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Calling All Priests!
 Dr. Mark Ongley

This truth in Proverbs is important enough that Solomon repeats the exact verbiage in chapter 14 & 16. Clearly, this is a truth worth driving home… there are countless ways men, women and young people make foolish and destructive decisions based upon what seems right in the moment.
 

This faulty thinking can be traced all the way back to Adam and Eve’s original disobedience to God in the Garden of Eden. Even there, before sin saturated nearly every aspect of humanity, a decision was made. A decision based not on what God clearly stated, but on what “seemed right” regardless of what God said.
 

Naturally, the world doesn’t care about God’s laws. Many don’t even believe in the reality of a personal God who created all things, let alone a God who gave His life to redeem hopelessly fallen humanity. The real issue isn’t the perspective of the unchurched and non-believers. Rather, the far greater concern is so many are living according to “a way that seems right” to them, even as professed Christ-followers.
 

The examples are endless, but certainly compromise made in the inordinate pursuit of: pleasure, comfort, money, careers, retirement planning, following feelings, personal happiness, sex, and identity are a few of the many ways we set ourselves on a path leading toward death because we reject God’s way for what feels right to us.
 

As our understanding of and value for God’s laws diminish, we functionally consider ourselves to be more enlightened and “nicer” than God. So we make compromises for ourselves and others that often seem small at the time, frequently giving way to cumulative or major sudden life-choices that are a total departure from God’s intention and outside of His protective boundaries.
 

When this happens, we engage in the same distorted thinking and reasoning as Eve. We observe the “fruit” before us (whatever that might be). Satan, the world, and our own flesh reason that “it” seems good (Genesis 3:6) and we depart the narrow path of life for the wide path of destruction and death. Sadly, in our deluded condition we often influence others to join us on this path that promises wisdom, fun, and freedom, but actually leads to bondage.
 

Setting aside the many areas we as purported Christ-followers and regular church-attendeee ignore the lordship of Christ in our lives and abandon The Narrow Way, this particular blog post is addressing one primary area: cohabitation.
 

In 2019 Pew Research reported that 58% of white evangelicals approved of cohabitation if the couple intended to get married.
 

According an article at www.probe.org/cohabitation “Cohabitation, as a lifestyle, is on the rise. Consider the significant growth in cohabitation rates in the last few decades. In 1960 and 1970, about a half million were living together. But by 1980 that number was 1.5 million. By 1990 the number was nearly three million. And by 2000 the number was almost five million.

Researchers estimate that today as many as 50% of Americans cohabit at one time or another prior to marriage. The stereotype of two young, childless people living together is not completely accurate; currently, some 40% of cohabiting relationships involve children.”
 

I have a friend who regularly attends church, participates in Bible-studies, and highly values connecting with other Christians for support and mutual encouragement. She gave her all to an abusive first marriage, doing everything she knew to walk out her commitment and vows. When she discovered that her husband was committing adultery repeatedly she separated from him for a significant amount of time. With his apparent repentance and commitment to work on their marriage, supported by positive actions on his part over time, she returned home in hopes of participating in the much needed growth and development of a far better marriage.
 

Unfortunately, he did not have the same level of commitment, and as bad as the first 10 years of their marriage was, the years that followed were far worse, including more adultery. Eventually, she left the marriage and divorced her husband. She was devastated, to say the least, and needed time and counseling.
 

Eventually, without any intention of pursuing a relationship she became friends with a Christian guy, which led to a romantic connection. This brought about a dilemma. My friend had been so emotionally and mentally abused and violated, she was totally afraid of the prospect of ever marrying again. She also didn’t want to put her kids or herself through another failed marriage. She and her boyfriend wound up crossing sexual boundary lines. After that behavior continued for months, it didn’t seem like a big deal for him to move in, with the idea that it wouldn’t be long before they would “tie the knot”.
 

It’s been 4 or 5 years. They attend church together and seemingly have a life and family together, but with no actual commitment. Her boyfriend wants to get married, but there are still so many areas of unprocessed pain and fear it’s just been easier for my friend to stay where she’s at – living a life of cohabitation, disconnecting from God and her own conscience in this area and ignoring the impact her behavior is having on her now adult children, who are great young men and women, but care nothing for Christianity. Her witness for Christ and her inner peace have been compromised.
 

In most cases though, cohabitation isn’t about unresolved or avoided trauma from a previous marriage. It’s simply convenient; a way to save money, a way to “test drive” the guy or girl before saying “I do”. But this is a complete disregard for the institution of covenant marriage originated by God.
 

At www.crosswalk.com an article entitled, “Cohabitation and divorce - - is there a correlation?” stated the following: A 2010 "meta-analysis" looked at 26 peer-reviewed, published studies that followed various couples over time. This analysis found that marrieds who had cohabiting pasts were more likely to face divorce, and that "noncohabitors seem to have more confidence in the future of their relationship, and have less accepting attitudes toward divorce.
 

Hebrews 13:4 is frank and clear, “Marriage is to be held in honor among all, and the marriage bed is to be undefiled; for fornicators [those who have sex before marriage] and adulterers [those who have sex with someone other than their spouse after marriage] God will judge.”
 

A few years ago a friend confided in me that he was completely baffled by his 12-step program leader. He had been part of a popular Christian recovery program in a local church for more than a year, working out his own substance abuse issues. He had recently learned that his leader was living with his girlfriend, but according to the leader they weren’t having sex.
 

While it is possible (though highly unlikely) they were not having sex, is that all that matters in whether or not couples are cohabitating? Aside from the fact that sexual sin is far more likely when we are living and sleeping under the same roof, how does this impact those who look to us as a shepherd or mentor? Either this will generate mistrust (as it should), undermine the leader’s character, or it may embolden others to live out the same practice, usually without any effective boundaries to guard against sexual sin.
 

1 Thessalonians 5:21-22 says “But examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good; abstain from every appearance of evil”. Avoiding or delaying marriage and cohabitating instead may seem like wisdom, but it’s definitely not godly wisdom.
 

Staying on the narrow path with God and trusting His many commands to avoid sexual immorality are both good and for our flourishing, leads toward fulfillment, joy, and life. Let’s choose life, rather than momentary pleasure accompanied by severe long-term consequences.

Reach for your spears!
 

It’s an election year. Our perspective is skewed. So many articles in the news are written from an angle intended to sway you toward one presidential candidate or another. And depending on your political bent, you quickly dissect each article according to your bias. “Obviously, they are bad-mouthing ­­­_________, but what they don’t tell you is . . . .”
 

I read such an article last week. But after sifting through it, I was finally kicked in the gut with God’s perspective.

The only news source I read now is The Free Press. They seem about as balanced as you can find—some articles lean left, some lean right. The article I read was about the sex-trafficking industry which is “America’s fastest growing criminal enterprise.” Because 90% of the victims have been smuggled in from south of the border, you know what political party they are slamming.
 
But consider the explosion of this very crime itself. The only reliable stats we have are the underage victims who have escaped. That number has more than tripled since 2020. Incredible!
 
What really slams me is this: What kind of country have we become?! Why is there such a market for children? For underaged girls? Young boys?
 
Oh, I know. This raises your passion for a candidate or a party to stem the flood of immigrants. But what about a passion for the vast, gaping brokenness in our country?
 
You may be pinning your hopes upon a candidate to solve an issue. But what about us as God’s people? Why don’t we as the people of God pin our hopes on the Holy Spirit? Are we willing to be equipped for ministry to sexual addicts? To the abused? To the trafficked?
 
Consider with me a little known priest named Phinehas. His story didn’t make the cut when it came to Sunday school curriculum, but in recounting the sins of the nation of Israel, a psalmist said this:
 
28 Then they attached themselves to the Baal of Peor, and ate sacrifices offered to the dead; 29 they provoked the LORD to anger with their deeds and a plague broke out among them. 30 Then Phinehas stood up and interceded, and the plague was stopped. 31 And that has been reckoned to him as righteousness from generation to generation forever. (Ps. 106:28-31 NRSV)
 
The context is in Numbers. The Baal worshiping Moabites and Midianites could not conquer God’s people militarily, so they hired Balaam to curse them. However, Plan A was a bust. Numbers 31:16 reveals Balaam later sold them on Plan B: hold a festival to Baal, including the fertility rites of free sex; then persuade men from Israel to join the party.  
 
God was enraged. Moses was informed. The judges of Israel were called to the entrance of the Tent of Meeting and given an assignment. They were to return to their tribes and publicly impale the guilty to atone for this heinous sin to stop the spreading plague.
 
The leaders, gathered before the Tabernacle, doubtless aware of the cloud of God’s presence above the tent. They began to weep. 
 
At that very moment, a man brazenly waltzed right past the Tent of Meeting, hand in hand with a Midianite woman, taking her to his tent. Phinehas, son of Eleazar the priest, saw this and was filled with rage. Grabbing a spear and running into the tent where the twosome laid, he drove the spear through both of them.
 
An incredible act. Out of zeal for God and for the holiness of God’s people, Phinehas went beyond the command of Moses. Even though he was a Levite, the skewered man was a Simeonite. Phin took no time to ponder the details.
There was no hesitation. It was an outburst of zeal for God which propelled him.
 
Last week I challenged us to consider taking risks to call the Church to repentance for the unseen sexual addiction among us. Just as Gideon needed to tear down his father’s altar to Baal before God moved in power, I believe the Bride of Christ needs to repent of bowing the knee to sexual excess. It is a simply a matter of obedience to sanctify ourselves from all sexual immorality (1 Thes. 4:3-4).
 
No zeal for confronting your local church? Can you find any measure of zeal when you think about the sexual brokenness of our culture? The Church will never be fully equipped as the healing hands of Jesus for them until we seriously seek God’s power to cleanse ourselves.
 
What pleases God in all of this?
 
Well, from Numbers 25, we can see that at least the zeal of Phinehas pleased God. He made a covenant of peace with Phinehas and his descendants because of his outrageous obedience. All of the other covenants of God involved the Missio Dei, the mission of God. These divinely initiated covenants with Noah, Abraham, and others all prepared the way for the Messiah. But Phinehas was not in the lineage of Jesus. No connection, really . . . .
 
Except we do see a similar zeal in Jesus as he fashions his whip out of cords and cleanses the court of the Temple—the very place corresponding to the Tent of Meeting (John 2:13-22). Zeal for his Father’s house!
 
Both of them saw something egregious—an affront to our holy God. For Phinehas, his zeal spiked while weeping in front of the Tabernacle. The zeal of Jesus seems to have been on a slow burn, boiling over once his whip was ready.
 
Few can operate with that level of zealous rage for very long. Such high throttled emotion saps us and distorts our vision. Sometimes it feeds pride and stirs up judgmentalism. But certainly it pleases God when it spills out at the right time.
 
Time in the Tent
 
 
The rocketing rate of sex-trafficking should enrage us. And perhaps you are also awakened to the sexual immorality and brokenness in the pews. Instead of launching a campaign or putting our hope in a political party, join me as I seek God’s presence as described in Psalm 27:4:
 
One thing I asked of the LORD, that will I seek after; to live in the house of the LORD all the days of my life, to behold the beauty of the LORD, and to inquire in his temple.
 
Let’s enter our own “house of the LORD,” worshipfully behold his beauty, and inquire in his temple. 
 
What would he have us do?

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