Marriage at Risk - The Danger of Adultery - Greg Laurie
Marriage at Risk - The Danger of Adultery - Greg Laurie
Marriage at Risk - The Danger of Adultery - Greg Laurie
Greg Laurie
A Publication Of
Harvest: Greg Laurie
Riverside, California
www.harvest.org
Greg Laurie is senior pastor of Harvest Christian Fellowship in
Riverside, California.
Scripture quotations marked nlt are taken from the Holy Bible,
New Living Translation, copyright © 1996. Used by permission
of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All
rights reserved.
ISBN:
www.harvest.org
Contents
Chapter One Caught in the Act
Notes
Chapter One
“Well, what if that dumb bird heard our names and repeats
them when its owners get home?”
Some time ago I received a letter from a man who attended our
church. He and his wife had a ministry together, but then he fell
into the sin of adultery. Here is what he wrote me (I have
changed the names of the principals in this story):
Dear Greg,
As you may know, Mary and I are no longer husband and wife. Our marriage
ended in divorce. Bottom line Greg, I took my eyes off God and placed them
on circumstances surrounding me. Pride, lust, and the enemy had their way.
Before long, Mary—God’s gift to me—no longer satisfied me, and I
committed adultery. In fact, the very night that act took place, you and I
crossed paths at the mall. I was there in a restaurant with a
coworker I introduced as Christy. Remember? When I look
back on that night I am reminded of when Judas came to
Jesus in the garden with a band of soldiers to arrest Jesus,
and before Judas identified Christ with a kiss, Jesus said
to him, “Friend, why have you come?” In that moment,
Jesus was giving to Judas one more opportunity to turn to
Him. Greg, you were that person God used to cross my
path that evening to wake me up, to warn me, “Don’t do
this!” I didn’t listen. Needless to say that decision and
those that followed would systematically destroy my life. I
hit rock bottom. My life was in complete shambles. I lost
everything: my relationship with God, my marriage, my
reputation. Everything was gone. To look back on my life
and see the destruction that has been done through my
selfishness is devastating. I failed to take God seriously at
His Word, because I thought I knew what I was doing. I
said, “Get out of my way God, You are crowding me.” I
virtually destroyed what life I had at the time. Even worse,
I destroyed Mary’s life as well. Not to mention all those
folks whose lives we had impacted for God.
Sincerely,
John
What a sad story. God may have forgiven John—and Mary, his
ex-wife, remarried and is happy in her new marriage—but a
tragedy took place, because John was disobedient to God. His
actions have scarred both his life and his ex-wife’s life.
Much like the two thieves, John too was caught in the act.
Caught by his spouse, his family, his church, and most
importantly, caught in the act by God. Learn from the mistake of
John. Do not even consider the sin of adultery. I know the
world makes adultery look so appealing by the way they
present it in movies, magazines, and music. But adultery is a
dangerous and devastating sin. Cheating on your spouse is a
snare that will affect the rest of your life and the lives of those
around you. Take seriously the danger of adultery or you’ll be
putting your marriage at risk.
Chapter Two
It is after midnight. Your wife has taken the kids to visit her
parents for a week. You are all alone in that great big house.
Everything seems so quiet without them. You just microwaved
dinner for one. Now you can’t sleep. You reach for the remote
control to the television set. Maybe a little late-night channel
surfing will help. So, with your finger on the button, you flick
quickly from one channel to the next, noticing the crummy late-
night television fare: lots of infomercials, a couple of shopping
networks, and CNN Headline News. No—news won’t do. What
you’re looking for is something with a plot, a story line. There
are the usual get-rich-quick programming, which never
interests you, regardless of what time of day it is. You flick past
the dial-a-psychics, and also decide to pass on old reruns of
Bonanza and a late-night talk show hosted by a personality
that you could take or leave. Now you are into the pay
channels. You know the programming on pay channels gets
pretty raunchy this late at night. You realize, those are the
channels that you tell yourself you keep paying for because
they feature recently released PG and PG-13 movies for the
family, during prime-time hours. Not to mention the special
sports programs.
But it is not prime time now. Your conscience says, Don’t watch
it! But in direct contrast to those soul-deep warnings, your
eyes, ogling on images of a couple locked in the throes of
heated passion, are saying, Watch it!
So you do just that—you watch it. After all, who will ever
know? You’re the only one home, all alone in front of the tube.
It doesn’t take long before you realize that this steamy tale is
about a man who claims to have found fulfillment—even
excitement—via an illicit romance. Sure, he’s married. So are
you. You tell yourself you don’t approve. You tell yourself it is
against your moral values. You tell yourself it’s only a story.
What’s wrong with a little compromise now and then? You tell
yourself that by just watching a story like that on television,
you really aren’t sinning. Or are you?
If it is all right to watch it, why don’t you like to watch movies
about adultery with your spouse? Why does it make you feel
so guilty? And afterward, why is there that feeling in the pit of
your stomach that, although your moral code is offended, has
you secretly wondering why there isn’t more passion in your
love life. You aren’t missing something—are you? And just
when was it that you began to compare your wife of twenty-
five years with the young, beautiful women whose sleek
images have recently been flashing across the television
screen of your mind? When did you notice that you were
bored?
Fictional scenarios like these are more real than you may think.
Remember that old song from the 70s, “Just one look—that’s
all it took”? Well, so many times that is how it is. All it takes is
just one look for well-meaning, God-fearing Christians to fall
into the danger of adultery.
Chapter Three
Just one look—that’s all it took for King David to fall into
adultery. As you know, he was one of Israel’s greatest kings.
The Bible describes him as “a man after God’s own heart.”
Then how could such a horrendous thing as an adulterous
affair with a married woman have happened to this godly man?
I want to stress the fact that King David did not fall into the
compromise of adultery all at once. It happened step by step,
little by little, over the passage of time. That is how it still
happens today.
“Saul has slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands!”
That’s what the people once sang about David, their king, ever
since, as a boy, he slew Goliath, the giant Philistine warrior. In a
matter of minutes, a young, courageous shepherd boy had
accomplished with a slingshot what an entire army outfitted
with swords and spears could not do. God was glorified as
David felled Goliath with a single stone launched from his
simple sling. With that act of faith and valor, a boy met his
destiny. The course of his life was changed forever.
Now, many years later, with many more exciting victories to his
credit, the middle-aged warrior king had reached a plateau. He
had already accomplished more in his lifetime—a lifetime that
was only half over—than some people ever dreamed of
accomplishing. Perhaps he was weary. Could it also be that he
had become bored by his successes, numbed by the adulation
of his armies and the people? Was he experiencing the Old
Testament equivalent of a mid-life crisis? Whatever his reasons
were, David opted out during this particular time when the rest
of his men went down to the heat of battle. After all, David had
personally trained and appointed his captains. Why should he
go down to battle? Instead of sleeping in tents on the
battlefield, David was at home, living luxuriously, with plenty of
time on his hands.
One balmy, spring evening, the king simply could not sleep. He
kept tossing and turning until finally, he rose from bed and
walked out onto his royal terrace for a breath of fresh air. But
David received much more than a breath of fresh air that
evening. Although he didn’t realize it, the king was about to
step into another situation that would change his life forever.
From the vantage point of his rooftop porch, high above the
city of Jerusalem, King David could see for miles in every
direction. As he looked across the way, his eyes settled upon a
scene that made his heart pound. There in plain sight was one
of the most beautiful women he had ever seen, bathing in the
warm night breezes. As she bathed herself, it would seem that
the woman had no idea she was being observed by Israel’s
king. Nor did she realize what was soon about to transpire.
David, who did not yet know her name, made a decision that
set him on a different course than the one God had planned for
him. He determined to have this woman no matter what it took.
All this would happen to the man who had once penned the
words, “As the deer pants for the water brooks, so pants my
soul for You, O God” (Psalm 42:1) and “The Lord is my
shepherd; I shall not want” (Psalm 23:1). He had loved God in a
dear and tender way; yet even today he is remembered not
only for his great victories, but also for his greatest defeat.
Today’s world is often filled with images that one can’t help
but sometimes see. We are constantly bombarded with
seductive images that we have no control over—a picture on a
billboard, a commercial on TV, even a person who walks across
our path. But there is a difference between simply seeing
something and saying, “I really wish I hadn’t seen that, so I
will not continue to look at it” and placing ourselves in the
position of knowing that we will be intentionally exposed to
things that will arouse us sensually.
I have made a covenant with my eyes; why then should I look upon a young
woman? . . . If my step has turned from the way, or my heart walked after my
eyes, or if any spot adheres to my hands, then let me sow, and another eat;
yes, let my harvest be rooted out. (Job 31:1, 7–8)
Have you ever noticed that God doesn’t make it easy to sin?
There is a line drawn, and crossing it is no simple task. God
puts obstacles in the way. Perhaps it will be a Bible verse that
you discover during your morning devotions. It will seem to
leap out at you, convicting you not to do that thing the devil is
currently trying to tempt you into doing. Perhaps you will hear
a message at church that tugs at the strings of your heart:
“Don’t sin!” A Christian friend may cross your path and, in the
course of conversation, bring up the exact thing you seem to
be struggling with. The Holy Spirit will send clear warnings. He
is trying to alert you: danger ahead!
Uriah was so loyal to the king and his fellow soldiers that
instead of sleeping at home with his wife, he spent the night
outside, as he knew his fellows were doing on the battlefield far
away. When David asked why he hadn’t spent the night with
Bathsheba, Uriah replied, “I couldn’t bear to think of the other
soldiers out there on the battlefield, fighting for you, the king. I
couldn’t give myself such a luxury as being with my wife, so I
slept outside.”
The fifth and only positive part of David’s fall was that he
repented. Now that Nathan had broken through David’s wall of
resistance, the king quickly broke before the Lord. He repented
tearfully. The prophet said, “All right. Your sin has been put
away from you.” Then he added something else: “The sword
will be a constant threat to your family” (2 Samuel 12:10 nlt).
David, who had just been forgiven, was being told that he
would also reap what he had sown.
For instance, you can rob a store, but if you are caught, you
will also be arrested for it. Let’s say you are arrested for the
crime and as the handcuffs are applied, you suddenly see the
light. You turn to God and say, “I’m so sorry! Please forgive
me!” If you have truly repented, I am confident that God will
indeed forgive you. But I also am confident that you will
probably do some jail time for robbery. The day you are
scheduled to appear in court, it’s doubtful that the judge will
want to hear, “I know I was wrong, but I have asked God to
forgive me.” You will still be required to face the consequences
and pay your debt to society.
Each one is tempted when he is drawn away by his own desires and enticed.
Then, when desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is
full grown, brings forth death.
I once heard about a man who had been unfaithful to his wife
for seven years. She was devastated when she realized that he
had been living a lie all that time. She felt betrayed as she
thought of all the Christmases, children’s birthdays, and
anniversaries that they had celebrated during those seven
years—while he was secretly unfaithful. What deception!
When you fall into this sin, you lose your integrity and ruin
your witness. After Nathan pointed out David’s sin to him, he
said, “By this deed you have given great occasion to the
enemies of the Lord to blaspheme . . .” (2 Samuel 12:14).
Likewise, in falling into this snare, you will give ammunition to
the enemy to use against the church.
The sixth and final reason to avoid adultery is you sin against
the Lord. This should be the primary reason to avoid the sin of
adultery, but sadly, it is probably the last thing some people
even stop to consider. The young man, Joseph, kept this in
mind when he resisted the charms offered to him by Potiphar’s
wife. When she tried to entrap him sexually, he replied, “How
then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?”
(Genesis 39:9).
Go after it! You can get it back. Romance is something that you
work to keep alive. Pick up the phone and call your spouse for
no other reason than to say, “I’m thinking about you. I
appreciate you. You’re wonderful. I love you!” Communicate.
Keep the friendship going. Just as we commune with God, we
must also commune with each other.
You may say, “Well, Greg, I know it’s bad. But these are things
that are happening with secular society. It’s not that bad in the
church.” Sadly, I must disagree. In a random sampling of a
thousand subscribers, Christianity Today learned that forty-
five percent of respondents admitted to having committed
adultery or acting inappropriately regarding sexual matters.
Don’t you know that those who do wrong will have no share in the
Kingdom of God? Don’t fool yourselves. Those who indulge in sexual sin,
who are idol worshipers, adulterers . . . none of these will have a share in the
Kingdom of God. (1 Corinthians 6:9–10 nlt)
An intense love for God and for your spouse will see you
through this difficult time. Stop looking for loopholes. The
Lord will guide you safely through the rough waters of sexual
temptation. I don’t have some magic formula I can give you
that will make it so that you will never be tempted again. It is a
daily battle. I can tell you this—once you begin to lower your
guard in this area, you will become a target once more.
If you are providing target practice for the enemy’s fiery darts
called adultery, face the facts. It is time to move forward again
with God. Those who are moving forward with Christ, those
who are growing in their love for Him and working to keep the
fires of romance building within their marriages, are not nearly
as easy for the devil to hit as those who have grown stagnant
and bored in their marriages. Those who have let their guards
down can easily become the next victims of adultery’s flaming
arrows. Keep moving forward, and God will strengthen both
your marriage and resolve.
When this homeowner was asked why his home still stood
while his neighbor’s homes lay in ashes, he replied that he had
simply gone the extra mile—far beyond building codes—to
make his home flame retardant. That included installing double-
paned windows, thick stucco walls, sealed eaves, concrete tile,
and abundant insulation. Firefighters said, “It was clear to us
that this would be a place to make a stand. Because this man
had taken extra fireproofing precautions, his house had
survived the flames when they actually hit.
One day I decided to raise the stakes. I lit three at once. This
time, the flames melted the three little plastic men down into
one giant puddle of goo—and caught the newspaper on fire
too. Now I had a big blaze going. In another classic bad
decision, I wadded the whole thing up and tossed it into a
nearby wastebasket. It was made of rattan—very flammable. It,
too, caught fire. I could have burned the entire house down
had I not gotten control of that fire. It was that event that cured
me of my pyromaniac ways.
In much the same way the devil brought down King David, he
banked the fires of lust and desire within the great Old
Testament judge and warrior, Samson. (See Judges 16.) When
ensnared by the charms of the temptress, Delilah, Samson
succumbed in such a way that he was made completely
vulnerable. Here was a man upon whom the power and
strength of God rested. Samson possessed the power to
vanquish many enemies in the name of the Lord God. He was
able to resist the temptation of many types—until it was
presented to him in the form of beautiful Delilah.
Ironically, the very sin this man said he would never commit
was the sin he fell victim to a short time later. After a stormy
period of failure, followed by repentance, restoration, and
recovery, this man concluded: “An unguarded strength is a
double weakness.” I agree.
The Bible says, “The heart is deceitful above all things, and
desperately wicked” (Jeremiah 17:9). And Paul states, “I know
that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells” (Romans
7:18). That verse does not mean that I will automatically go out
and commit sin, unrestrained. It simply means the potential to
sin is always present, as long as I am in this physical body on
earth.
In our increasingly value-free, anything-goes society—a
society that will not allow the Ten Commandments to be posted
on classroom walls, but will freely hand out condoms at school
—the only way we can hope to infuse moral values back into
society is through the teaching at home. A USA Today cover
story about the spread of crime in America stated, “Crime and
the growing fear of it has muscled aside the economy to take
control of the nation’s political agenda and public mind-set.
People feel personally threatened by what they consider a
complete collapse of the fabric of society,” said Ethel Cline, a
New York pollster and political consultant. When asked the
question, “Which factors do you see as most important in
causing crime?” eighty-nine percent of the people polled
4
replied, “A lack of moral training in the home.”
At the time this story took place, King Balak of the Moabites
was seeking the key to defeating the Israelites. If he could just
get the edge he was seeking, he would have all Israel in his
clutches. He thought that perhaps the answer would be to find
a prophet to curse them. Then he and his band of men would
sweep down and recover the spoils. That would be much
simpler than relying on superior strength on the battlefield,
now wouldn’t it?
Somehow, King Balak found the willing Balaam and with the
promise of a lucrative payoff, Balaam happily complied. As he
went about his work, trying to find a curse that would stick to
the people of Israel, the Lord spoke to this misguided
mercenary. He told him in no uncertain terms not to curse Israel
but to bless them. Needless to say, this was not exactly the
news for which King Balak was hoping.
While the Israelites were camped at Acacia, some of the men defiled
themselves by sleeping with the local Moabite women. These women
invited them to attend sacrifices to their gods, and soon the Israelites were
feasting with them and worshiping the gods of Moab. Before long Israel was
joining in the worship of Baal of Peor, causing the Lord’s anger to blaze
against his people. (Numbers 25:1–3 nlt)
As a result, God’s judgment came down. After all was said and
done, 24,000 Israelites were not the first people to be destroyed
by immorality; nor will they be the last.
Chapter Ten
The body is not for sexual immorality but for the Lord, and the Lord for the
body. . . . Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I
then take the members of Christ and make them members of a harlot?
Certainly not! Or do you not know that he who is joined to a harlot is one
body with her? For “ the two,” He says, “ shall become one flesh” But he
who is joined to the Lord is one spirit with Him. Flee sexual immorality. (1
Corinthians 6:13, 15–18)
God warns us about sexual immorality for our own good. There
is really no such thing as a one-night fling. The results of such
an act often go on forever. When we cross that line of
protection that God has placed around us, we do so at our own
peril. The repercussions can go on for months, years—even a
lifetime.
“But,” you say, “I couldn’t help it. I just fell into it.” Come on.
We both know that just isn’t true. You knew for weeks, maybe
even months ahead of time that this was bound to happen.
Before you ever actually acted anything out, you allowed your
mind to become polluted with all sorts of fantasies,
imaginations, and impure thoughts. After a while your
thoughts were no longer satisfying. That is really when you
crossed the line. You began to flirt and spend more time with
the object of your secret affections. But soon that didn’t
satisfy you either. So you stepped things up a bit. Soon you
and the other guilty party were having long, soul-baring
conversations. That’s what really led to immorality: a chain of
events that you could have stopped at any juncture before
they got out of hand. It’s not that you started out saying, “I’m
going to act in an immoral manner and thereby destroy my
home, hurt my kids, devastate my wife, break up my marriage,
and damage my Christian witness.” No. Instead, you said,
“We’re just friends. There isn’t anything to it. I’m just sharing.
I can stop any time I want.”
It is time to draw a new line, then defend it. I know this isn’t a
pleasant message, but it’s a needed one. It’s vital that we
confront this important area of compromise and deal with it
head up. Straight on. Face to face. We must overcome
immorality, or it will overcome us.
Do you remember when you first fell in love with your spouse?
Remember how you wanted to make such a great impression?
You would wear your best clothes, put your best foot forward,
and use your best manners. Wherever you went, people could
see you holding hands and looking into one another’s eyes.
Then there were those little gifts you would give to each other
throughout the week, just to let each other know how much
you loved one another.
What brought you and your spouse together was your desire
for companionship, for intimacy, for honesty. But when a
husband and wife begin to take each other for granted, that
marriage becomes endangered. A marriage is strong because
you make it that way. Romance is kept alive by a conscious
effort on the part of both marriage partners. Romance is not
something that comes and goes. Romance is something you
keep alive as you take part in the necessary things to keep
your marriage strong and vibrant.
Are you taking the Lord for granted today? If so, take the
necessary steps to return to your first love—your love for
Jesus Christ.
Below are four steps for you to take to return to and reignite
your love with Jesus Christ. In fact, the most important step to
developing a strong godly marriage is first to develop a strong
relationship with the Lord. Once your life is right with the Lord,
everything else will begin to fall into place. As Jesus said to
the church in Ephesus, “Look how far you have fallen from
your first love! Turn back to me again and work as you did at
first” (Revelation 2:5 nlt).
The first step to returning to your first love is to realize you are
a sinner.
Second, you must recognize that Jesus Christ died on the cross
for you.
Scripture says, “But God showed His great love for us by
sending Christ to die for us while we were still sinners”
(Romans 5:8 nlt). God gave His very Son to die in our place
when we least deserved it. As the apostle Paul said, “[Christ]
loved me and gave Himself for me . . .” (Galatians 2:20 nlt).
Jesus stands at the door of your life right now and is knocking.
He says that if you will hear His voice and open the door, He
will come in. If you would like to know or renew your belief that
when you die, you will go to heaven, and if you want to have a
life that is full of purpose and meaning, then pray this
suggested prayer and mean it in your heart:
Dear Lord Jesus, I know I am a sinner. I believe You died
for my sins and rose again from the dead. Right now, I
turn from my sins and open the door of my heart and life. I
confess You as Lord and Savior. Thank you for saving me.
Amen.
Epilogue
Dear Friend,
May God bless you and your spouse as you grow closer to
Him.
Greg Laurie
1 Chris L. Stollar, “The Happy Divorcee?” Family.org,
http://www.family.org/married/comm./a0021846.cfm (accessed
November 19, 2004).
2 Ibid.
3 Ibid.
4 Bruce Frankel, “People Fear Losing Control,” USA Today, 28
October 1993, 1A.
5 Michael Medved, Hollywood vs. America (New York:
HarperCollins, 1992), 110, 112.