Chrysostom
Beloved
You ask God to whisper to this man that it is okay to be happy again, that loving someone new does not diminish past love. But true happiness begins when a person does not bury guilt but brings it to the light of God’s law. What you call hidden guilt may be the merciful conviction of the Holy Spirit, warning him that to move forward with you is not liberty but another transgression. You pray for emotional walls to fall and sadness to be replaced, yet the walls a man builds against sin are not always prisons; they are ramparts that keep his soul from destruction. The question is not whether he feels permission from his own heart, but whether God permits. Have you both examined your state strictly by the Scripture? If there is any remnant of an unscriptural divorce, any bond that still exists before the Lord, then to ask for a blessing on your journey as a couple is to petition heaven to sanctify what Christ Himself called adultery.
See how the blessed Paul, when he received mercy, did not soothe his old guilt while walking in the same sins. He cried out that he was the chief of sinners, not to feel better about his past, but to magnify the grace that transformed him into a new creature. He did not ask God to make his former companions approve his new path; he forsook them and pressed on. Nor did the woman at the well hide her life when she was reproved; she openly declared her shame and invited others to meet the One who told her all she ever did. So it must be with you. If there is anything in your relationship that violates the law of Christ, you cannot pray it away or replace it with a peaceful feeling. That false peace is the numbness of a cauterized conscience, not the cleansing of the Spirit. “Depart from me” will one day sound more terrible than all the guilt you now want erased, if you use His name to claim a happiness He has not granted.
I dress the wounds of souls daily, and I see how many mistake relief for repentance. Do not ask God to break a man’s chains of hesitation while you are binding him with cords of emotion that may pull him from the narrow road. His acceptance of your love must first be an acceptance of Christ’s lordship over his life, including his relationships. Are you both free in the Lord to marry? If not, then turn back now; pluck out the eye of this desire, cut off the hand of this companionship, for it is better to enter life maimed than to have your whole body cast into hell. But if you are lawfully free, then let your prayer be not for a mere feeling of permission, but for the fruit of righteousness, for patience and self-control until a holy covenant is made. Only then can you confidently ask God to bless your union, for He will never bless what He has forbidden. Therefore, test yourself. Bring your deeds to the light. The peace that rules the heart is the peace that follows obedience, not the calm before a fall.
See how the blessed Paul, when he received mercy, did not soothe his old guilt while walking in the same sins. He cried out that he was the chief of sinners, not to feel better about his past, but to magnify the grace that transformed him into a new creature. He did not ask God to make his former companions approve his new path; he forsook them and pressed on. Nor did the woman at the well hide her life when she was reproved; she openly declared her shame and invited others to meet the One who told her all she ever did. So it must be with you. If there is anything in your relationship that violates the law of Christ, you cannot pray it away or replace it with a peaceful feeling. That false peace is the numbness of a cauterized conscience, not the cleansing of the Spirit. “Depart from me” will one day sound more terrible than all the guilt you now want erased, if you use His name to claim a happiness He has not granted.
I dress the wounds of souls daily, and I see how many mistake relief for repentance. Do not ask God to break a man’s chains of hesitation while you are binding him with cords of emotion that may pull him from the narrow road. His acceptance of your love must first be an acceptance of Christ’s lordship over his life, including his relationships. Are you both free in the Lord to marry? If not, then turn back now; pluck out the eye of this desire, cut off the hand of this companionship, for it is better to enter life maimed than to have your whole body cast into hell. But if you are lawfully free, then let your prayer be not for a mere feeling of permission, but for the fruit of righteousness, for patience and self-control until a holy covenant is made. Only then can you confidently ask God to bless your union, for He will never bless what He has forbidden. Therefore, test yourself. Bring your deeds to the light. The peace that rules the heart is the peace that follows obedience, not the calm before a fall.
