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Home > Marriage > Winter > This Isn't for Quitters


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This Isn't for Quitters
Why couples need stamina and courage for marriage
Annette LaPlaca | posted 9/30/2008 03:59PM



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Last summer when it got hot and steamy and I discovered that our air conditioning was on the blink, I made it only a couple of hours before I dragged my kids and the stroller off to the cool of the mall. I also take Tylenol at the first hint of a headache, and I begged my obstetrician for painkillers during delivery months before my babies were due to be born. As you can see, I'm all for making life comfortable whenever possible.

I thank God for aspirin, personally, and for the many other ways I escape discomfort simply because I can. But sometimes I wonder if we take our "escapes" at the expense of God-given instructions to "persevere" and "forgive grievances" and "endure." I think maybe we're missing out because we're too quick to be quitters. Nobody likes pain, of course, but sometimes enduring tough times is necessary to learn to do what's right. In a culture where pleasing yourself has become the national pastime, nobody really wants to hear that doing what's right is more important than being "happy"—but it is!

There are gray areas certainly. It may be right to change jobs, neighborhoods, or churches when things become unbearably difficult. Those are situations that call for prayer and guidance from God.

But hanging in there in your marriage versus giving up is a no-brainer. The Bible states clearly that God considers the covenant of marriage sacred. This is not an area where we can afford to be quitters. Yet it's happening all around us.

Now that I'm in my thirties (okay, late thirties), I've reached the age where I'm hearing that friends from work or church or college have split up. To tell the truth, I find it depressing, especially when it turns out that everyday marital stresses—communicating over roles or money, handling the balance of work versus home, in-law issues—pushed these couples to that feeling of hopelessness.

My friend Diane Eble once wrote about marriage calling for courage. When problems—even big glaring problems—come up, it's the courageous who speak up and get help, who knuckle down in humility to work at their marriages, who hang in there until time and effort do their work and things get better.

Nothing wrenches me more than when couples race to the idea of separation. I can imagine the despair of feeling that problems are so painful, so wide-ranging that the only option to reach for is a way to stop the pain. But I'd love to encourage those couples to hang on. To get help from everywhere—friends, church, counselors, and the God who changes lives. I feel like telling them stories of folks I've known who hung in there—and later were so glad they did.




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