January 29, 2013
The Elephant in the Room
There he is in the corner of the great big room
Big and fat an obvious to see
Why’s he there? You both wonder
Is he scared? You both wonder.
He should use the door and be free.
Both are sitting on the couch munching on some snacks
When the husband takes a quick and stealthy look
That elephant won’t fit through the door, he’s way too big
He barely fits inside the breakfast nook
This time the wife looks ‘round at the great big beast
She doesn’t want her husband though to notice
The ellie stinks and blocks their path so you can’t get by
This is not something for a novice
There he is in corner of the great big room
Big and fat an obvious to see
Why’s he there? You both wonder
Is he scared? You both wonder.
He should use the door and be free.
Husband turns to wife, and risks sounding rather silly
But this problem must be talked about and solved.
The wife responds in kind, and also wants to talk
She too agrees this problem must be resolved.
Ideas begin to flow as the married couple talks, and focuses upon the elephant.
Should they squeeze him out the door after covering him with butter?
Should they have some people over and then have a barbeque?
If an idea comes to mind then it is uttered.
Something happens as they talk that escapes the eye of both
The elephant is shrinking by the moment
Talk continues, sometimes heated, but they focus on the beast
They listen close to hear the other’s comments.
Problem solved, and they going looking for the great big beast
He’s not so big and clunky anymore.
The elephant is tiny, and his trumpet is a toot,
And with a boot the lady kicks it out the door.
He was there in the corner of the great big room
No longer big and fat an obvious to see
He was there, they both knew why
They were scared to put their heart out
They talked an now the elephant is free.
November 11, 2012
Loving Your Spouse with a Whole Heart
Saw this one and had to post. There is some really good stuff in here. I know in my own life I see the damage that can be doen with too much rushing around and not enough time with your spouse. My wife and I strive to spend time together, but sometimes with 3 kids and jobs and church stuff we don't always get to. Marriage takes some work. Here are some ideas that just struck home with me:
Loving Your Spouse with a Whole Heart
Loving Your Spouse with a Whole Heart
Whitney Hopler
Editor's Note: The following is a report on the practical applications of Dr. Greg Smalley and Dr. Shawn Stoever's book, The Wholehearted Marriage: Fully Engaging Your Most Important Relationship, (Howard Books, 2009).
The passion and intimacy you wish you and your spouse could enjoy together isn't just a pie-in-the-sky dream. That kind of marriage is within your reach. But it's possible only if you both devote yourselves wholeheartedly to your relationship -- fully engaging and giving 100 percent, without reservation.
Here's how you can put your whole heart into your marriage:
Recognize where love comes from. Do you find yourself thinking that you're not in love with your spouse anymore? Perhaps you feel like you just don't connect with your spouse. Maybe you feel alone, even though the two of you are still living under the same roof. Have you chosen to settle, compromise, or go into survival mode in your marriage? Worse, have you given up and started looking for love somewhere else?
It doesn't have to be that way. No matter how discouraged you may feel, it's possible to experience love for your spouse again. That's because love comes from God -- who is always willing to give you a fresh supply of it -- rather than from you. You don't have the pressure of trying to generate love for your spouse when you don't feel it. All you need to do is go to God in prayer each day and ask Him to fill your heart with His love.
When you open your heart to God daily, you'll receive from Him all the love you need for both yourself and your spouse. The love in your heart will naturally overflow into your relationship with your spouse. So remember that God is the source of all love, and love is always available to you because it flows through you whenever you open your heart to God.
Open your heart. In your marriage, the issue isn't love; it's the state of your heart. Ask yourself daily: "Is my heart open or closed?" If your heart is closed, your marriage will start to shut down because you're blocking the flow of God's love into it. But if you open your heart to God and keep it open every day, you'll be inviting God to pour out His love through you into your marriage.
Give your heart a voice. Become aware of the emotions you're experiencing, and learn how to manage them in healthy ways. Keep in mind that God has designed your emotions to work together with your thoughts so you can make the best possible decisions. Your emotions give you valuable information that you can then process through your thoughts.
Deal with a wounded heart. Life in this fallen world wounds you and your spouse's hearts by attacking them with false messages (such as: "You're not valuable"). The messages on your hearts affect how you see yourselves and how you interact with the world.
Then replace those lies with biblical truth.
Deal with an exhausted heart. If you don't intentionally plan regular time with your spouse and time to recharge yourself, the busyness of life will take over and your marriage will suffer.
Fight for your spouse's heart. Conflict is inevitable in marriage. But it doesn't have to harm your relationship; it can actually strengthen it. If you and your spouse respond to conflict in a healthy way, conflict will become the doorway to intimacy between you because it will deepen your understanding of each other.
Care for your spouse's heart. Your spouse has an amazingly valuable and incredibly vulnerable heart, just as you do.
April 28, 2009.
Adapted from The Wholehearted Marriage: Fully Engaging Your Most Important Relationship by Dr. Greg Smalley and Dr. Shawn Stoever. Published by Howard Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, West Monroe, La., http://christian.simonandschuster.com/.Dr. Greg Smalley is the coauthor of eight books, including The DNA of Relationships for Couples and The Marriage You've Always Dreamed Of. He is the director of Church Relationship Ministries for the Center for Relationship Enrichment at John Brown University and is also the founder of the National Institute of Marriage.
Dr. Shawn Stoever currently serves as a senior director for a nonprofit ministry called the WinShape Foundation, and he previously served as director of training for the Smalley Relationship Center.
The passion and intimacy you wish you and your spouse could enjoy together isn't just a pie-in-the-sky dream. That kind of marriage is within your reach. But it's possible only if you both devote yourselves wholeheartedly to your relationship -- fully engaging and giving 100 percent, without reservation.
Here's how you can put your whole heart into your marriage:
Recognize where love comes from. Do you find yourself thinking that you're not in love with your spouse anymore? Perhaps you feel like you just don't connect with your spouse. Maybe you feel alone, even though the two of you are still living under the same roof. Have you chosen to settle, compromise, or go into survival mode in your marriage? Worse, have you given up and started looking for love somewhere else?
It doesn't have to be that way. No matter how discouraged you may feel, it's possible to experience love for your spouse again. That's because love comes from God -- who is always willing to give you a fresh supply of it -- rather than from you. You don't have the pressure of trying to generate love for your spouse when you don't feel it. All you need to do is go to God in prayer each day and ask Him to fill your heart with His love.
When you open your heart to God daily, you'll receive from Him all the love you need for both yourself and your spouse. The love in your heart will naturally overflow into your relationship with your spouse. So remember that God is the source of all love, and love is always available to you because it flows through you whenever you open your heart to God.
Open your heart. In your marriage, the issue isn't love; it's the state of your heart. Ask yourself daily: "Is my heart open or closed?" If your heart is closed, your marriage will start to shut down because you're blocking the flow of God's love into it. But if you open your heart to God and keep it open every day, you'll be inviting God to pour out His love through you into your marriage.
Give your heart a voice. Become aware of the emotions you're experiencing, and learn how to manage them in healthy ways. Keep in mind that God has designed your emotions to work together with your thoughts so you can make the best possible decisions. Your emotions give you valuable information that you can then process through your thoughts.
- Ask God to help you accurately identify what you're feeling each day in various situations.
- Once you've figured out what you're feeling and why you're feeling it, start guiding your emotions toward what you want to feel in your marriage.
- Bring your negative emotions to God and ask Him to replace them with positive emotions in your life.
- Avoid unhealthy actions like ignoring, suppressing, judging, or minimizing your feelings; viewing your feelings as facts; impulsively acting on them; or spewing them on others.
Deal with a wounded heart. Life in this fallen world wounds you and your spouse's hearts by attacking them with false messages (such as: "You're not valuable"). The messages on your hearts affect how you see yourselves and how you interact with the world.
- Ask God to help you identify the false messages that have attacked your hearts and wounded them.
Then replace those lies with biblical truth.
- Search the Bible for specific verses that line up against the lies with which you've been struggling, and memorize those verses.
- Pray for the Holy Spirit to renew your mind so you can see yourself from God's perspective and think right thoughts about yourself.
- Talk to some people you trust (such as friends, mentors, or a trained psychologist) for counsel and encouragement.
- Care for your heart by nurturing yourself (such as by maintaining a close prayer connection to God, nurturing healthy friendships, setting healthy boundaries in your life, journaling your feelings, eating whenever you're hungry, and sleeping whenever you're tired).
- Avoid behaviors that erode trust, like:
- Recognize your spouse's value.
Deal with an exhausted heart. If you don't intentionally plan regular time with your spouse and time to recharge yourself, the busyness of life will take over and your marriage will suffer.
- Slow down the pace of your lifestyle and simplify your schedule.
- Get rid of stuff that clutters your house and demands your time and energy to deal with it. Refuse to allow our culture's standards to define your value by what you look like, what you do, or what you own.
- Find your true value in the fact that God has made you and redeemed you, and He loves you.
Fight for your spouse's heart. Conflict is inevitable in marriage. But it doesn't have to harm your relationship; it can actually strengthen it. If you and your spouse respond to conflict in a healthy way, conflict will become the doorway to intimacy between you because it will deepen your understanding of each other.
- Consider how both you and your spouse tend to react to conflict now.
- Instead of becoming your spouse's adversary in conflict and causing your hearts to close to each other, open your hearts to God.
Care for your spouse's heart. Your spouse has an amazingly valuable and incredibly vulnerable heart, just as you do.
- Keep the promise you made in your wedding vows to care for each other.
- Communicate to understand by agreeing on when it's a good time to talk, agreeing on the goal of each conversation (connecting emotionally, or trying to fix something), and checking during the conversation to make sure you're still both staying on track and understanding each other.
- Avoid communication pitfalls, such as trying to figure out: who is right or wrong, who is to blame or at fault, and what was said or what really happened.
- Avoid destructive behaviors like: criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling. During difficult interactions, say to your spouse: "Help me understand" so he or she knows you truly care.
- Ask God to open the eyes of your heart toward your spouse and give you compassion for him or her.
- Respect how valuable and vulnerable your spouse's heart is by treating it gently.
- Set aside your temptation to blame your spouse and focus on simply caring for him or her instead.
- Express empathy ("I feel what you're feeling, and I want to share in your joy or pain.") and validation ("What you're feeling matters to me and you matter to me.") toward your spouse.
- Honor, motivate, and call out your spouse's spiritual gifts and natural talents.
- Find out what wounds and fear your spouse is struggling with, and what you can say to encourage your spouse to pursue healing.
- Consider people's most common intimacy needs -- acceptance, affection, appreciation, approval, attention, comfort, encouragement, respect, security, and support -- and do what you can to help meet your spouse's intimacy needs through your marriage.
- Understand people's love languages -- words of affirmation, quality time, receiving gifts, acts of service, and physical touch -- and express your love for your spouse in ways that best speak his or her specific love language.
- As much as possible, do your everyday chores and errands together rather than separately.
- Pray with your spouse often. Share your dreams with each other regularly.
- Schedule dates whenever you can.
- Talk frequently about what God is doing in each of your lives.
- Learn something new together, such as through trying a new activity or taking a class.
- Serve others together by doing volunteer work side-by-side.
- Surprise your spouse by doing something unexpected every now and then (such as by playing a loving practical joke on him or her or planning a romantic getaway trip).
April 28, 2009.
Adapted from The Wholehearted Marriage: Fully Engaging Your Most Important Relationship by Dr. Greg Smalley and Dr. Shawn Stoever. Published by Howard Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, West Monroe, La., http://christian.simonandschuster.com/.Dr. Greg Smalley is the coauthor of eight books, including The DNA of Relationships for Couples and The Marriage You've Always Dreamed Of. He is the director of Church Relationship Ministries for the Center for Relationship Enrichment at John Brown University and is also the founder of the National Institute of Marriage.
Dr. Shawn Stoever currently serves as a senior director for a nonprofit ministry called the WinShape Foundation, and he previously served as director of training for the Smalley Relationship Center.
August 15, 2012
What does spiritual leadership look like in marriage?
This is an interesting blog post that was sent to me email address. I think it might be a little controversial because it implies that there is a leader in a marriage, but I think that when you see how this points the Christian man, you'll agree that this is a good thing. It is by a blogger named Kevin East. His personal blog is here.
"Many Christian men want to lead their wives spiritually, but they have no idea what that means. Many Christian women want to be led spiritually by their husbands, but they're not really sure what it looks like to follow. Often times, what can result is a chaotic mess of unmet expectations.
Recently, I sat across the table from a young married man who wanted to know some practical ways to lead his wife. He went through a short list of what he was currently doing, but felt that was somewhat inadequate. After asking some men around him, he felt like the main question he got back was, "are you praying with your wife?".
I'm glad some men want to fill the role in their marriage as spiritual leaders. Since God has called us, as men, to love our wives like Christ loved the Church, it is important that we put together some practical ways this plays out on a daily basis in our marriage relationships.
Here are a few ways I think men can lead spiritually in their home:
1. Pursue Christ. This is the foundation for good spiritual leadership. Before you try to start leading, you need to make sure you are following. Men whose hearts are humble before the Lord can be shaped by Him. Sit before God regularly, with His Word open, eagerly seeking to be purified and conformed into His image. Show her the importance of this in your life. That will translate into your relationship as well.
2. Find out who has led your wife spiritually in the past. Think about your life. Who made a distinct impact on you? Was it a youth pastor, college pastor, Young Life leader? Why did you learn so much from their presence in your life?
We all learn and are led differently. If you can find out those things about your wife, I think you will get a better clue of what it means to lead her. Your wife might love time together, just sitting and talking. In those times, significant conversations are had that give you the opportunity to care for her soul.
3. Honor her publicly. Speak highly of your wife. Don't focus on her flaws or deficits. Be the man that makes your wife light up when you speak about her at meal tables with your friends.
4. Sacrifice for her. Philippians 2 gives us a great picture of Jesus' love and example. It is marked by putting others' needs before your own. Do the same in marriage. Put down the rights you think you deserve and start sacrificing for your wife.
Leadership begins by setting an example, and then asking someone to follow it. As a man, take the initiative to sacrifice for your wife.
5. Be eager to serve. My temptation is merely to be able to serve. Some days I am even willing to serve. But Christ's example and calling for Christian leaders is to be eager to serve.
The other day my wife asked if I could help with one of our foster sons. I made a joking comment in return, and then helped. A couple of days later I apologized to her, recognizing that my attitude in that moment did not show her an eagerness to serve her. That was not the type of husband I want to be.
6. Pray with her. Yes, I said it. Pray with your wife. This might be the go-to question for older men teaching younger men about spiritual leadership in marriage. There is something unique and intimate about praying together. I've read statistics of what prayer in marriages does for the health of a marriage. It is profound.
Spiritual leadership in marriage is not something we should leave as a vague idea that exists in someone else's reality. Instead, let's strive as men to fulfill the role that God has given us.
Any other concrete ideas of how a husband can lead a wife spiritually?"
"Many Christian men want to lead their wives spiritually, but they have no idea what that means. Many Christian women want to be led spiritually by their husbands, but they're not really sure what it looks like to follow. Often times, what can result is a chaotic mess of unmet expectations.
Recently, I sat across the table from a young married man who wanted to know some practical ways to lead his wife. He went through a short list of what he was currently doing, but felt that was somewhat inadequate. After asking some men around him, he felt like the main question he got back was, "are you praying with your wife?".
I'm glad some men want to fill the role in their marriage as spiritual leaders. Since God has called us, as men, to love our wives like Christ loved the Church, it is important that we put together some practical ways this plays out on a daily basis in our marriage relationships.
Here are a few ways I think men can lead spiritually in their home:
1. Pursue Christ. This is the foundation for good spiritual leadership. Before you try to start leading, you need to make sure you are following. Men whose hearts are humble before the Lord can be shaped by Him. Sit before God regularly, with His Word open, eagerly seeking to be purified and conformed into His image. Show her the importance of this in your life. That will translate into your relationship as well.
2. Find out who has led your wife spiritually in the past. Think about your life. Who made a distinct impact on you? Was it a youth pastor, college pastor, Young Life leader? Why did you learn so much from their presence in your life?
We all learn and are led differently. If you can find out those things about your wife, I think you will get a better clue of what it means to lead her. Your wife might love time together, just sitting and talking. In those times, significant conversations are had that give you the opportunity to care for her soul.
3. Honor her publicly. Speak highly of your wife. Don't focus on her flaws or deficits. Be the man that makes your wife light up when you speak about her at meal tables with your friends.
4. Sacrifice for her. Philippians 2 gives us a great picture of Jesus' love and example. It is marked by putting others' needs before your own. Do the same in marriage. Put down the rights you think you deserve and start sacrificing for your wife.
Leadership begins by setting an example, and then asking someone to follow it. As a man, take the initiative to sacrifice for your wife.
5. Be eager to serve. My temptation is merely to be able to serve. Some days I am even willing to serve. But Christ's example and calling for Christian leaders is to be eager to serve.
The other day my wife asked if I could help with one of our foster sons. I made a joking comment in return, and then helped. A couple of days later I apologized to her, recognizing that my attitude in that moment did not show her an eagerness to serve her. That was not the type of husband I want to be.
6. Pray with her. Yes, I said it. Pray with your wife. This might be the go-to question for older men teaching younger men about spiritual leadership in marriage. There is something unique and intimate about praying together. I've read statistics of what prayer in marriages does for the health of a marriage. It is profound.
Spiritual leadership in marriage is not something we should leave as a vague idea that exists in someone else's reality. Instead, let's strive as men to fulfill the role that God has given us.
Any other concrete ideas of how a husband can lead a wife spiritually?"
June 11, 2012
Communication.... Or not!
This is an issue that has spelled the end of many relationships. Sometimes it is a lack of communication. Sometimes it is a miscommunication. Sometimes it is thoughtless, and mean communication. Imagine its import in a marriage! Communications is SO important.
At work, as part of my signature in my email, there is a quotation from George Bernard Shaw.
“The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.”
I put it there to be a bit mischievous, and a bit ironic, but really this is SO true! I think of all the times I have written an email or a text message and thought that I was completely clear, and then someone responds to what I said with something that makes no sense compared to what I asked them for.
Ok, granted communication is complicated when you think about it. First, there is the person that creates the thought or the idea. They filter it through their set of assumptions and their experiences. There are certain things that they expect you to know, and if you don’t know those things you have already lost part of the idea that they intended.
So then when the idea comes out of their mouth, their emotions, and their body language and their voice tone play a major role in what is communicated. If they were too intense, or maybe they were tired, or distracted when they spoke, it can affect the way the message is sent. When speaking, we rarely have the time to really focus our words, and some people are better at it than others. Just take a few minutes when you are in the middle of a conversation and notice how many conversations are really just clipped words and sentences, or even the occasional grunt. It really is a wonder that people communicate at all.
Then there is communication in text form. I know I have been guilty of this in the past. You write something, and sometimes your intention is lost because the person you are writing to doesn’t pick up on your mischievous tone. Consider this. About 10% of communication comes from the words we say. The other 90% of communication comes from body language, voice tone, and other non-verbal cues. It is no wonder why so much can be confused in text form. And let’s not even get into the spelling that people have these days… or using the wrong homonym. (There, Their and They’re) … But I digress.
The person receiving the message has a part to play in this too. There is a difference between hearing and listening. We hear a lot of things, and forget them, but I would define listening as actively trying to hear something. It is a choice to focus on someone communicating with you.
Like before the experience and assumptions of the listener play a role as well. Those may or may not be the same as the person sending the message. When those experience and assumption filters are not the same the communication can break down. There are the emotions of the person receiving the message. There are the issues of body language and voice tone and all that on the side of the listener too. Maybe they are angry, or worried, or in some other charged of off-focus state. It is easy for them to misunderstand a message.

Hurt and anger about topics make it even harder to discuss the topic the next time. It’s so complicated. Any number of things can be an impediment to communication. The only thing I have seen that works… Is grace. Listen closely, as best you can. If someone says something you perceive to be hurtful, clarify it rather than react to it. Do your best to be clear, and think through how what you are saying can be taken, both positive and negative. Learn from your mistakes. Love people where they are at.
In a married relationship, remember that love is the rule. 1 Corinthians 13:4-7 says it all:
“Love is patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud or rude. It does not demand its own way. It is not irritable, and it keeps no record of being wronged. It does not rejoice about injustice but rejoices whenever the truth wins out. Love never gives up, never loses faith, is always hopeful, and endures through every circumstance.”
You may have heard this a thousand times before, but really take some time to think about the words. Put your name in where the word Love is. With your name in the passage, is it true? Most of us fail in this area…. A lot. In communication… especially in marriage, love must be the goal.
Thoughts?
April 15, 2012
My Wife and I Fight!
This is an article that I saw and thought Yeah! This is so true! I keep hearing about people ending their
marriages and I feel sad for them. It’s
like they need to really get to the point where their marriage is the most
important relationship they have. It has
to be that thing that they put lots of value on... that they are willing to
fight to keep!
Years ago Steph and I attended a marriage conference hosted by Family Life. This lesson of oneness vs isolation has probably been what Steph and I remember most about that weekend. We walked away realizing that unless we were purposeful at pursuing each other, we would slowly drift apart.
Fast forward all the way to a few weeks ago. Steph and I were on a date, fumbling around over dinner. I asked her the question how she thought we were doing with having 2 foster kids in addition to our 3 kids. (A total of 5 under the age of 5). What we realized on that date was that we were drifting. Our marriage was fine, but we could see the small degree of separation that was forming due to all the craziness of life.
Even after our date I sent out this tweet:
When you first get married, you kind of just ride on that cloud of the freshness in marriage. That lasts for a while. And then change begins. Add a child, some financial difficulty, some unexpected changes at work, and the next thing you know, those "troubles" that scripture promises begin to tear you apart. Fighting for oneness as newlyweds only requires what an obese man with a really soft pillow could win. It requires little stamina and the "punches" feel more playful than anything.
For us, we realized we need to step up our game. The enemy wages war on marriage, and we are in it to win. The fight I picture now is of an MMA fight. The pillows have been reduced to almost bare-knuckle fighting. "Eye of the Tiger" is playing in the background. We - like Rocky did - are running up the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, training for a fight that is ongoing in our marriage.
By Kevin East
It's
true. Occasionally, my wife and I get into it. Figuratively
speaking, we kick, punch, claw, wrestle and just plainly get mad.
Throughout our marriage, the fighting hasn't gotten better; it's actually
intensified. And now here we sit, with a total of 5 kids in our home, and
we realize we have a problem. The problem: we aren't fighting enough.
For years we have spent time with couples in pre-marital counseling, talking to
them about how God's desire in marriage is oneness. This oneness can be
described as intimate, sacrificial, transparent love for each other. It's
the type of love that demonstrates to this world the love that God has for His
people. Our other option - isolation.
Years ago Steph and I attended a marriage conference hosted by Family Life. This lesson of oneness vs isolation has probably been what Steph and I remember most about that weekend. We walked away realizing that unless we were purposeful at pursuing each other, we would slowly drift apart.
Fast forward all the way to a few weeks ago. Steph and I were on a date, fumbling around over dinner. I asked her the question how she thought we were doing with having 2 foster kids in addition to our 3 kids. (A total of 5 under the age of 5). What we realized on that date was that we were drifting. Our marriage was fine, but we could see the small degree of separation that was forming due to all the craziness of life.
Even after our date I sent out this tweet:
"It's Date night with Steph. Can't express how much we needed to reconnect."
When you first get married, you kind of just ride on that cloud of the freshness in marriage. That lasts for a while. And then change begins. Add a child, some financial difficulty, some unexpected changes at work, and the next thing you know, those "troubles" that scripture promises begin to tear you apart. Fighting for oneness as newlyweds only requires what an obese man with a really soft pillow could win. It requires little stamina and the "punches" feel more playful than anything.
For us, we realized we need to step up our game. The enemy wages war on marriage, and we are in it to win. The fight I picture now is of an MMA fight. The pillows have been reduced to almost bare-knuckle fighting. "Eye of the Tiger" is playing in the background. We - like Rocky did - are running up the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, training for a fight that is ongoing in our marriage.
We talked
about a few changes we needed to make:
Recognition that we need to fight harder. The first thing for us was just realizing that our fight needed to intensify. Once that happened, we were on the same page to talk about changes together.
Recognition that we need to fight harder. The first thing for us was just realizing that our fight needed to intensify. Once that happened, we were on the same page to talk about changes together.
Pray
together more regularly.
This isn't just before meals, but earnestly seeking the Lord together.
This has been something we've in which we've been lazy. We want that to
change.
Go on
more regular dates.
We go on dates pretty often. What we realized, though, was with each
child we have added to our finally, it increased the need for us to get away
and connect. So for us, what might have been once every 2-3 weeks needs
to be once every 1-2 weeks.
Be
purposeful on dates to interact at a deeper level. Our dates had become routine.
We'd go out to dinner and then to Starbucks, or maybe a movie. What was
missing was a deeper, more intimate conversation. We don't want our marriage
merely to survive, but to thrive. For this reason, we are making these
changes.
How
about you? Is your marriage drifting? Have you already noticed it
was? If so, what did you do about it?
April 7, 2012
Should I get divorced? I'm miserable!
This was a question sent to Dr. Russell Moore. I just thought that it rang true when you see all those people that get divorced with "irreconcilable differences" as the reason. What do you think?
"Should I Divorce If I’m Miserable?
Dear Dr. Moore,
My wife and I are at an impasse. There’s been no abandonment, no sexual immorality, and no abuse. We just don’t get along. We shouldn’t have married. We should have known we are incompatible. I know God hates divorce but I don’t have any other option. My pastor and some Christian counselors have told me that while God hates divorce, this is the lesser of two evils because God doesn’t want me to be miserable. What do you think?
Married but Miserable
Dear Miserable,
Here’s what I think (and I’m paraphrasing a pastor friend of mine here). With “Christian” pastors and counselors like these, who needs demons?
Divorce isn’t about you, and it’s not just about your marriage. Divorce is the repudiation of a covenant. It doesn’t start anything over again. It instead defaces the icon God has embedded in the creation of the union between Christ and his church (Eph. 5:22-31) .
I do believe that there are exceptions to Jesus’ prohibition against divorce: namely unrepentant sexual immorality or abandonment by a gospel-repudiating spouse. Neither of these, according to you, are present here and so you do not have reason to leave.
I plead with you to reconsider this and to understand that when you give account before the Judgment Seat of Christ, these “counselors” you have around you will not be present, and their cowardly justifications for sin will ring quite hollow.
Does God want you to be miserable? Long-term, no. And that’s why God has designed marriage as a life-long covenant signaling the gospel of Jesus Christ. In the long-term, God wants you to be deliriously happy. But by long-term, I mean the next trillion years, and beyond. In the short-term, one often must bear difficulty and, yes, even misery. Remaining faithful to a wife you wish you hadn’t married might seem miserable to you, but taking up a cross and following Jesus is “miserable,” in the short-run. That’s why the Book of Hebrews presents the life of faith in terms of not receiving what was promised (Heb. 11:39), but seeing it and embracing it from afar.
If you take the nuclear option of divorce off the table, you might find that you and your wife have more reason to seek help with your problems and make this work. But even if your marriage never becomes what you thought it might be, it is worth it to stand by your words and maintain fidelity to the wife of your youth.
What God has joined together, let no man separate (Mk. 10:9). And that includes the “shepherds” whose craven counsel leads to simply more chewable mutton for the wolves."
My wife and I are at an impasse. There’s been no abandonment, no sexual immorality, and no abuse. We just don’t get along. We shouldn’t have married. We should have known we are incompatible. I know God hates divorce but I don’t have any other option. My pastor and some Christian counselors have told me that while God hates divorce, this is the lesser of two evils because God doesn’t want me to be miserable. What do you think?
Married but Miserable
Dear Miserable,
Here’s what I think (and I’m paraphrasing a pastor friend of mine here). With “Christian” pastors and counselors like these, who needs demons?
Divorce isn’t about you, and it’s not just about your marriage. Divorce is the repudiation of a covenant. It doesn’t start anything over again. It instead defaces the icon God has embedded in the creation of the union between Christ and his church (Eph. 5:22-31) .
I do believe that there are exceptions to Jesus’ prohibition against divorce: namely unrepentant sexual immorality or abandonment by a gospel-repudiating spouse. Neither of these, according to you, are present here and so you do not have reason to leave.
I plead with you to reconsider this and to understand that when you give account before the Judgment Seat of Christ, these “counselors” you have around you will not be present, and their cowardly justifications for sin will ring quite hollow.
Does God want you to be miserable? Long-term, no. And that’s why God has designed marriage as a life-long covenant signaling the gospel of Jesus Christ. In the long-term, God wants you to be deliriously happy. But by long-term, I mean the next trillion years, and beyond. In the short-term, one often must bear difficulty and, yes, even misery. Remaining faithful to a wife you wish you hadn’t married might seem miserable to you, but taking up a cross and following Jesus is “miserable,” in the short-run. That’s why the Book of Hebrews presents the life of faith in terms of not receiving what was promised (Heb. 11:39), but seeing it and embracing it from afar.
If you take the nuclear option of divorce off the table, you might find that you and your wife have more reason to seek help with your problems and make this work. But even if your marriage never becomes what you thought it might be, it is worth it to stand by your words and maintain fidelity to the wife of your youth.
What God has joined together, let no man separate (Mk. 10:9). And that includes the “shepherds” whose craven counsel leads to simply more chewable mutton for the wolves."
April 2, 2012
Making your marriage a safe place By April Motl
Oh, the comfort - the inexpressible comfort of feeling safe with a person - having neither to weigh thoughts nor measure words, but pouring them all right out, just as they are, chaff and grain together; certain that a faithful hand will take and sift them, keep what is worth keeping, and then with the breath of kindness blow the rest away. ~Dinah Craik, A Life for a Life, 1859
Marriage was intended to be a relationship of intimacy and that means vulnerability. After God, your spouse is the one who sees nearly every flaw. How we respond to each other’s weaknesses and insecurities can make or break the trust so vital to the intimacy of marriage.
Not only were Adam and Eve partaking in physical intimacy, but there was no part of their physical, emotional, or spiritual union that held the slightest hint of uncomfortableness. They were free to be open and vulnerable with each other. Marriage was designed to be a completely safe relationship.
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Marriage was intended to be a relationship of intimacy and that means vulnerability. After God, your spouse is the one who sees nearly every flaw. How we respond to each other’s weaknesses and insecurities can make or break the trust so vital to the intimacy of marriage.
Responding to your spouse's struggles with compassion and understanding creates an atmosphere of comfort, safety and trust. Not only will your marriage be stronger, but as individuals you will be able to conquer more of those daunting tasks in life because you know you have a cheerleader right there beside you. As a husband or a wife, you have a place of influence that no one else has! We are wise to learn how to be our spouse’s safe place.
The following are some of the ways God prescribes we offer comfort and encouragement to our family in Christ:
2 Corinthians 1:3-5: Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction so that we will be able to comfort those who are in any affliction with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.
All of us feel overwhelmed or discouraged at times. When you see your spouse in that predicament instead of reminding him that he needs to work harder to climb the ladder of success or poking a finger at her struggle to juggle the demands of kids, the house and work, choose to comfort them with grace and love. God allows us to experience trials for many reasons, but one of them is because he wants us to reach out with compassion and understanding to others.
2 Corinthians 1:7: …knowing that as you are sharers of our sufferings, so also you are sharers of our comfort.
The context of this verse describes a ministry partnership relationship, but doesn’t it also well describe how our marriages work? We ought to experience each others’ sufferings, but also share our comforts as we make this faith journey together.
2 Corinthians 2:7: …forgive and comfort him, otherwise such a one might be overwhelmed by excessive sorrow.
This verse references the sin of one of the members of the church Paul is writing to. In our marriages we, will see each other fail. If your spouse is repentant, God’s heart is for you to respond with comfort and forgiveness. It is so easy to keep that long list of offenses and mistakes our spouse has made and use it as our trump card whenever we need a little leverage in a dispute. But what an opportunity we miss when we keep score!
This verse references the sin of one of the members of the church Paul is writing to. In our marriages we, will see each other fail. If your spouse is repentant, God’s heart is for you to respond with comfort and forgiveness. It is so easy to keep that long list of offenses and mistakes our spouse has made and use it as our trump card whenever we need a little leverage in a dispute. But what an opportunity we miss when we keep score!
Isaiah 35:3: Encourage the exhausted, and strengthen the feeble.
This verse isn’t hard to understand how to apply -- is your honey worn out? Find a way to tangibly come alongside him or her to give encouragement and strength to them. Maybe it is some time away from the responsibilities of life, a shoulder rub, making and cleaning up dinner or just listening to them process life.
1 Thessalonians 5:11-12: Therefore, encourage one another and build up one another, just as you also are doing.
Use words that build your spouse up in love and truth!
Hebrews 3:13-14: But encourage one another day after day, as long as it is still called "Today," so that none of you will be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin.
Keep encouraging your spouse! Don’t get weary of it because we all need it!
One of the other ways we can comfort our spouse (and my hubby thought of this) is through sexual intimacy. Now, just for fun, I want to share his thought process with you.
One of the other ways we can comfort our spouse (and my hubby thought of this) is through sexual intimacy. Now, just for fun, I want to share his thought process with you.
I asked him if he knew of any good comfort verses that applied directly to marriage, since the ones above pertained to the general Christian life.
He said, “God made Adam and Eve naked in the garden.”
“So, nakedness is comfort?” I responded with a little doubt because I was looking for a direct word correlation.
“Yes. They were comfortable being naked -- so comfortable, comfort -- that works!”
He said, “God made Adam and Eve naked in the garden.”
“So, nakedness is comfort?” I responded with a little doubt because I was looking for a direct word correlation.
“Yes. They were comfortable being naked -- so comfortable, comfort -- that works!”
Not only were Adam and Eve partaking in physical intimacy, but there was no part of their physical, emotional, or spiritual union that held the slightest hint of uncomfortableness. They were free to be open and vulnerable with each other. Marriage was designed to be a completely safe relationship.
Think about how you can direct your relationship toward its design as you interact with your spouse. And enjoy God’s design for marital intimacy along the way! However the Lord moves your heart to apply these truths to your marriage, I am praying that God opens your eyes to new opportunities to proactively comfort, encourage and strengthen your sweetheart!
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