My Abundant Life study remains on hold,
why I don’t know, but that’s the way it is.
My
frontal lobe is clogged with fidelity thoughts! Why, I ask myself, should I be
concerned with marital fidelity? I’ll be 80 this year, we’ve been in love for
57 years, and very happily married 54 years; why is my head full of fidelity
concerns? Can’t answer that; I can only share what‘s on my heart.
The
benefit of this sidetrack may be singularly mine, but I’ve learned to follow
the leading I have, and not complain about the leading I don’t have. This is longer
than planned, but some topics can’t be covered 140 characters; sometimes 1,000
pages are skimpy.
First, a working
generalization; men are physically immodest and emotionally modest. If you ask a
man about family life or business, you’ll get a general answer, but few
details. Men don’t talk much (emotionally modest) but if you give them a
problem they want to fix it.
Women,
on the other hand, are physically modest and emotionally immodest. Women like
to talk, “If you want to know what’s going on, ask the wife.” When asked, women
will tell you about the children, grandchildren, and their bank account. (Men
are always unhappy to hear their wives discussing the family finances with
anyone outside the inner family circle.) Men must learn that sometimes when
women bring up a problem, they don’t want a fix; they only want to express
their feelings and perhaps hear the husband’s point of view. That can frustrate
men, if there’s a problem they want to fix it.
Second, marriage is a
covenant between a man and a woman, to give themselves to each other.
Scripturally, her body belongs to him, and his body belongs to her.
Men
are stimulated through their eyes (physically immodest), therefore a wife needs
to let her husband see ‘his-body’, in the shower, walking through the bedroom,
getting dressed, in attractive clothes, or displayed in a negligee. Being
physically modest, this can be difficult for some women.
Women
must keep their bodies in shape (for example, not over weight). Their body is
the only legitimate body their husband has; they need to show it to him, often
and displayed the best possible way!
Women,
on the other hand, are stimulated through their ears (physically modest). Men
must tell their wife how nice she looks, that she satisfies his every need, and
that he loves her – and tell her often (in 50 different ways). Give her a gift,
for no reason at all; let her know she’s special and important.
Both
men and women must commit their attention and devotion to their marriage 100%,
it’s not a 50-50 deal, each partner devotes 100%.
Third, the process of
marriage is like a dance: he leads, and she follows. That doesn’t mean one is
more important than the other, it means that dance is the marriage process.
In
marriage, like dance, he leads; he does not have a choice. He can’t say, “You
lead”, whatever he does is leading. She follows, but, she has a choice (not scripturally),
she can decide not to follow.
If
she follows closely, pays attention, works at following, the dance is graceful,
and other dancers enjoy having them on the dance floor. When she follows
closely (fitting in with her husband’s plans) she allows him be a better
dancer, and he will try harder to be a better leader. It works best when each
gives their 100%!
If
she decides not to follow – there is no dance, and the marriage vow is broken,
infidelity has happened!
Fourth, God created us,
such that, we need acceptance and approval, just like we are. Not only do we
need acceptance, we must have it, and we’ll get it – either legitimately or
illegitimately.
When
first married each person has the approval they so desperately need – they are
happy, they are in love! Love is something they do (consciously and
unconsciously).
Fifth, I have a basic
operational premise: nobody, but nobody, (regardless of sex, race, religion, or
age) starts out a day saying, “Today, I’m going to screw up. I plan to come
home tonight a total failure.”
I
don’t think people do that, rather, I think everyone does what is socially
acceptable (in their thinking, at that moment, within their social circle) and
they do it to have acceptance and approval from their social group. Race
drivers, bull riders, soldiers, high wire performers, risk their lives to get
acceptance from their social group. Teenagers wear certain clothes and hair
styles, to get peer acceptance.
Now, the topic at hand, - marriage
fidelity.
I’ll
use a man for my example, but it could just as well be a woman. He goes to
work, does a good job, gets acceptance and approval from the office, and when
he gets home he is tired and does not feel the need to give his wife the acceptance
she needs. He didn’t plan it, it just happened.
If
that pattern continues the wife will start looking for acceptance and approval
illegitimately. She may watch TV, spending too much time with the folks in the
tube, and not enough time getting her husband’s attention.
Or,
she may find some girl friends, meet with them regularly, let her housework
slide, and thereby transfer ‘just a little’ of her devotion to ‘the girls’ and
away from her marriage. She may talk about her spouse and share intimate moments
that she should be sharing with her husband. (She is emotionally immodest.)
Or,
it may happen when the kids are born. Unintentionally, the mother pours her
love and attention into the kids, her needs are being met, and she does not
feel the need to give, or get, attention from her husband, so she lets that
portion of her marriage vow slip – just a little, at first.
As
the kids grow, she buys extra things for them, things to keep their love and
attention, but things that were not in the family budget. When the husband is
displeased with the missing funds, and the bank overdrafts, she becomes
defensive – he is tampering with her source of love and affection. If asked,
she would deny being out of step, and not following the dance leader.
Infidelity has happened – the marriage vows are broken.
If
these, “just a little” attention moments continue over several years, they grow
into a big deal! A silent-divorce develops, two adults living under the same
roof, and they don’t have the marriage they planned. “How did it end up like
this?”
There
are thousands of ways this ‘just a little’ happens, and it’s different in every
marriage. Getting love and attention illegitimately may stretch into one, or
both, of the partners having a sexual affair – one time or ongoing.
Ethicist Richard Taylor wrote a book on Having Love Affairs
(Buffalo: Prometheus Books, 1982) and he discusses whose fault it is when there
is an affair.
“Though a wife may be ever so dutiful, faultless, and virtuous in
every skill required for the making of a home, if she lacks passion, then in a
very real sense she already is without a husband, or he, at least, is without a
wife.
“Similarly, a husband who is preoccupied with himself and his
work, who is oblivious to the needs of his wife and insensitive …, who takes
for granted her unique talents and who goes about his business more or less as
though she did not exist, has already withdrawn as a husband, except in name.
“What has to be stressed is that the first infidelity … may not
have been committed by the one who is having an affair. The first and ultimate
infidelity is to withhold the love that was promised, and which was originally
represented as the reason for marriage to begin with.”
Now for a fix – from my point of view
(remember, I’m a man, I want to fix things)
Infidelity
happens in every marriage (not always sexual) and the fix is always the same.
Healthy marriages ‘fix it’ early and often. Unhealthy marriages allow the ‘just
a little’, or ‘it doesn’t matter this time’, experiences to go un-fixed, those
‘little’ things pile up - until one (or both parties) says, “Enough is enough!”
So,
what is the fix?
The
first part of the ‘fix’ is for each partner (or only one) to ask, “What did I
do to cause these broken marriage vows?”
I’ve
noticed, that if one or both partners ask, “What did I do … “ the marriage is
fixable. But, when one or both partners define their problem as “He/she
did/does … thus and so’” a fix is questionable. Why, because a change is
required and you can’t change ‘them’!. The only person that a spouse can change,
is themselves.
But
there can be a fix.
Forgiveness
and new actions, that’s the fix!
It
doesn’t matter what the problem is – it really doesn’t. Bank overdrafts,
emotional TV, and sexual infidelity – they are the same to God. He doesn’t
grade sin – sin is sin, and it’s forgivable (by us and God). The ‘fix’ requires
discussion, a lot of repentance, a boat load of forgiveness (by both partners),
and a truck load of plans for change (for both partners). Fixed marriages can
continue and become better and stronger.
Why
forgive – for our own benefit! In the Lord’s Prayer we ask God to forgive us as
we have forgiven others – that’s why we forgive (at least that’s one reason)! We
want forgiveness; therefore we are obliged to give forgiveness.
To
put it another way, what has happened to us is not important, but, our reaction
to what has happened is important. Forgiving will not change the past, but it
can change the future.
Discussion,
forgiveness, and new actions, that’s the fix!
3 comments:
(from email)
Well said!!!
In HIS servide
Jim Edlin
WestWell Farm
10176 FM 3138
Channing, TX 79018
(806) 717-1667
(via email)
Wow dad.
This is Awesome. I'm digesting.
More time tonight. I am so blessed by you. You change everything.
Everything.
I love you.
my blog:: it's all connected....
http://suzysammons.com
(via email)
I appreciate your sending me your essays. This one was full of good thoughts. Joyce and I have been faithful to each other for nearly 51 years of marriage. Sometimes my thoughts have wandered, and I needed to confess such and receive forgiveness. Praise God forgiveness is available. I certainly am not worthy of eternal life--praise God for His grace. Thanks for your creativity and beneficial thoughts.
Doug Stave
Post a Comment