Every day of your married life, you have a critical choice to make: you choose if you will stay married today. This daily decision helps you do the things you need to do for your spouse. It empowers you to make the changes you must make to grow in your marriage. This choice will also influence the other choices you make during the day so you can protect the intimacy you have with your spouse. Today’s post talks about two additional choices that will have a critical impact on your marriage: love and personal responsibility.
"Choices That Impact Your Marriage" by Dr. Gary Smalley
God has given you the ability to choose. Next to the gift of His Son Jesus, this is the most precious gift you possess. It’s what separates you from all other forms of life on this planet. Making choices allows you to tap into strengths you never thought you had and exercise the power to change whatever needs changing in your life. Whatever grief or anger or pain you may feel about your marriage, you have the power within you to do something about it. You are not a victim. You are free to choose to act, to change. God has given you a huge reservoir of talent, creativity, knowledge, self-worth, energy, and love. You have the freedom to change your negative responses to your mate’s behavior and draw on these God-given assets to do the right and helpful thing. Making this choice can introduce a redemptive force for positive change in your marriage.
For marriage choices, it narrows down to two critical things every married individual must exercise: unconditional love and personal responsibility. Unconditional love means you accept and cherish your mate as he or she is. Personal responsibility means you take charge of correcting your own faults instead of your mate’s. That, in a nutshell, is it. Intimacy, happiness, growth, communication and all the other vital aspects of a good marriage grow out of these two choices. If both partners recognize this fact, there will be no victims in the marriage. Each person’s happiness will rest entirely in his or her own hands. And the end result is the safety and security that every marriage must have in order to thrive.
Do you believe this? Really believe this? Since it’s my contention that all behavior is a result of what we believe, this is a crucial question. Do you believe that you can take personal responsibility for the success of your marriage? If you don’t, then you must believe the opposite—that your spouse or circumstances are in control of what happens to you. You must believe that you are a victim. Therefore you must react and put the blame on your mate when the marriage does not meet your expectations. This is a tragedy, because when you blame your mate you not only divest yourself of your responsibility, you also reduce the choices you have to change the relationship. You forfeit the ability to control your own destiny.
So if you want your marriage to be the most exciting and rewarding journey of your life, the question to ask is not whether your mate is doing enough to make the marriage work, but rather: Are you loving your mate unconditionally by taking responsibility for your role in the relationship? A good way to turn this intention into a commitment is to make a promise of it. Promise to look at yourself first, to take responsibility for your own part of the marriage, and to stop trying to change your mate. Such a promise puts legs on unconditional love. It says you are willing to put your personal dreams and needs on hold for a while and make what’s best for the relationship a priority.
Lord, help me to be aware of the choices I make in my marriage. Through the Holy Spirit, convict me when my choices do not honor my marriage, and show me how I can make better ones. Help me to take personal responsibility in our relationship and to show my spouse unconditional love.
Am I loving my spouse unconditionally by taking responsibility for my role in the relationship?
Promise to look at your thoughts and actions each day, and take responsibility for your own part of your marriage.
In the day-to-day grind of life, it might be easy to forget to work on your marriage. But as you learned today, the secret to a lifelong union is to make the choice every day to love your spouse unconditionally and to be responsible for your part of the relationship. Don’t get discouraged because the work you are doing will make a difference, even if it doesn’t seem like it will. In the next post, you will get additional tips for ways you can restore or strengthen your relationship by learning how to fall in love with your spouse again.