P
ParkerD
Guest
SteveVH,Parker, it is exactly this type of attitude that sticks in my craw. I mean nothing personal here, by the way. I realize that this comes from your faith tradition. This, my friend, is gnosticism. The idea that only a select group of people are worthy enough to have the truth unveiled for them; secret knowledge that you can only attain when you become as enlightened as they. If you don’t agree it is because you are not yet worthy and you will become worthy only when you join the group.
The “select group of people” could be children in elementary school, if they learned grammar and followed the grammar of the passage we are talking about. How it got “hidden” and “veiled” is by those who wanted no such thing as eternal marriage, easily finding a way of looking at those verses in the way they wanted them to mean, and then everyone else following their lead.
The verses and the grammar are simple enough. A child, using grammar but not having the prior influence of “this is what it says” (i.e. tradition), could easily see the direct meaning in the passage, particularly with some basic knowledge of understood pronouns within verb conjugations.
Which belief is completely contrary to the parables and the example of the apostles when they asked the Savior to “speak plainly” instead of in parables. It is also completely contrary to the very words you partly quoted. If you don’t have “ears to hear”, you won’t “hear”, and “eyes to see”, you won’t see. He and Isaiah repeated this, with a clear meaning that the apostles understood.Christ came to reveal truth to all of humanity, most especially sinners (which includes all of us). He did not come to reveal truth to those deemed worthy. We are all unworthy. He did not act selectively, reserving truth for some and keeping it hid from others. He spoke the truth and said if you have ears to hear, hear, and if you have eyes to see, see.
He did make it very clear. Others took what He said and made it less clear, less impactful to them and others who followed them.Jesus taught us about the sacredness of marriage and that no man should divide what God has joined. It is a sacrament; a source of grace to lead us to our eternal destiny. But when we have reached our eternal destiny there will be no more need for it. Yes, we treasure our relationships with our spouses here on earth, but I will make my point again. If eternal marriage were the necessary factor determining the level of happiness we might obtain in heaven, Jesus was remiss in not making that point very clear.
Jesus spoke very plainly about the marriage of Adam and Eve, which marriage “God hath joined together” and man should not “put asunder”. Adam and Eve were given commandments for their happiness, not for less than their happiness. They were given to each other for an eternal purpose, not for a “time only” purpose. God is an eternal God, not a “time only” God and He joined them together.