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How To Love Your Wife Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 17, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Most people who end in the divorce court because of a mole hill which was not removed, and it grew into a mountain.
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A minister was visiting a state asylum, and was being
shown around by the superintendent. On the first floor a
man sat in a rocking chair moaning, "O Mary, why did you
do it?" The superintendent said, "This is a very sad case of
a man jilted in love." Continuing on the tour they finally
came to the top floor, and they walked down the corridor
lined with padded cells. As they passed one they heard a
man screaming and knocking his head against the wall.
"That," commented the superintendent, "is the man who
married Mary."
This is a joke, of course, but the facts are not very funny
when you discover that people are not just going crazy about
each other, but are going crazy because of each other. Dr.
Hadfield, a writer in psychology, said, "I have personally
known many neuroses precipitated by marriage; indeed, I
am sometimes tempted to think that half of my patients are
neurotic because they are married." There is just no doubt
about it, marriage is a gamble. It is a leap of faith. You can
never know the future, and so any act of commitment in the
present must be an act of faith. It is unrealistic for two
imperfect people to think that the uniting of their
imperfections will produce perfection. Gray mixed with
gray never makes white.
Imperfections are an inevitable part of marriage, and
there is only one antidote to the poison of imperfection, and
that is love. That which is the ultimate in God's relationship
to man is also the ultimate in a man's relationship to his
wife. Harold T. Christensen said, "Love is the magnet that
brings people together and the cement that holds them
together; it is the most essential element in pair unity."
Without love all other factors will fail to make marriage a
success. Kepler, the great astronomer, failed in his first
marriage, and so he decided to put the next one on a soundly
scientific basis. He made a list of all the women he consider
available. Then he listed all their good qualities, and all
their bad ones. He gave each item a value, and by exact
mathematical calculation he made his choice. His second
marriage turned out worse than the first. Science can never
find a substitute for love.
Match making machines can pick two people that ought
to be ideal for each other, but the machine cannot make
them love each other, and without love there can be no lasting
unity. This is obvious, but what is not so obvious is
what Paul implies by his command that husbands love their
wives. The implication is that husbands have a tendency to
neglect this most important factor in marriage. The two
major problems that Paul puts his finger on are,
unsubjective wives, and unloving husbands. This means
that husbands who do love their wives fail to express it, and
so lose the benefits of it in making a happy marriage.
This is due in part in our culture to the modern male's
misconception about the nature of love. All of the mass
media convey the concept that it is something like being
struck by lightning. It is a matter of mere chance. It just
happens to you. Your eyes meet across a crowded room, and
it happens-you fall in love. The only problem is that this
kind of love is as easy to fall out of as it is to fall into. With
this view of love, which makes it a matter of stimulus and
response, one is on the lowest level of love. If the love of
Christ were on this level there would be no cross and no
salvation, for there is nothing in man to stimulate God to
sacrificial love. His love is agape love, which means it is
objective rather than subjective. It is a matter of the will. It
is an act of choice. This is the way men must view love if
they are to be on the highest level. Anyone can love on the
level of eros, for this is the natural response to what is
pleasing. But only those who work at it , and strive to make
it a matter of the will can love as God loves, and as Christ
loved the church.
Eric Fromm in The Art Of Loving says, "Most people seethe problem
of love primarily as that of being loved, rather
than that of loving, of one's capacity to love." This means
that men are constantly striving to be successful, powerful,
and rich in order to be loved, when they ought to be striving
to develop their own skill in loving. Dr. Popenoe said, "If we
gave as little time to the training of our intellect as we do to