Monday, June 18, 2012
Lenses
The reason this a fact is because we all wear lenses, like sunglasses and these lenses, color what we see.
Perhaps the most powerful lens, the lens that floods our perception with the most color is the lens of love.
Recently, my wife Robin and I went to visit my uncle and aunt. My uncle had been in declining health for some time.
We arrived at their house and after exchanging greetings and hugs at the door, my aunt led us into the bedroom where my uncle lay resting.
As I held his hand and spoke to him, I couldn't help but notice my aunt as she climbed into bed beside him and stroked his hair and rubbed his bare chest now gaunt from months of battle.
His injury of years ago, which claimed his right arm was apparent as only a thin sheet covered his lower body.
I watched as my aunt loved my uncle with her words, service and touch. The whole time, I was thinking about the rarity of such devotion.
The damages of injury, the frailty of illness, and the eminence of death are not attractive; however, my aunt did not see those things. She saw the love of her life through the powerful lens of love.
I received the expected call today of his passing. And I am reminded to look at the people, especially, my family through that strong lens.
What lens is coloring your view of the people in your life?
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Leading, Walking and Awareness
While waiting to get in the lazy river, I noticed a couple walking toward the start of the line. The man was walking about 10 feet ahead of the woman and when she stopped to place their towels and flip-flops in a grassy area, the husband kept going, unknowingly allowing several people to get between them in line.
In observing this, I couldn't help but think about the importance of being spouse aware. Sometimes, as a husband we know we are to lead and, in doing so, we walk on, only to find that no one is following. Why?
What separates a leader from those merely taking a walk, is awareness. In marriage, this is called spouse awareness. As husbands, we must know where our spouse is, relationally, emotionally, physically and spiritually. If we know where our spouse is, we will know better what they need from us and we can meet their greatest desire - feeling loved and secure.
It works for both husband and wife. Are you aware of your spouse today?
Friday, June 15, 2012
Marriage, Dribbling and Basketball
I did surprisingly well, considering that I have not shot hoops for several years. The majority of my shots found the net, but some bounced off of the rim - and a chase ensued.
While on the court, I was reminded of something. When a basketball is dribbled it maintains a steady rythym and direction. However, take your hand away and the ball's course becomes less predictable and it's rythym grows weaker with every bounce.
Our marriage is like that basketball. When we keep our hands on it, it is steady, it is fun and it is productive.
It's when we take our hands away - become passive rather than proactive, self-centered rather than spouse-centered and disengaged rather than invested, that our marriage begins fading down a slippery slope.
Keep your hands on your marriage- and your spouse. ;) Have a ball but don't lose the ball.
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Real Honesty
It's so easy to get caught up in dishonesty for the sake of convenience.
Be real with your spouse in even the little things. Intimacy begins to grow there.
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Too Much of a Good Thing
I am always amazed at how gifted my wife is at juggling all her different roles in life. Wife, Mother, worker, pastor's wife, ministry leader, homemaker and friend. Without a doubt, Robin is a Proverbs 31 woman, with an incredible work ethic. She wears every hat of her life with excellence and looks mighty fine in each one.
However, even though that characteristic is a strength and is very desirable in a wife, the extreme of that characteristic can lead to trouble.
Too often, couples come to us who are in marriages that have gone stale - that have lost their spark. A reoccurring trait in the marriages of many of these couples is that they suffer from priority issues.
Clean dishes and clean kids are important, as are regular meals and folded laundry. But, I'm guessing that husbands across the country would be thrilled to have that one on one time with their wife - over a pristine living room and a 5 course meal.
A wise husband would do well to ease his wife's load by helping with projects and the daily things that need done. But, when the time created by doing so is habitually used to tack on additional projects instead of connecting relationally or intimately, the husband receives a message that the wife never truly intended to send.
Wives, are you showing your husband that you value him over projects, chores, daily routines and schedules? Does this mean that you should drop everything and whisk your husband off to the bedroom when he would least suspect it? Every once in a while - YES!
God has given you, as a woman and as a wife, a nurturing spirit. And as a husband, I thank God for it. It is in your nature to serve your family - desiring to meet their needs.
Remember to prioritize those needs from time to time. Want to be a great wife? Show your husband that he means more to you and you desire to be with him more than you do matching socks in the laundry sometime this week. Meet his need to be with you.
Also, when your husbands does help with projects and other tasks, it typically means two things.
1. I love you and I want to serve you by helping you.
2. I love you and I want some time with you.
In your husband's mind, being with you is a good thing that he can never get too much of.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Borrowing Time
1 Corinthians 7:1, 6 MSG
"Now, getting down to the questions you asked in your letter to me. First, Is it a good thing to have sexual relations? Certainly—but only within a certain context. It's good for a man to have a wife, and for a woman to have a husband. Sexual drives are strong, but marriage is strong enough to contain them and provide for a balanced and fulfilling sexual life in a world of sexual disorder. The marriage bed must be a place of mutuality—the husband seeking to satisfy his wife, the wife seeking to satisfy her husband. Marriage is not a place to "stand up for your rights." Marriage is a decision to serve the other, whether in bed or out. Abstaining from sex is permissible for a period of time if you both agree to it, and if it's for the purposes of prayer and fasting—but only for such times. Then come back together again. Satan has an ingenious way of tempting us when we least expect it. I'm not, understand, commanding these periods of abstinence—only providing my best counsel if you should choose them."
Recently, Robin and I accepted a challenge put forth by colleagues of ours in marriage ministry. What was the challenge? It was marriage-strengthening, it was intimate, it was fun, it was satisfying, it was incredible and it was - A CHALLENGE!
We were challenged to have sex, make love, be intimate, however you want to label it, at least once a day for seven days.
You might be thinking, "What's the challenge in that?" Try it! As good as it was, we discovered, within ourselves, a fact that we warn other couples about.
Life can be draining - emotionally, mentally, physically and relationally. We wind up borrowing energy that could be used for a intimate and sexual encounter to use to get through the day.
Priorities! It was amazing what the challenge did for our marriage. In honesty and transparency, we went through day six, when back injuries, treatments and borrowing took it's toll. However those six days transformed something in us - it re-ignited a holiness and an intimacy in our marriage.
Not surprisingly, many couples of varying ages are, simply put, not having sex on a regular basis, or regularly enough to be the spiritual warfare that it can be in a marriage.
Where are you borrowing time and energy in your life that is stealing from your sex life?
Good sex isn't the only thing in a successful marriage, but it is a important aspect. Want an increase in holiness? Want an increase in intimacy? Stop borrowing time and energy from your sexual potential.
Can you go 3, 5, 7 days straight to re-ignite your sexual lives. Regardless of the amount of time, you will be amazed at what it will for your marriage.
Are you battling for your marriage? Battle together in the bedroom.
Monday, June 4, 2012
Marriage's Death Row - Part 8 - Quarrelling
Gal 5:19-21 NLT