martyred on February 14, in AD 269. Furthermore, we totally
reject the connection with Cupid, the ancient Roman "god"
of love, represented as a winged, naked, infant boy with bow
and arrows. We also renounce all connection with Lupercalia,
the Roman festival with vile fertility rites honoring the
gods Juno and Pan—a feast that occurred on February 15 of
each year. We definitely refuse to endorse the emphasis on
romantic lust or sexual infatuation that is prominent on this
popular holiday. All in all, Saint Valentine’s Day does not
hold the place in our hearts that it does to the people around
us in the world. (Notice the article under "Questions
and Answers" about Saint Valentine.)
During the days of Geoffrey
Chaucer, the fourteenth century poet, the English people
thought that birds were mated
on February 14. Shakespeare made mention of this in "A
Midsummer Night’s Dream." When two lovers are discovered
in the woods, someone asks, "St. Valentine is past; /
Begin these woodbirds but to couple now?" By the 1700s,
women in England thought they could learn who their future
mate would be through Valentine’s Day rituals. In the early
1800s, commercial valentines appeared, with space for a special
message in each card. In the latter 1800s, Kate Greenway produced
cards with joyful children and beautiful gardens—and these
are collector’s items today. Cupid and hearts were favorite
symbols during this period. From the 1800s and into the early
1900s, comic Valentine’s cards were popular; they were called
"dreadfuls" and sold for a penny. Today, Valentine’s
cards of all kinds are available at nearly all drug stores,
card shops, and discount chains. (See Compton’s Encyclopedia
and World Book Encyclopedia for much of this information.)
In rejecting much of the
world’s holiday named
"Saint Valentine’s Day," we want to make it abundantly
clear that we stand positively for something! We stand wholeheartedly
in favor of love between marriage partners! We advocate the
bliss of marital love and rejoice in the institution of marriage
as God would have it!
In the beginning, God our
Creator made the man and the woman. He said, "It is not good for the man
to be alone; I will make him a helper suitable for him"
(Gen. 2:18). He continued, "A man shall leave his father
and his mother, and shall cleave to his wife; and they shall
become one flesh" (v. 24). The Bible says, "God
saw all that He had made, and behold, it was very good"
(1:31). It was "very good" for there to be one man
and one woman, united in the relationship of marriage! It
was "very good" that they express genuine love and
be intimately united as "one flesh" in this holy
relationship.
While we would reject the
world’s conception
of love and marriage, we earnestly advocate marital love as
God designed it! We wholeheartedly encourage true, genuine,
unselfish love of a husband for a wife and of a wife for her
husband. This love is basically an "agape" love—an
outgoing love and concern for the welfare and blessing of
the beloved. Further, there is the romantic dimension
in which a husband or wife definitely is attracted to his
or her life partner. There also is the "friendship"
aspect to their relationship—a joy in simply being together,
working together, living together, and sharing life’s pains
and pleasures with each other. There likewise is the sexual
"love" within marriage, a wholesome sexual attraction
and expression that is hallowed by a holy God. The ideal
but
rare marital relationship, therefore, involves a multi-faceted
response to the beloved. This should be celebrated every
day
throughout the year and not simply on one special day that
the world has chosen.
Scripture has much to say
about this positive aspect of love and marriage. The Hebrew
writer says, "Marriage
is to be held in honor among all" (Heb. 13:4). Paul shows
the lofty ideal of a loving relationship in Ephesians 5:22-33—which
is a classic passage unequaled in the Word of God. In this
rich passage, Paul shows that a husband should respond to
his dear wife as Christ related to His people or His body.
While he is head over the wife (v. 23), he loves her (v. 25),
nourishes and cherishes her (v. 29), and gives himself for
her (v. 25). Surely he will not be harsh, unkind, unloving,
cruel, or domineering. Likewise, the wife will express her
love to her husband, just as the body of Christ does to Christ.
She will submit to his leadership (vv. 22, 24), respect him
(v. 33), and love him (cf. Titus 2:4-5). She will not be insubmissive,
unkind, selfish, disrespectful, or unloving. Jesus also addresses
the marriage relationship. He pointed out that God joins eligible
people together in the marriage relationship where they become
one flesh (Matt. 19:4-6). Therefore, while we would reject
the world’s conception of "love" and sex and marriage
(cf. 1 Thess. 4:3-8), true love, marriage and the sexual relationship
is very much in God’s wise plan for His people! "Love
and marriage go together like a horse and carriage," as
the popular song puts it!
Regretfully, most marriage
relationships are defective to one degree or another. Very,
very few are ideal.
They fail to reflect the divine plan as God intended it from
the beginning. In our day about half of marriages end in
divorce
in the Western world and many of those that continue are
unhappy ones. Therefore, there are countless alienated,
hurt, disillusioned,
and broken people in the world. Some have experienced a relatively
blessed relationship in the past but the union has been
shattered—and
dissolved—through selfishness and lust. Many have succumbed
to numerous sexual encounters with a variety of partners
and
have found that what they thought would be fulfilling is
only a mirage with empty promises. This is not the way to
assure
future marital bliss! Others have never found a fulfilling
human relationship with the opposite sex. They do not have
such a relationship at present, and they will never in the
future have such a relationship.
Saint Valentine’s Day, to the people above,
is a mockery that serves to remind them of what they lack
and can never have. Some, of course, allow themselves to dream,
vainly imagining that a particular person is the "lover"
or "beloved" whom they have always wanted. Yet,
when they face the truth honestly, they realize that their
relationship lacks the key ingredients that constitute the
ideal love relationship.
There is a further aspect to all of this that
should be prominent in our thinking. No human relationship
is perfect. Even the relatively healthy and good relationship
has some lack, some defect, and some unfulfillment. Because
of this, no human being—whether husband or wife—can fulfill
the deepest needs of our heart. No one can entirely
meet our inner yearning for wholeness, comfort, peace, and
fulfillment. But, thanks to our God, we can find a relationship
that offers these blessings in abundance. It is a relationship
that is open to all—whether single or married, whether separated
or divorced. I refer to the fellowship that God graciously
offers us with Himself.
Again and again in Scripture
we have a glimpse of this marvelous relationship that can
be ours moment by
moment, day by day, and throughout life—and into eternity!
Notice the passion of the psalmist for the living God in
Psalm
73:23-26:
"I
am always with you; you hold me by my right hand.
You guide me with your counsel, and afterward
you will take me into glory.
Whom have I in heaven but you? And being
with you, I desire nothing on earth.
My flesh and my heart may
fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion
forever."
Another psalm adds the following words of
love and longing (Psalm 63:1, 6-8):
"O
God, you are my God, earnestly I seek you;
My soul thirsts for you,
in a dry and weary land where there is no water….
On my bed I remember you; I think of you
through the watches of the night.
Because you are my help, I sing in the shadow
of your wings.
I stay close to you; your
right hand upholds me."
Is this kind of intimate, warm, intense, and
loving relationship really available? Indeed it is! God longs
to have it with you and me. Through the Lord Jesus Christ,
His dear Son, we may be reconciled to the living, loving,
passionate God. With the removal of our sins through forgiveness,
all barriers are removed and sweet peace with God is granted.
We may be united to God Himself in spiritual union! In this
way, we will be closer to our God than we are to any other
human being, however dear and close that person may be.
The personal and close relationship
with God of which I speak does not come immediately; at
least the enjoyment
of it does not come at once. It comes through nurturing the
relationship, just as a relationship with a husband or
wife
comes through patient, loving, forgiving, and nurturing fellowship.
We must receive God’s Word into our heart and meditate
on it. We must openly and continually pray to and worship
our
God through the day. As time goes by we will find ourselves
more and more in love with the One who first loved us!
Even the best of marital
relationships are only temporary. They are limited to a
few short years on earth.
Jesus explains, "In the resurrection they neither marry
nor are given in marriage, but are like angels in heaven" (Matt.
22:30). The marital union and sexual relationship will cease
but an even deeper, spiritual, non-sexual relationship
with your spouse is possible in the Kingdom of God.
Let us rejoice, therefore,
that God sometimes does grant a close and warm human relationship
between a beloved
husband or wife during their fleeting earthly journey. He
sometimes blesses a single man or woman with the knowledge
that another person on earth extends love and genuine care
that will blossom into the full expression of marital union
and fellowship. But let us rejoice in an even greater way
that we may have a deeper, higher, and broader spiritual
relationship
with God Himself through our Lord Jesus Christ. "Our
fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ" (1
John 1:3). Through our commitment of genuine love and submissive
faith, this is a relationship that will never end!
Richard Hollerman
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