January
2010 - Vol. 36
.
Jesus’ Teaching
on Singleness
by
Barry Danylak, continued
Paul’s teaching
on marriage and singleness
Paul’s statements about marriage and singleness in 1 Corinthians 7
are consistent with the teaching of Jesus in the gospels. He too affirms
that it is good for the unmarried to remain single (1 Cor. 7:8). His reasons
seem to describe the eunuch type dedicated service that Jesus suggests
when he argues that the single person is “free from anxieties” and “anxious
about the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord (1 Cor. 7:32).”
The benefits of singleness are clear. One is able to cultivate an “undivided
devotion to the Lord (1 Cor. 7:35)” and dedicate one’s energy to how he
or she might please and serve him. But there were specific aspects of the
situation of the church in Corinth that also serve to shape Paul’s response.
Most notably the church had a history of problems with illicit sexual activity
(1 Cor 5:1-11; 6:12-20; 7:2; 10:8, etc.) Thus Paul wishes to make clear
to his Corinthian audience that marriage is a provision of God given for
legitimate sexual expression. He goes so far as to direct the Corinthians
that within marriage partners should not deprive each other (1 Cor 7:5)!
While Paul stipulates that the inability to control one’s sexual passion
is a valid (and good) reason to marry, thus providing a category of those
to whom Jesus’ teaching on eunuchs is not given, he does not indicate that
sexual passion is the exclusive reason that one should marry. Rather his
answer appears shaped by the Corinthian situation and still leaves open
other legitimate motivations for marriage consistent with Matthew 19:12.
Jesus’ single
life
Though the gospels give no indication of Jesus being married, did Jesus
consider himself to be a eunuch for the kingdom of God? Was he fulfilled
and satisfied as a single man in first century Jewish Palestine? The former
question seems evident from Jesus’ statements of his own lifestyle.
In Jesus’ statement, “the Son of Man has no where to lay his head (Matt
8:20; Luke 9:58),” the gospel writers indicate that he had no home or family
of his own. Jesus also declares that the purpose for which he was sent
is to “preach the good news of the kingdom of God (Luke 4:43).” As an itinerant
single man preaching the kingdom Jesus fits the sense of one who sets himself
apart for dedicated service to the kingdom of God.
Jesus didn’t have sons and daughters but he did leave a legacy though
those who became his disciples and followers. He uses maternal language
to express his desire to gather all the children of Jerusalem as a hen
gathers her brood (Matthew 23:37; Luke 13:34), although they would not
be gathered. Instead he turns to calling selective individuals to follow
him as his disciples. These become members of Jesus’ kingdom family which
supersede the importance of his own nuclear family. He refers to his disciples
as his mother and brothers over and against his physical family (Matthew
12:48-49). His disciples likewise recognise this tension between their
nuclear families and their commitment to Jesus; Peter acknowledges that
“we have left our own homes and followed you (Luke 18:28)”.
The Last Supper as a Passover meal would have been a family occasion
in which the father was to instruct the children in the significance of
the Passover lamb (Exodus 12:24-27). But here instead we see Jesus gathered
with his disciples and instructing them regarding the details of his impending
betrayal and death. The culmination of the occasion occurs when Jesus proclaims
the new covenant, offered to them in the cup of his blood (Luke 22:20).
Thus the legacy Jesus leaves is not in physical progeny, but in forming
disciples in his image and in commissioning them also to be disciple-makers
(Matthew 28:19-20). The apostle Paul sees himself within Jesus’ legacy
of discipleship when he exhorts the Corinthians to “be imitators of me,
as I am of Christ (1 Cor 11:1).”
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[This article is excerpted
from A Biblical Theology of Singleness, copyright © Barry
Danylak 2007, published by Grove
Books Limited, Cambridge, UK. Used with permission.]