Several times in our first year of marriage, I ran home. My mom, however, would never say one bad thing about Ken and I was never invited to spend the night. I have seen parents support their daughters when their daughters wanted out of their marriage for reasons other than any type of abuse. This was always very sad to me.
My soon-to-be daughter-in-law sent me a wonderful article about a woman who ran home because she was "miserable" in her marriage. Her mother was one wise woman. She had her daughter make a list of all the things she didn't like about her husband: Bill never picked his clothes off the floor. He never told me when he was going outside. He slept in church. He had embarrassing, nasty habits such as blowing his nose or belching at the dinner table. He never bought me nice presents. He refused to match his clothes. He was tight with money. He wouldn't help with the housework. He didn't talk with me, etc.
Then she asked her to write next to each criticism of her husband the way she responded when her husband acted like this: I'd pout, cry, and get angry. I'd be embarrassed to be with him. I'd act like a "martyr." I'd wish I'd married someone else. I'd give him the silent treatment. I'd feel I was too good for him. The list seemed endless.
Then her mother cut the paper in two, handed her the list of her responses, and told her to go home and pray about them. After spending all afternoon doing this, her realization was "I saw a record of petty behaviors, shameful practices, and destructive responses. I spent the next several hours asking God for forgiveness. I requested strength, guidance, and wisdom in the changes I needed to make. As I continued to pray, I realized how ridiculously I'd behaved. I could barely remember the transgressions I'd written for Bill. How absurd could I be? Nothing immoral or horrible was on that list. I'd honestly been blessed with a good man—not a perfect one, but a good one."
She decided to go back to her husband. Her husband didn't change but she changed through God's power. She stopped looking at his faults and began looking to God and began loving her husband as God commanded her to do. Her husband ended up getting Alzheimer at an early age and she was so thankful she began treating him with respect and loving him as she should before this terrible disease affected him. You can read all of her story HERE.
I was listening to a woman teacher yesterday. She said that if you have a rebellious 15 year old son, stop quoting the Bible to him, stop making him go to church, stop yelling and screaming at him {as our natural inclination is to do}, but instead fix him his favorite meal, smile at him, speak warmly to him, win him with love. Therefore, if we are called to treat a 15 year old rebellious son this way, certainly we can treat our husbands this way who we are one flesh with, even if they leave clothes on the floor, don't help with housework, watches too much TV, is tight with money, etc.
Love bears all things, believes all things,
hopes all things, endures all things.
I Corinthians 13:7
wellsbunch2014j 32p · 562 weeks ago
The difference came in me. From that day forward, I had to be responsible not only for my actions in our marriage, but also for my reactions.
wellsbunch2014j 32p · 562 weeks ago
Christine · 562 weeks ago
wellsbunch2014j 32p · 562 weeks ago
helen · 562 weeks ago
Lori made it clear in her post that it didn't apply in cases of any type of abuse!.
Blessings
Helen UK
Nora · 562 weeks ago
Boy oh boy I was I had some training on what to expect when I got married. My dear husband was a slob and I took that as a personal attack. I remember feeling like I was suddenly "the maid" Now i realize that he was just doing things as he had always done. I was the one being petty. When I changed my attitude and started to let go of the "little things" our marriage changed. My husband wants me to be happy, if i simply ask him to do something, he usually does it. For example, i asked him to put his clothes in the hamper as it makes it easy for me to know that's what he wants clean. 90% of the time he does. I don't fret about the 10% when I find dirty socks in the nightstand, i just smile:)
Lori Alexander 122p · 562 weeks ago
Cynthia · 562 weeks ago
(Obviously, if it was a truly horrible situation, that could become clear as well. "Has a cute bad-boy look" as a good point doesn't outweigh "spent the rent money on drugs, went to jail again and assaulted me in front of the children while high".)
Lori Alexander 122p · 562 weeks ago
afewthingstoday 18p · 562 weeks ago
Kevin Leman wrote a book called 7 Things He'll Never Tell You But You Need to Know and one of them is "Think of Me as a 4 year-old Who Shaves" Funny but so true. Men do appreciate being babied sometimes. I know if i were doing things i shouldn't i'd change much faster if my husband kept respecting me anyway and loving me in spite of myself. Thank you for the post.
Lori Alexander 122p · 562 weeks ago
Sue B. · 562 weeks ago
Lesson learned: Be careful what you share about your relationship with your husband with anyone, even your mother. You will get over your anger and resentment, but your friends and family may not.
Cynthia · 562 weeks ago
The woman in the article was lucky that she had a wise mother. I see SO many cases where family members get involved and make problems between a couple 100 times worse.
I'd say that if someone, husband or wife, is having problems in the marriage, they should speak to:
1. Their spouse - in a polite and respectful way.
2. A professional counselor, who has a reputation for good advice and who knows how to maintain confidentiality.
Some pastors or mentors are also counseling professionals, some are not. I'd be careful about confiding in someone who doesn't really understand what confidentiality is all about. A young wife may think, "I've found an older woman to be my godly mentor", while the older woman doesn't appreciate her role and blabs their story around the congregation. [Keeping confidentiality is hard work! At times, I've had to refrain from telling even my husband about marriages in trouble, which is how he knows that I can keep a secret. Most people that I know naturally talk about people that they know.]
Lori Alexander 122p · 562 weeks ago
jsr · 562 weeks ago
It would be nice to see more Christian writers not playing the get-out-of-marriage-free abuse card. Especially with the excessive labels of abuse being piled on in today's society. It's an admittedly tough doctrine, but I Peter 2 - 3 seems pretty compelling on abuse not being a divorce excuse. Furthermore, cite one bible verse that allows divorce for abuse.
Lori Alexander 122p · 562 weeks ago
Miriam · 562 weeks ago
Lori Alexander 122p · 562 weeks ago
Ken · 562 weeks ago
if a spouse is abusive you have two possibilities. He/she has some underlying hurts and failures that propel the abuse and need work to discover and resolve, or they have a bad heart. Both of these can be healed by the blood of Jesus and His Spirit working mightily in the situation, but no Bible admonition insists on a wife staying in an abusive relationship, even if divorce should still be put far on the back burner to reconciliation and healing.
Herein lies the biggest issue with "abuse" in the Christian world today, that too many want to define it for themselves when there is no physical threat whatsoever. Some tend to define what is right and wrong, what expectations should be met, and any gross set of unmet expectations can easily be labeled abuse. A perfect example is a young husband coming from a single apartment situation where he does his laundry once a month and dirty and clean clothes are left lying around. A wife can internalize this and decide her husband is unloving, unkind, even abusive because she has to pick up his stuff all the time, when he never asked her to pick up a thing. It is just the way he is used to living, and in time, most men will figure out where the clothes hamper is, but that still does not mean they can figure out what is clean or dirty, so they still leave clothes laying around.
One person I know married a cop and was shocked to find he kept his loaded gun by his bed stand. To him he was protecting the family and to her it was abusive, and that plus other young man issues lead to a divorce. No abuse, but he was called abusive. He next wife loves him dearly and has no problem with a loaded gun in the house. After all he is a cop and the safety is on.
To marry means each spouse must leave some room for the other to grow up and learn to be considerate. A Believer should not define abuse in a marriage by what they perceive is wrong, inconsiderate, or misuse, but that word should be reserved for threatening and potentially injurious behavior... not hurt feelings or missed expectations, no matter how inconsiderate a spouse may be. We have too many divorces not for true abuse, but for immaturity and doing inconsiderate things that given time, most Christian men will grow up of and learn to be more lovingly considerate of what their wife sees as a big deal, while to him, is just living life like he was when he was single.
And you are correct. The Bible does not give abuse as a reason for divorce, but separation for a time is possible, especially if it is approved by leaders in the church who should be protective of each and every flock member, and their marriages.
Cynthia · 562 weeks ago
When I work with families, I often avoid the word altogether, because it means different things to different people (although I've never heard anyone going as far as to say that dirty clothes on the floor was abusive).
Instead, I will talk about things like violence, threats and safety issues, because it is concrete. I will ask about any risks causes by substance abuse (including alcohol) or mental health issues. Not all safety threats are caused by deliberately evil and abuse intent. Nobody chooses to be psychotic, and while addiction can be related to bad choices nobody really chooses to be an addict.
Control and/or isolation can be an element of abuse, but I ask about that separately.
Verbal abuse is a concern, because it can poison both the relationship and the atmosphere in the home, but it isn't always a "get a restraining order and go to a shelter" sort of situation.
Children being involved in conflict between parents is another separate concern. I wish more parents realized just how damaging this is - children learn not to respect their parents, they feel torn, and they often withdraw from one or both parents. The extra stress leads to stomach aches, headaches, eating disorders, sleep disorders, school problems, behavioral problems, etc., and in the teen years it can be an absolute disaster if kids put themselves at risk with no real adult authority in their lives.
Amy B. · 562 weeks ago
Lori Alexander 122p · 562 weeks ago
Roxy · 562 weeks ago
Enough said about abuse, as we would never allow that with true intervention for safety of all involved! But running away from home is usually another wrong reaction of the wife.
Maybe a night away to get some perspective and prayer and counsel from a biblical source.
A man sometimes does not realize how lonely a home is without his wife and family!
Just a thought...
Miss Roxy
Lori Alexander 122p · 562 weeks ago