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(a fictitious letter)
Dear Fellow Friends of Rachel,
Did you know that infants, if put in a pool, start swimming naturally? It’s kind of scary to watch because, well, they are infants. What more can they do than sleep, eat, poop and cry? Letting go of an infant takes a huge amount of trust in the child’s natural instincts. Something we can’t see.
But the baby will swim.
I’ll cut to the chase. I am writing this letter in my office feeling very disturbed. I have been corresponding with our mutual friend, Rachel. She describes you as her Christian community and local support network.
Rachel, as you know is going through a separation. Divorce is the next step, but she doesn’t want that. She has been deeply wounded. She always thought marriage would bring her happiness, not disappointment and heartache.
As people who love her, it is only natural that we would want to protect her. It’s not fun seeing those you love in pain and tears. We want to fix them and make them feel better…immediately.
Here is where I was shocked. Rachel has admitted that they are both to blame, yet you affirmed her moving out. To walk away until he changes. I’m sorry…what part of “unconditional” love teaches ultimatums? I must have missed that in Sunday School.
Your instruction is that she can’t do the humble and unconditional thing of moving towards her husband because she would ultimately be rolling over and dying.
Dying?
This is the kicker. Rachel has told us all that her husband is struggling in his faith. Should she not be the one who shows that much more grace? Should she not work harder to win him back to Christ even when it’s not easy?
We all know Rachel’s personality. She is smart, outgoing, and strong willed. The only way I can see her rolling over and dying is if her husband physically tried to murder her. And even that would be difficult for him. She is too smart.
I have prodded and asked Rachel to tell me if he has been unfaithful. No. Has he beat her? No. She has even admitted that despite the ways he has hurt her, he has also asked her to move back in, pray together and talk.
But now you…you all are telling her she shouldn’t…because she is too vulnerable.
Is she?
Does pain = vulnerable?
Or can pain be present, but vulnerability evaded if there are strong people holding her hands and helping her discern what is true or not true? Is it possible for her to hear his unkind words in his weak moments (ones she will admit having dished out herself) and live with the mindset of, “I do not accept this behavior, I do not receive words of untruth, but I will not give up on this marriage.”
Is it possible for Rachel to stay committed to this marriage even when it doesn’t feel good? Do we just walk away in 2010 because a spouse is doing things we don’t appreciate right now? Is there grace for people having bad seasons? For making mistakes?
If we don’t, then we are acting and giving advice no different than the rest of the world.
It feels like we don’t trust God to show up.
This is why my generation is getting divorced after two years or two months.
We give up too easily and don’t trust that unconditional love and unconditional respect (even when our spouse doesn’t deserve either one) could actually be the right thing to do and what God calls us to do.
We don’t trust that being the bigger person and being obedient could actually soften the person who is ultimately more at fault in their behavior. (Gasp! God actually might know what he is doing?)
No, instead we make demands.
“Do this or else.”
I don’t remember that being part of Rachel’s vows.
What I do remember was this:
“In good times and in bad.”
A study done in 2000 showed that within five years, just 12% of very unhappy married couples who stick it out are still unhappy; 70% of the unhappiest couples now describe their marriage as “very” or “quite” happy.
What does this mean?
There are seasons!
Do we think the divorce lawyers are going to tell us that? Lawyers and many counselors focus on the here and now. They play to your feelings and emotions. And we have fallen for it.
Please remember, I love Rachel. I know she is not being abused. She is not in harm’s way. She is not married to an evil man. She will admit this if you just ask her.
Christians—do you love people enough to point them towards obedience and truth or do you love them like a coddling mother who pulls her infant out of the water when it’s floundering and in tears? I get it, you do it because you love the baby and you don’t want to see it suffer. Perhaps your fear of suffering is rooted in the fact that you don’t ultimately trust that they would actually be able to swim.
Love,
Joy
P.S. An extra little note from Matthew, Mark and Luke: “It would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck and he were cast into the sea than that he should cause one of these little ones to sin.”
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Love and Respect (Now) is a division of Love and Respect. Please be considerate.
I was talking to my dad this morning about one of his friend’s sons who called him to let him know he was divorcing his wife. I was really shocked that this young man would have called my dad. The only thing I can think of is that he is the only Christian man he knows and maybe somewhere beneath all his broken and empty logic he knew he shouldn’t be doing what he was doing.
I got to thinking about how so many of us are going to have a difficult chance in our lives to speak truth to a friend who is looking for a way out of their marriage. It’s hard to disagree with someone who is hurting and point them towards the hard and narrow path, but I think as Christ followers we should all be prepared to do that when our time comes.
Thanks for doing that Joy. Not so much with this hypothetical letter, but in your relationships. Don’t grow weary of doing good.
What happens when we’ve encouraged the person to follow Jesus back into the marriage, but they refuse? We support them in love anyway, right? I mean, being a nag in the name of Jesus doesn’t seem to go over well for me. What do you think? You offer a ton of great insight here, plus you’re funny, so keep talkin’, girl.
Great post! Am especially curious about the stat you listed re: happiness in couples. That’s really encouraging; is it from your dad’s research?
The process of undulation is a really important one for all young people to get a grip on; young couples especially, I think. I wonder what percentage of couples find themselves contemplating divorce only to push through and discover that things really do “get better.” I’d guess of people who are still married, the percentage is pretty high.
Of course, marital counseling, and the adoption of the love & respect principles of communication in marriage, can probably make a great difference as well.
Thanks for being willing to protect Rachel’s marriage, Joy. It helps me know that you would do the same for me- God forbid it would be necessary!- one day.
great post, joy! -exactly, marriage does bring both happiness and heart ache. When we accepted to follow Christ, we accepted the same. We have the ultimate eternal joy, and the almost unbearable cross. Isn’t that why marriage is a VOW to God? not a conversation to move in and maybe spend forever together if it ‘works out’… was marriage designed to be easy and happy-go-lucky? or does it require a similar ‘cross to bear’? Sometimes the Community gets a little too comfy in their temporary home called Earth…or America. Where things DO have immediate answers, transactions, communication, transfers, satisfactions, pain-relievers…And they can forget that marriage is worth climbing the huge Mt Everest of pain!
It’s great to have you on her side! Keep it up, & if she is as smart as you say, then she must be honored to have such sound advice and encouragement from Joy herself.
– the good the bad and the ugly. The promise to be there no matter the shoot that happens. How many times has adversity glued friendships tighter together, making the stronger ones concretely bonded, and letting the weaker ones visable? (well for me, a lot, i say bring it on!) Come on, it’s your best friend – you get sick of them, they get sick of you…but you are one!!! When one is weak, the other needs to be strong. Look at God, and His heart will come into vision as soon as your spiritual eyes focus. Patience, pain and endurance are OK (i know foreign,) to exercise. Right?
Thanks again, Joy for the post!
PS-i won the “where is this” contest this week – unless that is really on some safari in africa. then i will be more jealous than sad i did not win the knives.
Kelly: I completely agree, being a nag, especially in the name of Jesus never works. I believe there is a way to do things as Jesus would, never compromising truth, and not being a nag. It doesn’t mean people will fall down and worship you though…thats the bummer. (-:
“We support them in love anyway, right?” Yes and no. We love them, but we tell them the truth in love. Which means sometimes we don’t support them. And its OK to say that to people.
“Rachel” knows where I stand on her moving out and separating from her husband. But I also have the freedom to say that to her because I am not some random person on the street corner. I loved Rachel before this happened, she knows I love her now, and she knows Ill love her after…but I will never support something I believe she shouldn’t be doing.
As Janel commented, it will make the real friendships stronger, and the weaker ones visible. Sometimes, people don’t really want our advice, they want our approval. So, as sad as it is, they may walk away from the friendship if you don’t approve of what they are doing, but you can be sure, they didn’t really value you as a friend or your opinion seriously to begin with. And, in the end, most of those friends even though they seem like you have lost them, will come back to you one day because they know deep down you are the only one who told them truth (if you did) and didn’t just try to appease them.
Val: I got that statistic from this article in City Journal: http://www.city-journal.org/html/10_4_why_marriage_is.html
Thank you for your comments and thoughts. You are right on and you know I am always there for you & the Rhetters.
Janel: Great words. You are such a passionate woman who will be able to help so many people with the truth of commitment. You will have to wait and see if your guess is correct. Don’t go buying a knife sharpener just yet. (-:
bev thinks...
totally agree. preach it, sista 🙂
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