Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Equally Different

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One of the greatest modern myths is that there are no essential differences between men and women. This is unbiblical, unreasonable, and dangerous to your marriage. God made men and women different, both physically and emotionally, and He commanded husbands to take note: “Likewise, ye husbands, dwell with them according to knowledge, giving honour unto the wife, as unto the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of life; that your prayers be not hindered” (1 Peter 3:7). We may not understand why our spouses think and feel the way they do, but we should understand that they think and feel certain ways. The material in this article has been gleaned over the years from several different sources, and much of it is based on scientific research. Of course, you are free to disregard science and obligated only to obey Scripture.

Nevertheless, I think that these statements will resonate with most couples. And I trust it will be helpful in understanding the person God has given you to be your life’s partner.

Think Different

From the very early stages of development, the brains of men and women develop differently. Women get a heavy dose of estrogen which develops a more nurturing and caring nature. Weeks after conception, men receive a huge dose of testosterone and later a biochemical bath that severs much of the connection between the left and right brain. This promotes competitiveness and focus at the cost of multitasking.

The result is a very different way of thinking for men and women. Men are analytical with a laser-like focus, while women are much more intuitive and are able to juggle many tasks at the same time. There are obvious advantages and disadvantages to both.

A man can usually tell you exactly why he believes something. If he doesn’t trust someone, he would tell you he caught the person in a lie or saw him keep back money that wasn’t his. In math terms, he can “show his work.” He may still be wrong, but he can give you good reasons for being wrong. Women don’t “show their work” but often come to the right conclusion by intuition—their brain working faster than they can explain.

To see the difference in focus, watch one spouse have a phone conversation while the other is listening. The wife is perfectly capable of talking to one person on the phone and getting feedback from her husband next to her. The husband cannot. If his wife asks him to ask a question, he has to put the person on hold, turn to his wife and ask, “What did you want me to ask him?”

Feel Different

Because of the way God made them, men base their significance upon their achievements, while women are more centered on relationships. Ask a couple about a road trip, the wife will talk about the wonderful coffee shop they discovered. The husband will glow with pride because he shaved thirty minutes off the road time compared to last year.

Men like to solve problems alone; women like to help others solve problems. It’s supportive, encouraging, uplifting, and helpful for one woman to give another woman advice. Men just need encouragement to “stick with it.” Men tend only to ask for advice under two circumstances: when they are looking for a solution and when they want someone to blame.

Affirmation & Solutions

After reading the differences between how men and women think and feel, you can see conflict coming like an oncoming train—predictable and unrelenting. The different thinking patterns and behaviors are ripe for misunderstandings and unmet expectations.

Primarily, men want to fix problems, and women want to affirm people. When the wife shares a problem, the husband assumes she is telling him because she wants him to fix the problem—that’s why he would share a problem. Really, she just wants sympathy and encouragement, and she will prolong the conversation until she gets it. It’s not even a conscious decision, but she may reject her husbands solutions because she isn’t done talking about the problem yet. If this continues—the wife subconsciously rejecting solutions to continue the conversation—the husband will feel rejected and the wife won’t find the reassurance she was looking for from her husband.

Women have their own expectation to “improve” their husbands. Their desire to redecorate the house and add certain touches to meals carries over to the relationship with their husbands. A wife may give small advice on how to drive, how to dress, and generally “mother” her husband. But stable men don’t feel romantically inclined toward their mothers.

How have your efforts to “improve” and “fix” each other worked so far? Maybe it’s time to quit trying to change each other and decide to love and accept.

Sayings & Meanings

Figuring out what to say is a challenge for men and women. Knowing how to say it is the next obstacle.

“You never talk to me,” she says.

“I’m talking to you right now,” he replies.

“But you never spend time with me,” she tries to elaborate.

“I’m with you now.”

“But I feel like you’re someplace else.” There, she said it! That’s what she really wanted to say.

“What do you mean I’m someplace else? I’m standing right here!” What the wife is trying to say is, “I wish we could talk more. I need you in my life. I appreciate you. I wish you would give me more attention.” Women speak more from their emotions, while men speak in literal facts.

The gap between men and women is wide, but not impassible. Here are a few tips for men and women to better live, communicate, and express their appreciation for each other.

Marriage Advice: For Men
  • Listen. Try to listen to your wife with empathy. Try to understand what she is feeling and put yourself in her place and on her side.

  • Notice the details. Do many small things for your wife, not just a few big things. A man may feel like the grand gesture will be most effective, but women appreciate small but frequent reminders of your love and affection—a phone call, a book she might enjoy, a bouquet of flowers.

  • Ask her counsel. Your wife may not always be able to give you a reason for her opinion, but her advice is highly valuable. The husband, under God, bears the responsibility to make the final decision, but he would be wise to hear what she has to say.

  • Appreciate her motives. Even when you can’t appreciate her message, appreciate her motives. When your wife complains about your heavy workload, she’s really saying that she would like you to be home more. This is good! She wants you around! Would you rather she suggested you get a second job, work 100 hours a week, and never see her?

  • Offer support. Before offering solutions, listen. It is more important to her that you listen before trying to fix the problem.

  • Accept her as she is. Do not try to adjust her to what you wish she was.

Marriage Advice: For Women
  • Do not give unsolicited advice. Trust me. If you followed this single piece of advice, your husband would be giddy. Partially because of our ego, we don’t take helpful advice as a sign of love and care.

  • Don’t make him talk. Do not try to make your husband talk when he withdraws from you. He needs time. He doesn’t know what to do about it yet, so he’s waiting. If you try to make him talk now, the results will be unpleasant. I read an old proverb, “Don’t follow your husband when he goes into the cave. Otherwise, the dragon that lives in the cave may breathe fire on you.”

  • Be clear. Make it clear you do not blame your husband for the problem you are describing. My dear wife will often say to me, “I know this is not your fault. I know you cannot do anything about this. But…” She then proceeds to share with me her concern. I recognize then that she is looking for sympathy, understanding, and support, and she is not blaming me for the difficulty.

  • Condense it. Make requests short, direct, and non-manipulative. For example, you will find better results if you say to your husband, “Sweetheart, would you be willing to take out the garbage tonight?” as opposed to saying, “Honey, do you think you could please take out the garbage this week? It has been four weeks since our garbage has been taken out. The garage is full of trash. It stinks to high heaven, and I don’t know why in the world we haven’t gotten it out to the curb before now!”

  • Give perspective. Put things in perspective for your spouse. When you are telling him of some difficulties, be sure to let him know that you are, by and large, happy, satisfied, and encouraged in your marriage.

Whether you accept all of the scientific and sociological concepts of this article, we must agree that the Scripture requires men particularly to dwell with their wives according to knowledge. One of the greatest secrets to success in marriage is to stop trying to get your partner to understand you and start trying to understand your partner.

Thank you ministry127.com and Dr. R.B. Oullette!

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Tips for Lesson 10

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Here are a couple tips that will help you win the prize for having the most blanks filled out correctly on the outline:

1. The main points are alliterated.

2. All of the sub-points are alliterated except for the sub-points under point IV.

3. None of the alliterated sections use the same letter.

4. Look up Luke 14:16-24 for help on II B.

5. Look up Matthew 28:20 for help on III A.

Good luck and we’ll see you Sunday morning!

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

12 Tips to Prevent Resentment and Rebellion

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Dr. Bobby Roberson says, “Rules without relationship breed resentment and rebellion.”

Using the word relationship, here is an acrostic of ideas to help prevent resentment and rebellion in your child’s heart.

R—Read God’s Word together.

E—Events, make big of special events, birthdays, and spiritual birthdays. Don’t always feel like you have to have a big party. Sometimes just the family celebrating is best.

L—Laugh, have fun together, and instigate this!

A—Always, be the same always. Consistency and stability are key ingredients to every successful relationship. Hypocrisy will cripple your children.

T—Treasure each day. Remember, they are a gift from the Lord.

I—Initiate time together. You may not think so, but your child craves it and needs it. So schedule it and make it a priority. Plan date times where you spend one-on-one time with your children alone. You will never regret a minute invested in these precious relationships!

O—Openness, be approachable, talk things through, be willing to talk about anything, ask questions, and remember honesty is a must!

N—No! Sometimes you just need to say “no.” You need to be the bad guy every now and then. Sorry, that is part of parenting.

S—Support the authorities in your child’s life: their pastor, school teacher, etc.

H—Honor your spouse (or their other parent) and refuse to argue. This is so important!

I—Improve yourself. Keep growing and improving in your parenting skills.

P—Pray together every night!

Thank you Gabriel Ruhl via ministry127.com!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Why Young People Stay Faithful

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Do you want your children to “turn out” for God?  Read this helpful article by Cary Schmidt.

Have you ever wondered what contributes to young people staying faithful to the things of God, while others wander away? What contributes to two kids in the same local church, hearing the same preaching, ultimately going dramatically different directions? Ultimately, it’s free will—everybody makes their own decisions. But what influences those decisions?

1. Parents—faithful parents who lived the Christian life, not perfectly, but genuinely.

2. Pastor—a great relationship with a faithful pastor. These first two trump all the rest!

3. Youth Pastor—someone to come along, teach the Bible, and encourage the first two relationships.

4. Godly Relationships (friends, peers, dating, mentors, friends’ parents)—choosing right influences and good crowds.

5. Involvement in church functions, events and work around the church—making church life a priority, and letting fun, social life, and friends revolve around spiritual things.

6. Seeing and experiencing the joy that comes from serving in ministry—acting out your faith by getting involved in ministering to others.

7. Seeing miracles and seeing God do amazing things—being a part of a dynamic local church where God is at work.

8. Seeing and realizing the need—taking eyes off of self and looking around long enough to see that God wants you to make a difference in someone else’s life.

9. God’s grace—the supernatural working of God developing desires and direction in life—probably a result of the prayers flowing from points one and two!

10. Relationship with God (devotions, prayer, prayer meetings, etc.)—the outflow of a real personal walk with Christ. At some point, Josh made his walk with God real and personal.

The first two on the list are the foundation. Everything else can be built on those two. If you’re wondering what factors help a teen choose to stay faithful to God, I believe this list states it well! May God bless you in the work of establishing young hearts in the faith of Christ!

Thank you www.caryschmidt.com!

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

4 Tips to Stay in Love

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It has been said that “marriage is man’s last best opportunity to grow up,” and I have to admit that I had my share of growing up to do. I have learned many lessons in the last thirty-five years that I would like to pass on to others here.

1. Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff

Most marriages break apart over an accumulation of little things that are not really important in the long run. In my hometown of Savannah, Georgia, there is a bridge that spans the Savannah River and links the state of Georgia with South Carolina. I stood on top of the bridge before it was opened to traffic and immediately felt a slight movement as the coastal winds pressed upon it. The D.O.T. worker informed me that if the bridge were rigid it would collapse under the pressure of strong winds. A marriage that is not flexible will never hold up under the adverse conditions it must face.

2. End Each Day With a Clean Slate

In Ephesians 4:26 we are commanded not to let the sun go down upon our wrath. Don’t end the day with unresolved differences in your heart. Never keep a mental file of times that your spouse has disappointed you—shred it and never use it as ammo in the next disagreement. People who live in the pains of the past have no real present and no hope of a happy future. They are imprisoned by their lack of forgiveness.

3. Communicate

We who are saved were drawn to Christ by His Word, and our marriages are to mirror the relationship that Christ has with His church. It is through our communication as husband and wife that we are drawn to each other in fellowship. Couples who do not communicate learn to live in survival mode—just getting by, yet never knowing what a spiritual marriage can be. When a person pouts and exiles his mate to solitary confinement, he reveals that he never truly grew up.

4. Express Your Love

I love you are three of the most powerful words in the English language. Say them daily, and evidence it often. Love is not a passive emotion that lies dormant somewhere within us; it must always be active in order to remain healthy.

Many waters cannot quench love, neither can the floods drown it.” Song of Solomon 8:7a

Thank you Pastor Dan Herring and www.ministry127.com!

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

2 Great Posts

Every Christian should read every word of these two posts by Cary Schmidt. They are practical and challenging. Apply as many of these principles as you can as soon as you can. You will be helped.

You can find them here and here.

Tell me what helped you the most...

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Adam and Eve had the Perfect Marriage

Man and woman holding hands, close-up of hands No way around it, I think that Adam and Eve probably had the perfect marriage. Here are a few reasons why …

  • Eve never had to hear Adam talk about how good his mom cooked.
  • Eve never questioned Adam’s faithfulness by asking, “Are you sure there’s no one else?”
  • Eve wasn’t lying when she told Adam that he was the best looking man in the whole world.
  • Adam never went off fishing with his buddies.
  • Adam never had to hear about all the men Eve could have married.
  • Eve didn’t need to clothes shop.
  • Adam never had to answer the age old question that gets all men in trouble, “Honey, do I look fat in this fig leaf?”
  • Adam didn’t have to pay for a different pair of shoes for every outfit Eve owned.
  • Adam never had to hear Eve say, “You know those fig leaves don’t match, don’t you?”

Can you think of any other reasons that Adam and Eve had a perfect marriage?

Thank you www.treymorgan.net!