Taking Jesus Home After the Wedding

My comments about trying to make our spouse or child into our own image instead of honoring God’s design and destiny for their lives seem to have struck a cord…so I thought I would share a few more thoughts about marriage.  Actually, I just want to talk about Christian marriages. I have been involved in pastoral counseling in churches for about thirty years and have sat in front of a counselor myself on more than one occasion.  As I reflect on those meetings, I really believe that most of the couples that have come into my office needed to be “discipled” in the ways of Christ much more than they needed marriage counseling. In many ways they never took Jesus home with them after they said, “I do.” I say that because it is not hard to tell people how to live under the same roof in harmony and love.   The hard thing is getting them to do it.

 

Scripture is pretty clear and I think very practical.  For instance, we are told to love one another as Christ loved us and then we are given a number of hints about what that looks like.  In the New Testament alone there are a number of “one another” passages that command us to relate to others in certain ways that are very practical ways of loving another person.  We are told to pray for one another, serve one another, put the needs of others before our own, encourage one another, build up one another, submit to one another, be devoted to one another, honor one another, accept one another, and forgive one another as Christ forgave us. There are other passages just as straight forward but these are a sampling.  Most of them are clear enough and don’t take a lot of imagination to figure out ways in a relationship to fulfill these commands. The problem is that couples in marriages that are troubled find all kinds of reasons not to treat each other in these loving ways.

 

We usually begin to fight in a marriage because our emotional needs for security, affirmation, intimacy, respect, affection, and so forth are not being met by our spouse.  So, we begin to ask for what we want in vague or manipulative ways or assume that if our spouses truly loved us then they could read our minds and intuitively know what we are needing.  As these “needs deficits” build up, our attempts to get our spouse to do what we want become more coercive.

 

We resort to anger, biting criticisms, silent treatments, guilt tripping, withholding affection, demeaning language, sarcasm, nasty names, accusations, judgments, and bringing up the past in our attempts to force the other person to give us what we need.  In doing so we violate about every teaching or commandment Jesus ever gave us regarding relationships.  When we are called out on our disobedience, we simply try to justify our positions based on the other person’s disobedience. “I said that because he….  I won’t do that until she…. He doesn’t deserve my respect because…. I might forgive after she….”   You can add more of these statements if you like.

 

But that is like saying that we lie because other people do.  We commit adultery because someone else did.  We refuse to forgive because someone hasn’t earned our forgiveness.  Jesus doesn’t make our godly behaviors conditional on the godly behaviors of others.  In fact, he calls us to love when others don’t.  He calls us to speak well of others when they slander us. He tells us to throw in our coat when someone sues us for a jacket. And he tells us to pray for those who persecute us. How much more should we do those things in a marriage?  So why don’t we do those things?  There are lots of reasons we push back against these commands. We are afraid the other person will take advantage of our kindness.  We are afraid that our needs will never be met.  We are afraid that if we give up too much power in the marriage we will simply be someone’s servant without respect and without standing.  It just seems too risky.

 

The truth is that obedience to Christ nearly always puts us at risk of being taken advantage of, of being seen as weak, of letting others get the credit they don’t deserve at the office, etc. And yet Jesus still says that we must not attempt to overcome evil with evil but must overcome evil with good. He goes so far as to command us to love our enemies…even when we are married to one.  If you are in a difficult marriage right now your flesh was probably screaming that each of those commandments is insane.

 

So here is the bottom line.  When we push back against the teachings of Jesus it is because we don’t trust him to protect us, meet our needs, or bless our relationships through surrender. We don’t believe his word is true for us and we don’t believe obedience will produce good outcomes for us. We are afraid to trust and afraid to obey. I am not saying that my surrender to Jesus will save every marriage because eventually both must surrender. But I will say that obedience gives any marriage its best chance but, more than that, it prevents your heart from being poisoned in the process and keeps you form becoming the very thing you hated in your spouse.

 

Christian marriages fail because we fail to trust the one who designed marriage.  Discipleship is all about trust. When I fail in following Jesus it may be because I don’t know his will in a certain matter but, typically, it is because I don’t believe that doing it his way is in my best interest – in marriage, at the office, or on the golf course.  So, I decide to do it the world’s way which is Satan’s way.   And every time I do it his way, I “take and eat” of the fruit in one form or another.  Victory in the kingdom of God usually takes a kind of reckless obedience like Shadrach and the boys that seems to place us in the fire at first but then brings deliverance after a time of testing. It’s always been that way.  Our marriages need that same reckless obedience on many occasions and someone always has to go first. Think about it and be blessed today!

I met with a young couple this morning.  They were married less than a year and were already having major struggles in their relationship.  He was frustrated.  She was crying.  They felt like they were fighting all the time and couldn’t understand what was going on. They both loved the Lord and were committed to ministry and growing spirituality so why were they fighting?  Had they made a mistake?  Did they misread God when they prayed and heard him bless their plans to become one?

 

After hearing their stories it became plain that they were missing one of the first rules of marriage – one of the first rules of loving someone in the Lord. That rule is to honor the way God has made the other person because he has made them for their destiny as well as you for your destiny.  To fail to honor God’s design in another individual gets in the way of developing talents and spiritual gifts – which gets in the way of being fulfilled and fruitful -which gets in the way of love.

 

When we come to a place where the differences in another individual (especially a spouse or a child) begin to frustrate us our tendency is to get busy trying to encourage (or coerce) that person to become more like us.  But in that moment we forget that God had a very intentional hand in making them just as he did in making us.  David declared, “For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well. My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be” (Ps.139:13-16).

 

In this Psalm we are told that God creates our inmost being.  I understand that to be not only our talents but our temperament or personality as well.  Our design is also related to our destiny – the specific things for which God has uniquely created us, the things ordained for us day by day in heaven.  Most of us have an intuitive sense of what we were made for and we intuitively push back when people in our lives don’t allow us to “be ourselves.” We aren’t always sure of how we should express who we are but we know what feels natural and what feels unnatural to us.  We know what subjects in school come more easily than others. We know what attracts us and what repels us.

 

Paul echoes the same sentiment in the New Testament.  “For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Eph.2:10).  Again, workmanship implies that God has an intentional hand in our design and our design is related to good works prepared in advance for us.  It stands to reason that if God has ordained good works for us then he will also design us in such a way that we can be effective in accomplishing those things.  In most cases, it will take not only the right talents but also the right temperament to fulfill God’s call on our life.  In addition, the Spirit will release spiritual gifts in our lives as icing on the cake.

 

As an example, if God places a call on someone’s life to teach special needs children then that person will need the academic capacity to get a degree and the talent to teach plus compassion and patience to take into the classroom.  In addition, that person will probably need a bent toward structure because the children will need structure. Talent and temperament both are needed and become part of God’s intentional design for that individual.

 

The couple I met with both had talents and a call to ministry but those gifts and that ministry needed to be expressed in different ways. He was extroverted and gregarious and loved to study the Word in big bites. He loved street ministry and his desire was to fill their house with teens every night for ministry and teaching. She was introverted and loved to go deep with a few people.  She loved the clarity and structure of prepared studies.  A house full of kids every night or approaching strangers on the street sounded like “a living hell” to her.  It is not who God made her to be. Yet, her husband wanted so badly for her to be his mate in ministry that he was pressuring her to do ministry in ways that fit his design but not hers.  She experienced that pressure as rejection of who she was and a statement that her spirituality was inadequate.  She felt rejected by her new husband who really is a great guy.  He just didn’t understand how his design called him to a different style that hers.  I encouraged them to find some middle ground but to allow different expressions of their faith so that they both could fulfill the destiny God had ordained for them.  Their destinies would be parallel as they went through life together but not identical.

 

Many of us have had destinies and spiritual gifts that never flourished because someone in our lives didn’t value the design God had built into us. As a result, we eventually either failed to value whom God had made us to be or just gave up on our dreams to keep the peace.   As parents, spouses, or spiritual mentors it is not our job to make people into our image but to help them discover God’s unique design for their life and it release them into that adventure.  Our job is to build them up and encourage them to pursue the “good works” for which God has destined them rather than to deconstruct them with criticism and to remake them as we see fit. Remember, we are to accept one another as Christ accepts us (see Rom.15:7).

 

One major aspect of Christian marriage, then, is that we pursue the destiny God has ordained for us while encouraging our spouse to do the same.  As we each operate in our God-given gifts and talents we will experience the fulfillment of partnering with God and when we do, we will be more content in every part of our life and that contentment will bless our marriage.  Remember the phrase, “Be all that you can be!”  That needs to be our heart for our spouse and children in their service to the Lord. You will be blessed by blessing them as they grow to be all that God has made them to be.