Hello, Blogger World! I am finally back at it. It has been awhile, and let’s just say life happened. God has been tugging on my heart to get back at it, so here we go.
I want to keep blogging on marriage. Marriage is a big part of my heart and it is definitely my passion. My marriage is not perfect, but God has blessed us with a healthy marriage, and I want to share some tools we use to keep it healthy.
Quick to forgive. This can be really hard, and it can make or break a marriage. What do I mean when I say quick to forgive? Well, there are day-to-day things like putting the toilet seat down, cleaning up after making a mess, or snoring really loud. (You can’t see this, but I am writing this at 3:20am because Jon is snoring so loud and I just couldn’t anymore.) These are the little things that just come with being married. We quickly learn to just let go and not hold on to these things. Let’s be honest… after 18 years of marriage it is what it is.
Then there are the hard ones, where it is not so easy to be quick to forgive. The ones that hurt. The ones that feel like your heart has been ripped out, thrown on the floor, and stomped on. The ones where you can’t breathe and you cry yourself to sleep. The ones that can make or break your marriage. You know those ones.
This past July my world came to a complete stop. I felt a hurt and pain from Jon that I thought I would never experience. A hurt where I could have just walked away from him and it would have been justified. I won’t go into details out of respect for Jon, but let’s just say it was a big one.
When he dropped this bomb on my lap, I experienced every emotion known to man. I hated him, I felt sick, I was crushed, I loved him, but yes, I honestly wanted to punch him in the throat more than once. I yelled at him, I cried, I was silent towards him, and I felt numb towards him.
Over the next couple of days, we talked A LOT! Well, mostly it was me talking… we know men and the many words they have to say when the going gets tough. (This is me trying to lighten the mood of this blog.) Anyway, we got to a point where we needed some help. Let me say how important this part was for us. Lots of women and men at this point in marriage crisis want to hold this hurt in. They want to do 1 of 2 things: #1 not talk about it and bury it deep down, or #2 they want to hold it over their partner, making them suffer and get back at them for hurting them so bad. I didn’t want to do either of those things because I loved Jon so much, and I wanted to work this out.
This is why we reached out to a good friend of ours who is very wise and has training in this area. Along with this friend, we knew we needed, really needed, God and the Holy Spirit to help us get through this hard time. Our friend came in and talked with us and did some prayer/healing time with us. This friend looked at me and asked if I could forgive Jon. In my mind is was yelling Are you kidding me?!?!? He doesn’t deserve my forgiveness! No way am I forgiving him! He needs to hurt the way I hurt! Of course, I didn’t say any of that out loud, but I did say I know I should, but I don’t know if I can. The next question was a game changer for me: Do you give your spirit permission to go ahead of you and forgive Jon, and then you will catch up over time?
That I knew I could do! Believing that resulted in a shift I could feel. By letting my spirit go ahead of me and forgive Jon, I was allowing myself time to heal as I worked toward forgiveness. This is what it means to be quick to forgive. This doesn’t mean that it’s all better and perfect, rather it allows the Holy Spirit in to heal my heart, to daily forgive, and to not hold on to unforgiveness towards Jon.
What felt like an epic disaster turned into this beautiful thing. Our marriage has changed since that day, but it has changed for the better. I (and I know this will sound crazy), but I have fallen more in love with my husband. We look at each other with more grace and more love.
In 1 Corinthians 13:5 it speaks about love and how it doesn’t keep a record of being wrong. This is what it means to be quick to forgive. Don’t keep a tally board of all the wrongs your spouse has done. Talk it out and hand it over to God. We don’t need to carry all the wrong around with us, it only results in bitterness and anger. Ask God to search your heart for any unforgiveness and leave it at his feet. This works for all relationships, not just marriage.
Do you struggle with unforgiveness in your marriage or in other relationships? If you do, please reach out. It’s amazing how God has already used this situation to speak life into marriages that are struggling. God is so good! Jon and I would love to help. We’d love to walk with you and invite the Holy Spirit in to bring healing, peace, and restoration.
1 Corinthians 13:4-5
Love is patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud or rude. It does not demand its own way. It is not irritable, and it keeps no record of being wrong.