Friday, February 21, 2014

A Marriage Full Of Weeds


She wants out.  She is fed up with her husband.  
This is the comment she left recently on one of my posts ~

My husband is a selfish man who lives as a bachelor with no regard for me or our child.  He has chosen him and his circumstances over us, every time.  One time we were locked out of the house, on a freezing cold snowy day.  We tried to break into the house.  My keys were inside so we couldn't start the car either.  We called him and he said he was still bowling so he could not come home.  We were having a certain problem and he told me I just needed to fix the problem.  He has always refused to go to counseling.  I feel like his maid, his mother.

Our marriage is an over grown garden full of weeds.  I am ready to leave him.  I am so tired of not being able to count on him to have my back.  He is more like a brother, one that I don't like, than a husband.  I just want out!  

How I will respond to her is how I respond to all women I mentor.  I will not try to get her to change her husband through different tactics but through the tactics spelled out in Scripture.  I will address her to try to see where she may be part of the problem and encourage her to become the godly woman God wants her to become.

I know there are some of you who can relate to her desperation.  What would you tell her?  Yes, he sounds like a selfish man but I would ask her if she is a selfish woman.  I would ask her if she has a gentle and quiet spirit that is so precious to God.  Is she submissive to him and shows him respect even though he doesn't deserve it?  Has she tried to win him by becoming a more godly woman?


This marriage probably began with two people in love.  After the warm, fuzzy feelings wore off, she probably began focusing on his faults instead of his good qualities.  She began having contempt for him instead of respect.  This is a fallen world.  She will never find a perfect spouse.  If she can't respect this spouse because of certain weaknesses, she will never be able to respect any spouse. Thus, the vicious ugly cycle begins and the marriage goes downhill.  She shows him contempt and they both begin treating each other with contempt, instead of with gentleness and forgiveness.

  The Bible says that when a husband is disobedient to the Word, win him without a word.  I would beg her not to leave him.  He has done some wrong things but nothing worthy of divorce.  We want out too easily today.  Life is hard.  Marriage is hard but that doesn't mean you should quit.

Work on yourself and allow the Lord to work on him.  Love him even when he doesn't deserve it.  We are not very good at being living sacrifices and servants to others, especially our husbands.  If she began loving, serving, and pleasing him, I am sure she would draw him to her and he would want to protect her.

You may tell me I am a dreamer and this way doesn't always work.  I have seen it work too many times to discount it.  I believe God and His promises.  It may take a long time but I believe she would eventually win her husband to herself and they could have a strong, good marriage.  Please don't give up whoever you are.  Fight for your marriage.  Your child needs a daddy.  You will very much appreciate having a husband in your old age that you have grown old with.  It will be worth the fight.

What therefore God hath joined together,
let not man put asunder.
Mark 10:9


Comments (41)

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Oh, how I hope and pray many, many couples can open their eyes to this truth!
Was this just one isolated event, where a husband said something stupid without thinking, or was it one example out of many which show a real pattern of being utterly insensitive to the needs of the family?

Would you suggest that a wife submit to a husband's request that she have more children, that she not have a cell phone or that she not have a spare set of keys made, if she made it clear that this was an example out of many?
4 replies · active 579 weeks ago
God has impressed upon my heart this: That I love my husband not because of why's, I just love him full stop. True love cannot explain why I love a person, you just do. You know their faults and their shortcomings but you just love your husband because God is trying to get you to understand "Until death do us part", that He is a God of covenant and He delights in unity and oneness. I have tried to rationalize this, I have tried to explain it to my self but I can't, every recess of my heart, all I find is love for my husband, so I guess God must have this love in there for a reason.
A faithful reader's avatar

A faithful reader · 579 weeks ago

You said on Facebook that we cannot assume this man is cheating. But you are assuming the woman was unsubmissive or a nag. Isn't this inconsistent? Just trying to understand.
8 replies · active 578 weeks ago
Lori, I agree with this post and really enjoyed it. I hate to even say this but I am feeling a little put off by all of Cabinetman's comments on your blog all the time. Have you and Ken asked him to help moderate comments, or does he just check it a lot and spend a lot of time here? You and Ken's approach always seems so much more gentle and kind, and I always learn a lot from the two of you.
11 replies · active 579 weeks ago
Reading this post makes me sad as it reminds me of my sister's husband. The thing about my brother - in - law is that he is verbally abusive. I would say he is even verbally abusive to me and my children to the point my husband said I will not stay there again without him because I was so upset and distraught after visiting last time. She is my twin and we are really close so it breaks mY heart. What should I tell her. I have never approved of him, and I have a lot of guilt about not discussing it with her before she married him. He is the most selfish person I have known. I have been proud of my sis, She has been loving, forgiving and focusing on her relationship with God. However, It kills me to not see her happy and treated right.
1 reply · active 579 weeks ago
These sorts of stories are very sad and no one can assume that it is her fault. My husband can be very sweet and loving but he also has a very bad temper that can be very hurtful and has nothing to do with what I do. After almost 30 years he still that very bad temper that still hurts. I understand where this lady is coming from and I can feel her sadness and frustration. She really needs a strong female friend who she can talk to honestly with out be criticised and told she is nagging or that it is her fault. She needs someone who cares about her and her well-being. I need to vent sometimes, there is really only so much a person can take before they snap and talking to a friend does make a huge differences.

I don't think some people realise how much strength (and grit) some women need to get through a difficult marriage. Not all husbands are saints. I often read here how much men have to endure with their "difficult"wives, well us women can have "difficult" husbands that need a lot of will-power and strength too (and many many hours of prayer).
1 reply · active 579 weeks ago
Your last sentence said it all Lori! Thank you for sharing the truth over and over. He can be won!
And, from a logistical point of view, I think many women think it will be "easier" once they get divorced. I couldn't imagine that being further from the truth. Then they deal with visitation, child support, holidays, remarriages, splitting up everything. The marriage may seem hard but divorce isn't any easier (and certainly not better of course!)
In response to many of the comments above, I don't think that it's productive to make assumptions, one way or the other, about the situation in the original comment.

Instead, if I was asked for advice by this lady, I'd be asking more questions.

When did the incident occur? How was it ultimately resolved? How did the husband explain his reaction? What other things have bothered her? How does the husband usually act with their child? Does he ever take care of the child or show concern? Does he contribute to the household and family in any way? What would she identify as his good points? And so on.....

Making assumptions is dangerous. There are situations where I have been asked for advice, and I've discovered that a small comment was just the tip of the iceberg in a truly horrible, even dangerous situation. In other situations, I've discovered that a comment was based on something that was truly blown out of proportion and that someone is determined to see their spouse in the worst possible way.
1 reply · active 578 weeks ago

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