Friday, July 13, 2012


My Life Before God...

The Crosswalk

Perhaps it was the weekly clanging of the 40-ounce bottles in my recycling bin.  Perhaps it was the six-inch hole splintering my bedroom door.  It might have been the forever ashtray odor, or the f__  yous reverberating in my ears, the bruises on my arms, the puke rimmed-toilet, or the constant worry that I would someday find his body a corpse.  Whatever it was, it caught me in the middle of the crosswalk one day, and begged the SUV to come and bring my death. 

But something made me keep walking.

Looking back, I see that I was locked into a bad situation (which, by the way, merits no description.) A season of my life I could refer to as my death.  I know I am not alone.  So many souls get locked into their death, never realizing that they are trapped.  They are so comfortable that they will never change, never meet any potential, but instead will die moment by moment as their could-bes change to nevers.  I was trapped because I couldn’t believe I deserved anything better than a man who used me, abused me, and enabled me to become my own enemy.
***

I remember the first time that he asked me to drink.  I was adamantly against it, but that sweet smile convinced me that it was okay, and even if it wasn’t, at least we were wrong together and would suffer the consequences hand in hand.  I woke up the next day with a purple spot the size of a golf ball as a trophy on my neck, and parent-teacher conferences as the pageant.  Thank goodness for long hair.

I think that moment was the catalyst of my decadence, and looked at by itself could explain the entire path to my destruction.  I was a teacher.  Thus, my naïve and idealistic purpose in life was to save humans from their own destruction.  I thought I was strong at the time, that nothing could deter me from my path in life, from my success and my goals.  I was wrong.  Inside of me were unseen weaknesses, like a path in the woods you run down, without realizing its covered in thistles.

I was confident and sure of my skills, well liked by students and faculty, praised by administration, but hated by myself.  I didn’t see that I hated myself at the time, but looking back, I know I did. I hated myself to the point that I allowed myself to fall into dangerous patterns for the sake of one man who (I believed) loved me.  And that was worth everything to me, even if it meant I lost everything.

After that first drinking-fest, things went rapidly downhill and I lost control. I could tell you about the abuse, the verbal put downs, or the physical kicks to the head.  I could explain how he manipulated me into saying sorry when he spilled the soda, or stole my money.  I could describe the ups and downs, the “I love you” followed by the “I hate you.” I could cry about how I couldn’t live my own life for months because I was too involved with his despair.  But details would make the truth seem less immaculate, and, as I said before, the consequential events merit no detailed explanation. In essence, I did the things I did not want to do, and I paid the price.  But I survived. 
***
It probably sounds like my life fell apart, but believe me, it didn’t seem like it from the outside.  I went to school everyday, prepared, organized, and ready to teach.  And teach I did.  I was able to pull off the day impeccably; no one would have known that my nights were filled with anguish.  How I did this makes sense when I tell you that it was a pattern I set in middle school.  That’s when my dad died of cancer. That is when I learned to hide pain because no one wanted to see it, and to be successful because people needed me.  People needed me, and that was my driving force.  My mom needed me, and my students needed me, and now he needed me.  My own needs went unmet.

I knew what was going on, don’t think I was in denial and therefore have some sort of excuse.  I knew that I was letting myself go, but I didn’t know how to stop it.  All I knew was that he needed me, and I would sacrifice everything to give myself to him. I wish I could have helped him without such sacrifice, but all I can say is that I felt the need to be at his level.  If I was too “good” or too “successful” he wouldn’t believe I could relate to him or care for him because, in his eyes, I would be too full of myself to understand that there are people in this world who weren’t as “well off” as I was.  (I don’t think he really understood that I had fought for my success and for my sanity). 

So yes, I knew what was happening, but thought I would never stop the maniacal ride.  I honestly believed that there would be no end, that I would have no courage to stop myself from this façade.   At least, not until pretense fell one day to reveal that this was indeed infecting me.

The moment came as I was crossing the street.  This act was my daily transition between my personal life and my professional one.  My short walk consisted of less than a block, and, as soon as I saw barely clad students running toward a brick building, I knew my day was about to begin.  I would pause and stare down traffic until the vehicles would wait for me.  As soon as my feet stepped off the curb, I forced myself to stop the churning worries and aches, and turned my head to the next curb in front of me: the thoughts of students, lesson plans, and handouts.  That crosswalk was my neutral zone; the place where nothing could touch me.  It was the place where one day I paused and looked up and saw an SUV baring down.  In a split second, I thought of how beautiful it would be to be hit, to die, to let go of all responsibility.  No one to depend on me, to look up to me, to look down on me, to consume me.  But I kept going.

I’m no hero.  I didn’t do it because I am noble or brave or because I wanted to live.  I kept going because (besides the fact that the SUV probably would have stopped) I felt that I had no other choice. This moment lasted in my head for only that split second, but it began to tear down the whirling mechanisms that kept my momentum to live as myself during the day and as a victim by night.  Slowly, it brought me to the surface of reality, and I was forced to look at my life…at what was really going on.  And the sight wasn’t pretty.
***
I came home that night to a normal scene.  A guy on my couch playing video games.  Dinner was made, thus his guilt was atoned for.  We ate, we talked, we laughed, and we probably went out drinking.  I probably woke up with a hangover and went to work feeling groggy and guilty; small deeds would not make up for my guilt.  I’m not being specific because, honestly, I don’t remember that particular night.  One day spilled into the other by filling up with happiness, and spilling it out…catching up the remains, and spilling them out—little by little there’s nothing left.  What matters is that I had thought about suicide.  I had thought about suicide. Whether or not I could have gone through with it is of no import.  Me, the teacher, the mentor, the saint.  I had wanted to die, and that terrified me.

Ever so slowly, I begged God to save me. I spent evenings sobbing to the point of gagging.  I spent nights of quiet tears, blood for what it felt like, hugging my pillow like a tiny freckled girl with her teddy bear. I woke with puffy eyes, and a whisper of hope.  Hope that things would change, hope that someone would save me.

Hope turned into reality; one day, he decided a cocaine-enhanced life would be better than me.  So, I bought him a ticket and he left.  He moved out of my life forever. But I didn’t rejoice.  I was heartbroken because I missed him.  Missed the torment, the pain I was used to.  People think that’s crazy if they’ve never experienced it.  But people who grow up on pain crave pain, like children who grow up with hugs need them, or babies that grow up with milk always want more.  It’s what feeds you, what molds you, what you depend on because it’s always there. 

And, in my anguish, I had to make a decision: to feed my pain with more, to accept misery as my fate, or to believe that there was more to me.  This was the colossal street that I had to cross, or give up and die.   The curb loomed in front of me, antagonizing me, saying, “You can’t change now!  It’s always been this way, and it always will.  Give up now, and accept who you are.  Accept what you deserve.”  And I did.

But this time, I chose differently.  I chose, like so few do, to take hold of my life, to take control of my life, to take care of myself, and become the woman I was destined to be, rather than the one I had portrayed myself to be.

And this is the moment I’ve lost your attention.  The moment you’ve rolled your eyes and thought, “Great, here’s some more Carpe Diem crap.  Give me something I can touch.”  You think I don’t know your situation.  You think I don’t know that you feel like you’re trapped into a formulated phrase.  Like your life has been determined and this is who you are and this is who you must be meant to be.  You think I don’t hear that voice inside saying, “There’s got to be more.”  That I don’t know you sometimes want a new life, a new journey, a new body, a new soul, but are too afraid to move.  Too satisfied to dare.

We are alive for a breath; a breath that can give life or take it away.  We matter, but only for a moment.  We may live thinking we’re immortal humans, but we are not.  We die as immortal souls.  And it’s what we do to and with our soul that counts. 

I think people like to deny eternity because it's a great defense.  If what we do doesn't really matter, we're free to waste away and live as we please, good or bad.  But what if it does matter?  What if, in the end, we will be forced to account for all of our choices? All I really know is that, at that moment, I would want to look back, smile, and say, "Thank you. Thank you for life, for hope for third tries, and for smacking me in the face with reality."

At every age, we stand in the middle of a road.  We have the opportunity to pause between past and future, between who we are and who we want to be, between our current reality and our ideals.  And all we really need is hope that there is more, the courage to move forward, and (from time to time) a vision of death.  The frightening part isn’t really moving forward, is it?  It’s the horror of pausing too long in the crosswalk.  

 It started off slowly, to be sure. At first, he was the one calling me; he was the one stopping over to see me. I felt wonderful and valued. I didn’t really have to think much about whether or not he liked me because it seemed obvious. Why else would he see me so much, flirt with me, and say such sweet things? It didn’t seem to bother me at the time that no commitment was stated or even mentioned. To me, I was getting attention and that was worth quite a bit.
            However, a few months passed and suddenly I was starting to get nervous. He wasn’t coming around as much, wasn’t calling as often, and the sweet words were fewer and farther between. I started to wonder why, thinking maybe it was about me. Maybe I wasn’t pretty enough, or wasn’t flirting enough. I started feeling pathetic because I was talking about it all the time and trying to figure out what was going on.
In my search for truth, a friend of mine said he had some sage advice. He said my situation sounded similar to his. Maybe it sounds familiar to you as well:
I didn’t mean to hurt her, but I kind of enjoyed the ride. I knew I had power over her, knew I could control her, and enjoyed it. If I needed attention that day, I would go over by her and turn on my charm. Sometimes just a smile would do the trick. Especially when she was angry…all I had to do was look at her like I was concerned, and she would melt. She’d say (giggling), “Stop being cute! I can’t be mad at you anymore.” I did have moments where I felt horrible. Like I said, I knew what I was doing. It’s just that she made it so easy for me. She said how much she liked me, and didn’t even care that I didn’t say it back. I loved the way she acted towards me. It made me feel so good about myself. Eventually what I was doing really did hit me; I saw how selfish I was. I guess I cared about her enough to stop hurting her, so I told her we had to end it. It was the best thing for her, but I wish she wouldn’t have wasted two years of her life on a guy that would never have married her.
To tell you the truth, I started bawling when he told me this story. I realized this story was very similar to what had happened to me. He even went on to say that this lady was kind of like a doll to him. When he wanted to play, he would take her out of the box, play with her a while, and then put her back when he was bored or tired. He said he didn’t want anyone else to have her so, if another guy got too close, he would act protective and suave and she would stop herself and come back to him.
I can’t say how horrid I felt when I realized I had been duped the same way. It happened little by little, so I didn’t even notice it. However, looking back, I realize that I ended up initiating all the conversations about where our relationship was and where it was going, I was the one admitting I was falling in love, I was the one pouring out the compliments, and I was the one going out of my way to make him happy. He was the one coming over only when it was convenient, he was the one teasing me and putting himself above me, he was the one avoiding all “uncomfortable” conversations about what was going on between us, and he was the one not answering my phone calls if he didn’t feel like it. Sadly, I was the one who was willing to stay up until the wee hours of the morning, not getting enough sleep before I had to get up for work, and he would leave after thirty minutes with me, if anything “more important” came along.
I wish I could say it wasn’t so, but it took me until I heard the words, “I was leading you on” (more than once) to realize that I indeed had become a slave to the obsession of a relationship. I say obsession because it was never really a relationship, but my idea of what I wish had been one.
And so, I finally had to face the truth—that he owned me. Owned my heart, my actions, my motivations. My life was spent waiting for a call or a smile or, if I was lucky enough, a chance to be around him.
So often we, as women, find ourselves as puppets to a marionette who decides when to move us and when to put us away in a heap of tangled limbs and strings. We place ourselves in his hands, giving him permission to rule our lives only when we feel worthless enough to do so.
Thank God, literally, those things don’t a have to stay that way. We DO have the power to pick ourselves up, cut the strings, and walk away, even if stiffly at first, to place our tangled selves in the hands of our Creator, who can make even the most broken thing be whole once again.



Women Don't Woo--Chapter 1 (Part 1)

Chapter 1: He Owns You

It is 1:18 in the morning, and I’m sleepless in bed, still agonizing, “Why didn’t he come over?”
I called his cell phone after church this morning. He didn’t answer (“Thank you, God!”) so I put on my cheerful voice and said, “Hey, just called to let you know I got the sermon on CD for you from church! I can’t wait for you to hear the sermon; it was so great! I hope work is going well, and maybe you can give me a call when you have some time?!” Pathetic. What I REALLY wanted to say was, “Hey, thanks for hanging up on me the other night and then leaving suddenly last night. What the heck is your problem?” However, his previous behavior has told me that being direct and angry does no good. All I can do is be sweet and try to lure him over so I can somehow weave my true feelings into the middle of a base discussion. So, on with the story…
 He called me back an hour later. AHA! My plan worked thus far. He sounds happy. He asks me about church, and asks where I am. “At the mall,” I say, and he asks, “With who?” Passing by the nagging instinct to say, “Raoul, the hot guy I met last night after you hung up on me,” I say, “I’m by myself,” which is the truth, after all. So, we talk awhile, but he says nothing about coming over to get the CD (which, by the way, I bought just so I could con him into stopping by that night). Not wanting to sound needy, I decide not to suggest it and hope he surprises me after he gets off of work. So, can you guess where that leaves me tonight? Yep, you got it: hanging around the house, trying to make myself busy, while I day dream about the possible visit.
Hours go by and the phone remains silent. 9, 10, 11pm rolls around and I finally come to terms with the fact that my day dream will remain a fantasy. I try to fall asleep, but all I can do is think, “Did I say something wrong on the phone? Maybe I shouldn’t have made that flirty comment…maybe I should’ve acted more standoff-ish, …maybe I should’ve called him and brought the CD over to his house.”
I wonder how many of you are shaking your heads in pity and how many of you feel your stomach sinking in memories of similar instances. The truth is, I shouldn’t have been waiting around at all. Looking back on it, it seems quite pathetic, me spending hours waiting in my apartment, wasting time because I was too full of nervousness and anticipation to do anything of value, hoping he’d call me or come over. Who does that? The sad answer is that the women who do that are the ones who feel not-so-valuable. I gave more value to a chance to see or talk to him above my time, which is precious.
I wish I could go back in time and tell myself to do something else with my time…call a girlfriend, read a book, help someone, or get out my Bible.I know the latter suggestion sounds like something you’d read in a cheesy “What to Do When You’re Down” book, but really, what could have been better? I have now discovered that, deep down, this longing for a man to make me feel loved and accepted is truly a need to realize that I already am loved and accepted by the creator of the universe, and the creator of me. God loves me even though I don’t deserve it, failing every day. Now THAT should be the foundation of a relationship with someone who I can love and depend on every day. Instead of looking for acceptance from a man, it’s essential to grow a relationship with my fierce and passionate savior.
            Maybe it’s strange to hear of God described as such. We usually hear God being described as things such as a gentleman. This is hard for me to swallow. I mean, I understand the point that God doesn’t force us to do anything that we don’t want to, but the connotation of God being a gentleman makes him seem like a wimp, which he definitely is not.  In Psalm 18, David cries to God for help, and God does much more than just say, “At your service, me lad!”  Instead, God “shot his arrows and scattered [the enemies] great bolts of lightning and routed them. The valleys of the sea were exposed and the foundations of the earth laid bare at your rebuke, O Lord, at the blast of breath from your nostrils.” I don’t know about you, but when I picture a gentleman, I see a guy in a sharp looking suit pulling out my chair, not nostril breath upsetting the foundations of the earth.
            So, how about seeing God as a lover who will “never leave you nor forsake you” (Hebrews 13:5)? I still struggle at times to see God in this way, but reading His Word, especially the Psalms, repeatedly demonstrate his faithfulness, his passion, his strength, and even his jealousy to have me to himself. So, if he is to be my number one love, how furious must he be when he sees me spending an evening wallowing in my own misery because I didn’t get a phone call! Instead of rejoicing in this opportunity to live, I sit here alone thinking of what I can do to keep myself busy enough to not notice the phone is silent. 
            In all honesty, this frightens me. How is it that I got to this point?

Women Don't Woo (Introduction To Multi-Parts)

INTRODUCTION: It DID Happen to You

It starts out seemingly innocent. He forgot his wallet, so you decide to foot the bill.  He didn’t return your phone call, so you decide to call him again. His car broke down at the last minute, so you give him your keys “just this once.” You’re friends are starting to miss you at the usual hangout because you’re not around as much anymore.
However, a few months pass and you find yourself broke because you’re always paying, you’re sick to your stomach because you haven’t heard from him today, and your friends aren’t speaking to you anymore because you haven’t picked up the phone “just in case he’s trying to get through.” You’re wondering if you’re crazy because you’ve started to do “drive-bys.” You know what I mean: you have to go to the grocery store, so you just happen to take the route that goes past his house (and makes your trip five miles longer).  However, since he has had your car for the last week, you have to walk, which ends up being better…now, car-less in the night, you find it easier to stealthily walk around the house and peek in the windows at will.
            Perhaps these examples are extreme to you, or perhaps you’ve experienced something like this or even worse. Regardless of the level of your actions, I am sure I can relate, as can many women in our society today. A trend is sweeping the nation: men are sitting back because women have stepped up to woo and win their man, only to be disappointed (and often hurt) in the end.
            Maybe “woo” is too much of an old-fashioned word for you, or maybe in today’s society it is completely appropriate and almost expected of a woman to “chase” after her man. Regardless, most women are not all that proud to step up and say, “YES! I woo men!” I would venture to say that women like to think of themselves as treasure to be cherished, and most of us know that, even when we do woo and win a guy, it doesn’t leave us feeling so valuable in the end.
God set up very clear expectations and guidelines of the right position of a man and a woman in a relationship, but due to our inherent and sinful natures, we have put God’s advice on the back-burner to get our way, right away. Little did the women’s movement know that we have killed the very nature of a man by taking his job of “the chase.”   Women, we need to re-claim the throne of patience and realize that the man God has for us is worth the wait.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Chapter 1 (Part 2)

 It started off slowly, to be sure. At first, he was the one calling me; he was the one stopping over to see me. I felt wonderful and valued. I didn’t really have to think much about whether or not he liked me because it seemed obvious. Why else would he see me so much, flirt with me, and say such sweet things? It didn’t seem to bother me at the time that no commitment was stated or even mentioned. To me, I was getting attention and that was worth quite a bit.
            However, a few months passed and suddenly I was starting to get nervous. He wasn’t coming around as much, wasn’t calling as often, and the sweet words were fewer and farther between. I started to wonder why, thinking maybe it was about me. Maybe I wasn’t pretty enough, or wasn’t flirting enough. I started feeling pathetic because I was talking about it all the time and trying to figure out what was going on.
In my search for truth, a friend of mine said he had some sage advice. He said my situation sounded similar to his. Maybe it sounds familiar to you as well:
I didn’t mean to hurt her, but I kind of enjoyed the ride. I knew I had power over her, knew I could control her, and enjoyed it. If I needed attention that day, I would go over by her and turn on my charm. Sometimes just a smile would do the trick. Especially when she was angry…all I had to do was look at her like I was concerned, and she would melt. She’d say (giggling), “Stop being cute! I can’t be mad at you anymore.” I did have moments where I felt horrible. Like I said, I knew what I was doing. It’s just that she made it so easy for me. She said how much she liked me, and didn’t even care that I didn’t say it back. I loved the way she acted towards me. It made me feel so good about myself. Eventually what I was doing really did hit me; I saw how selfish I was. I guess I cared about her enough to stop hurting her, so I told her we had to end it. It was the best thing for her, but I wish she wouldn’t have wasted two years of her life on a guy that would never have married her.
To tell you the truth, I started bawling when he told me this story. I realized this story was very similar to what had happened to me. He even went on to say that this lady was kind of like a doll to him. When he wanted to play, he would take her out of the box, play with her a while, and then put her back when he was bored or tired. He said he didn’t want anyone else to have her so, if another guy got too close, he would act protective and suave and she would stop herself and come back to him.
I can’t say how horrid I felt when I realized I had been duped the same way. It happened little by little, so I didn’t even notice it. However, looking back, I realize that I ended up initiating all the conversations about where our relationship was and where it was going, I was the one admitting I was falling in love, I was the one pouring out the compliments, and I was the one going out of my way to make him happy. He was the one coming over only when it was convenient, he was the one teasing me and putting himself above me, he was the one avoiding all “uncomfortable” conversations about what was going on between us, and he was the one not answering my phone calls if he didn’t feel like it. Sadly, I was the one who was willing to stay up until the wee hours of the morning, not getting enough sleep before I had to get up for work, and he would leave after thirty minutes with me, if anything “more important” came along.
I wish I could say it wasn’t so, but it took me until I heard the words, “I was leading you on” (more than once) to realize that I indeed had become a slave to the obsession of a relationship. I say obsession because it was never really a relationship, but my idea of what I wish had been one.
And so, I finally had to face the truth—that he owned me. Owned my heart, my actions, my motivations. My life was spent waiting for a call or a smile or, if I was lucky enough, a chance to be around him.
So often we, as women, find ourselves as puppets to a marionette who decides when to move us and when to put us away in a heap of tangled limbs and strings. We place ourselves in his hands, giving him permission to rule our lives only when we feel worthless enough to do so.
Thank God, literally, those things don’t a have to stay that way. We DO have the power to pick ourselves up, cut the strings, and walk away, even if stiffly at first, to place our tangled selves in the hands of our Creator, who can make even the most broken thing be whole once again.


Women Don't Woo--Chapter 1 (Part 1)

Chapter 1: He Owns You

It is 1:18 in the morning, and I’m sleepless in bed, still agonizing, “Why didn’t he come over?”
I called his cell phone after church this morning. He didn’t answer (“Thank you, God!”) so I put on my cheerful voice and said, “Hey, just called to let you know I got the sermon on CD for you from church! I can’t wait for you to hear the sermon; it was so great! I hope work is going well, and maybe you can give me a call when you have some time?!” Pathetic. What I REALLY wanted to say was, “Hey, thanks for hanging up on me the other night and then leaving suddenly last night. What the heck is your problem?” However, his previous behavior has told me that being direct and angry does no good. All I can do is be sweet and try to lure him over so I can somehow weave my true feelings into the middle of a base discussion. So, on with the story…
 He called me back an hour later. AHA! My plan worked thus far. He sounds happy. He asks me about church, and asks where I am. “At the mall,” I say, and he asks, “With who?” Passing by the nagging instinct to say, “Raoul, the hot guy I met last night after you hung up on me,” I say, “I’m by myself,” which is the truth, after all. So, we talk awhile, but he says nothing about coming over to get the CD (which, by the way, I bought just so I could con him into stopping by that night). Not wanting to sound needy, I decide not to suggest it and hope he surprises me after he gets off of work. So, can you guess where that leaves me tonight? Yep, you got it: hanging around the house, trying to make myself busy, while I day dream about the possible visit.
Hours go by and the phone remains silent. 9, 10, 11pm rolls around and I finally come to terms with the fact that my day dream will remain a fantasy. I try to fall asleep, but all I can do is think, “Did I say something wrong on the phone? Maybe I shouldn’t have made that flirty comment…maybe I should’ve acted more standoff-ish, …maybe I should’ve called him and brought the CD over to his house.”
I wonder how many of you are shaking your heads in pity and how many of you feel your stomach sinking in memories of similar instances. The truth is, I shouldn’t have been waiting around at all. Looking back on it, it seems quite pathetic, me spending hours waiting in my apartment, wasting time because I was too full of nervousness and anticipation to do anything of value, hoping he’d call me or come over. Who does that? The sad answer is that the women who do that are the ones who feel not-so-valuable. I gave more value to a chance to see or talk to him above my time, which is precious.
I wish I could go back in time and tell myself to do something else with my time…call a girlfriend, read a book, help someone, or get out my Bible.I know the latter suggestion sounds like something you’d read in a cheesy “What to Do When You’re Down” book, but really, what could have been better? I have now discovered that, deep down, this longing for a man to make me feel loved and accepted is truly a need to realize that I already am loved and accepted by the creator of the universe, and the creator of me. God loves me even though I don’t deserve it, failing every day. Now THAT should be the foundation of a relationship with someone who I can love and depend on every day. Instead of looking for acceptance from a man, it’s essential to grow a relationship with my fierce and passionate savior.
            Maybe it’s strange to hear of God described as such. We usually hear God being described as things such as a gentleman. This is hard for me to swallow. I mean, I understand the point that God doesn’t force us to do anything that we don’t want to, but the connotation of God being a gentleman makes him seem like a wimp, which he definitely is not.  In Psalm 18, David cries to God for help, and God does much more than just say, “At your service, me lad!”  Instead, God “shot his arrows and scattered [the enemies] great bolts of lightning and routed them. The valleys of the sea were exposed and the foundations of the earth laid bare at your rebuke, O Lord, at the blast of breath from your nostrils.” I don’t know about you, but when I picture a gentleman, I see a guy in a sharp looking suit pulling out my chair, not nostril breath upsetting the foundations of the earth.
            So, how about seeing God as a lover who will “never leave you nor forsake you” (Hebrews 13:5)? I still struggle at times to see God in this way, but reading His Word, especially the Psalms, repeatedly demonstrate his faithfulness, his passion, his strength, and even his jealousy to have me to himself. So, if he is to be my number one love, how furious must he be when he sees me spending an evening wallowing in my own misery because I didn’t get a phone call! Instead of rejoicing in this opportunity to live, I sit here alone thinking of what I can do to keep myself busy enough to not notice the phone is silent. 
            In all honesty, this frightens me. How is it that I got to this point?

Sunday, February 26, 2012

by: Phyllis Schlafly
eagleforum.org
Article Link
February 15, 2012
Phyllis Schlafly
Phyllis Schlafly
          Proclaiming in a New York Times headline that "Obama Adjusts a Rule Covering Contraceptives," the pro-Obama media tried to dig the President out of the political hole he had jumped into. But calling Obama's revised rule an "adjustment" or an "accommodation" or other soft-sell word can't cover the fact that the revision is essentially the same as the original rule.
          Barack Obama and his Administration are the lackeys of the feminists. And furthermore, they must think the American people are too stupid to see through the deception he is trying to put over on us.
          A big New York Times editorial cried out that Obama's action means "The Freedom to Choose Birth Control." Poppycock. Every American already has the right to choose birth control, but that shouldn't give them the right to have somebody else pay for it, and that's what ObamaCare demands.
          The bottom line is that the ObamaCare insurance, which employers are mandated to provide and individuals are mandated to buy, will include birth control, the morning-after pill (an abortion drug), and sterilization, at zero cost to the individual without any additional premium, co-pay, or out-of-pocket expense. And yes, this mandate does apply to religious hospitals, schools, colleges, and charities, even though their religion teaches them that these acts are immoral and wrong.
          Obama's original rule called for religiously affiliated institutions to pay for these controversial services, which even liberal commentators denounced as a gross interference with religious liberty. It was even denounced by Chris Matthews, E.J. Dionne and Democratic Senators, and the ever-loquacious Joe Biden hid out in uncharacteristic silence.   
          The debate about this rule went on within the Administration for several months. Obama eventually sided with the feminists (no surprise) against the warning of then Chief of Staff William Daley.    
          After the firestorm erupted, Obama may have thought he could get the Catholic Bishops to go along with his accommodation (as a couple of liberal nuns did), but the Bishops saw through his duplicity. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops pointed out that the "adjustment" still includes a "nationwide mandate of insurance coverage of sterilization and contraception, including some abortifacients" and also that the many "self-insuring religious employers, and religious insurance companies, are not exempt from this mandate."
          The accommodation orders insurance companies to pay the costs of these birth control/abortion services, but you can be sure insurance companies will price their products to make a profit. It's obvious that insurance companies will distribute and conceal the costs so nobody appears to be paying for the controversial procedures.
          Since the insurance companies will not be permitted to charge different fees for different employees, all their customers will be paying something for the controversial services. In plain words, all religiously affiliated institutions and their employees will be paying for birth control/abortion drugs, but not "explicitly," as the Wall Street Journal delicately explained.
          Congressman Chris Smith (R-NJ) summed up this issue: "The White House Fact Sheet is riddled with doublespeak and contradiction. It states, for example, that religious employers 'will not' have to pay for abortion pills, sterilization and contraception, but their 'insurance companies' will. Who pays for the insurance policy? The religious employer."
          The political donnybrook continues as many people are speaking out against Obama's rule, both the original and the revised version, because it is an outrageous interference with religious liberty. How dare Barack Obama and HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius tell religiously affiliated institutions that they must do something that violates their moral code?
          This issue has aroused people of all religious denominations to speak out. They now realize we have a President who made himself part of the organized attack on religion anywhere in the public square, an attack we see so frequently in the courts and in the schools.
          One of the shocking parts of this charade is the fact that the U.S. Army Chief of Chaplains sent an email to senior chaplains telling them that Archbishop Timothy Broglio's letter criticizing the Obama rule was not to be read from the pulpit. Has anti-religious bigotry become so extreme, even in the military, that a chaplain's sermon is expected to be banned or censored to conform to Obama's prejudices?

  • Lesson #1: this issue demonstrates that the Obama Administration is participating full-strength in the ongoing campaign against religious liberty.
  • Lesson #2: this issue demonstrates that national health care involves so much more than health, and that all decisions, major and minor, will be controlled by federal bureaucrats, not by patients, not by doctors, not by taxpayers, and not by any elected representatives, state or federal.
          As Walter Cronkite used to say, "That's the way it is."
Great Resources By Phyllis Schlafly to combat the lies of feminism.

Unbreakable Love – By: John D. Morris

“And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.  Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.” (Genesis 2:23-24)
          When the Pharisees asked for His view on divorce, Jesus replied by quoting our text, giving the Creator’s view on marriage and how men and women should approach it, if they are to function as they were designed (Matthew 19:4-5).  He added, “Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh.  What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder” (v. 6).
          In some special way, known fully only to Him, a man and woman in a marriage relationship can truly become one flesh, just as Adam and Eve were one flesh after Eve had been fashioned from Adam’s side.  (Christ’s doctrine of marriage has no logical foundation, by the way, nor do we have any reason to marry, if Adam and Eve were not real, specially created people.)
          Our text was also quoted by Paul as he more fully explained the marriage doctrine (Ephesians 5:31), prefacing it with a brief discussion of the relationship between the Lord and His Church (v. 30).  Just as we are inseparably “members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones,” He designed each of us to be inseparably “one flesh” with his or her spouse.
          Paul uses a forceful word for “leave,” meaning to completely leave one’s parents and “be joined” to the spouse.  This word is equally forceful and leaves no room for a half-hearted commitment.
          Marriage partners, in the eyes of the Creator, should be inseparable, just as the bones and flesh of a body cannot be separated, and just as we cannot be separated from the love of God in Christ (Romans 8:35-39).
By: John D. Morris – From the Days of Praise daily devotional by the Institute For Creation Research (02/14/12).  For a free copy of the Days of Praise call 1-800-337-0375 or go online at: www.icr.org

A Compassionate Heart – By: Paul J. Twist

          A compassionate heart is one indication of a spirit-controlled life, as we read in Galatians 5:22-23.  A believer must not only show compassion to those of like social standing, but must reach out to the most unlovable with the love of Christ, whatever their need.  Genuine compassion will tug at your heart to do all you can with no strings attached.
          The actions of a compassionate heart speak louder than words.  In fact, 1 John 3:17 questions a person’s relationship with God if he or she does not display His love to the needy.
          One winter evening several years ago, my youngest daughter Karen and a girl friend walked to a café near downtown Chicago to study and enjoy a snack together.  They were students at a nearby Bible college.  Approaching the café, they noticed an intoxicated man with no coat shivering on the steps.
          Karen was wearing a new warm winter jacket and instinctively, her compassionate heart wanted to give the man her jacket.  Her friend discouraged her.  Police had been called and, arriving about the same time, also discouraged Karen from following the urges of her heart.  “Most likely he wouldn’t even wear a woman’s jacket, or would sell it for more alcohol.”
          But as the cold drunken man was taken away, Karen gave him her jacket despite the misgivings of those around her.  She never knew what happened to him, but a compassionate heart doesn’t need to know the outcome of its generosity.
          The cold man had no coat, Karen had other coats, her compassionate heart prompted her to share, and she did it.  Whether the man appreciated her compassion is unknown, but we do know the Lord looks down and sees each act of kindness done in Jesus’ name.
          The people who tried to discourage Karen saw the compassion of her heart displayed in an act of kindness.  She could have shared with them what God said to Moses: “I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion” (Romans 9:15b).
          Don’t pass up your next opportunity to show a compassionate heart, and don’t be dissuaded.
Paul J. Twist

Saturday, February 25, 2012

On The Shelf – By: Judi Allen

         My husband and I served for nine years in Belgium in a church-planting and discipleship ministry.  Together, we worked many hours learning French, helping with the teens and children, conducting summer kids clubs, hosting home meetings, making contacts with neighbors, discipling college students, preparing for Sunday services, helping implement a city-wide evangelistic outreach, and many more ministries.  The key word in all of that was “together.”
          In 1991, we transitioned back stateside and began ministry with Northwest Independent Church Extension.  For a number of years, Bob was the Director of Ethnic Ministries and the Financial Secretary for NICE.  Almost immediately I began to feel left behind in ministry.  We had always done everything together, but suddenly Bob was moving on into new ministry directions.  What was I doing?  Staying home with the kids!  I felt like I had been put on the shelf from ministry.  I chafed and wrestled against it!
          God taught me some valuable lessons during that time of frustration and discontent.  The lessons weren’t new, but lessons I needed to learn.  When we have been involved in what we consider “great things for God,” our pride makes it difficult to be involved in small things for God.  Did I really have the gall to feel that God should only use me for “important” ministry?  Pride gives us a rather exalted view of how important we are to the plan of God.
A great resource to
combat the lies of
feminism!
Link To Purchase
At Eagle Forum

          If we believe God is truly sovereign, then He has the right to use us as He sees fit.  God chooses where and how I will be used for His glory.  If I approach my seemingly insignificant situation, acknowledging that God has put me here, it is then significant.  Though we may not be accomplishing our goals, God is still accomplishing His plan.
          Spending time, thought, and energy dwelling on what you want to be robs you of joy and effectiveness in what really is.  God had placed me in a ministry that was different from the previous one.  But it was still ministry; and God desired for me to be effective in it.  I looked around and found outlets for ministry that brought great joy and a sense of being useful for God.  It is an honor to be chosen for service, no matter what the service may entail.
Judi Allen – NW Independent Church Extension – Hobart, WA
(Adapted from Voice magazine, September/October 2011.)

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Seriousness In Children and Teens

by: Jim Elliff
          It is increasingly obvious that children and young people in many evangelical churches are anything but serious about Christ. There are notable exceptions, but in many churches a cursory look at the behavioral signals put out by the young people reveal a profound disinterest. On the one hand there is a sort of giddiness and silliness by some who believe that church is there only to provide them a place for enjoying friends and impressing the opposite sex. On the other hand, a complete boredom or disdain for worship and the Word is seen in their dull eyes and passive participation. This should grieve us.
          A theological misunderstanding is to be blamed for much of this. We have failed to understand that children and young people are not God-lovers until the Spirit changes them. They are dead to God. Our attempts at getting these young people to "pray the prayer" when they were small have not necessarily made them children of God. Their behavior belies the true state of their hearts.
          God has said that the only hope for them, therefore, is the regenerating work of the Spirit in the context of the preaching of the Word (James 1:18). However, our inadequate view of depravity and the inability of man has led us to resort instead to a greater confidence in entertainment to reach them and a minimizing of the use of the Word.
          If God has ordained that the Word and the Spirit are the only hope for these kids, then we should not avoid the means God has promised to bless. Our Bible studies for young people should be more intense and our prayers more fervent for the Spirit's intervention. Children and young people ought to be sitting with their parents in worship services in order to avoid the distraction of other friends. As much as it is possible, we should not encourage young children to draw and play during the preaching of the Word since we are training listeners, not idle-minded pew sitters. And parents must show in their own enthusiasm their love and need for the Word. Pastors should seek to preach convictionally and refer often to the need of the children and teens to obey the Scriptures. And churches should weep for their children in corporate prayer. The answer is not in providing more fun things to do for the children. The answer is in the Word and the Spirit!
          If a more intense and prayerful approach to our young people does not reach them, or if many refuse to participate because there is not enough entertainment to appeal to their love of pleasure, then we should not be confused. Our children are like all the rest of the world in their attitude about God (Eph. 2:1-3). They run from the light, just as Jesus said (Jn. 3:19-21).
          Why must we assume that every great youth group has to be large and fun, when Jesus himself demonstrated that truth alienates and godly fellowship makes the unregenerate uncomfortable? Isn't John 15:19 just as true of youth groups as it is of the missionaries in Muslim countries? "If you were of the world, the world would love its own. Yet because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you."
          If you are inclined to be angry at someone in leadership of your church because your child does not have fun in church, then first consider if the source of the problem is in the heart of your child. Please don't make the criteria for judging the success of a church's efforts at reaching children and teens the fun-value of the meetings. God did not command the church to provide entertainment for your kids. And if you must speak out about it at all, attempt to increase, rather than to decrease the intensity and effectiveness of prayer and Bible study as a means to reach the hearts of the children.
          If you chose to do otherwise, you could be working against the Spirit.
Nothing is more appealing, on the other side of this issue, than those young people who are intent upon following God at any cost. The history of revival is filled with stories of such youth and children who demonstrated their faith by their deeds. In some cases, it was the youth who were the first recipients of the grace of God in revival. Somehow I cannot imagine that our emphasis on entertainment for the youth promotes the concept of authentic revival. And, frankly, I am saddened by church leaders who persist in believing otherwise.
Distributed by: www.worldviewweekend.com 
By Jim Elliff

Click here for bio and archived articles

Are You Ready For Marriage? By: Dwight Porter

          Facts and figures tell the story of broken hearts in marriage and homes. A professor in the University of Southern California interviewed 100 marriages of 20 years of more. He concluded that only six couples were happily married. James Dobson declared that last year half of the brides at the altar were already pregnant. (How can this be with so much modern sex education?) Can you imagine the consequences of one half of all homes beginning with the biological pressures of a pregnant wife? Stop to think of the financial pressures of a new baby, not to think of the emotional strain of a baby at the most crucial time of the marriage adjustment.
Pregnant girls under the age of fifteen increased 600 percent in one year in California. The murderer Charles Manson was born to a 14 year-old prostitute. We wonder what is happening to our young people when one marriage in four involves a man who has been divorced and more include a woman in the same position. In millions of families one or both spouses bring the leftovers of another married life, with all of its habits, obligations, friendships, children and financial obligations. In most of today’s marriages step-children are involved. Facts and figures tell the story of broken hearts in marriage and homes. A professor in the University of Southern California interviewed 100 marriages of 20 years of more. He concluded that only six couples were happily married. James Dobson declared that last year half of the brides at the altar were already pregnant. (How can this be with so much modern sex education?) Can you imagine the consequences of one half of all homes beginning with the biological pressures of a pregnant wife? Stop to think of the financial pressures of a new baby, not to think of the emotional strain of a baby at the most crucial time of the marriage adjustment.
           Pregnant girls under the age of fifteen increased 600 percent in one year in California. The murderer Charles Manson was born to a 14 year-old prostitute. We wonder what is happening to our young people when one marriage in four involves a man who has been divorced and more include a woman in the same position. In millions of families one or both spouses bring the leftovers of another married life, with all of its habits, obligations, friendships, children and financial obligations. In most of today’s marriages step-children are involved.
          The most important lifetime contract for any human being is marriage. It is God’s plan, and if we enter into it with a light a frivolous attitude, time will prove its devastation with the lives of those who hold marriage less than sacred. It is God’s institution, ordained by Him. Most of us reading these lines have already learned by observation the heartaches brought upon innocent children because of the divorce of their parents.
          The National Center for Health Statistics shows how common divorce has become in the US. The latest yearly count, for 1,079 totaled 1,181,000 new divorces. That was 4.5 percent above the preceding year and nearly triple the number reported 20 years earlier. Almost 1.2 million children joined the ranks of youngsters under the age of 18 who have divorced parents. Twenty three of every 1,000 married women experienced a new divorce. Twenty years earlier, the annual divorce rate was barely nine out of every 1,000.
          Today’s average church is strangely quiet about the portion of Scripture that says “No” to divorce. The fear of offending and losing support closes that portion of the Scripture to the pews. Is God quiet? Has He changed his position on divorce? Do we want our children and youth to accept it? Silence on the subject says “YES” to the popular trend away from the sanctity of marriage. We will answer to God for not declaring His whole counsel.
Definition
          What is involved in marriage? It is more than a legal and social contract; it is a covenant made under God in the presence of His children. It is more binding than any other legal contract. Marriage is God’s plan for a total commitment of the TOTAL person for TOTAL life.
          Marriage is desired and designed by God. “And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it; and have domination over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth” Gen. 1:28. “And the Lord God said, it is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help fit for him” Gen. 2:18.
          Marriage is determined by God. “And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept: and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof; And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her into the man” Gen 2:21,2. This same institution is defended by God. “Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife; and they shall be one flesh. And they were both naked, the man and his wife and were not ashamed” Gen. 2:24, 25.
          We must be committed to building a Christian marriage. “Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it” Eph. 5:25.
          The man and woman who are going to get married should have identical convictions about God. “Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers; for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? And what communion hath light with darkness?” II Cor. 6:14. Remember if your partner has no desire to please God, never will he or she desire to please you.
Mature Enough
          Marriage is not child’s play. There is no such thing as automatic happiness in marriage. It is a relationship that must be carefully nourished and worked upon. Age demands great adjustment for both parties. Marriage is one grand adjustment to each other. The girl with the princess syndrome is in for one great shock and disappointment. Marriage does not give the dreamy-eyed girl a crown. God says she is to be a helper to her husband, meeting his needs. What a rude awakening that can be! Mistaken ideas of marriage can wreck any relationship within one year. The husband is to express and demonstrate love to his companion. Remember it is easy to be in subjection to the person who loves you. It is equally easy to love the wife who is in subjection. (This is God’s direction for both!)
          Maturity or the lack of it is revealed more in marriage than any relationship. It is not taught by precept. It is realized as demonstrated by one to the other. Are you willing to assume complete responsibility for another person? If not, you are not in love and not ready for marriage. If the person you are keeping company with is not released from childish attachments, leave him or her alone with mother and daddy until ready to grow up. Are you ready to love and be loved with all of the potential of joy, happiness, sorrow, and heart break~ Are you equipped mentally and socially for a full time life of sharing all you have with another person? Have you been captivated by another individual? Is your supreme desire to make them happy and fulfilled for the rest of their sojourn on this earth? Are you willing to place the responsibility for their entire future in your own hands?
Are You Ready for Marriage? continued
Immature Motives          
          Many marry to gain their independence and control from parents. All they do is move under another set of rules and regulations. These people conclude anything or anybody is better than mother and dad. What a price youth pay for bitterness toward their parents to enter their heart and life.
          Emotional twisted values can ruin any marriage. This is the crowd that has listened to TV and attended the Hollywood movies. They have been taught that the satisfaction of sex is the one purpose of marriage. Actually it is part of the whole and not the most important. Money matters cause more divorces than sex. Sex brings little satisfaction unless mutual satisfaction, love, and respect are established in a relationship. If you doubt this, see what happens to your sex life the next go-around after a heated disagreement.
          Many have a twisted concept of marriage. They will make it because mother and dad did. Few marriages today are buoyant, refreshing and filled with desire to meet the needs of the other person.
          (Have you read my definition of love in the free printed radio message, “Am I in Love?” Social pressures of others’ actions should not be a motivation for your marriage or an indication of your readiness for it.
The Word of God gives clear distinctives for the action of husbands and wives. Are you willing to hear and abide by them? If not, you have no help from God in your marriage. He does not bless or assist disobedient people. Until you are under His authority, you will not be under his direction. Want to go it alone? Look around! Many are and all can see the consequence.
          Eph. 5:21-25, “Submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of God. Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church; and he is the savior of the body. Therefore, as the church is subject unto Christ, so let the wives be to their own husbands in everything. Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it.”
          Eph. 5:28,29,31,33, “So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies. He that loveth his wife loveth himself. For no man ever yet hated his own flesh, but nourisheth and cherisheth it, even as the Lord the church; For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall be joined unto his wife, and they two shall be one flesh. Nevertheless, let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself; and the wife, see that she reverence her husband.”
          Eph. 6:14, “Children, obey your parents in the Lord; for this is right. Honor thy father and mother (Which is the first commandment with promise), That it may be well with thee, and thou mayest live long on the earth. And, ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath, but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.”
Marriage Difficulty?
If you are one of the many involved, I would urge you to do the following:
1. Every day read a portion of the Bible together and get down on your knees and pray for definite requests shared with each other.
2. Study a portion in the Bible that give direction for each member of the family and determine with the Lord’s help to start acting properly. (It’s what you DO that counts!)
3. Be wide open with one another in all areas of your marriage. Talk everything over together. Keep no question, idea, attitude, action or reaction from one another.
4. Place your money in mutual accounts and discuss all expenditures together. Have NO his or her money!
5. Determine with God’s help to minister to your spouse. Make him or her the most important person in your life, second only to the Lord.
Some Questions
Are you ready for marriage? Face these questions and get them settled in your own mind and heart:
1. Are mutual interests more important than physical attractions?
2. Will marriage solve feelings of insecurity?
3. Should married people endeavor to change one another or accept each as they are?
4. Will two “opposites” get along well and make good adjustment?
5. How important is sex to a buoyant marriage?
6. Will the things that bother a person become dissolved in marriage?
7. Do engaged people have as much liberty with one another as the married?
8. Should a couple get married because of their pre-marital sexual relations?
9. Should emotional difficulties be ironed out prior to marriage?
10. Is there any scriptural allowance for a saved person marrying a non-Christian?
11. Does God choose a mate for us and all we have to do is locate that person?
12. How long after you meet a certain person will you “know” you are in love?
Do you believe every person should get married?
Should each partner realize their strengths and weaknesses prior to marriage?
13. Do you believe every person should get married?
14. Should each partner realize their strengths and weaknesses
prior to marriage?
15. How long should a couple wait for children after their marriage?
By: Dwight Porter (http://thehourofgraceandpower.org/Docs%20and%20Literature/Love%20&%20Marriage/Are%20You%20Ready%20for%20Marriage.pdf)

One Secret To A Happy Marriage

Article Link (rippster4christ.blogspot.com)
          Despite all of the books, videos, and cassettes in our Christian bookstores, Christian marriages continue to fall apart. With my own ears I heard a Christian psychologist, with the largest radio audience, state that the percentage of wrecked homes in the world is identical to that within the church. God’s statement in I Corinthians 7 is ignored. If we allow separation, it will be the first step in disobedience. Can I get a divorce? You are not to be separated as husband and wife, except for a temporary time, which is coupled with warning. Read it! The Bible is very clear about the husband and wife relationship!  
          There are few happy marriages in the day which you and I live. Why? That is easily understood. One condition ruins this thrilling relationship. It is SELFISHNESS! If a person disobeys God in his personal attitude and lifestyle, how can he or she expect God’s blessing upon their union?

             Before I talk about adjustment in marriage, let’s consider a modern-day misconception about this God-provided union. It is the most wonderful, thrilling, intimate relationship outside of being sons of God. Today’s philosophy says that love doesn’t need a piece of paper. Marriage to many means the possibility of getting stuck in an unhappy relationship. Remember, for many, marriage is our last best change to grow into a fulfilled, mature person. Submission to God’s leadership is a proper step toward adjustment to each other. A built-in failure results from an immature concept of this relationship. If a wife believes the home revolves around herself and the princess syndrome is to continue through married life, a poor relationship will be of her own making. If each endeavors to usurp authority over the other, they deserve the ensuing war.
          Marriage is not a guarantee of happiness. If so, marry your house, car, or TV set. Looking for a man or woman who will treat you perfectly? God help you if he or she has been found according to your evaluation. Is your love based upon your feeling, produced by your spouse? If so, your love will fluctuate with treatment, circumstances, or reactions. Love is a commitment on your part to provide all of the needs for the object of your affections.
Directions Are Clear
Scriptural directives are loud and clear for every spouse. Are you listening? Are you still reading? Here are some of them:
1. Each spouse is to submit himself or herself to one another. “Submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of God” (Ephesians 5:21).
2. The wife is to submit to her husband as the final authority in every contested issue. “Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord” (v.22)
3. The husband is to lead in spiritual worship at home and is to have loving authority over his wife and children. “For the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ
is the head of the church; and he is the savior of the body”
(v. 23).
4. He is to love his wife, following the demonstration of Christ’s love for His bride, the Church. “Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it” (v.25).
5. Children are to obey their parents. The responsibility for this obedience belongs to the parents as much as the children. “Children, obey your parents in the Lord; for this is right” (Ephesians 6:1).
6. Honor is given to parents by their children. This is deserved and merited by parents. “Honor thy father and thy mother; which is the first commandment with promise” (v. 2).
7. Parents are not to generate anger within their children (negative). They are to demonstrate, under the authority of the Lord, by their demonstration before them (positive). “And ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath, but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord” (v. 4).
8. As parents, the husband is to give definite honor and respect to his wife as one with a weaker body than his. If this is not practiced, his prayers will not be answered because of this disobedience. “In like manner, ye husbands dwell with them according to knowledge, giving honor unto the wife, as unto the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of life, that your prayers be not hindered” (I Peter 3:7). The greatest verse for married couples is found in Ephesians 4:31,32. Read it carefully. “Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and evil speaking, be put away from you with all malice; and be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God, for Christ’s sake, hath forgiven you.” Don’t miss Colossians 3:13-15. “Forbearing one another, and forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against any even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye. And above all these things put on love, which is the bond of perfectness. And let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to which also ye are called in one body; and be ye thankful.”
          But I can never forgive him. Since when is adultery unfor-givable? If God forgives, and commands the same of you, then how can you expect His forgiveness if you fail to exercise the same? “Therefore, I say unto you, whatever things ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them and ye shall have them. And when ye stand praying, forgive, if ye have anything against any, that your Father also, who is in heaven, may forgive you your trespasses”
(Mark 11:24,25).
One Secret


          Now I have arrived at my subject matter. The secret of a happy marriage is ADJUSTING to one another. Few work at this because of preconceived notions about marriage. The wedding is over; and with the princess syndrome, the wife expects a life of continuing moonlight and roses. Nine chances out often, the husband will act and react like his father Why be-surprised? You mean you hadn’t noticed prior to your trip down the aisle? Husband, are you going to be surprised at your wife’s mental attitude after observing her mother prior to her daughter’s marriage relationship with you? The big adjustment begins right
after marriage. Two individuals walking down different roads, with parents completely different, come together for a lifetime. Not too many young couples are ready for such a change of life. It is a big one! They had better possess real love. Do you know what that is? (You should write for my free printed message, Am I in Love?)
          Here are some of the great adjustments in marriage. Are you going to get through them with ease or make them insur-mountable mountains? Will you adjust to your spouse—the one that you cannot and will not make over anyway? Will you keep your attention on yourself and develop an attitude of sorrow and sympathy for the most important person in your life—YOU?
Advice and Counsel
1. When you get married, all of a sudden you are living together. Any other sexual relationship, independent of marriage, is fornication (if not married before) or adul-tery. God says NO and assures both of an entrance into Hell. (Galatians 5: 19-21)
2. The husband, realizing his financial responsibility, works hard to get established in his career. Many a wife con-cludes that his work is more important than she is. How sad! Here is another crisis.
3. When the first child arrives, the mother must take atten-tion from her husband for the new member of the family. This is a big adjustment for the husband, especially if the wife becomes neurotic about the welfare of the child. To allow a child to come between a husband and wife is the height of folly. God gives us children when He desires us to have them. “Lo, children are an heritage from the Lord; and the fruit of the womb is his reward. As arrows are in the hand of a mighty man, so are children of one’s youth. Happy is the man who hath his quiver full of them; they shall not be ashamed, but they shall speak with the enemies in the gate” (Psalms 127:3-5).
4. Don’t minimize the in-law problem. You have married your spouse’s family. Adjust to their idiosyncrasies. They have been living in a different world. If they bother you, it is your fault. No one is to cause you trouble. “Let not your heart be troubled; ye believe in God, believe also in me” (John 14:1).
5. Age takes its toll and demands tremendous adjustment. A husband in front of his wife in my office stated, “She is not the woman I married.” I proceeded to tell him, how could she be the same after presenting him three children. Living with him for all these years could change anybody. Husband, is your inference that you have not changed?
6. Age takes its toll in varied ways. Here is one of the greatest challenges in your marriage! Are you awake to the attitudes developing within your spouse? Better not
wait very long before you recognize them. In older age your concrete attitudes set up faster and harder. Are you still ministering to one another? A wide-open sharing of concerns is of great assistance during this time of adjustment.
7. At least once a month sit down together and discuss exactly how your marriage relationship is progressing. List your encouraging signs and those that give you a bit of concern. Ask your partner how you are doing, especially notice your partner’s suggestions for improvement. Better have some smelling salts in your purse. By the way, the timing of these sessions is very important. Perhaps it could be during a date, the time you get away for a few days, or after a nice cozy trip to the restaurant, but by all means, do it regularly.
Some Do’s
1. Realize that your most important relationship upon this earth (next to the Lord) is with your spouse.
2. Remember that in your marriage relationship you have the best and most effective demonstration before your children as to happiness, responsibility, and confidence. Why not assure your children at an early age that their mother and father will never separate until one goes to Heaven. Your children will soon be playing and going to school with a child who is not living with his or her father.
3. By your talk, appearance, and display of affection, prove to your spouse that of having made the right choice when he or she looks around.
4. The most important person in your household is your spouse! Be sure your entire pattern of activity revolves around him or her.
Some Don’ts
1. Don’t think complaining and nagging is going to provide what love will produce.
2. Don’t feel sorry for yourself in your spouse’s action or reaction. Keep busy meeting his or her needs. The returns will be great.
3. Stop reading fictional books, looking at soap operas, and dramatic TV series about love. They know nothing about it, since the only love in the world comes from God which is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit (Romans 5:5).
4. Don’t ever stop assuming personal responsibility for present relationships in your marriage. YOU are the first person to allow God to change. If he can change your heart, attitude, and actions, He can do the same for your spouse.

From: rippster4christ.blogspot.com
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