
Home > Marriage > Spirituality
 Marriage Partnership, Fall 1998
Doing Unto Othersat Home
The first place to live out the Bible's 'love one another' advice
is right in your own marriage
by Margaret Brouillette
Sunday mornings
around here are crazy. Inevitably I find only five shoes for six small feet.
Somebody leaves a puddle of water on the bathroom floor, and we take turns
stepping in it. My hair religiously says "no" to efforts with the blow dryer
or curling iron. The kids realize they need to go to the bathroom only after
they're pressed and dressed and Dad is waiting in the car.
And then there's the roast. One Sunday morning when we were expecting company
for dinner, I put the roast in the oven and forgot to set the timer. We ate
sandwiches. The next week I double- and triple-checked the timer. Pierre
checked the timer. The oven worked wonderfully, but we left the roast on
the counter. We ate beans.
Why bother? Why not just take the day off, like our neighbors do? Because
we love church. We love the music and preaching, and we especially crave
fellowship with God's people.
Fellowship is the unique and life-changing dynamic of the body of Christ.
The apostle Paul describes Christians as members of one another called to
serve one another, exhort one another, be devoted to one another, honor one
another, encourage one another and bear one another's burdens. That's mutual
edification. And Sunday morning's fellowshipafter a hectic week at homeis
simply refreshing.
Pierre and I stay committed to being with the people in our church because
fellowship doesn't happen unless we spend time with them, giving and receiving,
so God can produce change in our lives. Funny, though, how sometimes in my
rush to be with the family of God, I forget that my number-one source of
fellowship is right beside me. My husband, that guy who brings home the lean
bacon and takes out the garbage, is also my brother in Christ. As Christians
we're exhorted to help build each other's spiritual lives. That means Pierre
and I should continually seek ways to "spur one another on toward love and
good deeds" (Heb. 10:24). In marriage, God brings another person up close
for the purpose of helping us live out all those "one another" commands that
Paul wrote about.
We're All Different
One of the things that makes life in a church family challengingand
effectiveis that people and their circumstances are so different. I can
look around in church and see a home-schooling mother of five children, a
lonely divorcee, an ambitious businessman and a starry-eyed teenage couple.
I can see my husband, too. Like other members of the body of Christ, Pierre
and I are different. In the same way God puts varied members together to
serve different functions in the church, I believe God plans that when two
become one in marriage, their diversity would be their strength.
On days when I do not revel in my husband's structured (I didn't say
"monotonous") approach to life, the Bible reminds me that fellowship begins
with acceptance. Pierre isn't like me, and that's okay. And when our selfish
nature makes either one of us hard to live with, we find an answer in Ephesians
4:2-3: "Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another
in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond
of peace." That "bearing with one another" is a nice way of saying, "Put
up with him; he has to put up with you."
So I'm learning to recognize Pierre's punctual, one-thing-at-a-time lifestyle
as the perfect balance to my more "gymnastic" approach of spinning and flipping
as I plunge into multiple activities and relationships. That diversity is
our strength.
The Inside Story
It's actually easier to deal with brothers and sisters at church because
I can generally control the intensity of those relationships. If something
gets too hard or too personal, I can pull back some. But with Pierre, it's
for better or for worse, and there's no easy out. The Bible says to be "devoted
to one another in brotherly love" (Rom. 12:10). That's the core of commitment,
and I'm committed to Pierre.
I want to show my "brother" at home a devoted, intimate kind of love. We
know each other like no one else, which means we have the tools either to
destroy or to enrich each other's lives. Paul says, "encourage one another
and build each other up" (1 Thess. 5:11). If Pierre is questioning his capacity
to lead our family, only I can give him the boost he needs. When the pressure
of work starts to wear away his confidence, I can help him bear that burden.
And when I become engulfed in the whirlpool of multiple activities, this
man who knows my capacities and my limits can steer me back toward my real
priorities.
To honor one another, we make an effort to touch on special points of interest
or talent and brag to others about our amazing spouse. Once I overheard Pierre
telling friends that I had a special way with people on the fringe, making
them feel a part of the group. I was encouraged. Somehow a mention of my
strengths means so much more coming from the person who knows all my weaknesses.
Two-Way Street
The beauty of fellowship is that it goes both ways; it's a mutual exchange.
Christians get to share with each other the gifts of God's grace. Marriage,
too, is a mutual arrangement.
Things go wrong in a church family when some people set themselves up as
the "givers" without being able to receive support and encouragement from
others, or when some come only to "take," exploiting the church for what
it offers without desiring to love and serve as well.
Likewise, setting out to "get what you can" from your spouse is exploitation.
It's more subtle, but equally harmful to feel that you are the only one "giving"
in your relationship.
I am learning to receive from Pierre. When I talk to a friend about somebody
else's personal life, I can count on my "few-words-a-day" husband to suggest
that maybe it was gossip. Ouch. That hurts. But thanks, Pierre. I needed
it. Because Pierre and I are different but also close, the give-and-take
of exhortation rings true.

Because my husband
and I are different
but also close, the
give-and-take of
exhortation rings true.

In Ephesians, when Paul exhorted spouses to submit to each other, he understood
something about mutual service. This is the "washing each other's feet"
principle. When my partner does not or will not "wash" mine, I can by the
grace of God make concessions, forget myself and do something special just
for him.
One day as I worked furiously at the computer, my three children simultaneously
had mother emergencies. I barked, um, balked and Pierre stepped in to deal
with the situation. When I finished my work and went upstairs, expecting
bedlam, the bath was drawn for me and tea was ready. My husband had "washed
my feet" when I needed it but didn't especially deserve it.
In John 13:34, Jesus admonishes his disciples to love one another. He knew
that true fellowship in the new body of believers depended on that mutual
love and care. God planned for the same loving diversity, intimacy and
reciprocity to be lived out in the union of a husband and wife.
So of course Pierre and I will keep making it to churchdespite bad hair
days and semi-frozen roast beefand keep investing in fellowship with the
members of that body. But we also want to make the most of the rich potential
for mutual edification between us. Sunday morning and every other day, this
is fellowship at its best.
Margaret Brouillette is a writer living in Quebec, Canada. She and her
husband, Pierre, have three children.
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.
Fall 1998, Vol. 15, No. 3, Page 14
Marriage Partnership
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