To Love And To CherishSample
Fight for, Not With
The moment we decide to throw more energy into fighting for our mate than with him, the crack of a fist on the enemy's jaw splits the ears of angels.– Beth Moore
If you’re stuck in a miserable marriage, then that no-out clause – till death do you part – is looming large before you, right? And since we’ve already covered Jesus’ view on the permanence of marriage, it seems you have two options:
- • you can live in this miserable marriage until one of you dies, or • you can pray Jesus does a miracle, love breaks out, and you find you are in a great marriage.
I know what you’re thinking, Yeah, Pete, but you don’t understand my messy marriage. We are two people living separate lives under the same roof. I don’t even like to go home after work.
Can Jesus really work with that? Yes, He can if you’re willing to participate. It’s not going to be easy, but you’ve got His Spirit alive in you. He’s more than enough.
Since we know Jesus is in the business of taking dead things and breathing life back into them, we just need a place to start. I recommend you start by learning some basic protection skills.
[Love] always protects. (1 Corinthians 13:7)
The word protect comes from the root word “roof or covering.” The idea is that it protects us. It’s a shelter – a home. If an intruder enters your home, you defend it, right? The golf club under your bed becomes your weapon of choice to protect what is valuable.
That said, chances are good that one very dangerous intruder is stealing your marriage. It’s the idea that you don’t have to stick it out. You can leave.
Rather than surrender to that thought, I challenge you to surrender to Jesus’ power to resurrect instead. Both of you sit down, admit the marriage is miserable, and invite Jesus to do something miraculous.
It’s possible. I’ve seen it dozens of times.
So what’s your choice?
Healer, it’s not easy to choose to stay. Lead me into a community of friends and family that will live life with us – in good times and bad. I pray we will be a place of support and refuge for each other, so none of our marriages fall victim to the dangerous idea that we can quit. Amen.
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About this Plan
Marriage is hard. There's no way to get around it. When two people commit to sharing their lives forever, there will be seasons in which the relationship is close and satisfying, but there will also be times when one of you feels distant, angry, or just lonely. The default choice can be to check out, give up, or store up frustration. But in the end, it won't improve your marriage, and it will leave you longing for something more. God doesn't want you to settle for an empty marriage, and you don't have to! In this devotional series by Pete Briscoe, he uses 1 Corinthians 13, the familiar passage on love, to teach specific actions you can do today to change the dynamic of your marriage.
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We would like to thank Pete Briscoe and Dunham & Company for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: tellingthetruth.org