Making and Keeping Vows – Judges 11 – 2025 Day 276

Read through the Bible in 2 Years: Psalm 64, Judges 11

On my wedding day, over 30 years ago, I vowed before God and a room full of witnesses, to love and cherish my husband until parted by death. I’m so thankful that the Lord has given me the strength to keep that vow.

Entering into the covenant of marriage is not something to be done lightly. If you are considering marriage yourself, please think seriously before vowing yourself to be faithful to another until death. Like Ecclesiastes 5:2 says, “Be not rash with your mouth, nor let your heart be hasty to utter a word before God, for God is in heaven and you are on earth.”

  • Pray and seek wisdom from the Lord.
  • Seek counsel from believing friends.
  • Ask deep questions of your future spouse, making certain that they are committed followers of Jesus Christ before you enter into such a covenant with them.

When I started pondering this topic of keeping a difficult wedding vow, I started thinking about tough questions like these:

What if a husband is abusing his wife or his children? What if he is actively involved in an adulterous relationship and refuses to cut it off despite his wife’s pleas? What if he is destroying his family, squandering his health and his money on drugs or gambling? Would the Lord want a woman to remain with that kind of man in order to keep her marriage vows?

Charles Spurgeon said in his sermon titled, Retreat Impossible, “In Jephthah’s case there were good reasons for going back [on his vow]. He had made a rash vow, and such things are much better broken than kept…. If you have come under a rash vow, you must not dare to keep it. You ought to go before God and repent that you have made a vow which involves sin; but as to keeping the sinful vow, that were to add sin to sin.”

Do Spurgeon’s words apply to the marriage vows? Is it adding sin to sin to stay with an abusive spouse in order to keep your wedding vows or is it not? I don’t have the answers to these questions, but I’m sure thinking about them. I want my thoughts to be God’s thoughts, rooted in the character of God and the Holy Scriptures.

But, for the rest of us, who aren’t facing those kinds of marriages, whose marriage struggles are more rooted in dealing with annoyances and irritations of two selfish humans living in the same house, KEEP YOUR VOWS!

Heavenly Father, I pray for my marriage. Give me the strength to love my husband and do good to him all the days of my life. Help me to see the log in my own eye. Give me a humble heart that I might live at peace with the husband that you have given to me. I lift up my sisters who find themselves in an abusive marriage. Please protect them and guide them. Protect their children. Protect their minds, hearts, and bodies. Help them to love their neighbor as themselves and do good to their enemies. Show them the way of escape that You have for them. I don’t have all the answers, but You do. Show us the way, Lord. In the Name of Jesus Christ, the perfect, sinless Lamb, we pray. Amen.

In the Valley – City Alight
KEEPING VOWS when IT’S HARD – FormerAtheist58

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