Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Kim Kardashian and the Minute Marriage


Explaining her divorce filing from NBA player Kris Humphries after only ten weeks of marriage, reality star Kim Kardashian released this statement: "I hope everyone understands this was not an easy decision. I had hoped this marriage was forever but sometimes things don't work out as planned." Court documents cite irreconcilable differences as the reason behind the divorce. Humphries seems upset by the filing, saying he is “devastated” and willing to work on the marriage.

Apparently, they had plenty of time to plan an elaborate made-for-television wedding, spending lavish amounts of money, but they don’t have time to plan their marriage and discuss the issues that are now irreconcilable.

What thinking in our culture has led to the “minute marriage” or even those that last longer but get no more effort to fix the problems than this one? What attitudes that devastate marriage are flourishing even in the church? Here are three thinking patterns I hear when I listen carefully.

First, the prevalent thinking is that marriage is supposed to make me happy. When it doesn’t, it’s time for a change because it’s broken. In contrast, biblically marriage is part of God’s character-building work. It is one way for iron to sharpen iron (Prov. 27:17). A good marriage that projects the oneness of Christ and the church is a picture to the world of love and faithfulness.  Such a marriage is the framework for building strong families.

Second, we have made the most important thing the wedding rather than the lives that will be joined together. There is little sense of the sacredness of vows. God takes vows seriously, and we must also. When so many brides and grooms write their own vows, it’s easy to forget what is being promised—to be faithful until death.  Who married Kim and Kris? Did they talk about anything other than the ceremony? Did they get any counseling about the marriage itself?

Third, we live in an age when we expect instant everything. We get frustrated when our computers are slow and our internet isn’t working. Even some “Christian” counselors often tell their clients to give up on their marriages without ever really working on them. There is nothing instant about a good marriage. It takes time to learn to work together and through problems. We come into marriage as two very different people, and God uses those differences to help us each grow into better people as we learn to work as a team. That, however, takes time. After almost 40 years at it, my husband and I are still learning how to be better spouses for one another. Marriage is about dying to self and becoming more unselfish. It is about communicating our differences so we can become better partners for one another. It is about being friends and giving that a chance to grow and bloom. All these things take time.

If I could say one thing to all of you about marriage, it is this—don’t give up on your marriage. God is the business of changing people, and that includes you and me!

What other thinking patterns do you see behind our short-lived marriages?

4 comments:

  1. Ultimately, our real problem is that we do not understand the Gospel, which is mirrored in marriage (Ephesians 5). We can and should work on issues, practice communication, etc, but to do so without the constant and thankful understanding that the Christian's sin is washed away by the Blood of Jesus, then we are just setting up another works righteousness system that fails every time.

    We could all give advice that would have possibly allowed this marriage to last a bit longer, but the real answer here is Jesus. Even the greatest marriage expert is going to sin (and sin a lot!), and without repentance and forgiveness, then all is lost. That is why Paul tells us that marriage is a picture of the Gospel. Jesus forgave a wicked and undeserving church, not because we deserved it, but out of love. In the same way, we are not holding our marriages together by our own righteousness. By right, we should all be left alone. But there is grace!

    You have good advice in this post, but you missed the only thing that can really make a difference – the Gospel. “This mystery is profound, and I am saying that it refers to Christ and the church.”

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  2. Thanks, Paul, for that reminder. I wasn't attempting to deal with this particular marriage, which seems to have lacked Christ. My primary audience is believers so I was using this story to point out flawed thinking even in the church. But you are right, the gospel is always the foundation!

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  3. Great post Kay. One problem you didn't mention is the way we've diluted marriage. Not only has the wedding ceremony gotten out of hand, but living together previous to marriage is becoming the norm. Cohabitators expect marriage to work some miracle on "merely" living together, when living together is the whole point of marriage. In marriage you commit to live together and love one another NO MATTER WHAT. That's tough and you need God to do it. Living together before marriage takes God out of the equation and it takes more than a fancy wedding to put Him back in.
    Politicizing marriage hasn't helped either. I wonder if same sex marriage would be in such high demand if there were no insurance and tax benefits. Rather than extending rights to same sex marriage and domestic partners, I'm for taking the financial benefits away from "married" people and returning marriage to a very serious religious rite that only us religious fanatics :) would have any interest in. Now that would reduce the divorce rate.

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  4. Thanks for the input, Jane. You certainly have some radical ideas about taxes! It would make for interesting debates.

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