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JOURNEY
INTO INTIMACY
Helping Couples Across the Marriage Map
by
Karen & Ron Flowers
Directors, Department of Family
Ministries, General Conference
1996
How
to Use This Resource: The pieces within this resource
are intended to provide some daily focused activities for a
week of marital growth in the setting of the couple's home.
Pastors or family ministries leaders may wish to adapt the materials
to better suit their local situation or simply reproduce and
distribute them as found here. An introductory letter (see "Pastoral
Letter") to each couple will provide instruction, encouragement
and the awareness that the church leadership is joining them
in this period of marital growth.
Alternatively, the resources may be incorporated into a weekend
seminar or a series of programs on marital growth. |
Contents
of This Resource:
Pastoral
Letter
Seasons of Marriage
The Marriage Miracle
A Time for Dialogue
Marriage as Children of the Light
Learning to "One Another"
A Day to Remember
Redigging the Well
A Journey Called Marriage |
Introduction
Life in marriage is not unlike a journey across a countryside. There
are high and low points in the terrain, roads that are rough in
spots and smoother in others, and occasionally detours. Too frequently
couples embark upon the trip, often with an inadequate map, perhaps
without any awareness of road or weather conditions likely to influence
their travel. Too few stop for fuel and provisions and some run
out. Others fail to care for the vehicle and experience breakdown.
A clear destination, better preparation, information about the landscape,
and careful refueling and maintenance offer the best hope of a successful
journey.
Marriage is a journey into intimacy. Each encourages the other toward
divine ideals, while seeking to incorporate God's provisions for
human brokenness and personal failings. Together they reach for
deep levels of love, affection, companionship, and commitment. Together
they face life's challenges and work to develop their relational
skills so that they may be better able to effectively handle their
family routine, cope with varying circumstances, and resolve issues
of conflict or controversy. Side by side they form a partnership,
each contributing talents and spiritual gifts so that they may do
something great for God.
The resources in this section offer a fresh approach to marital
growth. They provide a marital growth menu that includes information,
reflection, skill-building, and ideas for enhancing romance, deepening
friendship, and expanding marital commitment. They provide an opportunity
for enrichment of a couple's life as they traverse that part of
the marital terrain in which they find themselves.
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Pastoral
Letter
[A
personal letter (sample below) should introduce couples to
the marital growth experiences.]
Dear
____ and ____:
We just
want you to know how much we value you as members of our church!
We want you to know, too, how much we care about the quality
of your relationship as a married couple. Your church places
such importance on strong families that the week of February
17-24 has been set aside as a special week for strengthening
marriages worldwide.
We know
your lives are full, but we also know that you place a high
estimate on the love that binds you togetherfor your
own sakes, for the sake of the children, for the sake of the
community of believers and for the good of society. So we
want to encourage you to take time to celebrate the good things
in your marriage this week and also to challenge you to become
intentional about marital growth. Enclosed you will find some
ideas for a couple time each day this week. We hope they will
provide a catalyst for sharing that will bring you encouragement
as a couple and call you, in Christ, to stretch toward God's
wildest dreams for your relationship.
We will
be spending some quality time together this week too, just
for ourselves. But we will also be praying for you. If there
are issues right now that make communication difficult, know
that all couples pass through seasons when they could benefit
from talking to a professional, just as we need the services
of our dentist or family doctor from time to time. You will
find enclosed a list of several Christian counselors in our
area. If we can be of further help, please speak to us.
[You
may wish to add a paragraph here about a special program planned
for Christian Home Day, Sabbath, February 24.]
May God
bless us together as we celebrate His good gift of marriage.
Warm
regards,
(Pastor and spouse)
Enclosures:
Marital growth activities.
List of Christian family counselors [Pastors will need
to provide this list from their area. If you do not have a
list of counselors to whom you refer, one place to begin is
to visit with several pastors of other denominations in your
town/city and ask them for names of the counselors they are
using. A personal visit to these counselors to get acquainted
with them as the pastor of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
can be very helpful. Your Conference Family Ministries Director
may be able to provide additional names of reputable Christian
counselors in your area.]
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Seasons
of Marriage
Before starting out on a long journey, a wise traveler will make
every effort to determine what will most likely be encountered along
the waythe road conditions, the weather, the availability
of services, the possibilities in case of emergency. Marriage is
a journey through stages or seasons, some of which are predictable
and similar for many couples, others of which are more or less distinctive
in the life of a particular couple and often times unexpected. Learning
to view changes as potential seasons for growth will also help couples
to redefine roles, beliefs and behaviors and negotiate differences
as the seasons pass.
In his book Seasons of a Marriage, H. Norman Wright identifies six
typical seasons in marriage across the developmental life span of
a couple. As you review these seasons together, talk about your
marriage journey. Is your marriage following a similar path? Where
have you taken a different fork in the road, for what reasons? What
have been the hills and the valleys in your journey together? What
storms have you survived? Who has supported you, helped you over
the rough spots? What have you learned that makes you hopeful about
the future?
The season of expectation. Most couples begin their journey
together with each partner making assumptions about what their life
together will be like, often without checking with the other. Thus
a primary task of this marital season is to identify both partners'
expectations, evaluate whether or not they are realistic and reasonable,
and work toward those that are healthy.
The twenties and thirties. Couples in this season are beginning
to settle down. Five primary tasks occupy their relational energies:
defining roles, creating new relationships with parents, transforming
their romantic attraction into a love based on steady commitment,
beginning a family if they so choose, and learning to be separate
as individuals and yet connected as a couple. All the while, they
are pouring enormous energy into career, friendships and other priorities.
Mid-life. Mid-life men, weary of the stress of the workplace,
often turn toward home and intimacy while their wives, released
from the care of small children, turn outward and become more autonomous.
Flexibility is essential in this stage of accepting what is possible
and what is not. It is a time for learning patience, endurance and
contentment.
Empty nest. With children grown and gone, healthy adjustment
involves developing a new sense of intimacy, new roles with children,
and a new range of friendships and interests.
Role reversal. In this season we become parents to our aging
parents, coping with their decline and passing, and recognizing
the inevitability of our own aging and mortality.
Bereavement. The primary challenge of widowhood, the final
season, is to complete the process of grieving. This means emotionally
separating ourselves from the deceased spouse, adjusting to life
without him or her, and taking up a new life with new relationships
and possibilities.
The Marriage Miracle
Read and reflect together on the story from John 2:1-12.
Permission to Celebrate. Jesus presence at the wedding feast
at Cana showed Him to be One who had a social nature. Parties and
social events were not off-limits to Him. People invited Him and
He enjoyed the experience. The serious business of the work of the
Kingdom did not stop Him from entering into fellowship and the light-hearted
spirit of a wedding reception, a family and community get-together.
What are the implications of Jesus' action for your marriage
relationship?
A Wedding Inaugural for the Messianic Age. A wedding ceremony
marked the climax of the Creator's activity when He made the first
man and woman. But sin has radically altered the relationship between
the sexes and the institution of marriage. Now, as Creator becomes
Re-creator, His first work in the restoration of all that had been
lost is at a wedding. How might the following passages about
Christ's redemptive work be directly applied to your marriage?
1. The kingdom of God has come to us in Christ (Matt. 12:28; Luke
11:20; 17:21).
2. Believers are rescued from the powers of this evil age (Gal.
1:4) and enabled to taste of the powers of the age to come (Heb.
6:5).
3. In Christ there is a new creation, old things have passed away,
behold, all things have become new (2 Cor. 5:17).
4. As Christ dwells in our hearts by faith, we may be filled with
all the fullness of God (Eph. 3:17-19).
5. My God shall supply all your needs according to his riches in
glory by Jesus Christ (Phil. 4:19).
Water to Wine. Jesus' first miracle of changing water into
wine was about much more than saving an ill-prepared family embarrassment.
The waterpots at the wedding feast were filled with the best water,
the purification water of the Jews. This water represented the best
that human beings had been able to do to care for sin, in this case
the effects of sin on marriage. But all these rituals become meaningless
in the presence of Jesus who wants to radically transform marriage
to represent His creation ideals equality, mutuality, a loving
co-regency of husband and wife over all that God has placed in their
hands. Christian marriages, in Christ, will be as radically different
from the marriages around them as water was perceived to be inferior
to the best wine. "Like every one of God's good gifts entrusted
to the keeping of humanity, marriage has been perverted by sin;
but it is the purpose of the gospel to restore its purity and beauty"
(Ellen G. White, Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing, p.
64).
How have you as a couple experienced the brokenness that sin
has brought to marriage? If Jesus were to begin a new work of re-creation
in your relationship today, where would you first like to feel His
healing touch? Ask Him together for the first miracle you would
like Him to work in the way you relate to one another. Talk about
how you can prepare yourselves to receive His grace.
A Time
For Dialogue . . . My Gift to You
Read the following passage together and talk about your hopes
and expectations for this week of marital growth together.
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I
come to dialogue with you in search of mutual understanding,
not in pursuit of victory. I want to share my most precious
possession, myself, with you. Emotional warning flags are
fluttering all over the place, telling me that this is risky
business, and I know this. But I want to take this risk for
you because I love you and want to make this an act of love.
I know that there is no gift of love without this gift of
myself through self-disclosure.
I know also that I am asking through this self-revelation.
I am asking first for your understanding and acceptance. I
am also inviting you to reciprocate, to share yourself with
me. You, too, will know instinctively a sense of risk. It
may be that my taking this risk for you will empower you to
take a risk for me. Whenever you are ready for that risk,
I will be here for you. Do not feel that you must respond
to me on my terms or at my time. Love is freeing, and so my
love for you must always leave you free to respond in your
own way and at your own time.
So I come to you in dialogue, wanting you to know me and willing
to take the risk of transparency and the revelation of my
deepest feelings. More than that, I want to know you and share
your feelings. And when I have put aside all my games and
facades and left myself naked before you, please stay with
me and clothe me with the gentle garments of your understanding.
For this is the essence of the love I need, the love I am
stretching to be able to give.
Adapted
from The Secret of Staying in Love by John Powell,
S.J. © 1974 Tabor Publishing. Used by permission.
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Marriage
As Children of the Light
The following passages establish God's high ideals for marriage.
No marriage on earth perfectly embodies these ideals. But the good
news of the gospel is that Christian husbands and wives are declared
to be perfect marriage partners in God's sight because Jesus' perfection
as Bridegroom and Husband is ours when we are in Him. What a gift!
Contemplate it together.
Because the Kingdom of God has come to us in Christ, a new season
is born in our marriages. We are no longer in darkness. We now live
in His marvelous light! Talk together about how you will respond
to the gospel's call to stretch toward God's ideals, to as Paul
puts it, "live as children of the light" (Ephesians 5:8).
What steps will you take personally to respond to the counsel given
below in your relationship with your spouse? How can you encourage
one another as you move step by step together out of darkness into
light in your everyday relationship as husband and wife?
There are many who regard the expression of love as a weakness,
and they maintain a reserve that repels others. . . . We should
beware of this error. Love cannot long exist without expression.
Let not the heart of one connected with you starve for the want
of kindness and sympathy.
Let each give love rather than exact it. Cultivate that which
is noblest in yourselves, and be quick to recognize the good qualities
in each other. The consciousness of being appreciated is a wonderful
stimulus and satisfaction. Sympathy and respect encourage the
striving after excellence, and love itself increases as it stimulates
to nobler aims. (Ellen White, Happiness Homemade, p. 25)
Though difficulties,
perplexities, and discouragements may arise, let neither husband
nor wife harbor the thought that their union is a mistake or a
disappointment. Determine to be all that it is possible to be
to each other. Continue the early attentions. In every way encourage
each other in fighting the battles of life. Study to advance the
happiness of each other. Let there be mutual love, mutual forbearance.
Then marriage, instead of being the end of love, will be as it
were the very beginning of love. The warmth of true friendship,
the love that binds heart to heart, is a foretaste of the joys
of heaven. (Ellen White, Happiness Homemade, p. 24)
Respond
to each other by finishing the following:
I want to give love rather than exact it by . . .
I want to show my appreciation and respect for you by . . .
I want to continue my early attentions by . . .
I want to encourage you by . . .
I want to offer you the warmth of true friendship by . . .
Learning
to "One Another"
One of the recurring themes of the New Testament is the call to
"one another" fellow believers in Christ. Read the following
passages in several modern versions, making a note of the gist of
each passage as you read:
Romans 14:13; 15:7 ___________________________________________________
Galatians 5:13, 15, 26 __________________________________________________
Ephesians 4:29, 31-32; 5:19, 21 ___________________________________________
Colossians 3:9, 13, 16-17 _______________________________________________
1 Corinthians 11:33 ___________________________________________________
2 Corinthians 13:12 ___________________________________________________
1 Thessalonians 4:18; 5:15 ______________________________________________
Hebrews 10:25 ______________________________________________________
James 4:11; 5:9, 16 ___________________________________________________
1 Peter 4:9 _________________________________________________________
1 John 4:7 __________________________________________________________
Reflect together on how each of these passages might be applied
to your marriage relationship.
What changes would you personally have to make to grow toward these
evidences of the presence of Christ in your life?
While marriage
is intended by God to add a bright thread of joy to our personal lives,
marriage is also ministry. Reflect on the following passage:
Our
sympathies are to overflow the boundaries of self and the enclosure
of family walls. There are precious opportunities for those who
will make their homes a blessing to others. Social influence is
a wonderful power. . . . The work to which we are called does not
require wealth or social position or great ability. It requires
a kindly, self-sacrificing spirit and a steadfast purpose. A lamp,
however small, if kept steadily burning, may be the means of lighting
many other lamps. Our sphere of influence may seem narrow, our ability
small, our opportunities few, our acquirements limited; yet wonderful
possibilities are ours through a faithful use of the opportunities
of our own homes. If we will open our hearts and homes to the divine
principles of life we shall become channels for currents of life-giving
power. From our homes will flow streams of healing, bringing life
and beauty and fruitfulness where now are barrenness and dearth.
(Ministry of Healing, pp. 354-355)
Talk together
about how God might use your marriage to bless others and to bring
the Good News into their lives.
A Day to
Remember
Pick a day this week to give your spouse a special gift. Need
ideas?
Make a collection of wild flowers together.
Browse through the library, sharing books you'd like to read
or have read.
Spend half a day accomplishing a task together that you have
been avoiding, then relax.
Go stargazing.
Start a sustainable exercise program together.
Get your picture taken together and frame for your home,
workplace, family members.
Volunteer together to help in a community service project.
Prepare and enjoy a new recipe together.
Exchange back rubs with a good smelling body lotion.
Find a quiet place to talk, only this time write out your
conversation back and forth in silence.
Make lists of 25 things your spouse does for you and say
"thanks."
Share stories from your lives as children.
Memorize a passage of Scripture together.
Go exploring.
Create a family tree that goes back at least 3 generations
for each of you.
Practice the instruments you used to play.
Take one step toward making your bedroom a more attractive
place.
Make a long-range plan to accomplish 3 important couple goals
in the next year.
Go bird-watching.
Create a "couple time capsule"--a collection of
things that symbolize and describe your life together right now
and seal it in a container for opening five years from now.
Go fly a kite.
Make "as needed" love coupons to exchange with
each other.
Answer "wild questions" like "If you had a
thousand dollars and had to spend it all tomorrow, what would you
spend it on?" "What have you done recently that you are
proud of?" "What famous living person would you like to
spend a day with?" "What do you know now that you wish
you didn't?" "What is your favorite spot to be alone?"
Listen to your spouse's favorite music.
Learn about your spouse's hobbies or help one another get
involved in an interest they have always wanted to pursue.
Plant a flower garden.
Go on a picnic.
"Kidnap" your spouse by secretly arranging for
their responsibilities and taking them on an unexpected outing.
Read the Song of Solomon aloud together.
Admire a sunset.
Write a letter to your in-laws thanking them for your spouse
and let your spouse read it before mailing.
Redigging
the Well
Reflect on the following passages:
An Old Testament Story. Isaac and Rebekah were living in
enemy territory because of a famine in their homeland. God had affirmed
their decision to live there and repeated to Isaac His promise of
abundant blessing first made to Abraham. But like his father, Isaac
feared for his life because he was married to a beautiful, much
desired woman. So he lied to the men who asked about her, saying
she was his sister. But when Abimelech, the king, looked down from
a window and saw Isaac caressing his wife, he confronted Isaac with
his lie. While the king gave strict orders to his men to protect
Isaac and Rebekah from molestation, soon their wealth became the
envy of the Philistines. And so it was that "all the wells
that his father's servants had dug in the time of his father Abraham,
the Philistines stopped up, filling them with earth" (Genesis
26:15). Ordered to move on by Abimelech, Isaac settled again in
another valley where his father had also lived. There "Isaac
reopened the wells that had been dug in the time of his father Abraham,
which the Philistines had stopped up after Abraham died" (vs.
18). And "Isaac's servants dug in the valley and discovered
a well of fresh water there . . . and told him [Isaac], . . . "We've
found water!" (vs. 19, 32).
Advice from the wise man.
Drink water from your own cistern,
running water from your own well.
Let them be yours alone,
never to be shared with strangers.
May your fountain be blessed,
and may you rejoice in the wife of your youth.
A loving doe, a graceful deer
may her breasts satisfy you always,
may you ever be captivated by her love.
(Proverbs 5:17-19)
Jesus' conversation at a well with a woman with five failed marriages.
Jesus said, "Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty
again, but whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst.
Indeed, the water I give him will become in him a spring of water
welling up to eternal life." "Sir, give me this water!"
is her immediate response. (See John 4:1-30)
For reflection:
Some ways in which our relationship is like a well in the desert
. . .
Our acknowledgment of our need for "Living Water" in our
relationship . . .
Some things in our marriage that are like dirt and debris which
stop up our well . . .
Some things we can do to keep our marriage well clean and fresh
. . .
If we could start digging a new well in our relationship right now,
I would like it to be . . .
My commitment to you to drink water only from our own well . . .
A Journey
Called Marriage
The Inevitability of Change. D. H. Lawrence, in his book We Need
One Another, writes: "I should say the relation between any
two decently married people changes profoundly every few years,
often without their knowing anything about it; though every change
causes pain, even if it brings a certain joy. The long course of
marriage is a long event of perpetual change. . . . It is like rivers
flowing on, through new country, always unknown." In what
sense is this true of your marriage? In what ways were you prepared
or not prepared for the changes you have experienced in your circumstances,
in each of you as persons, in your relational life as a couple?
Predictable Journey. David Augsburger in his book Sustaining
Love (1988, Regal Books, Ventura, CA 93003, pp.24-25. Used by permission),
suggests that persons who stay married to one partner may experience
as many as four marriages within a marriage:
1. Dream Marriage. During this early period, couples have
very high expectations for their relationship. They express feelings
cautiously or not at all and they tolerate, accommodate or overlook
differences--all to avoid conflict. Romantic feelings are perceived
as intimacy. The dream is largely an illusion which must be recognized
for what it is for love to deepen.
2. Disillusionment Marriage. When disillusionment strikes,
the dream vaporizes. Couples, weary of accommodation and avoidance,
often turn to manipulation to get what they want. They try to eliminate
differences by attempting to change their partner, and deal with
conflict by fighting, bargaining and threatening. Intimacy is intense
when things are going well, absent when there is tension. Relationships
are often competitive and adversarial. Hope fades, and life together
becomes empty and alienated. Many go looking for dream again during
this period, and many marriages die. But disillusionment will inevitably
follow dream with the new partner just as it did with the original
spouse.
3. Discovery Marriage. During this phase, couples discover
each other. They learn to communicate and to own and express feelings
with freedom, candor and caring. They discover that differences
both make us unique individuals and offer creative possibilities
within the marriage. They learn to fight more fairly and seek mutually
satisfactory solutions to conflicts more quickly. There is balance
in their relationship between separateness as individuals and connectedness
as a couple. They become intentional about stretching toward equality
in their relationship. True intimacy is now possible and hope rises.
4. Depth Marriage. This stage can only dawn in a marriage
as deeper levels of maturity dawn in the personal lives of husband
and wife. Now couples genuinely share and listen, with a free flow
of both feelings and thoughts. Both delight in, even cultivate,
the differentness of the other. Conflict is accepted as a healthy
process and the couple utilizes it to work for mutual growth. Intimacy
becomes more wholisticemotional, intellectual, social and
spiritual as well as physical. Both partners feel secure, whether
near or far. The future is full of promise.
In which of these "marriages" do you find yourselves
right now? What is hopeful about understanding these stages? What
would facilitate your growth into the next "marriage"?
How can you work to put your ideas in place in your church to benefit
both yourselves and others?
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