
Home > Marriage > Help & Healing
 Marriage Partnership, Winter 1996
Bonds of Steel
Strengthening your marriage to survive anything
-by Donald R. Harvey
Every couple face things they'd prefer to avoid-job losses, severe illnesses,
financial reversals, deaths of close family members and many other such events.
We call them crises, roadblocks, setbacks or tragedies, and
none of these are terms of endearment. That's because these storms of life
place immense stress on usand they also test our marriages.
When crisis strikes, some couples not only weather the storm, they emerge
stronger and more united than before. Others struggle through the pain, and
some marriages are destroyed by the crisis. So what makes the difference?
It mostly comes down to what spouses do during the crisis itself. Do they
give comfort and support to each other, or do they withdraw emotionally or
cast blame? Do they allow friends or family members to extend support or
do they isolate themselves from outside help? Do they cling to a spiritual
life or do they rely, instead, on "their own understanding" and abandon their
faith?
How you react during a crisis is important for the survival of your marriage.
But the real battle is won or lost before the crisis occurs. A marriage
that crumbles under intense pressure is similar to a china cup with a hairline
crack. While the cup is sitting on a table, the crack goes unnoticed. However,
when the cup is held up to the light, the tiny crack becomes visible. The
light doesn't cause the crack, it only illuminates a fracture that already
exists. External crises are like the light, illuminating difficulties that
lie under the surface of a marriage. So while the outside influence (the
crisis) may seem like the problem, the real problem is what's going on inside
the marriage before the crisis strikes.
Marriages that survive share at least three characteristics. First, the couples
are committed to marriage as a sacred institution. Their commitment
brings stability and provides staying power even during the most severe setbacks.
Every marriage needs this resilience, but true survival requires more than
simply bedrock commitment to an institution. If this is the only characteristic
working in a marriage's favor, the relationship can easily become lifeless
and devoid of emotion.
Second, survivors are committed to marriage as a relationship. I have
friends whose daughter was severely depressed, even suicidal. "We felt so
helpless," John told me. "When things were at their darkest, Pam and I found
ourselves holding each other tight. Through tears, I told her things may
get a lot worse for us, but we'll survive even if it does." John was telling
Pam he loved her, no matter what might happen. He was committed to more than
the institution of marriage; he was committed to Pam.
The words were comforting, but John wasn't telling Pam anything she didn't
already know. "I knew we were in this together, regardless of what might
happen," she explained, "because of the way John and I both lived throughout
our marriage."
For more than 20 years, John and Pam had practiced being sensitive to one
another's needs. They had guarded their relationship against time pressures
and striving for material success. And they had practiced mutualitygiving
and receiving in roughly equal measure over the years. They shared a goal
of looking for and doing whatever was in the best interest of their relationship,
even if it meant sacrificing some personal comfort. John and Pam survived
the pain of their daughter's depression, and their marriage was made even
stronger because of it.
There's a third characteristic that enables couples to weather the big storms
of life: a vital faith and commitment to God. Vital faith appreciates
"the big picture." Life doesn't operate according to our agenda. Pain comes
to everyone, and we learn some of the greatest truths from things we wouldn't
choose for ourselves. God uses personal experiences to develop our ability
to deal with the crises of life. By learning to trust him in the little storms,
we are prepared to trust him in the big ones.
Married Christians have to guard against the "Teflon mentality"an expectation
that pain, stress and hardship can't really touch us but will magically slide
right off. It's true that Christians are not of the world, but we
are definitely in it. We do feel pain and stress. But we don't have
to be overwhelmed by them.
I don't totally understand the "all things" verses in Scripture: "all things
work together for good" (Rom. 8:28) and "give thanks for all things" (Eph.
5:20), but I believe them. God does not cause bad things, but he allows painful
and unjust experiences. And there is a useful purpose in them. The trials
of life may cause us pain, but they refine our faith in a way nothing else
can (1 Pet. 1:6-7).
It's time to face some facts: Life is hard, and you and your spouse are not
exempt. It's not an issue of if, it's a matter of when. And
when the storms arrive, they will stress your marriage.
But here's a second fact: You can survive the stormsand even be strengthened
in the process. You can do it by winning the battle before it begins by
strengthening your commitment to your marriage, demonstrating that commitment
by building your relationship with your spouse, and growing a faith that
embraces the big picture. God always has a future for his people.
Donald R. Harvey, Ph. D., is a marriage therapist and a professor of marriage
and family therapy. He and his wife, Jan, live with their two children near
Nashville, Tennessee.
Copyright © 1996 by Christianity Today International/Marriage Partnership
Magazine.
Winter 1996, Vol. 13, No. 4, Page 50
Marriage Partnership
Home | Archives | Contact Us
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Try an Issue of Today's Christian Woman Free!
 |
 |
|
 No credit card required. Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only. Click here for International orders.
If you decide you want to keep Today's Christian Woman coming, honor your invoice for just $17.95 and receive five more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The trial issue is yours to keep, regardless.
Give Today's Christian Woman as a gift
Buy 1 gift subscription, get 1 FREE!
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
|