Should Sanford be forgiven?

Psychiatrists explain that married people tire of one another after 10 or 20 years. (It used to be seven years, as in that Marilyn Monroe/Tom Ewell film “The Seven Year Itch” – must be inflation.) Good marriages are the result of hard work. Forsaking all others is more than a wedding promise. It is a daily denial of one’s lower instincts. Temptation is everywhere. The key to overcoming it is to realize you are fighting an adversarial force that wants to destroy you, embarrass you and cause ridicule to be heaped on the God you claim to worship.

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One can make excuses about power and loneliness and starting out as a friendship that develops into something else, as Mr. Sanford rambled on about, but one can’t explain adultery. It is what it is, and the person who commits it should be calling on God for mercy, not the voters for understanding.

I once asked evangelist Billy Graham if he experienced temptations of the flesh when he was young. He said, “of course.” How did he deal with them? With passion he responded, “I asked God to strike me dead before He ever allowed me to dishonor Him in that way.” That is the kind of seriousness one needs to overcome the temptations of a corrupt culture in which shameful behavior is too often paraded in the streets.

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