Good Marriages Don’t Just Happen – MM #367

Good marriages Inspirational Married Couple AdobeStock_73498373 copy“Every day of marriage is a new adventure in which God is trying to teach us something. God doesn’t necessarily want it to be easy. If we’re one with another, then we’ll be able to hear what God is saying to us and learn together.” Good marriages don’t just happen.

Please read the above statement again. It has such a powerful message for us all to engraft into our thinking. It’s a quote from Travis Turner who, along with his wife Carol has worked with Life Partners Christian Ministries, Inc.

We sometimes forget in the “everydayness” of life that God cares more about our character than He does about our comfort. And because of this, after marrying, God will be working to teach us what it means to love someone sacrificially.

Our marriages are to be visible pictures of Christ’s sacrificial love for His church. And in order to do that, we must “die to self” everyday of our lives so Christ may live in and through us.

To help us in this mission, we’d like to share excerpts from an article written by Tracy Munsil, featured in the Arizona Citizen Magazine in March of 2008. In it we found God-given wisdom, shared by Travis Turner. We believe it can help us build marriages that are “good.” But as Travis says, “Good Marriages Don’t Just Happen.” And we agree.

Good Marriages Don’t Just Happen:

“‘One starting point in a good marriage is spending time together,’ said Turner. That sounds simple enough—a date night here and there, an occasional movie. But by that he means at least 30 minutes a day, giving undivided attention to your spouse. This is just to maintain your marriage relationship.

“More time is needed if you’re in the process of building or repairing your marriage. ‘It has to be prioritized and specific,’ explains Turner. ‘If it’s not, you just won’t get the time you need. That means scheduled time with the TV turned off, the kids in bed, no telephone, and all distractions eliminated. This is to be a one-on-one time of real communication with your spouse.’

“‘It’s very difficult to do in our culture. Yet, if we don’t spend the time growing and cultivating the marriage, it causes disharmony and hurt. All of us are changing. And we need to take the time (and MAKE the time) to grow together. If we don’t get that time, we pay a huge price. We lose connection with our spouse.’

Spiritual Busyness

“Turner, a former football quarterback for the University of Nebraska, has been involved in the Life Partners ministry with his wife Carol for 13 years. They became involved after problems in their marriage surfaced while he was serving full-time in pastoral ministry. He finds that one of the pitfalls common to Christian marriages is husbands and wives confusing spiritual ‘busyness’ with genuine spirituality.

“‘We spend a lot of time doing, rather than being like Christ,’ he said. ‘We go to church, and do this and do that in ministry. Plus, we try to measure our spirituality by those things, rather than allowing the fruits of the Spirit be the evidence of our spirituality.’

“‘Our marriage becomes a byproduct of what’s going on in our lives spiritually,’ he said. ‘If we experience joy in our spiritual life, we’ll see joy in our marriage. Too often we’re busy doing spiritual things. But we don’t experience a spirit of contentment over our role in God’s economy, in what God has called us to do.’

Spending Time Together

“In addition to spending scheduled, uninterrupted time together daily, Turner offers advice specific to husbands and wives. First, he suggests that husbands get in the habit of praising their wives on an ongoing, daily basis. ‘Men need to learn to recognize positive character traits on a regular basis. They need to learn to build up their wives. We need to tell them how valuable and special they are,’ he said. ‘We need to make our wives feel appreciated and confident, like Christ would do. But are we willing to sacrifice the time, thought and effort it takes to do this?’

“As for the wife, according to Turner, she needs to be honest with her husband. She should tell him how he’s affecting her and the kids. ‘This is very difficult for the wife to do. She has to be willing to risk herself with her husband, giving input about his diet, and about his tone of voice with the kids. She is to give him input about his pace of life or work habits, about everything,’ he explained. [We want to add a note that seems appropriate here. It’s important for the wife to realize that she’s not just to give input in any old manner possible, but to give it in a Christ-honoring ‘respectful’ way.

“The Bible tells us to ‘speak the truth in love. It also says that ‘a soft answer turns away wrath. This is especially true when discussing something that could be interpreted as ‘nagging.’ Don’t just blurt out what’s on your mind. Be careful and prayerful in how you deliver it so it can be received as graciously as it’s given.]

Wife Wants More of Husband’s Time

“Travis goes on to say, ‘Only the wife can say, ‘I would rather live with less finances and more of you.’ That’s really hard to do and I don’t envy having to be a wife.’ Turner suggests that the husband can make his wife’s job easier by being willing to hear what she has to say. ‘I can make it easier for my wife if I’m concerned about my attitudes. I am to be concerned about being Christ like and being teachable, than getting defensive,’ he said.

“Turner argues that an equally serious threat in the Christian community as legal divorce is ’emotional divorce.’ This happens when the spouses in a marriage are disconnected from one another. ‘Their marriage looks real good from the outside, because they’re no longer affecting each other,’ he explained. ‘You don’t know what their marriage relationship is like until you get real close.’

Warning Signs of Emotional Divorce

“But the warning signs are clear. This includes putting personal activities, friends or church involvement before the needs of the spouse. When in a state of emotional divorce, couples experience a significant distance between them that undermines the closeness of their relationship. At the point of emotional divorce, the couple needs to recognize their situation. They begin taking steps to renew closeness and connection in their relationship.”

Travis made an excellent point when he talked about taking the time to communicate. We need to give each other our undivided attention. It has to be “prioritized and specific” as he points out. We need to be pro-active in making the time to build one another up.

Plus, we made the time to communicate with each other in relationship building ways before marriage (or we wouldn’t have fallen in love and gotten married in the first place). And now we need to make the time to communicate everyday. This is so we continue to grow together in this ever changing world we live in.

Let God Be Lord of Our Time

The enemy of our faith is a stealer and a robber. If he can get us so busy that we’re side-tracked from spending specific relationship-building time with each other, he’s succeeded in robbing us from having the loving relationship God wants us to have. We need to “be still” and let God be Lord of our time and energies so we’re not robbing our marriage of the time that we need to invest into it. If we do so, He will guide us so we lovingly build each other up instead of tearing each other down.

If you find yourselves “emotionally divorced” in how you communicate with each other ask God for the wisdom and insight you need to turn this situation around. As promised in the Bible, If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him. (James 1:5)

Please look around this web site to see what you can use in your marriage. Ask the Holy Spirit to be your “Wonderful Counselor” in this mission. Pray, read, glean, and apply what God shows you to do.

We pray that together, because of Christ, we will grow up together in Him, so our marriages truly reflect the love of God to everyone we’re with.

Steve and Cindy Wright

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Filed under: Marriage Messages

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Comments

19 responses to “Good Marriages Don’t Just Happen – MM #367

  1. (USA)  “Our marriage becomes a byproduct of what’s going on in our lives spiritually,”

    Very true. If a couple focuses on God, everything else falls nicely into place. Constantly studying the Bible, going to church services and participating in marriage workshops is a good way to keep a marriage alive, healthy and focused on God’s plan.

  2. (NIGERIA)  Keep it up. I appreciate your site for saving marriages. Your marriage will last through eternity.

  3. (SOUTH AFRICA)  My name is Elvis, from South Africa. May you please support me in prayer as I’m looking a wife. I did pray but unfortunately the lady God chose for me was not going to the same church with me. So her pastor and elder made an appointment with us. The problem is they never want to allow me to talk to her. I was told by them to speak to the lady while in the house which was so very unfair to me. They asked me a lot of questions insteat of her. I’m so hurting now! Please pray for me. I do not know what to do. But there is only one thing I know. I did pray for her, I truly beleive her pastor has chosen a man for her, because she just keeps on phoning me, giving her mom’s cell number to phone. Your suggestion will be much appreciated. God Bless you!

    1. (NIGERIA)  Elvis, when you have played your own part, you let God have His way. The Bible says “I will instruct thee and teach thee in the way you will go, I will guide thee with mine eyes” Psalm 32:8. Wait and see God act. God bless you. The best from God is in store for you!

    2. (SA)  Some churches believe in this form of practice, which I do believe is godly, but some people can manipulate the situation and cause so much pain and unhappiness by thinking that they know what the other person needs.

      I believe when you are in love you are really not thinking straight. Hence, you need to surround yourself with people with sound minds and sound doctrine.

      Our pastors have so much wisdom and God has placed them in our lives to look after us. So as a young person, learn to exercise patience and restrain and be acountable to someone who will correct you and guide you using the word of God. Stay blessed. Rose

    3. (SOUTH AFRICA)  My beloved brother, in marriage we have two sides of life, but one in Christ. If you marry from a different church, they have different preparations for marriage at church. You have access to her at home, outside church boundaries. Use that to understand her church and advise her about the procedures of your church. Follow both and don’t doubt or criticise because she may have the same problem with your pastor or your church. GOOD LUCK. MAY THE GOOD GOD GIVE YOU WISDOM.

  4. (UGANDA.)  Brother, your right. You have to marry someone who can accept to fellowship with you in the same church.

  5. (KY)  What if your husband don’t want to have sex anymore he says it’s because he wants to be pure before God? If God really prepared him for this wouldn’t he also prepare me too? Or is it because there is something wrong me? Am I not as attractive as I used to be or is it because I’m fat or is he cheating, which he insists he is not? I need answers.

  6. (UNITED STATES)  Hello, I am asking for prayer for my marriage. I am a newlywed and it is true that you do not know someone until you live with them. I love my husband very much and would consider divorce. But he is so easily upset and threatens divorce to me often. He always apologizes but it is nerve racking. He as also recently become addicted to pain pills which makes matters worst.

    When we are in church together, and stay prayed and fasted up things are fine but its so easy for him to get distracted and slip out. Please pray for strength and endurance, true deliverence and that God will show him that I’m truly on his side, not against him and that I love him.

  7. (USA)  Time is truly important. My husband and I haven’t even been married that long and we are already struggling to find the time for one another. I mean personal one on one time without disturbances such as the TV. After reading this message we are now trying harder than ever to spend more time together, getting to know one another on a deeper level, and doing things together that we used to do before we got married, such as dating each other.

  8. (UGANDA) I am impressed by this message. It comes in handy to the already married and us who are preparing for marriage. God bless you.

  9. (BENIN) This question is a serious matter in marriages nowadays. The devil knows the importance of one-to-one spare time in the couple, and he tries every possible things to keep partners busy so as to easily and gradually kill the marriage. May God help every couple to be alert and not to let go for over tight schedule. This spare time should be part of everyday schedule. Thanks and God bless.

  10. My husband does not give us any time and is very dude with our kids too. Please pray for his heart in our marriage.

  11. I love my wife but I don’t know when she makes me mad or angry how to manage it. I would like to know more about marriage.