
By Shelly Esser
How many times have you heard
the scenario of one spouse feeling
called to be a missionary, but the
other not hearing the same call?
Or what do you do when one
spouse wants to leave his secular job to
become a pastor and the last thing his wife
is interested in is becoming a pastor’s wife?
Or how about the husband who desires to
start a ministry in the inner city, but the wife
isn’t comfortable living in a place like that?
Or what’s to be decided when one spouse
wants to leave a ministry for another?
These types of changes can rip through a
marriage with tornado-like force. Left
unresolved they can literally tear a couple
apart. While there is no one blueprint that
can be applied to every situation, because
God has a unique plan for each marriage,
there are some general principles that can
help in weathering through these types of
changes.
Seek To Discern God’s Will Together
Job 34:4 says, “Let us discern for
ourselves what is right; let us learn together
what is good.” It can sound terribly
spiritual for one spouse to say, “God is
leading me,” – and He may be; however, in
marriage discerning God’s will is a mutual
matter. It’s true that God often begins the
leading process with one spouse first and
that leading can influence the other one, but
eventually God will operate in both
spouses’ lives to do His will, if they are
genuinely seeking it. That “will” may not
necessarily mean that a couple will take on
a particular change together, but they can
be unified in the decision.
Often conflicts and resentments arise
when one spouse feels left out of the
decision-making process. Couples need to
operate as partners so they can begin to
discover God’s plan together.
Philippians 2:2-4 says, “then make my joy
complete by being like-minded, having the
same love, being one in spirit and purpose.
Do nothing out of selfish or vain conceit,
but in humility consider others better than
yourselves. Each of you should look not
only to your own interest, but also to the
interests of others.” I can find no better
passage for Christian marriage partnership
in a decision-making process that has the
potential to divide than this passage. If
we’re not careful, we can give the enemy a
foothold in our marriages by bulldozing
ahead with a major change without
sensitivity to the spouse God has given us.
What should a couple do if both spouses
are seeking God’s will on a matter, but they
still feel pulled in opposite directions?
They should move slowly, never pushing
the other one into something. They say the
Atlantic convoys of World War II used to
move forward at the speed of the slowest
ship. When there isn’t a true sense of God’s
direction, it is better to wait.
When I’ve faced a difficult change in my
marriage, it’s meant a willingness to give
up my plans so I can be open to accepting
God’s will for our lives – whatever the
outcome. When it comes down to it, it’s not
about what a husband or wife wants, it’s
about what God wants and that’s the end
that needs to be pursued.
You Married A Person, Not A Dream
One of the reasons a change in marriage
can be so difficult is because it’s often tied
to a dream. And when a spouse seemingly
upsets that dream, we can feel like, “this
isn’t the person I married.” Genesis 2:24
says, “For this reason a man will leave his
father and mother and be united to his wife,
and they will become one flesh.” Notice
that the verse says, “united to his wife,” not
“united to his dream.” It’s a person we have
married, and while there is nothing wrong
with having dreams, we need to hold on to
them loosely.
I heard a pastor’s wife bitterly say, “I
married a social worker, not a pastor!” No
she didn’t. She married a man – a man who
is daily being changed into the image of
Christ and who is on a journey that may or
may not lead her where she desires him to
go. The struggling spouse needs to be
careful that he or she doesn’t quench the
Holy Spirit in the other one’s life. As hard
as it may be to accept, there needs to come
a point where the struggling spouse is able
to say, “While I don’t understand any of
this and it’s not the course we started out
on, it could be God’s leading.” That’s the
first step in being open to change.
Grieve Over Your Broken Dreams
Sooner or later in every relationship a
dream dies. By giving yourself permission
to grieve over that loss, you can get to the
place of acceptance, of seeing God’s
working in your marriage again. By
bringing the God who never changes into
your losses, you can begin to embrace the
new things He is doing.
Sometimes, however, we get stuck in our
grief for so long that it blinds us to what
God wants to do in our marriage. Saint
John of the Cross summed it up well when
talking about the Israelites, “The children
of Israel did not find in the manna all the
sweetness and strength they might have
found in it; not because the manna did not
contain them, but because they longed for
other meat.” To always be “longing for
other meat” keeps us from embracing the
good God has for us through the changes
today.
Change in marriage can be challenging,
even scary. But it doesn’t have to rip your
relationship apart. Instead, it can become
God’s vehicle for redesigning your
marriage according to His good and perfect
will. From the moment you cease wanting
things to be your own way, and accept
unconditionally whatever changes God
sends into your marriage, you will be free
to receive His best.
Shelly Esser is editor of Just Between Us
and lives in Germantown, Wis., with her
husband and four daughters.
Also read:
Growing Pains
Engaging Conversation
Recommend this page to a friend.
Copyright © 1999-2005 Just Between Us. All rights reserved.
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