Thoughts on Marriage
The
latest statistics on marriage show that fewer Americans are married now than
ever before. Fewer get married. Many marry later than before. More end up in
divorce.
Marriage used to be the foundation
of the family. God used marriage as a picture of Christ’s relationship to the
church. It was a good and positive thing. People valued the commitment they
made and stuck it out even when it was hard. Even when their feelings failed
them, they valued the vows they said before God and their witnesses. Now
children grow up in single parent homes or with multiple parents and step-parents.
Family traditions go by the way side and holidays are splintered events where
they don’t know who to be with when. Life is hard for this generation of
children without the stability of a two parent home.
I am currently watching a 2nd
and a 3rd family close to me go through this. It affects so many. It
isn’t just the couple or even the children, but the grandparents and other
family members, too. It wreaks havoc on a family. The dynamics of even the
extended family and community are changed. People are not sure how to
react. Marriage is a commitment to more
than just the spouse, but it is also to future children and to those who
witnessed and supported that marriage.
Marriage is not always easy. It is
not always romantic. Sometimes it is hard and you have to deal with things you
never thought you would. But you promised you would. “For richer and poorer, in
sickness and in health, for better or worse…” When it gets worse or poor, or
sick, you promised. How good is your word?
Our marriage has not been perfect. No
one’s is. But it has been good more than not. It has not always fulfilled my
hopes and dreams. There are times I have not even enjoyed it. But God gave me a
deep and abiding love for my husband and even in those tough times, I could
cling to that. And if that were not enough, I could cling to God’s love. His
love was enough. God’s love would always get me through and would always spill
out so there was love enough for my husband.
I am not most important in my
marriage. Even my husband isn’t. Our promise to each other is. The Bible says
we become one flesh when we marry. I am united with my husband. We love and
respect each other. We hold each other in high regard. We even want to serve
one another. We honor God when we honor our vows.
My happiness is not the most
important thing in our marriage either. I cannot expect my husband to make me
happy. My spouse cannot fill the empty, lonely places in me. He cannot fulfill me. We do enjoy one another. We like being together.
We are best friends. I would choose him to be with and do things with before
anyone else. (Usually!) We recognize and even celebrate our differences. But
our true contentment comes from being in relationship with God. He gives us our
joy. He fills us with peace. Give your spouse grace and don’t place unrealistic
expectations on him/her. They are human like you.
Marriage is the ultimate test of character.
It shows you who you really are. Can you sacrifice or are you really selfish?
Are you willing to put aside some of your hopes, dreams, freedoms to make the
relationship work? Will you think first and act afterwards? Will you love with
a love like Christ’s? Can your love be patient, kind, not envious or boastful,
not arrogant or rude, not insist on its own way, not irritable or resentful? Does your love not rejoice at wrongdoing, but
rejoices with the truth? Can your love bear all things, believe all things,
hope all things, and endure all things? (1 Corinthians 13:4-7) Is your promise, your word good? Will you
stand by what you said? Will others see your commitment as a witness of God’s
love? Are you strong even in adversity?
I am saddened today by a culture
that has devalued marriage. I have 2 unmarried daughters and I am disheartened
by a world that has become so selfish as to only want what is easy and fun. I
want to see a marriage revival where this institution is once again desired. I
want it to be seen as good and even better. Ecclesiastes 4: 9 -12 says. “Two
are better than one, because they have a good reward for their toil. For if
they fall, one will lift up his fellow. But woe to him who is alone when he
falls and has not another to lift him up! Again, if two lie together, they keep
warm, but how can one keep warm alone. And though a man might prevail against
one who is alone, two will withstand him- a threefold cord is not quickly
broken.” There are advantages of having
that life partner!
Our marriage is good because we
choose for it to be. We have decided that nothing is more important. No issue,
no circumstance, no person will separate us. We are both willing to compromise.
We both are willing to go above expectations to care for the other. We forgive.
We spend time together, even doing things one of us does not enjoy as much as
the other. We seek each other out. We talk. We communicate. We go out of our
way for each other. We love each other. We look for ways to express it. We put
romance back into our lives often. We have fun together. We try not to take
advantage of the other one. We give each other the freedom to be different and
to do different things. We hold each other accountable. We tell the truth. It
is not always easy, but it is worth it.
Marriage is a good institution
because it was created by God. He thought of it. He planned it. He hates
divorce. He wants marriage to work. And I believe any marriage can work with
His love guiding you and holding you together.
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