Musings on Marriage

Month: September 2014

Deserving Success

Dear Daughters,

 John Adams wrote a letter to his wife, Abigail, during the Revolutionary War.  Part of that letter reads: “We can’t guarantee success in this war, but we can do something better.  We can deserve it.”  He basically said “How the war turns out is in the hands of God.  We can’t control that, but we can control how we behave.  We can deserve success.”SacredInfluence (2)

The same principle is true in marriage – How things turn out is not in our power, and we definitely cannot control another person, but we can act in such a way that is honorable, and then trust God to do the changing. It’s an interesting concept to think about, but perhaps your husband’s faults are the very tools that God is using to change you.  All those things about your husband that annoy you may be God’s way of teaching you to become more patient, longsuffering and kind.  In other words, your marriage makeover might begin with you!

In our early years of marriage I was disappointed. I couldn’t understand why Dad didn’t do more to make me happy.  In my “happily ever after” mind I thought it was all about me and my happiness.  With a mindset like that it didn’t take long to become discontented, and I thought more than once that I must have made a mistake in my choice for a husband.pitchfork

It seems counter-intuitive that we should start the improvement by changing ourselves because, of course, it’s always the other person who needs to change.  But think about it, if your husband changed solely because of your efforts and manipulation it would be easy to become proud and arrogant.  When you demand that someone change for your pleasure, you’re trying to bend a person to meet your needs, make you comfortable and bring you happiness.

If you remember the Fruits of the Spirit (love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness…) you will recall that the last one listed is self-control. It’s not child-control or husband-control, but self-control.  The only person you can do anything about is you.

God doesn’t require perfection in our behavior, but he does hope to see progress. In five years we should be wiser, stronger, and more mature in character than we are now.  Jesus wants us to be a reflection of himself.  He’s into character building – that’s His specialty.  But guess how He builds character?  By allowing difficult times to come into our lives so that we can learn to persevere.  Gary Thomas, author of Sacred Influence asks the question “How is God using your marriage to teach you how to love?”  God has us face many issues that may terrify us and make us feel completely inadequate so that we depend on His strength, His wisdom, and His love to be able to persevere through the trials and become a stronger, more loving person because of it.Fall 2010 2

I used to be annoyed by Romans 5:3-5,

We also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not disappoint us.

Rejoice in my sufferings?  Yeah, that’s not my gut reaction when hardship comes my way, but I’m slowly learning to recognize the tough times for what they are – God’s tools to make me stronger and more loving.  Mother Teresa has another way of saying this: “I never call difficulties ‘problems.’  I always say ‘gift of God’ because it is always much easier to take a gift than to take a problem.”

As I’ve said before, our marriage is better now than it has ever been. But it is only that way because we have both persevered through the hard times, and now we can rejoice in the good times.  The good news is that God is involved in our lives.  He knew, even before we were born, who our husband would be, and He is not at all surprised by the challenges that we face.  He will never leave you, nor forsake you, no matter hard life gets.OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

I just read the other day that life is 10% circumstances, and 90% our attitude toward those circumstances. That puts a lot of responsibility on us!  But with God’s help, we can become the women he wants us to be.  And that in turn will influence our husbands to be the best they can be.

Love, Mom

Grandma’s Music

Dear Daughters,

My trip to Idaho a few months ago was good but hard. It was wonderful to be with Grandpa and Grandma for a week, and yet difficult to see them struggle with their bodies that don’t work like they used to. Grandma speaks the truth when she says “My forgetter is getting better.” My nickname became “Lifesaver Shari” because when she lost things I found them! When I made meals for them they would both comment that I make it look so easy.   Many chores that used to be every day and normal for them have now become overwhelming.

gmagpaThe second morning I was at their home I came out of my bedroom as Grandma was walking by. She looked at me and said with a surprised look on her face “Oh, I didn’t know you were here!” But I quickly assured her that I had been there for a day or so and she was fine with that. I have become her mother, and she my young child. She is so quick to ask if she can help with lunch or dinner and is eager to do whatever I ask. I felt both honored to be able to assist them, yet found it difficult to navigate my new role.

Mums PianoIn the midst of all that, an amazing thing happened on that second day at their home. I asked Grandma if she would play some songs on the piano. At first she didn’t want to, but I told her I really wanted to hear someone else play besides me. So I got out the hymnbook, turned to the table of contents and starting in the A’s looked to see which songs she would know. Because her sight is so poor she is unable to read music anymore, but because she has everything memorized it wasn’t necessary for her to read at all, just think and play. So I said, Abide with Me. She thought for about 5 seconds and played it perfectly.  Amazing Grace.   Again, 5 seconds of thought and another beautiful rendition, complete with modulations into other keys. After she had played about 5 songs that I had asked for she suddenly transitioned smoothly into It is No Secret without my asking. Then I said Because He Lives, which she played flawlessly, then came back again to It is No Secret. Then all of sudden a rollicking version of You Are My Sunshine.   Then …Secret again. A few more songs of my request, and then Have Thine Own Way, Lord.

For the next 45 minutes or so she would continue to intersperse those three songs (It Is No Secret, You Are My Sunshine, Have Thine Own Way) in between the many other songs that I requested. She repeated no other songs, just those three. So I figured God wanted me to sit down and think on those songs for a bit.Dad2

Because of our living in the times that we do, these three songs were exactly what I needed to hear. God has always provided for us in the past, and I have no doubt that He will continue in the future. We just don’t know what that future is….yet.

I found it so amazing that Grandma, although she was not able to remember my answer to a question she had asked one minute earlier, could minister to me through her playing of songs that she loved and were embedded in her mind and heart for decades. It was probably my most memorable time in Idaho this year.

One more little tidbit ~ when we were driving to Washington that week I would look in the backseat once in a while and often see Grandpa and Grandma holding hands. Then once she started singing  You are My Sunshine, and she said to my sister Rhonda and me “Your dad’s a keeper!” After being married 64 years that was like music to my ears.

 

Love, Mom

 

In case you don’t know the words to those three songs, I’ve printed them below – some I haven’t heard for decades.

 

 

It Is No Secret

 Perinne3

 

The chimes of time ring out the news

Another day is through

Someone slipped and fell

Was that someone you?

You may have longed for added strength

Your courage to renew

Do not be disheartened

I have news for you.

 

It is no secret what God can do

What he has done for others

He’ll do for you

With arms wide open

He’ll pardon you

It is no secret what God can do.

 

There is no night, for in His light

You’ll never walk alone

You’ll always feel at home wherever you may roam.

There is no power can conquer you

.While God is on your side

Take Him at His promise

Don’t run away and hide.

 

 

You Are My Sunshine

 

You are my sunshine, my only sunshine,Datylilies2

You make me happy when skies are gray

You’ll never know, dear, how much I love you

Please don’t take my sunshine away.

 

 

 

 

Have Thine Own Way, Lord

 

Have thine own way, Lord, have thine own way.

Thou art the Potter, I am the clay.

Mold me and make me after Thy will

While I am waiting, yielded and still.

 

Have thine own way, Lord, have thine own way

Search me and try me, Master today!

Whiter than snow, Lord, wash me just now.

As in Thy presence humbly I bow.

 

Have thine own way, Lord, have thine own way.

Wounded and weary, help me I pray.

Power all power, surely is Thine

Touch me and heal me, Savior divine.

 

Have thine own way, Lord, have thine own way.

Hold o’er my being absolute sway!

Fill with Thy Spirit till all shall see

Christ only, always, living in me!

 

Building Character

Dear Daughters,

Do you remember reading the Calvin and Hobbes cartoon many years ago that showed seven-year-old Calvin being annoyed at hardships in his life and his father grimly saying “it builds character”?  At the time I thought it was just a funny joke.  But I was intrigued while reading a book by Neil Anderson about ten years ago.  He writes that the number one thing God is after in our lives is developing our character.  By character I mean things like love, joy, peace patience, goodness, kindness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.  Of course one the best ways to develop character is to live in a committed relationship with the man you married.

I love the last sentence in Chapter 2 of Sacred Influence. Gary Thomas writes, “It’s my firm belief that the current challenges in your marriage may well be God’s vehicle for you to become the strong woman he created you to be.”  As I look back through the years, sometimes thinking that I may have married the wrong man, I see now God’s perfect plan in our marriage – Dad and I both needed changes in our character that could only happen by being married to each other.cropped-BoiseRiver.jpg

Our marriage really started improving by leaps and bounds when I got sick back in January 2003.  I was forced to “lie in green pastures” (the couch) and see myself for who I really was.  And let me tell you it wasn’t a pretty picture.  As I lay there on the couch, my eyes were opened to how ungrateful I had been.  Dad often had many good ideas about different things, but because they came from him I would always find something to criticize.

I wince when I think of the years that I did not encourage, but instead found fault.  Looking back, I always found it easy to encourage my piano and choir students and you, my daughters, but my harshest criticisms were always saved for Dad.  I just thought it was my job to be honest with him, telling him what I thought was wrong with him, instead of building him up and thanking him for all the little things he would do for me.  I have since confessed my sin to Dad and he has so graciously forgiven me.  I know I have hurt him in many ways over the years which made his forgiveness even more amazing.MITrees

Another thing I learned while reading during those hours of lying on the couch, was the fact that Satan’s greatest strategy is to destroy marriages.  It’s not my husband who I am fighting against, it’s Satan whispering words of disdain, of how inadequate my man is, enlarging his faults and diminishing his good traits.  It was then that I truly started to understand the verse “For our battle is not against flesh and blood, but against rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.”  (Ephesians 6:12)

I finally decided to begin partnering with Jesus Christ to be an agent of reconciliation instead of division.  I am not trying to get myself off the hook because I was very guilty of saying some rude stuff, but at least now I know who was behind it all.  I have learned that I can choose my attitude, and I have decided to dispense grace.  Let me tell you, since then I still have temptations to go back to my old ways, but every day it is getting easier and more natural to affirm and love.  Love is a choice that I have to make every day of my life, but the best choice possible in order to have a good marriage.Flowers (5)

 

 

Love, Mom

 

 

Be Bold

Dear Daughters,

I’m sure there are things about your husbands that are annoying to you, simply because they and we are human.  The subject of Chapter 2 in Sacred Influence is “Becoming strong enough to address your husband’s “Functional Fixedness.”  Functional fixedness is a term meant to describe a man’s reluctance to change.  Men don’t normally see a need for change in themselves if what they have been doing seems to be working for them.  If a wife allows her husband to treat her poorly – with disrespect – he has no motivation to change.  He needs a compelling reason to change, but it has to be more than your unhappiness with the situation.SacredI

One would think that a husband would want to please his wife, but let’s face it, men (as well as women) are often more concerned with their own needs than the needs of their spouse.  Many women fall in to the typical trap of expressing their needs to their husbands.  Things change for a few days, but eventually he goes back to his old habits.  So how do we influence our men to make good, permanent changes?

In my younger years my M.O. (method of operation) was to put up with Dad’s insensitivities for a few weeks, then the week of my period I could contain my annoyance no longer and I would do the pms thing and blow up.  Not a healthy way of dealing with the problem.J  It wasn’t until years later that I was able to simply bring up a problem I had with him in a good conversational voice and be able to talk through what was bothering me.

SnakeRocky

The author, Gary Thomas, warns that we dare not overestimate our ability to live with a deep hurt or a gaping need for years.  Satan knows how to exploit such things and may suggest another man that seems to be so much more caring and understanding than your own husband.  If your ideal plan for marriage leaves no room for divorce, you must honestly accept your weaknesses and be willing to create a climate of change in your home in which your husband will be motivated to change.  Unfortunately Thomas gives no easy “five steps to influence” but the rest of the book  (and over the next several weeks) I will detail Thomas’ strategies for creating situations in which our men will become the best that God can help them be.  If you have tried in the past to communicate your hurt and it isn’t solving the problem, then you are most likely dealing with a case of “functional fixedness” – which will take a great deal of strength and courage on your part to address.

The first strategy is that we need to become a change agent in our marriage, and as I’ve written before it starts with us knowing that we are dearly loved by Christ. Also, to truly believe that if we ask Him He will help us in our journey to love our husbands.

Butterfly

Be Bold.  The first thing many women in the Bible had to be told was to “Be bold.”  When Hagar was abandoned by her husband and she and her son seemed to be slowly starving to death, God’s angel encouraged her, “Do not be afraid.”  When Mary was told that she as a virgin would carry Jesus Christ, the angel told her “Fear not.”  When the women were outside of the empty tomb wondering what had happened to their Lord, an angel again said “Do not be afraid.”

Fear gives way to paralysis, and many times passivity is our greatest enemy.  Marriages can slowly die from apathy; relationships wilt when neither partner will address the unhealthy patterns that are sucking the life out of their marriage.  But to be able to become that bold woman we must know who we are in Christ – beloved daughters of God.  Armed with that knowledge, security, and acceptance we can be bold and become a force for good in our marriages.  The power of Moses’ words are a wonderful promise to keep in mind “The Lord himself goes before you and will be with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.  Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.” (Deuteronomy 31:8)

Flowers

Simply hoping for change is not a strategy.  A good marriage doesn’t happen by accident.  You can’t build a business by accident, and I can’t write a song by accident.  All good things take work and activity, but too often we find ourselves thinking “It’s no use.”  It’s so much easier to give up on marriage, give up on kids, give up on prayer, give up on ourselves.  But God always encourages us to keep walking.  When you fall down, get up and try again.  God is the God of second chances, third chances – however many times it takes.  His love never fails and He is always there, cheering us on.

 

Love, Mom

 

 

 

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