Question: "Can/should a Christian who is a virgin marry someone who is not a virgin?"
Answer:
The ideal situation for Christian marriage is, of course, when both
parties are virgins, having understood that marriage is the only place
in God’s eyes for sexual relations. But we don’t live in an ideal world.
Many times, a person raised in a godly home and saved from childhood
wishes to marry someone who was saved in his or her 20s or 30s and who
brings to the Christian marriage a past lived according to worldly
standards. While God puts our sins as far from us as the east is from
the west when we come to Him in repentance and faith in Christ (Psalm 103:12),
people have long memories and forgetting someone’s past may not be
easy. The inability to forgive and forget the past mistakes of one of
the marriage partners will definitely influence the marriage negatively.
Before entering a marriage with someone with a sexual past, it’s crucial
to understand that salvation and forgiveness of sin are given to us by
grace. "By grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of
yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, that no one
should boast" (Ephesians 2:8-9).
When we begin to understand what it means to be truly forgiven, we
begin to see through God's eyes and how much He must love us, and that
helps us forgive others. To forgive is to let go of the other person’s
past and see him or her as a new creation (2 Corinthians 5:17).
Christ died for his/her sin, and the potential spouse now has to decide
if the memory of that sin can be lived with. This is where doctrine
moves from the theoretical to the practical.
In matters of forgiveness, it always helps to see our own pasts in God’s
eyes. Sexual sin is certainly grievous to God, but so are lying,
cheating, bad thoughts, drinking/smoking too much, impatience, pride,
and unforgiveness. Who among us is without sin and can “cast the first
stone”? Before coming to Christ, each of us is “dead in transgressions
and sins” and is made alive only by God’s grace (Ephesians 2:1-5).
The question is can we forgive others as Christ forgave us? Completely
and from the heart? Being able to do so is a mark of a true Christian.
Jesus said if we don’t forgive, neither will God forgive us (Matthew 6:14-15).
He did not mean that forgiving others is a way of procuring God’s
forgiveness, which we know is by grace alone, but that a forgiving heart
is a sign of the presence of the Holy Spirit in the heart of a true
believer. Continued unforgiveness is a sign of a hard, unregenerate
heart.
Before entering into a marriage with a non-virgin, much thought, prayer, and introspection are in order. James 1:5
tells us that if we seek wisdom, God will grant it freely to all who
ask. Speaking with a godly pastor and being involved in a Bible-teaching
church will help in the decision-making process. Some churches have
excellent pre-engagement classes. Also, talking freely and openly with
the potential mate about these things may reveal things in both parties’
pasts that need to be addressed and forgiven.
Marriage is a challenge in the best of circumstances and takes a lot of
work to make it successful. Both partners need, and deserve, to be loved
unconditionally. Ephesians 5 describes the roles of both husband and
wife in marriage, but the passage begins with the overriding principle
for both: “Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ” (Ephesians 5:21).
Willing sacrifice and the strength to choose to be a servant to the
betterment of the marriage are the marks of a maturing spiritual man and
woman who honor God. Wisely choosing a spouse based upon biblical
qualities is important, but of equal importance are our own ongoing
spiritual growth and our surrender to God's will in our lives. A man who
is seeking to be the man God wants him to be will be able to help his
wife be the woman God desires her to be and, despite their pasts, they
will be able to build their marriage into a God-honoring union that
delights them both.
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