The first half intrigued me with their description of postmodernism and included thought-provoking points on how cultural rather than biblical texts have potentially largely shaped the church’s views of gender roles within the context of marriage.
It helped to describe how God intended marriage to be a unifying, commitment where two become one and yet remain two, and both are equally asked to be self sacrificing, sharing in life together and submitting to one another in love.
It has inspired me to do my own critical exploration of the Bible to better understand passages regarding gender roles as well as how they shape our marriages and relationships today.
It did also point out how the church has expected married couples to endure in silence hardships of various kinds without life long support from their community and how vital that is.
However,
I wasn’t convinced by their writing that it is possible to have a God honoring marriage in our post modern context, nor what that might look like. The book was filled with history regarding the sociological and cultural influences of marriage and how Christians need to be counter cultural.
I was hoping the ending would include more biblical passages and evidence of how to have a God honoring life long marriage. I was also disenchanted that the book was written only from a North American perspective.
It saddened me, considering how rampant divorce is within our culture and in my own family, how little biblical guidance there was in the book for combatting that reality; it merely stately that it is a problem.
Overall, there is much that was left out in my opinion and I found myself thinking: wait that’s it? That’s all they are going to say?
Lastly, although I am gratefully living within the context of a Christian marriage, I don’t believe this book would help to show someone skeptical of the necessity of marriage that it is a sacred, grace-filled, beautiful, God designed and honoring mystery.