
Home > Marriage > The Early Years
 Marriage Partnership, Spring 1998
Why We Need Anniversaries
Once a year, we have an excuse to remember. What memories are
we making today?
by Les and Leslie Parrott
A couple of years ago our family gathered around a large,
circular table in an elegant restaurant, the place that has served as the
backdrop for many of our most meaningful celebrations. For decades, our family
has come here from around the country to mark holidays, birthdays, graduations,
promotions and farewells. But this time was different. We were gathered to
honor Les's parents on their 50th wedding anniversary.
The food, as always, was exquisite. The anniversary cake was lovely. The
presents were nice, but not worthy of such a noble occasion. What impressed
us most, however, wasn't the gifts, the food or the festivities. It was something
my father said. We had just offered grace and thanked God for the family
and the many years my parents had been together. Then, before picking up
his fork, Dad looked around the table and said: "I can't believe it has been
50 years! The time is so short!"
The rest of the meal was devoted to reminiscing. Mom talked about the times
when each of her three sons was born. She could describe in detail the various
homes we lived in. There was the first pastorate they took during the Korean
War, and Dad's transition to being a college president during the Mid-East
oil crisis. They reminisced about their first trip to London and many other
journeys around the globe. They've had hard times, of course, but what they
remember are the things they have enjoyed together.
My parents' celebration of 50 years together stands in marked contrast to
our culture's obsession with time. We develop elaborate strategies to make
the hours we spend at work more productive. We're conscientious about running
errands on the way home to make more efficient use of our commuting time.
We plan ahead to maximize the benefit of our leisure time. This compulsion
might result in more things getting done, but it also underscores what we
are missing. In our quest to maximize the value of time, we have forgotten
how to treasure it.
By focusing too intently on making every minute count, we run the risk of
squeezing the enjoyment out of the time we have together. Marriage doesn't
operate on a 40-hour week; it's a daily, long-term, dawn-past-dusk partnership.
That's one reason anniversaries are so important. They give us a chance,
once a year, to take stock of where we've been, how we've gotten to this
point, and where we're headed next as a couple.
What will your marriage look like in 50 years? Can you imagine your long-term
future together? Proverbs 24:3-4 says: "By wisdom a house is built, and through
understanding it is established; through knowledge its rooms are filled with
rare and beautiful treasures." After half a century, what memorable treasures
will you find in your house of love?
My parents' anniversary got Leslie and me thinking about the mere decade
or more of our own marriage. We have started marking time more carefully,
taking the opportunity to reminisce about the good gifts we've enjoyed as
a couple. Mom and Dad's major marriage milestone helped us mark our own progress.
We were reminded that the memories we treasure tomorrow will be the ones
we create today.
Something else struck us about Mom and Dad's golden anniversarytheir utter
dependence on God. They are living proof that no single factor does more
to cultivate oneness and a meaningful sense of purpose in marriage than a
shared commitment to spiritual discovery.
Spirituality is to your marriage as yeast is to a loaf of bread. We have
said to hundreds of couples: Ultimately, your spiritual commitment will determine
whether your marriage rises successfully or falls disappointingly flat. Will
you look back while celebrating 50 years together and say, "I can't believe
the time is so short"?
Les Parrott, Ph.D., and Leslie Parrott, Ed.D., are the authors of Saving
Your Marriage Before It Starts and Like a Kiss on the Lips (both
published by Zondervan).
Copyright © 1998 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
mp@marriagepartnership.com.
Spring 1998, Vol. 15, No. 1, Page 52
Marriage Partnership
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