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1st Marriage 2nd Marriage ZZ

Marriage is for losers

‘Don’t be selfish; don’t try to impress others. Be humble, thinking of others as better than yourselves. Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in others, too.’ Philippians 2:3-4(NLT)

You can be right, or you can be married; take your pick. — Dr. Kelly Flanagan, “Marriage Is for Losers” (UnTangled blogpost, March 2, 2012)

Dr. Kelly Flanagan, a clinical psychologist and writer, wrote a blogpost titled “Marriage Is for Losers.” In it, he wrote, “If marriage is going to work, it needs to become a contest to see which spouse is going to lose the most.”

A contest to see which spouse is going to lose the most. What would that even look like?

  • When the baby cries, both spouses race out the bedroom door, bumping into each other at the hall corners, just to get to the crying infant so the other one can rest.
  • Your spouse’s calendar and career takes precedence over your own.
  • In the midst of a really bad day, you still seek ways to make life easier for your spouse.
  • When flipping through Netflix and trying to decide between Sylvester Stallone’s 16th boxing movie or Rachel McAdam’s 17th romantic comedy, you choose as though your spouse is sitting next to you.
  • When you are having a rough day, you seek ways to make the day easier for your spouse, not yourself.

Listen, Christ calls us to do most things backwards from what the world and your flesh are telling you. So if you’re going to make your marriage a competition, compete over which spouse will lose the most.

Major life decisions would be much less traumatic on marriages if each party sought to lose so the marriage would grow. I’m not saying to lie down and put aside all of your opinions. I’m not saying to neglect your dreams and hopes. I’m not saying to change your taste in movies. Simply put, become second.

Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others. (Philippians 2:3-4)

Seek second. Choose to lose. In fact, become a real winner by choosing to lose every chance you get.

Lord of our Covenant, this is so exciting! I have multiple ways every day in which I can choose to lose. Remind me daily of my fullness in Christ and the filling of Your Spirit. For once I realize I have everything I need, I will be empowered to tend to the desires of my spouse over my own. Show me very specific ways You want me to do that right now, today. Amen.

from Choosing to Lose Wins in Marriage by Peter Briscoe

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1st Marriage 2nd Marriage ZZ

Be the first loser

‘Don’t be selfish; don’t try to impress others. Be humble, thinking of others as better than yourselves. ‘ Philippians 2:3(NLT)

I’ll insist my competitor is the greatest, so that when I beat him, I won’t be calling myself the greatest—I’ll be proving it through my actions. — Jarod Kintz, Seriously Delirious, but Not at All Serious

When I was young, people asked me, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” When I was little, my answer was the traditional fireman. During early adolescence, it was a professional athlete. When I was a teenager, the people who asked me that question got a strange answer. I’d say, “I want to be the best.”

“The best at what?”

“I don’t care. Doesn’t matter. I just want to be the best.”

The fact is I like to win. Winning, I believe, is more fun than losing. Coming in second just means you’re the first loser.

Nothing is wrong with trying to win unless we’re talking about relationships. Nothing kills a relationship faster than someone trying to win.

Here are a few examples: It’s 2:00 in the morning. The baby cries—again. You stare at the wall and think, Winning for me is getting to stay right here in this bed. That’s what your spouse is thinking too. Both of you are staring at the wall, practicing your deep sleep-like breathing, and waiting for the other one to get that baby. (Hey, I had three kids, okay? I got pretty good at that!)

Or you have one Friday night and two events: A couples baby shower or tickets to a game. There’s an argument. Emotions escalate. Winning, for you, is getting the last word and going to the game.

Or what about a financial decision? One spouse wants to save the money while the other one wants to spend it.

It doesn’t take a genius to see that winning in these ways does not lead to a winning marriage. Winning in the little things is like having a little bit of plaque on your teeth. Over time, that plaque builds up, leads to decay, and the marriage dies.

In marriage, when one wins both lose.

Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. (Philippians 2:3a)

In other words, stop trying to win. I’m not being simplistic and I’m not being unrealistic. Your spouse is not your competitor, okay? You can break the losing streak in your marriage by choosing to win God’s way, and that means dropping the competition thing and letting God love and serve through you.

God, You desire for me to have a servant’s heart, so I need You to give me the desire for the same thing! Show me how I’ve been trying to win inside my marriage. Reveal to me the ways I compete with my spouse. Give me peace in letting go of that desire to be number one in a relationship of two. Amen.

from Choosing to Lose Wins in Marriage by Peter Briscoe

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1st Marriage 2nd Marriage ZZ

No Record of Wrong

‘So watch yourselves! “If another believer sins, rebuke that person; then if there is repentance, forgive. Even if that person wrongs you seven times a day and each time turns again and asks forgiveness, you must forgive.”’ Luke 17:3-4(NLT)

‘But when you are praying, first forgive anyone you are holding a grudge against, so that your Father in heaven will forgive your sins, too.”’ Mark 11:25(NLT)

‘God blesses those who work for peace, for they will be called the children of God.’ Matthew 5:9(NLT)

‘Then Peter came to him and asked, “Lord, how often should I forgive someone who sins against me? Seven times?” “No, not seven times,” Jesus replied, “but seventy times seven!’ Matthew 18:21-22(NLT)

Devotional Content:

Forgiveness can get complicated in marriage relationships. We think if we forgive our spouse for what they did, they might feel they got off easy and not learn their lesson and do the same thing again. We think if we forgive our spouse for what they did, it doesn’t let them know how much they hurt us. We complicate forgiveness by having our own agenda instead of God’s agenda. We think, “if God really knew what my spouse did, He would understand. God doesn’t expect me to forgive that does He?” When we withhold forgiveness from our spouse, it can give us a false sense of power. We have something they want. We have control of when we say, “I forgive you.” All of this might make sense in a movie or a television drama, but in a Christian marriage, no.  

The truth is that God is God and we are not. God tells us to forgive. It’s not a “when you are ready,” or “when they have suffered enough” forgiveness. It’s forgive because I forgave you. It’s a Calvary hill forgiveness. Somehow in the midst of our hurt, we forget about that. We forget that Jesus gave His life so we could be forgiven. Our role is to forgive. What happens next is up to our spouse and to God.  

I know this for certain: When a person withholds forgiveness from their spouse, it never affects the spouse as much as it does the unforgiving person. God did not create us to be judges. That is His role and He is ever just and fair. In your marriage, be quick to forgive and resolve issues. It’s what God tells us to do.  

Today’s Challenge: 

Dr. Kim says that forgiveness keeps no record of wrong. Apply that to your marriage relationship.

Going Deeper:

Are there areas of unforgiveness in your marriage? If so, what are those areas? What steps will you take to forgive those areas?

from Stop The Fighting – Part 1: Breaking The Cycles Of Unhealthy Conflict by Dr. Kim Kimberling

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1st Marriage 2nd Marriage ZZ

A “Not Good” Cycle

‘“So if you are presenting a sacrifice at the altar in the Temple and you suddenly remember that someone has something against you, leave your sacrifice there at the altar. Go and be reconciled to that person. Then come and offer your sacrifice to God.’ Matthew 5:23-24(NLT)

‘Some people make cutting remarks, but the words of the wise bring healing.’ Proverbs 12:18(NLT)

‘And “don’t sin by letting anger control you.” Don’t let the sun go down while you are still angry, ‘ Ephesians 4:26(NLT)

‘“Do not seek revenge or bear a grudge against a fellow Israelite, but love your neighbor as yourself. I am the Lord .’ Leviticus 19:18(NLT)

Devotional Content:

Nancy and I have had many cycles in our marriage. Some of them were good; others were not. One of the “not good” cycles centered on the “not good” way we were handling conflict. If something happened that bothered one of us, we would stuff it.  “Stuffing it” means that instead of dealing with what happened in a healthy way and resolving it, we would either act like it did not bother us or give the other person the silent treatment for a day or two. Either way was not good. You can only stuff so much until you reach your limit and then all the “stuffing” comes flying out. Once the explosion was over, we would resume our cycle and nothing changed. That cycle was killing our marriage.  

Conflict in marriage is normal. You are never going to agree on everything. You will never see everything eye to eye. So you have a choice. Keep fighting the way you have been fighting or change. This is what I want you to consider. Keep short accounts.  When something happens in your marriage that bothers you you have three choices.  First, you can decide it is not really a big deal and let go of it. That works because you made a choice. You chose to not make this a battle. Second, you can give it to God.  Instead of you handling it, you let Him handle it and you leave it in His hands. Third, you can write it down and set a time to talk it through. That’s your “short accounts” list.  Something happens and as a couple you deal with it. You don’t stuff it. You don’t ignore it. You wait until there is a good time that works for you both and you talk it through. No more explosions. No more unhealthy cycle. It’s your choice. All three ways work. Let it go. Give it to God. Deal with it. What will you choose to do?

Today’s Challenge: 

On a scale of 1-10 with 10 being the highest, how important is forgiveness in your marriage? Why?

Going Deeper:

Dr. Kim talks about keeping “short accounts” in your marriage. What is your first step to do that with your spouse?

from Stop The Fighting – Part 1: Breaking The Cycles Of Unhealthy Conflict by Dr. Kim Kimberling

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1st Marriage 2nd Marriage ZZ

A Communication Vacuum

‘Don’t use foul or abusive language. Let everything you say be good and helpful, so that your words will be an encouragement to those who hear them.’ Ephesians 4:29(NLT)

‘Getting wisdom is the wisest thing you can do! And whatever else you do, develop good judgment.’ Proverbs 4:7(NLT)

Devotional Content:

One of the things that I thought I did really well in the early part of our marriage was speak. I thought I hit a home run with my words, ideas and thoughts. I could not understand why Nancy was not awed at my wisdom, but she wasn’t. In fact, my wisdom could really get under her skin. Why? It took me a long time to figure this one out. When Nancy was speaking to me, sharing a concern or something that was on her heart, I was not listening. I was thinking about what I was going to say when she stopped talking or what I was going to do once she finished. When I finally opened my mouth and spoke it would have been a minor miracle if I said anything that had to do with what she just shared. I don’t think it was a conscious choice, but over time, she quit listening to me. Now we were in a communication vacuum and we were stuck.

We needed to start over. We needed to commit to speaking clearly when something was important to one of us and we needed to learn to listen well to each other and I needed to take the lead since I was the one that got us off track in the first place. This is what happened. We both began to do a better job of speaking in a way that the other could hear. Nancy was all about information so I needed to touch all the bases when I was sharing something with her. I was all about being affirmed. I wanted to know she was interested in what I was saying. Then we both worked at really focused listening and making sure we really heard and understood what was said. Was there effort?  Yes. Was there work? Yes. Was it all worth it? Absolutely!

Today’s Challenge: 

If you really want your spouse to hear what you are saying, what do you need to do as the speaker?

Going Deeper:

Think together about the distractions that make it difficult for the two of you to speak and listen well. What can you do to eliminate these? 

from Stop The Fighting – Part 1: Breaking The Cycles Of Unhealthy Conflict by Dr. Kim Kimberling

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Why Communication?

‘Understand this, my dear brothers and sisters: You must all be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry. ‘ James 1:19(NLT)

‘To one who listens, valid criticism is like a gold earring or other gold jewelry.’ Proverbs 25:12(NLT)

Devotional Content:

There are a number of things in marriage that I don’t get. Much of that is because I am male! There are things that God teaches me in marriage that I still don’t understand. I don’t get that Nancy and I can be so connected when we are communicating well and spending quality time together daily, then have one day of not communicating or spending time together and be back at ground zero. I thought I could build up some equity and take a day or two off. Well, I guess I can take that day or two off, but there is no equity to draw on.  

God made male and female differently. Many of those differences we really like, but there are some that leave us scratching our heads as we try to figure them out. The thing God taught me that I do get is to accept the things He teaches me. He knows. I don’t. Most women are much better at conversation than their husbands and even though the talk would go more smoothly with another female friend, they want to talk to us. Our role is to talk and listen and talk and listen. We will get to their role in another reading plan.

Now this is the really cool thing I have learned. When I spend time communicating with Nancy, our marriage is better and I really like that time with her. Once I quit fighting the difference and started embracing it, things turned around and we began to fight less.  The better we communicate and listen to each other and seek to understand each other, the less we will fight and the less we fight, the better our marriage!

Today’s Challenge: 

How much time do you spend each day communicating with your spouse? Decide as a couple when and how you can spend more quality time together.

Going Deeper:

Each of you make a list of things you could talk about to your spouse. Now you have your conversation starters. Talk!

from Stop The Fighting – Part 1: Breaking The Cycles Of Unhealthy Conflict by Dr. Kim Kimberling

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1st Marriage 2nd Marriage ZZ

Made by Love

‘So God created human beings in his own image. In the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.’ Genesis 1:27(NLT)

‘Then God looked over all he had made, and he saw that it was very good! And evening passed and morning came, marking the sixth day.’ Genesis 1:31(NLT)

Imagine the transformation in your marriage if you viewed one another as image-bearers of God! The Lord chose to display his attributes through mankind—the final masterpiece of all he created. 

How do you see the Lord’s image displayed in one another today? Value each other’s intelligence and creativity,  compassion and mercy, beauty and strength, justice and integrity, discernment and wisdom, kindness and love. Despite your imperfections, the fingerprints of God are wonderful to see. 

Take a moment to pray and thank God for the unique creation of your spouse. Name the qualities you value most—the ones that remind you of Jesus. Ask for a greater appreciation for who they are. Pray for eyes to see past their weaknesses and celebrate their strengths. 

Trust that God has made you “very good” and delights in who you are (Gen. 1:31). He’s ready to show himself to a lost world as his character is revealed through your lives. 

Lord, help us understand what it means to be made in your image. Let us cherish one another as your priceless creation. May we know you better as we grow closer to each other. Amen. 

from Mr. & Mrs.

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1st Marriage 2nd Marriage ZZ

Keep Up the Fight

‘For we are not fighting against flesh-and-blood enemies, but against evil rulers and authorities of the unseen world, against mighty powers in this dark world, and against evil spirits in the heavenly places.’ Ephesians 6:12(NLT)

‘So humble yourselves before God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. ‘ James 4:7(NLT)

The devil is determined to ruin your marriage. He knows a godly husband and wife portray Christ’s love for the church. He’s aware that when “two or more are gathered” in prayer, God is with them. He can see the encouragement and strength found in your family. He’ll do whatever he can to destroy what God has joined together. 

Resist him by putting on the armor of God. Fill your minds with the Word so you can recognize his lies. He’ll whisper that divorce is the answer, that your spouse doesn’t really love you. He’ll tell you that a sexual experience outside of marriage won’t hurt anyone—that God cares more about your happiness than your wedding vows. 

Hold tightly to your salvation and faith in God’s forgiveness. When the enemy works to divide or harden your hearts, show grace instead. When he tempts you to sin, live in obedience by the power of the Spirit. Show kindness and integrity to your partner at all times. 

You have all you need to stand firm in God today. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you (James 4:7).      

Lord, give us strength to stand firm when the enemy attacks our marriage. Protect us from his schemes that would tear us apart. Amen.

from Mr. & Mrs.

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The Gift of Friendship

‘A friend is always loyal, and a brother is born to help in time of need.’ Proverbs 17:17(NLT)

When God brought you together, he knew the problems you would face. He created your marriage as a safe place in frightening times. Marriage can give companionship when you’re lonely, and forgiveness when you fail. Marriage can give encouragement when you feel defeated, and give you an ally when enemies come against you. Marriage can offer acceptance when you’re put down or rejected and help when you can’t make it on your own. Your spouse is a gift from God in times of trouble. 

Today, commit to each other as friends. Build each other up and help out and lighten one another’s load. Share laughter and fun and keep each other’s secrets. Stay faithful and loyal in every situation. Show unconditional love. 

Remember your bond in Christ. Pray together about the good and the bad in your lives. Thank God for how he’s working in your circumstances. Encourage each other to trust in the Word. Praise him for building your marriage and filling it with love. 

God truly did make you for each other. Embrace each other as lovers, friends, and brother and sister in Christ today. 

 Lord, thank you for our marriage. Let us be true friends, no matter what happens. Join our hearts together by your Spirit. Amen.

from Mr. & Mrs.

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Love in the Real World

‘Love is patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud ‘ 1 Corinthians 13:4(NLT)

We find out quickly after the wedding that love is more than feelings—it’s hard work! The Lord knows true love calls us to surrender our pride and preferences. 

How are you challenged in patience today? Do your partner’s quirks and habits get on your nerves? Ask the Lord for a fresh filling of grace to accept your differences. 

How can you show kindness today? Give a gift, pitch in with chores, or pay a compliment. Look for opportunities to help and care for one another. 

How might you be coveting your spouse? Are you resentful, thinking they have a better job, more fun, and less stress than you? Choose to rejoice today over the blessings you’ve each received. 

How is pride stealing joy from your marriage today? Do you point out your superior parenting, organization, and money management? Do you pressure your partner to be just like you? Ask God to renew your respect for each other’s strengths. 

Fix your eyes on Jesus—our servant King and his example of perfect love. He’ll turn your hearts toward each other and give you joy. 

Lord, forgive us when we’re impatient, jealous, and proud. Teach us to cherish one another as gifts from you. Amen.

from Mr. & Mrs.