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Be Married or Be a Wife

Carolyn McCulley

Author & Contributing Writer

How do you define a "chick flick"? My definition is that it's a movie women love and men are itching to turn off.

Chick flicks appeal to us because they are grown-up versions of fairy tales. As little girls, we read stories about how some plain girl becomes a dazzling princess and earns at first glance the undying devotion of a prince. Rescued from obscurity, she lives happily ever after.

This is the same storyline of every chick flick, but it's set in a big city (usually Manhattan) and the heroine's charms are her quirky personality and chutzpah. There's no fairy godmother to wave a wand, but there's always some sort of physical transformation to catch the eye of her prince. And in the end everything works out for the benefit of the heroine.

So why am I rambling on about chick flicks? It's because I think they color our perception of romance and marriage more than we know. The problem is that the heroine is forever the center of the story. All others are props to help her achieve her desires. In the good ole days, the movie ended with a wedding. In our post-modern culture, weddings are no longer the guaranteed ending, but some form of commitment is communicated.

Now let's think about our desire to be married. In fact, let's look at that phrase:  "be married." Isn't that how we always say it? "I want to be married." It's not very common for us to say, "I want to be a wife." We want to be the chosen one and to be the heroine of a chick-flick romance, but we rarely say we want to "be a wife." We chatter about changing our marital status, but it's far more sobering to say we want to undertake a role/position/responsibility.

To get a reality check, we must wipe away the pixie dust and study what the Bible says about this role we desire. Gaining God's perspective is one way we can be proactive about the goal of marriage. Though there are several good books on marriage that I can recommend – including "Feminine Appeal: Seven Virtues of a Godly Wife and Mother" by Carolyn Mahaney and "Love That Lasts: When Marriage Meets Grace" by Gary & Betsy Ricucci – they are additional study. Nothing replaces looking at God's Word itself.

The first passage we encounter about a wife is the well-known Genesis 2 account of the first marriage, between Adam and Eve. Adam definitely has that hallmark male reaction of every fairy tale and chick flick fed to us – "Bone of my bones! Flesh of my flesh!" And that's a good thing. It's good to be attracted to each other. But notice how the Bible goes on speaking where the typical romance story or fairy tale fades out. Instead of a nebulous statement of "living happily ever after," the Bible gives us something concrete to consider about marriage. Women aren't the center of the marriage, the object forever to be admired and applauded. God is at the center and there are two people He's created to reflect His image, one masculine and one feminine. The feminine creature is to reflect God in certain ways and the first way Scripture lists is as a helper:

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Most Recent User Comments
Cawfee
2/5/2007 10:50 AM
This is a great entry.
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