A
biblical reflection on marriage and family restoration based on Pastor David
Jang’s sermon and Paul’s teaching in 1 Corinthians 7 and Ephesians 5.
When
we open Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, we quickly realize that the
happiness or unhappiness of a family is never a superficial matter. Living
together is not simply about sharing a house. It is about remaining close to
one another’s soul. When love grows cold, conversation disappears, and hearts
drift apart, people do not merely face a relationship crisis. They begin to
feel that the direction of life itself is falling apart.
At
precisely this point, the teaching of the Apostle Paul and the sermons of Pastor
David Jang of Olivet University lead modern marriage and family life
back to their true essence. In an age of rising divorce rates, delayed
marriage, and emotional distance within the home, Paul’s words still speak with
remarkable clarity. Marriage is not merely a social arrangement or a personal
preference. It is a covenant, a calling, and a place where the gospel takes
visible form in daily life.
Marriage
in an Age Where Love Is Reduced to Contract
Today,
many people struggle to view marriage with hope. Economic pressure, personal
ambition, and individualistic values often make commitment feel more like a
burden than a blessing. As a result, marriage is increasingly understood as a
conditional relationship rather than a sacred covenant. The family is often
treated not as a place of devotion and growth, but as a space where personal
satisfaction is constantly measured.
This
cultural shift helps explain why divorce rates remain high and why many
hesitate even to begin married life. When marriage is built mainly on emotional
fulfillment or practical compatibility, it becomes fragile. The moment
expectations collapse, the relationship itself begins to collapse.
Paul
offers a radically different perspective in 1 Corinthians 7. He
does not treat marriage as merely a solution for human desire. Instead, he
presents it as a mutual relationship of responsibility, protection, and
faithfulness. Husband and wife are called to care for one another and guard one
another in love. Marriage, then, is not a tool for managing desire. It is a
covenant in which one person entrusts himself or herself to another before God.
Marriage
as a Covenant of Mutual Care
This
is where Pastor David Jang’s reflection becomes especially meaningful. He
interprets marriage not simply as a legal or emotional bond, but as a
relationship of spiritual companionship. A husband and wife are not
meant to use each other to meet personal needs. They are called to support,
strengthen, and build one another up within the will of God.
That
means marriage cannot be sustained by feelings alone. Emotions matter, but they
are not enough. A lasting marriage is shaped by devotion, responsibility,
patience, love, and obedience. In this sense, the gospel is not an abstract
doctrine removed from daily life. It is revealed most clearly in the way we
love the person closest to us.
This
insight is crucial for biblical reflection today. Many people explain marital
conflict only in terms of communication problems or personality differences.
While those things matter, Paul asks a deeper question: not “What can I get
from this relationship?” but “How am I called to love within this
relationship?” Faith begins to restore relationships when that question is
taken seriously.
Ephesians
5 and the Gospel Vision of Marriage
In Ephesians
5, Paul compares marriage to the relationship between Christ and
the church. This comparison does not exist to make marriage seem more
burdensome. Rather, it reveals the spiritual beauty and seriousness of marriage
in the clearest possible way.
Paul
speaks of respect and submission for the wife, and sacrificial love for the
husband. Yet the heart of the passage is not hierarchy or domination. The
center is self-giving love. The husband is called to love his wife
as Christ loved the church and gave Himself for her. The wife is called to
respond with respect that nurtures and strengthens the relationship.
This
teaching should never be used to justify one-sided power. Paul’s vision is not
about control. It is about mutual devotion ordered by love. Pastor David Jang
also emphasizes this principle of mutual submission. Marriage is
not a place where one person tries to win over the other. It is a place where
both learn to lower themselves so that the other may live and flourish.
The
essence of marriage, then, is not assertion but sacrifice, not possession but
service.
The
Profound Mystery of Becoming One Body
Paul
says that a man leaves his father and mother and is united to his wife, and
that the two become one body. He then says, “This mystery is
profound.” These words remind us that marriage is far more than a legal union
or a practical partnership. It is a sacred joining of lives before God.
To
become one body does not simply mean to live under the same roof. It means to
share joy and sorrow, burdens and hopes, weakness and strength. It means that
two people begin to carry life together.
Pastor
David Jang’s theological insight goes even further here. Marriage is not a
system designed to guarantee personal happiness. It is a form of companionship
through which God’s purpose for life is pursued together. Husband and wife are
not merely there for one another’s convenience. They are given to one another
so that each may learn the love of God more deeply through the other.
Love,
in this sense, is not sustained by emotion alone. It matures through decision,
endurance, forgiveness, and the willingness to walk in the same direction.
Why
Families Break Down Today
One
of the deepest problems in modern family life is not simply the existence of
conflict, but the way conflict is handled. When pain is not endured, when
silence replaces conversation, and when judgment comes before understanding,
relationships begin to unravel quickly.
Paul’s
counsel points in the opposite direction. He urges believers not to separate
lightly, but to seek reconciliation and restoration. This is not a command to
ignore pain or dismiss serious wounds. Rather, it is a call to resist the
spirit of an age that cuts off relationships too quickly. It is a call to learn
repentance, patience, honest dialogue, and hope.
That
is why the restoration of the family begins not with ideal conditions, but with
a renewed heart. Healing starts when people choose to open themselves again, to
listen again, and to love again.
Family
Restoration Begins with Grace
Pastor
David Jang teaches that the restoration of marriage does not begin with
financial stability or perfect emotional compatibility. It begins when husband
and wife recover the spiritual meaning of marriage itself. The family is
restored when both return to the understanding that marriage is a holy calling
through which God’s love is made visible.
When
spouses begin to understand, honor, and give themselves to one another again,
the home is not merely preserved. It is renewed. Grace does not come only to
perfect people. Grace quietly rests upon those who are willing to begin loving
again.
This
is why marriage can be understood as a kind of school of covenant love.
Within it, people learn to lay down selfishness, practice repentance, and
rediscover how to love through the gospel. Paul’s teaching remains powerful
today because it is not simply a list of moral rules. It is a path of hope for
broken relationships.
The
True Essence of Marriage
In
the end, marriage is not a system for consuming happiness. It is a covenant in
which love is learned, tested, purified, and deepened. It is where
responsibility, sacrifice, grace, and faith are woven together in daily life.
This
leaves us with an important question:
Do we still understand marriage only through the language of conditions and
satisfaction? Or do we see it as a holy calling where love, obedience,
responsibility, and grace can grow?
For
those who remain before that question with humility, Paul’s words still become
a quiet gospel today—a gospel strong enough to raise up homes, heal
relationships, and restore families.


















