As Luther showed in his marriage illustration, salvation by grace alone is about the believer’s being united to Christ as a bridegroom is united to his bride. In the story, the prostitute receives the royal status of her husband, but that does not tell us about the point or intent of the marriage. Marriages are supposed to point to the ideal marriage between Christ and the church (Eph. 5:31–32). And in an ideal marriage a man and a woman come together in order to get each other. Just so, believers trust in Christ and are united to him in order to get him. Not, first and foremost, to get heaven, righteousness, life, or any other blessing, but to get Christ, in whom all those other blessings are then found. Take the apostle Paul, who wrote so emphatically on salvation by grace alone. Writing to the Philippians he declared that his desire was to depart and be not “in heaven” but “with Christ” (Phil. 1:23). For him, Christ was the greatest attraction of heaven.