I'm going to try to answer these two posts together, as they both bring up the issue of making good choices.
@Hazelelponi -- I understand that Israel is seen as God's bride, and that the examples mentioned were of the Old Testament prophets who were called to be living examples of God's relationship with His people.
When I was growing up in Lutheran schools and we were reading these stories in the Bible, several kids were concerned as to whether or not God still calls people to go through things like this. I was in grade school at the time, and several of my classmates were worried that God would call them to difficulties of that degree.
The pastors and teachers back then tried to assure us that these things happened in the Old Testament and that God didn't have prophets today that He called in this way. However, as I've grown up within the church culture, I have to wonder about this, and it's one of the many questions I have to ask God in heaven someday, unless He somehow answers in this life.
This past week, my Bible reading has been about Peter -- one of the most well-known people in the New Testament rather than the old -- and I was pondering in awe, and downright fear, over how he went from denying Jesus at the cross to eventually being martyred for his faith.
I was especially thinking of the passage in which Jesus even warns him of this in John 21:18 -- "When you were young, you dressed yourself and walked where you wanted; but when you are old, you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will dress you and lead you where you do not want to go."
I don't know if it's been historically proven? But as kids, we were told Peter was crucified, and because he told the soldiers that he wasn't good enough to die in the same manner as his Lord, they turned Peter's cross upside down.
We can't deny that people today are still suffering and being martyred for their faith. Most of us are certainly blessed in that we aren't living among those extremes, but it is definitely happening. I could be wrong, but I still believe God calls people to extreme situations they would feel are impossible if they knew what they were being led into.
I also absolutely agree, however, that Godly choices must be made to the best of our abilities.
However, in every situation I see or hear of in which a marriage did not survive, people always say that better choices should have been made (implying it is the person's own fault.) But hindsight is always 20/20, and everyone has some choices in their lives that lead to less than stellar results.
The 3 original examples I gave were of women who felt called by God to marry certain men. I am most certainly not trying to say that it couldn't happen the other way around, as I have known many men who have gone through bad relationships or marriages as well. But I just haven't had any of them in my own life say they felt called by God to marry that specific woman, so I couldn't include any examples I knew of personally that worked in reverse.
Would it surprise you to learn that in 2 of those examples, one husband was a well-known, respected worship leader in their church, and the one fit to violent alcoholic bursts was a pastor?
And I know the first thing people will say is, "Didn't they notice any red flags?" and then the people in these situations are often seen as the cause of their own problems, because they made the wrong choices.
Of course, I definitely believe this can be happen. Bad choices will undoubtedly lead to bad consequences. But the thing is, as stated before, everyone makes bad choices at some point. So then the question becomes, "How perfect does someone have to be in order to get married, or to qualify as a someone else's spouse?"
In two of the examples I wrote about, these men had an entire congregation rallying and praying for them. The women who married them sincerely believed that with God, prayer, and a support group, things would get better, or at least work out in favor of holding their marriages together.
Again, I agree that Godly, prayerful decisions are a must. But at the same time, I understand where these women were coming from. They were standing on the very pinnacle of everything Christianity and the Bible teaches us -- faith. These women did exactly wht we are told to do: believe, and pray. These ladies believed God was calling them, believed God was working on these men, and believed that, by putting God at the center of their marriages as we are always told to do, things would work out.
What I'm trying to say is that I believe that sometimes, just as even the best choices result in consequences that go astray, I do think that sometimes God calls us to make choices that others will find questionable. Maybe it wasn't God calling these women to marry these men, but I believe there are many people who can relate to their story of doing something they believed God wanting them to do, and it all going to pot, whether in marriage or any other life situation.
Finally, we also have to consider that not all people are allowed to chose whom they marry. I once had two church mentors who were from a culture in which their family, not the person, chose their spouse.
Now I most certainly believe that God can lead families to make a good choice of someone for their child or family member, and that holy marriages can occur this way, but as we know, family members might not be considering some of the things we would consider for ourselves.
I wanted to mention this last point because most of us are accustomed to the luxury of choosing whom we date or marry, but for some Christians around the world, it is not a choice that is given to them. (And I'm not mentioning this as any kind of excuse, but just something important to consider.)