Musings on Marriage

Category: The Meaning of Marriage

Boys will be boys….

Dear Daughters,

It’s looking like #Metoo will become the most memorable hashtag of 2017.  I rejoice there have been so many women coming forward, honestly sharing their stories which have been quieted for decades.  And just when I think the stories are diminishing, yet another one surfaces.

I lament that there are so many who have been used, abused, silenced and threatened with lies and other intimidation maneuvers.  Over the years I have grieved with several personal friends as they have recounted their own stories of being assaulted, molested and raped. The devastation that follows is indescribable and becomes a part of their story for the remainder of their lives.

In the past, unwanted fondling, groping and inappropriate touching was often considered trivial and given the excuse boys will be boys.  But as Ann Voskamp wisely writes:

If boys will be boys, girls will be garbage.

Sexual freedoms which were so celebrated in the 1960’s with the advent of the Pill have not made us free.  Instead we have scandals, accusations, denials, finger pointing, judgment, hopelessness and despair.  In fact, it seems our society has become sex-obsessed, which instead of giving freedom has become a bondage to many.   It has caused us to see people as merely bodies to be used, instead of being given the respect, love and value that God originally bestowed on us.

I remember the question our nation was faced with when a past President was charged with an improper sexual relationship with a White House intern back in 1988.

Is morality an absolute or a private matter?

For much of our culture, morality is simply defined as what you feel is right.  That opinion brings a dilemma however: right for you may not be right for me.

For many of the accused men, I’m quite certain this is their belief, that morality is a private matter.  But what happens when their belief collides with the women they use?

God created each of us, male and female, with bodies that are sacred.  We are not only physical, but a spirit and a soul beautifully wrapped in flesh and blood.  When our body is touched so is our soul, whether it is a genuine hug from a friend or a caress from our husband.  But when unwanted, toxic touch occurs it hurts not only our body but also our soul and emotions – our entire person.

In the late 80’s, after the President’s adultery was uncovered, many others in high government positions were also publicly exposed with their past affairs, some from years and even decades earlier. Included were those who had hoped to impeach the President because of his moral failure.   Several men argued that their actions were merely indiscretions of their youth – at age 41. 

Why is it so easy to point out other’s sins yet assume no one will discover our own?  Jesus was right when he said long ago:

There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed,

or hidden that will not be made known.

What you have said in the dark will be heard in the daylight,

and what you have whispered in the ear in inner rooms

will be proclaimed from the housetops.

But back to the question about morality being absolute or a private matter.  If a person, male or female, commits adultery – or more politely having an affair – which is basically lying to their spouse, why would we trust them with political office, with power, with directing large sums of money?  If a person lies in one area of their life, we can safely assume there will be deceit in other areas as well.

When God carved those words, Do not commit adultery, He was simply desiring for us to live lives of simplicity and love.  He always wants the best for us.

Is marriage and fidelity hard?  Of course they are.  Marriage is a mystery and will always be a mystery, but should never be seen as a problem.  It takes a lifetime to learn to love our husbands.  But just because something is difficult doesn’t mean it should be abandoned.

I honestly think learning to stay faithful and love, no matter what happens in life, is much simpler than lying, trying to cover up those lies, attempting to impress someone new while carrying around all the deceit being hidden, pretending, covering up other lies – and all the while trying to look as though all is well.  Not to mention all the pain it inflicts on children, parents and others involved.

Harvey Weinstein, who has over 80 women with accusations of sexual abuse against him, has recently been quoted as saying,

I am profoundly devastated.

I have lost my wife and kids, whom I love more than anything else.

Weinstein, who has produced such movies as Sex, Lies, and Videotape and Flirting with Disaster seems to have embodied his own films in real life.

One thing that gives me a bit of joy in the midst of all this madness in our world is that somehow the general public really does have some kind of a moral law in their minds.

With the theory of naturalism (everything can be explained in the natural and scientific realm) prevalent in so much of our society there is no rational reason for right or wrong, absolutely none.  Science cannot dictate which sexual advances are inappropriate.  Science alone cannot give value to human beings or command respect for them.  Living with the philosophy of naturalism, which many in our country believe, everyone is free to make their own rules because there is no transcendence, no higher being, no moral law-giver.  Only what is seen with the eyes, measured in the lab and studied in science is real.

So why then are many people with no belief in the unseen realm upset with sexual indiscretions?  If the man thinks it’s good, it must be ok.  Why have women’s opinions suddenly become important and newsworthy?

I cannot answer that question except that it is by God’s grace.  Truth is coming out and men are being called to account for their actions.

As long as I can remember, men who jump from woman to woman have been called Playboys.  I think it is an accurate term, boys who have never grown up, who still like to play with women as toys instead of committing to one for a lifetime.

There is a possible danger I can faintly hear coming in the future –  women putting all men in the same category of sexual predators.  I do hope we will have the courage to not become men-haters because of the accusations of these high-profile abusers.

There are countless faithful, true, loving men who do keep their promises in the good times and bad, in the difficult and in the celebratory, even though temptation lurks with every mouse click.

I thank God for the men in our lives who treat women with respect, grace and kindness.  Yes, we all have our disagreements, conflicts and misunderstandings because we are all humans with countless flaws.  But I pray that we will continue to honor and esteem one another,  growing and learning to love even in the most difficult of times.

Love, Mom

p.s. I wonder if we should start #Wetoo for those of us who have faithful husbands…

 

 

 

 

 

Someone Better

 

Dear Daughters,

            Have you ever looked over at that husband of yours and wondered “who is this guy?” There are times when, even after decades of marriage, it seems as though I am living with a stranger.

When we marry, we are often in love with a fantasy rather than a real human person. While dating, our best side always shines, but then marriage and reality come, flaws surface and we begin to wonder if we ever knew him in the first place.

How can we know when we marry who our man will turn out to be? On the other hand, how can he know who we will become?Creek (3)

I must admit that I married for selfish reasons. I married because I wanted security, children, a soul-mate, and someone to make me happy. I soon found that this was not Dad’s central focus. He had work to do, dreams to chase, and he was thinking that my central focus in life should be to make him happy.

I began to consider that perhaps I had married the wrong person.

While dating, Dad saw only a joyful, cheerful woman. During the seasons of our lives, however, he has seen me angry, disheartened, sick, hopeless, livid, and thankfully at times, that previously joyful and cheerful woman as well. To be fair, I have seen all those same passions in him.

Instead of being repulsed and ready to bail when those potentially divisive events happen, what if we expected marriage to be about helping each other grow out of our flaws and sins and into the person God is creating? It would be much easier to expect those challenging times and when they happen, and understand that this is just another facet of love (patience, kindness, forgiveness…) that we need to learn.

But, alas, our selfish natures demand that we get our way. If we don’t we often throw a tantrum, give the silent treatment, or some other unproductive behavior.Apples (6)

When I married Dad I had no idea where our lives would go. I thought I had married an Idaho dairyman, just like my two sisters. Indeed I had, but for only four short years. Then it was off to Michigan with our two little girls, enrolling in seminary, moving and living in five different houses in five years as Dad was required to do internship work in various cities and states. There were times, after a move, that I would feel as if I had been thrown into the spin cycle of a washing machine, then tossed out into a whole new world.

Coming back to Idaho for vacations, I would often be envious of the families who were still living in the same house, having a somewhat predictable life and putting down roots with friends. They went to the same grocery store every week, they knew where everything was down each of those aisles, and they didn’t get lost while driving in their town. I remember going back to Michigan with that big green-eyed monster dangling its tentacles in my mind.Blur

Early on I found that I could not depend on friends to last. I would get to know people for a few months, say good-bye, and start over in yet another location. It seemed that saying hello and good-bye would become the only predictable events I could count on in my life.

At this point I had a choice to make: I could either accept and rejoice in the life that God had given me (I had certainly not chosen it) or I could wallow in the mire of self-pity, wishing I was some other guy’s wife living an established, non-moving life. For a time I did not accept my lot in life. I began to see God as cold and non-caring; I did not trust that He loved me. It certainly didn’t feel like He cared.

David the King spoke my feelings so well:

My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?

        Why are you so far from saving me, so far from the words of my groaning?

            O my God, I cry out by day but you do not answer, by night, and am not silent.

              ~ Psalm 22

 

Have you ever felt forgotten, dropped by God, hearing nothing but silence from heaven?

Here I was, a pastor’s wife, going through the motions of being a good church lady, but inside disappointed and disgruntled with my life and with God. Dad had become a stranger to me, and I to him. He was intent in his work, striving to show himself a good pastor, me delving into making a somewhat stable life for you girls.

You may have felt that separation in your own marriage, going in different directions and drifting farther and farther apart. The next logical thing seems to be to split up, try someone new, find someone better, someone more compatible. But you know what? I have talked to many married women and have found none that live in a compatible marriage.IMG_20150707_190549772 (1)

Tim Keller teaches “…that the great thing about the model of Christian marriage we are presenting here is that when you envision the ‘someone better,’ you can think about the future version of the person to whom you are already married. The someone better is the spouse that you already have. God has indeed given us a desire for the perfect spouse, but you should see it in the one to whom you’re married…. The only way you’re going to actually begin to see another person’s ‘glory-self’ is to stick with him or her.”IMG_20150623_204615139

Marriage is, at its best, trusting God with the man that He has entrusted to you. Yes, there will be fights, misunderstandings, anger. But continue to pray for him more than you criticize, encourage more than condemn, build up instead of tear down. It will take a lifetime for God to change us all, molding us all into that someone better that we are looking for.

When I finally made the choice to thank God for where he had placed me and bloom wherever I was transplanted, I found joy and peace. Not quickly, not overnight, and not without struggles, but I became free to focus on the many delightful people that God brought into our lives and kick out the monster of envy. As Paul writes, “…I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances.” Philippians 4:13sunset (3)

Rest and rejoice in the knowledge that Jesus has you in the right place, right now. His ways are not our ways, but they are good. Even if it feels as if God has dropped or forgotten you, the fact is, He has not. Cry out to him, for the ability to love better and bolder, anticipating and enjoying the ways that you and your husband are becoming one.

Love, Mom

 

 

Tied to the Mast

Dear Daughters,

It was a cloudless, beautiful evening in Seattle aboard the MV Skansonia, a retired ferry on Union Lake.  Parents, grandparents, aunt and uncles, cousins and friends of Chris and Julia came thousands of miles to witness a 30 minute ceremony of words, watch them exchange a bit of metal and stone, rejoice with a little music and square dancing, feast on scrumptious food.IMG_20150614_183536093

A wedding, the celebration of the beginning of a marriage, is a time for joyous celebration.  Promises made, all of us looking on, cheering, smiling, remembering earlier wedding ceremonies of our own.

When all the bridesmaids, groomsmen, parents and favorite dog processed to their places, Chris stood next to the pastor, his face eager with anticipation to see his beautiful bride.  The look of pure joy and desire on both Chris and Julia’s faces was priceless. DSCN1939

After the vows were promised and the rings exchanged, the parents encircled the newly married couple, hands clasped and praying for them during the song Be Thou My Vision.

VisionDSCN1981

Ever since I turned 40, my eyes have not focused as they used to.  I had to buy lenses in order to see clearly.  I could have continued on with no help from the magnifying lens but my life would have been drastically curtailed – unable to read books, music or computer pixels.

In the same way, seeing marriage through the lens of God is truly the best way to make a marriage thrive and grow.  Since God is the inventor/idea maker of marriage, it would only make sense to read what He has to say about this unique institution so we can have His clear vision of the meaning of marriage.DSCN1973

Think about buying a car.  When we purchase something that is completely out of our realm of understanding, it is certainly wise to see what the owner manual says about treating and maintaining our vehicle.

All of us see marriage through distorted lenses of our own experiences.  Some who come from a family with a sound marriage will be shocked at how difficult marriage actually is if our parents dealt with their differences behind closed doors.  Others, having come out of a dysfunctional home, will have little idea of what a healthy nourishing marriage looks like.  In either situation, young lovers will have to deal with selfishness and self-centeredness that is at the core of every human being.DSCN1955

During a short reading from C S Lewis’ Mere Christianity during the wedding ceremony, we were reminded about the difference between romantic love and true committed love.  It’s easy to feel ecstatic, floating-on-clouds emotion for a time, but life-long, unwavering, committed love, especially during difficult times, is what will ultimately lead to mature, selfless, true love.

Love, in the Christian sense, does not mean an emotion. It is a state not of the feelings but of the will; that state of the will which we have naturally about ourselves, and must learn to have about other people…IMG_20150614_192601583

Pastor JJ reminded us that marriage is a reflection of God’s love.  When the world sees a sound, committed marriage, the goodness of God is shared with everyone who witnesses such a love.  In our culture today it is a rare delight to see a married couple still enjoying one another after decades of living with each other.

When the Bible speaks of love, it is measured not by how much you want to receive, but how much you are willing to give of yourself to someone.  Marriage is to be a covenant love – seen through the lens of God, a love given with promises.  Too often today, love is seen through the lens of the world and becomes a consumer love – only living to take what it can get for the lowest possible price.DSCN1949

Tim Keller, in The Meaning of Marriage, tells about a story in Greek mythology. There were creatures called Sirens (half bird, half woman) who would lure Ulysses and his men to destruction with their beautiful songs as the men sailed by their island.  Because Ulysses knew of the power of the Sirens and the temporary insanity it would cause him and his men, he instructed the men to plug their ears with wax, tied himself to the mast, and told his men to keep on their course no matter what other instructions he might give. IMG_20150623_204615139

Ulysses was wise in looking and preparing for the future, knowing that temptations would certainly come, and come with a vengeance.  But he also knew that he didn’t want to succumb to the luring voices of the Sirens and be destroyed.

In marriage vows we too declare a mutually binding promise of future love, not merely of the present love that we are feeling.  Our public wedding promises, made before many people, are similar to being Tied to the mast.

I’m quite certain that Chris and Julia will stay Tied to the mast of their promises.  As they partner with God, their love is built on a firm foundation and will weather the many storms that are bound to come.DSCN2032

I thank you, my daughters, for also staying Tied to the Mast of your promises made on your wedding day.  Jesus is doing a beautiful work through those promises.

Love, MomDSCN2042

 

 

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