Photo by Jeremy Perkins on Unsplash
Both women
and men are sinners who, in Christ, have been forgiven, but there is an ongoing
consequence of the state of two human hearts within marriage.
Both men
and women are culpable in the sight of God to the destructive patterns known to
occur in the marriage relationship. Both men and women.
But it is
both my experience and my belief, even as an egalitarian, that love must begin
with the husband, before respect is received from the wife. If men can be men
enough to be open to this regard, a great deal of good can be done within a
marriage. This article does not dispute that abuses are not suffered by men.
This article does not dispute that women, too, can be perpetrators of abuse. But
this article must, for the common good, place the onus of responsibility on
husbands.
I will
often say in the marriage counselling service that I provide that the husband
has more control over the success of his marriage than the wife does. There are
some who would disagree with that. That is their prerogative. Again, my views
have been formed through experience, even after running myself as a husband through
the filter of my philosophy for marriage.
We must
understand that we are married to someone who does not meet all the conditions
that love demands. In this respect, God’s opportunity is to learn how to love someone who, occasionally
(or perhaps regularly), does not deserve our love; yet, someone for whom the
Father sent his Son to die for. At times they are difficult to love, let alone
like. Our challenge as a marriage partner is to overcome, and grow through, our
reluctance to love.
It is only when we have learned
to love someone
we don’t want to love that we learn something
more of Christ’s love for us. We need to ask:
how hard are we to love, yet how fully loved are we?
we don’t want to love that we learn something
more of Christ’s love for us. We need to ask:
how hard are we to love, yet how fully loved are we?
If Christ loves us
unconditionally
when we cannot even love ourselves,
can we love our spouse at a standard
much more than they could ever deserve,
to a standard to which Christ esteems for them?
when we cannot even love ourselves,
can we love our spouse at a standard
much more than they could ever deserve,
to a standard to which Christ esteems for them?
We must
also understand that we are married to someone who needs mercy, so we are able
to learn how to give it. We are married to a person who does not respond
appropriately, so we can learn how to be patient. The person we married, like
ourselves, is full of emotional junk, especially when their buttons are
pressed, and yet every bit of imperfection in our partner is a very resource
God uses to sanctify us.
Their disobedience is our
opportunity:
to love them to the extent of Christ’s love.
to love them to the extent of Christ’s love.
Put another way…
We know something of this love
when our disobedience is met with their grace.
when our disobedience is met with their grace.
Imagine
love being in the hand of the person who knows Christ’s love for themselves.
Unlimited love. If that person can love their partner like Christ loves them,
they have an effective premise for love.
Men, all
this must start from us. At least in having read this, we commit to the only
control we should ever take: to love and to keep loving. We do all we can to
take our responsibility. That our wives are increasingly safer in our
marriages. That we love them and keep loving them, even beyond our own feelings
of disappointment. That we know they’re loved when they say they feel loved.
I can tell
you that I know many husbands who have wrestled with love to the extent they
discovered how to love their wives — and theirs, as a marriage, is comparative bliss
to the attainment of contented marital maturity.
The disclaimer to all this is,
of course, the situation of rampant
abuse, where a marriage partner has no say or influence over their partner’s
behaviour, where there is no repentance, to the extent the situation is unsafe
to remain in.
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