Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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You are here: Home / Family / Improving Marriage

Improving Marriage

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July 24, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

When my friend visited us last month, we had a heart to heart conversation about marriage and parenting.

You see, the last time we were together, she had all but lost hope in her marriage. But she held it together and made some changes and now her family is thriving. I’m so proud of her.

She explained the turnaround to me.

She began demanding that her children respect their father.

Sounds simpler than it is?

My friend’s family dynamics and mine are rather similar.

She makes all decisions in that household. Her primary motive was to save her children’s relationships with their father. She wanted to break the cycle of absent fathers that she and her husband had growing up. Her desire to do that saved their marriage and family.

My husband’s father passed away two and a half months after we were married. I know that this has permanently damaged him and he has no one to ask for advice about marriage or parenting. I try to remember this and take that into consideration. But it’s often hard. I’m naturally a leader and I do things my way. I don’t ask for advice.

My friend described how during the last few years, she has consistently required her three children to respect their father. Even their dog had to be re-trained! She said it was slow going at first, but now they’re all much happier and her husband feels important and needed. Affirmation. But my friend still makes all the decisions. Her husband just needed that affirmation. Love languages!

Encouragement, priorities, affirmation, relationships.

I know many Christian wives wholeheartedly throw themselves into the belief of the submissive help meet scenario of a wife to a husband. I’ve read all those books too. They really confused me. Some of those books were rather frightening. I think this is a greatly misunderstood area in Christian and secular circles. My mother and aunts and grandmothers and great aunts were all very dominant (domineering?) women. I come from a long line of strong matriarchs on both sides, so the whole meekness thing isn’t ingrained in me at all. Wives can be strong and make decisions – with the blessings of their husbands.

When I’ve attempted to discuss these marriage roles with my husband, he was confused too. He doesn’t want me to be submissive to him and he doesn’t want to dominate. He’d rather I make all the household decisions. He knows I can handle it. Often, we make big decisions together, but it’s usually my knowledge, experience, and guidance that propel us in the right direction. It’s probably because I have more time to do research. He makes lots of decisions at work, so he’d rather know that home is running smoothly. Except when major plumbing repairs or electricity is involved. Then I need him to take over, because I don’t play with electricity.

So, my conclusion to the whole help meet submission thing is that each marriage should have spouses who submit to each other. We’re all different and our relationships with our husbands are all different. We were all created to be individuals, under God, as helpers to each other.

I think people try to read too much into the issue. Why make it harder than it is?

I tried to find my way for a while. I went through a skirt-wearing phase and my husband was quite horrified. He said he thought he’d entered an episode of Little House on the Prairie and he wanted to go home. NOW. So, I wear makeup and I like pretty clothes. We attended a Fundamentalist Independent Baptist for a time and there were brochures in the lobby about proper Christian dress. Every family has to make their own decisions as to what works for them. I don’t feel that makeup and shorts make me or my daughters less Christian. And modesty is more a behavior anyway. The Bible mentions it should be our constant “conversation.” We want to focus more on heart matters than appearances in our household.

I am making more of an effort to encourage my kids to respect their father, Aaron. It’s tough, I’ll tell you! I know I don’t respect him much either. I mean, honestly, I know everything, right? I know I am condescending and contemptuous. And my eldest daughter is a great mimic, much to my chagrin.  But he seriously can’t tell me to make the decisions and then not like those decisions. (And if I ask for advice, just tell me what I want to hear. It’s not like I really wanted an opinion anyway, ya know?)

Aaron struggles with being harsh to Elizabeth and having excessive expectations. He struggles with consistency in discipline. So, I think working on our relationships will improve everything. If the kids love and respect their father, they will desire to please him. Then he will see their efforts and not be so frustrated when they fall short. And I know that I struggle with lots of things too.

I could bemoan the loss of family devo time or I could suck it up that my husband leaves before anyone is up and comes home at dinnertime and is tired. I do devotional time and Bible teaching with my children as part of our homeschool. There’s always something to be discontent about, but is it worth it? Let’s just focus on the positives.

It’s so true that “if Mama ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy.”

My attitude is the catalyst for everything that happens with this family.

I have seen great improvements in my kids’ behavior when I strive to be cheerful and optimistic and make sure the schedule runs smoothly, including feeding the little monsters a good, healthy breakfast. I’m so much more tired on those days though!

So, that fearful word “submission” looks different in my household than it may look in yours. But we’re happy and blessed now that we’re working it out in a way that fits for us. Different denominations preach different interpretations of this. But what’s it’s about is power. Wives have power over our husbands, whether we exert it or not. Like that quote in My Big Fat Greek Wedding: “The man is the head, but the woman is the neck. And she can turn the head any way she wants.”

We can offer advice. We can be persuasive. We can do this in a godly way that honors our husbands and the decisions he makes. Most husbands do what their wives desire. Make sure your heart is in the right place.

Resources:

  • The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work: A Practical Guide from the Country’s Foremost Relationship Expert by John M. Gottman 
  • The Relationship Cure: A 5 Step Guide to Strengthening Your Marriage, Family, and Friendships by John Gottman
  • Boundaries in Marriage: Understanding the Choices That Make or Break Loving Relationships by Henry Cloud and John Townsend 
  • The Marriage You Want: Moving beyond Stereotypes for a Relationship Built on Scripture, New Data, and Emotional Health by Sheila Wray Gregoire and Dr. Keith Gregoire
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Introvert. Only child. Homeschool Mom. Geek. Naturalist. Traveler. Questioning authority since birth.

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Comments

  1. Megan Card says

    September 5, 2012 at 3:41 pm

    Jenny, Thank you for joining us for the Southern Mama’s Blog Hop! I hope you have a blessed day!

    -Megan @ {All Things New} Host of the Southern Mama’s Blog Hop

    Reply
  2. Sonja says

    September 5, 2012 at 6:28 pm

    Thanks for linking up with Southern Mama’s! Please be sure to follow the hostesses and check out the other ladies! xo

    Reply
  3. Sonja says

    September 5, 2012 at 6:28 pm

    Thanks for linking up with Southern Mama’s! Please be sure to follow the hostesses and check out the other ladies! xo

    Reply
  4. homemaker-mom says

    September 8, 2012 at 10:29 pm

    I am stopping by from The Southern Mamas Blog Hop. I am now following you on twitter too. I was amazed at your article on ALpha female… some of what you wrote I needed to hear today!

    Reply
  5. Amy Clark Scheren @ Gospel Homemaking says

    January 9, 2014 at 6:40 pm

    It’s interesting to read how different people do things and what works for them in their individual households. We have a lot of freedom to act according to our own particular circumstances and personalities. But a problem arises when what “works for me” isn’t what works for God.

    How my husband and I choose to treat each other and live out our relational roles may seem like a personal issue, but it is really a gospel issue. My husband’s leading and my submitting isn’t about us. It isn’t about our personal contentment or fulfillment, although we usually find both in these God-given roles. Our marriage is a picture of the relationship between Christ and the church, regardless of how imperfect we both may be. As wives, we are called to submit to our own husbands, as to the Lord. And the husband is called to be the head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church (Eph. 5:22-23). “Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit in everything to their husbands.” (Eph. 5:24) If I try to be the leader of my husband, that is the same as the church trying to be the leader of Christ. An “alpha-church” isn’t part of God’s design.

    Submission isn’t always easy. Believe me, I know. It can be especially hard if the husband isn’t a Christian or isn’t a good leader. But the Bible doesn’t give us any room to argue, even in those difficult situations. 1 Peter 3:1-2 makes it clear that we are to submit, regardless of what kind of leader our husband happens to be. As a matter of fact, our submission may be the very thing God uses to turn our husband’s heart to Himself as he observes our “respectful and pure conduct.” My husband and I are living proof of this grace.

    Being submissive isn’t about the clothes I wear or how I style my hair and make up. I have modern clothes, wear make-up, and cut my hair. I also discipline our children and make countless decisions throughout the day. Yet, I do all these things with a submissive heart towards my husband. I dress in a way that shows that I respect him and myself. I discipline and make decisions as a representative of him. And I enjoy a freedom and protection that is to be found in obeying God.

    Reply

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  1. Submission says:
    October 10, 2014 at 10:13 am

    […] a comment on a great lesson I learned from a Jewish friend. Read it for what it was for me at the […]

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