Working
with the Gift
Who
would have thought? There it was, on the stage of the Academy
Awards...in the opening monologue of Saturday Night Live...the
age-old, on-going theological discussion of “faith” versus
“works”. The unwitting, oblivious theologians? Ben Affleck and
Jennifer Garner. Well, actually, they didn't use the words “faith”
and “works”. They used the words “gift” and “work”,
which is close enough for me to weigh in on their discussion.
In
his acceptance speech as producer of the movie Argo,
Ben acknowledged his wife, Jennifer Garner, in these words “I want
to thank you for working on our marriage for ten Christmases. It’s
good, it is work, but it’s the best kind of work, and there’s no
one I’d rather work with.”
In
the post-Oscar chatter that followed, Ben took some flack for his use
of the word “work” in describing his marriage. A few weeks
later, during his opening monologue on SNL, he was joined on stage by
his wife, and the now infamous speech came up. He asked her what
word she would have used instead. Her response: "Gift! I would
have said, 'Thank you to my wife, our marriage is a gift!'”
And
there it was again – the somewhat difficult relationship between
“gift” and “work”, or “grace” and “works”, or “faith”
and “works” or...
Entertainment
value aside, I'd like to think Ben and Jennifer went home that night
and acknowledged the fact that they were both right. That marriage
is both work and a gift.
I've
always looked at my relationship with the Lord as like a marriage. I
can look at my early life and see God pursuing me, courting me. Then
there came a point I felt called to take a serious look at this God
and decide whether I wanted to go on with Him for the rest of my
life. How could I resist a relationship with Someone Who was
willing to die for me, in fact, actually did die for me? He, on the
other hand, required nothing of me – no dowry, no promises of great
spiritual cooking or homemaking skills, certainly no spiritual beauty
of my own. He asked only one thing – that I believe in Him, have
faith in Him and His promises for me. He offered this to me as a
free gift, nothing that I had to earn or pay for to enter into, a
relationship bought with His own blood. Did I want to enter into
this relationship forever on these terms? I said “I do”...
There
is an exciting intimacy in the early days of marriage, and it was no
different in my early days with the Lord. Prayer and worship came
easy and joyfully, wanting the same things that God wanted was almost
effortless. The desire to do the things that I felt He wanted me to
do I would do willingly and obediently. The extended honeymoon was
all grace and gift.
Then
came a time when easy, joyful, effortless, willingly and obediently
didn't seem to be quite that any more. The love, the commitment, the
gift of the relationship didn't change, but the almost effortless
forward momentum was not there anymore, not in the same way it had
been. The honeymoon, in a way, was over. That's when thoughts of
the “w” word first crept in...
Much
of the work of making marriage great is simply doing the things that
need to be done on a regular basis whether one feels like doing them
or not, making the choice to love and connect when the intensity of
the feeling might not be what it once was. As a newlywed, doing
laundry, cooking a special meal, can seem like a love gift to one's
spouse. As a not-so-newlywed...no, laundry just needs to be done,
people need to eat... But somewhere in doing the wash and making the
meal there is contained a certain pleasure on both sides when you see
he looks great in that shirt, when he enjoys that lasagna.
Prayer,
worship, intimate connection with God over the years does take work.
Fortunately, God does the heavy lifting. His dying for me was the
ultimate work. In that incredible task, He accomplished all the work
that needed to be done for our relationship. His work provides for
the works I could not do myself. And any of the work I do do for our
relationship comes from faith in His great work, already done, first
and perfectly. I can muddle on, knowing that my truly “better
half” will love and cover my imperfect work. So I aim to spend
time and connect with the Lord everyday in the same way that I aim to
spend time and connect with my husband. Some times it is still
effortless, and other times it takes on the feel of work, work that I
know is good and life-giving to the relationship, or as Ben says,
“...the best kind of work, and there’s no one I’d rather work
with.” But that work does not replace or supersede the gift-ness
or grace of the relationship, that commitment and connection. It
does not add anything more to the reality and substance of God's
original proposal to me – that I believe in Him, have faith in Him
and His promises for me – any more than icing adds to the reality
and substance of a great chocolate cake. It just allows it to taste
sweeter...
For
it is by grace that you have been saved, through faith – and this
is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God -
-Ephesians 2:8
What
good is it, my brothers and sisters, if someone claims to have faith
but has no deeds? Can such faith save them?
- James
2:14
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