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Volume 6 Number 26       July 25, 2001       Norman Bales, Editor

CONTENTS

Just Visiting

Some of you wrote to us and told us you missed us when our newsletter failed to appear on Wednesday, July 18. We were victims of a technological problem that is beyond our ability to explain. Computers are wonderful at times, but they can also be a frustration. When you don't get the newsletter, we are frustrated. You should have received it earlier today. Please forgive us for sending out two on the same day. If you missed it, you can read it at our web site.

We continue our series concerning the spiritual needs of husbands and wives. We believe that a stable husband and wife relationship is rooted in a stable relationship with God. Many years ago, we deal with a severe marital crisis ourselves. We found ourselves at odds with one another on many different fronts. However, we discovered that we had some strong mutual concerns about our relationship with God. We won't say that we had a proper relationship with God. As R. C. Sproul indicates in our "What Others Are Saying" section, marital failure means something is wrong with your relationship with God. What we had was mutual respect for God and that enabled us to work through all the other difficulties.

Norman and Ann

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THE SPIRITUAL CORE OF THE HUSBAND/WIFE RELATIONSHIP
Part Three: "The Relationship Between Our Need for God and Human Companionship"


by Norman and Ann Bales

In her famous diary, Anne Frank wrote, "I feel utterly confused. I don't know what to read, what to write, what to do, I only know that I am longing." We all have deep longings. We may not actually recognize the spiritual nature of our longing, but we know that we look for something beyond the mundane affairs of life. It's often an indefinable hunger that cannot be satisfied through the channels of self-indulgence.

Many people enter marriage expecting to have that hunger filled. We expect our chosen marriage partners to make up for the lack that we feel deep within. "Most expect marriage to quench their soulful longing and it often does for a time. But for many, the deep restless, aching echoes again." (Les and Leslie Parrott. Saving Your Marriage Before It Starts. p. 133).

Augustine put his finger on the spiritual nature of our longing when he wrote, "Thou hast made us for Thyself and our hearts are restless until we rest in thee." The writer of Hebrews compared our quest in life the struggle experienced by the children of Israel in their forty years of wandering in the wilderness. They failed to "enter into rest" because of their unbelief. In Hebrews 4:3, he said, "we who have believed enter into that rest." Every undertaking in life will ultimately disappoint us if we fail to make peace with God. While a marriage partner may well encourage us in that quest for peace, peace with God is really a two-dimensional activity. It comes down to the relationship between an individual and God.

However, we do have the capacity to contribute to each other's mutual spiritual development. "The apostle Peter recognized the necessity of such encouragement when he wrote, "Husbands, in the same way be considerate as you live with your wives, and treat them with respect as the weaker partner and as heirs with you of the gracious gift of life, so that nothing will hinder your prayers" (1 Peter 3:7). Notice how he touches on the common task of spiritual growth.

  • In their relationship both husband and wife share a mutual spiritual inheritance.

  • Husbands are to treat their wives considerately and with respect because it enhances their mutual prayer lives.

The Parrotts note, " . . .there is more to a thriving marriage than good communication, conflict resolution and positive attitudes" (p. 134). They go on to say, "For married couples, spiritual meaning should be a shared pursuit. While every individual must come to an understanding of life's meaning alone, couples must also discover the meaning of their marriage together" (p. 135).

One of the most amazing love stories of the previous century is the story of C. S. Lewis and his wife, Joy (You might want to rent the movie Shadowlands, which tells the story). Lewis was a bachelor, an Oxford professor, famous for his articulate writings in defense of the credibility of the Christian faith. Joy Davidman was an American, a Jewish woman who was attracted to his writings. Thus began a friendship, by mail at first. Later Joy was about to be deported from England. Lewis offered to marry her, so she could stay. At first it was simply a legal arrangement. Then came the news that Joy was suffering from cancer and Lewis realized how deeply he loved her. They went through a church ceremony and began a deeply devoted marriage. The cancer went into remission, but returned a short while later. Shortly before her death, Joy, told her husband two things (1) "You have made me happy" and (2) "I am at peace with God." The point in all of this is the fact that the depth of their relationship with each other was defined by their mutual understanding of their relationship with God.

Lewis wrote, "We feasted on love; every mode of it, solemn and merry, romantic and realistic, sometimes as dramatic as the thunderstorm, sometimes comfortable and unemphatic as putting on your soft slippers. She was my pupil, my teacher, my subject and my sovereign, my trusty comrade, friend, shipmate, fellow-soldier. My mistress, but at the same time all that any man friend has ever been to me." You could say they were soul mates. The thing that made them soul mates was their mutual exploration of the quest to know God.

Even though we account to God as individuals, we cannot properly relate to him without loving relationships with people. "If anyone says, 'I love God,' yet hates his brother, he is a liar. For anyone who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God, whom he has not seen" (1 John 4:20). You can't be close to God and distant from people. There is no human relationship that provides a greater opportunity to love God than the marriage relationship. That's why it has such enormous potential and requires our very best effort to make it work.

NEXT WEEK: "Enhancing Spiritual Growth in the Marriage Relationship"

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"WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING"

About the Impact of Marriage Problems on Teenage Children:, "Being confronted by the fragility of their parents' marriage can be seen as a loss to a teenager. It is scary, confusing, frustrating and it puts too much responsibility on the child . . .. It sets up a role reversal that asks the child to parent the parents" - Linda Perlman Gordon, psychotherapist.

About God and Marriage: "At this point I would like to make a rather bold assertion. In every single marriage that ends in disaster some stupid decisions were made with respect to God's regulations. If God's regulations were followed scrupulously, not only would there be no divorces, there would be no unhappy marriages. To violate the regulations of God is not only an exercise in disobedience, but an exercise in foolishness as well. If you want a happy marriage, the most intelligent thing you can do is submit to God's regulations." - R. C. Sproul. The Intimate Marriage. p. 117.

About the Effect of Divorce on Children: "From the viewpoint of children, and counter to what happens to their parents, divorce is a cumulative experience. Its impact increases over time and rises to a crescendo in adulthood. At each developmental stage divorce is experienced in new and different ways. In adulthood, it affects personality, the ability to trust, expectations about relationships, and ability to cope with change." - Judith Wallerstein. The Unexpected Legacy of Divorce. p. 298.

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PERCEPTIONS

"Taking Care of Valuable Things"


by Dennis Randall

In Ephesians 5:16, Paul urges his readers to make the most of every opportunity. Every day we are presented with important choices - choices about the way we accept responsibility, respond to God, react to the needs of others and how we treat our families. Most of us have regrets about opportunities that we let get away. My friend and fellow minister, Dennis Randall shares some thoughts about "Taking Care of Valuable Things"

at

http://www.allaboutfamilies.org/sh/percep200126.html

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If you have questions about marriage and family relationships, you can "ASK THE COUNSELOR." Address your questions to Mikal Frazier. Her address is mikal@allaboutfamilies. org

Norman's e-mail address: nlbales@allaboutfamilies.org

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