CP 187 The love of Johnny Pango
CP 187 The love of Johnny Pango…
My friends, this week I want to put before you a couple more
snippets about marriage. My thoughts are driven by what an apparent confusion
between romantic/erotic love and Jesus the Christ sort of love. The former is
what draws us together… the second is what keeps us together. Please know that
I am aware that often there is great distress when one partner chooses not to
uphold the vows. There is not much the other can do except pray, forgive, hope,
and pray and forgive again. However, where we can we do everything in our power
to encourage couples to understand the vows they make before God and family,
and then to be faithful to those vows. So here are a couple of more snippets to
chew on.
1) Love and Marriage
“One of the things that most of us learn in
marriage is that love – real, deep, abiding love – is the result of marriage
rather than its cause. Strange but true. A couple standing before God and the
church at their wedding, may think that love is the reason for their wedding. They
are here, in the church, having a wedding, because they are in love.
But one of the wonders of marriage is that, in
making and keeping the promise to love one another – for better or worse, in
sickness and in health, until death do us part – your love deepens, you become
more in love than you were when you began keeping the promises of marriage. You’ve
heard married couples note this when they say, “We didn’t know a thing about
real love when we got married. We were young and silly. But over the years, we’ve
learned what real love is.” Through the thick and the thin of marriage, in the
struggle to be faithful, love has been the gift of their fidelity. Thus the
church, at a wedding, does not ask, “John, do you love Susan?” but rather, “John,
will you love Susan,” speaking of
love in the future tense.
One thing that most of us discover in marriage
is that the more you work at keeping the promises, the more faithfully you hold
to what you promised to do, the less you have to consciously keep those
promises. Fidelity just becomes part of
you. You become a faithful person through your faithfulness. And thus Jesus
speaks of love.” William
Willimon, Pulpit Resource 1985
The second item is my paraphrase of a story from Selwyn
Hughes’ book, ‘Marriage as God Intended’. (Kingsway publications, 1983)
2) The love of Johnny Pango
A young Polynesian man named
Johnny Pango met a girl from a neighbouring island, and promptly fell in love
with her. When he first met the young lady he was blind to the unpleasant reality of her shattered
self-esteem. She believed herself to be downright unattractive if not ugly. She
carried herself accordingly. During her childhood she had been constantly
denigrated by her father. Johnny was distressed by her self-contempt but in his
heart he saw the person she could be and so continued his courtship of her.
Then came the day he sat down to bargain with her father for her hand in
marriage.
It was the custom in that place
that the bride-price was negotiated between the girl’s father and the future
husband. It was usually established in the number of cows one might exchange
for one’s future wife. If a girl was of 'ordinary' looks a father might be
willing to accept just two cows as the bride-price. A future wife regarded as
more physically attractive might be counted as worth three cows. An exceptionally
beautiful maiden might mean four cows for the father. When Johnny Pango
arranged to meet the father of his chosen one it was widely expected that,
being shrewd, he might manage to part with only one cow, or two at most.
In this matter, Johnny was shrewder
than he had ever been. He offered eight cows, double what had ever been offered for a wife! Eight cows! Of course his future father-in-law did not
hesitate. The offer was accepted on the spot. The girl’s father thought Johnny
a bit of an idiot. But not his future wife. She blossomed under this very
public declaration of her great worth. Everything about her began to change.
The girl of no esteem was transformed. Johnny’s willingness to pay the highest
price had declared to her, and to the world, the place she held in his heart.
How can I conclude after a story
like that? Sort of obvious is it not? God so loved the world he gave his only
Son… His only Son... to the Cross... His only Son... crucified... His only Son. Husbands love your wives as Christ loved the church… Submit yourselves to
one another out of reverence for Christ…
Be blessed as you wallow in his
divine estimate of you, in his CrossPurposes.
Fred
1 Comments:
"love has been the gift of their fidelity"
What is there when the fidelity has ben absent?
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