Helping, Not Hindering

Most women I know are prone to action. Perhaps it’s our God-given inclination to care for things that makes us swift to cross the next thing off our to-do list (or even to write the to-do list in the first place.) We’re also inclined to progression. We measure our kids’ height as they grow throughout the year. We try to better ourselves through a myriad of different ways and compare our “growth” with those that we know. In fact, perhaps it’s this tendency to compare that fuels our “action-oriented” nature. We want to make sure that we are viewed favorably in comparison to our friends.

The challenge with this is that we often turn this proclivity towards our husbands and make them the object of our activity. We are quick to identify the ways that he could improve to be a better spouse, employee, father, etc. In this regard, there is a fine line between helper and hindrance. Helping is lovingly encouraging your spouse as he works towards the things that God has called him to do. Being a hindrance is when we try to make our husband work towards the things that we think God has called him to do. Helping is for his good, hindering is for our own.

So what’s the solution? How do we lovingly help without being a hindrance? The first thing that we need to do is get our hearts right before God. We need to trust in the work that He is doing and humbly recognize that God doesn’t need us to accomplish what He wants. Oftentimes, He uses us in our loved ones’ lives, but if we’re waiting to be used by Him, than we will seek how His guidance for how to proceed. We won’t trust in our own initiative, but asking Him if, and how, He wants us to be used.

Secondly, we need to consider our motivation. As mentioned earlier, often the reason for our “helping” is because we’re fearful of what we’ll happen if we don’t keep everything together. We aren’t sure we will get what we want if we don’t “help” things aloge.  If fear is the reason for our intervention, than likely the good of our spouse is not the cause. We need to seek God’s good for them; not the good that we would like to create for ourselves.

Lastly, there needs to be conversation. We need to ask how we can be a help rather than assume that we know what would be most beneficial. To help is defined as “mak[ing] it easier for (someone) to do something by offering aid.” If we are in fact making it harder, because we are being discouraging or demotivating, than by definition, we aren’t helping. Our intentions may in fact be good, and let’s assume that they are, but we need to find out how our spouse would like us to make things easier, not assume that we know what they need.

A friend likes to say that in a marriage “love is the husband’s responsibility.” This is based on Ephesians 5 where we see that God calls the husband specifically to be a model of Christ’s love. While husbands should look to Christ as their guide for doing this, perhaps wives would do well to look to the work of the Holy Spirit, who is called the Helper,  for our example of how we can best be an assistance to our husbands. After all, the goal of both Christ’s love and the work of the Holy Spirit is the same – bringing glory to God.  That should be the goal of our marriages as well.

 

Why is it so tempting to be a hindrance rather than a helper? How does the Holy Spirit provide a model that we can look to for how to be a helper that brings God glory.

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3 Lessons of 3 Years

Yesterday, my sweet husband and I celebrated our third-year anniversary. It’s been a good three years. In many ways, it’s been a hard three years because of the circumstances that have surrounded us. However, in the midst of painful circumstances, it has been such a blessing to have each other to spur on in the Lord, to lean on, and to enjoin each other to keep putting one foot in front of the other. I am very blessed that when God picked out my future husband, He gave me such a great guy. The three years have been an adventure to be sure, but there’s no one I would rather be by my side as we ride the roller coaster of life.

Although three years, may not seem like much in the grand scheme of things, you can learn a lot in just a short time of being married. I’m sure that the years ahead will hold many more lessons and insights, and hopefully I’ll be able to write about those too. In the meantime, here are three important things that I’ve learned from our marriage:

  • Say “I Love You” often If you think you’ve said it enough, keep saying it. – One of the things I most appreciate about my husband is that he says “I love you” a lot. If you listened to our everyday conversations, it is full with expressions of our affection.  I suppose some people could think that this could get old, that as the years pass on you don’t need to say it as much. However, I’ve found that I need the “I love you’s” now just as much as when we were first married, maybe more. After all, after being married for a while you are familiar with each other and it can be easy to assume that your spouse knows how you feel. My husband never makes that assumption – he says I love you often, and he says it with feeling, letting me know it’s not just the words that he says, but the way that he feels.

 

  • There’s no substitute for sacrifice.  – People go to all sorts of extremes to put their love on display. They buy extravagant gifts; they hire skywriters; they take exotic trips. What I’ve learned though is that there is very little that is more meaningful in your marriage than when you sacrifice what you want for the good of the other, or the good of the marriage. It’s not easy and in all likelihood your husband or wife recognizes that, and will appreciate it all the more. Scripture is replete with the admonition to serve others selflessly; no where should this be more prominent than in our marriages.

 

  • Keep trusting in God. Keep encouraging each other. – Another one of the things that I appreciate about my husband is that he lives the truth of this statement. When I’m concerned about what comes next, he points me back to our Savior. When I’m frustrated with the way things are going, he encourages me to take the next step. It’s a characteristic of his that I hope I emulate the more that we are married. It’s tempting to put your trust in your spouse, and although you should trust them, ultimately your trust must reside with God. Your spouse will sometimes fail; He never will. At the same time, it’s important that you keep cheering on your spouse – to be the person that God has called them to be. Point them to God, and then encourage them to follow Him.

Scripture makes it clear that God gave us marriage for our good. However, a good marriage doesn’t come without some work. These are just three lessons that I have learned in my short time being married. I’m looking forward to many more lessons, and many more years to come!

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