‘100% All Natural’ Marriage
We’re buying ‘100% natural’ food these days . . . and lots of it. ‘100% natural’ is locked into our noggins as positive, even though we don’t always know what it means or why it’s better or even different.
But what if someone offered you a ‘100% natural’ marriage? Would you want it? What would that look like?
Part of marriage is natural, especially the part that leads to children! That’s instinct. It’s natural to eat and sleep together, keep each other company, protect each other and help with life’s demands. We’ve got genetics going on too. I watch my adult children as they interact with their spouses and sometimes I get a little nauseous. I hear my voice coming from their mouths and think ‘Whoa!’ Did I really sound like that when I argued with your mom?” I probably did . . . or worse. There are genetic pre-dispositions to anger, shyness, addictions and other stuff too.
But most of what we husbands do comes from copying what we’ve seen others do . . . beginning with our fathers. Our ‘defaults’ were set as we watched how Dad treated Mom. Whatever he did, we got ‘permission’ to do when we got married. If he was unkind and demanding, it’s predictable we’ll be unkind and demanding. If he helped your mom around the house, it feels natural when you do the same.
We also got some of our values from dads on TV and in the movies, but I’m not sure that’s worked out entirely well. I grew up watching Father Knows Best and Leave It To Beaver yet my generation divorces over 50% of the time. The next generation has grown up on The Simpsons, Friends and Family Guy. Heaven help us.
A ‘100% natural’ husband would be a compendium of all these . . . genetics, heroes and role models. That’s how ‘daddy’ learned to ‘husband.’ It was ‘all natural.’ By osmosis. It was unintentional. It just happened.
But we can do better. We don’t have to settle for ‘100% natural.’ We don’t have to just take what was handed us as ‘the way’ and surrender to it. We have more resources, fewer traditions and freer minds than any generation before. We can build marriages so far above 100% natural as to be called ‘supernatural!’
How?
By following Jesus as we love and lead our wives. Let’s look at how a Christ-following husband might be different from the ‘100% natural’ package . . .
100% natural husband | Jesus-following husband |
Self-centered | Considers others (especially his wife) better than himself |
Selfish | Selfless – “loves his wife as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her” |
Headstrong | Attentive, teachable |
Proud | Gentle and humble in heart |
Competitive | Collaborative |
Unforgiving | Full of mercy and grace |
Placing your ‘minute by minute’ will under the control of Jesus Christ brings God into your life and marriage. Pausing to ask, “Lord, what would you have me know about this situation?” and then listening for His voice. Asking “Lord, what would you have me do with what you’ve shown me here?” And obeying His voice without question.
That’s the foundation of a supernatural marriage. That’s how we move from being a 100% natural husband to being a Jesus-following husband. Very few wives who call themselves Christians would turn away from a loyal husband who is moving from ‘100% natural’ towards Jesus. In fact, I’ve seen a bunch of wives fall madly in love with their husbands all over again. It’s like “Who stole my husband and replaced him with this wonderful man!”
Don’t settle for ‘100% natural.’ You can do better. And you’ll feel so much better about yourself as you do it too.
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Responses (4)
Amen. Grit is something that I must maintain in order to be a great husband. Being a husband is not for the weak.
I don’t think it’s wrong to be, in a positive way, proud and/or competitive as a husband, father, Christian. A lot of what’s lacking in church is the fact that men feel emasculated. When we are allowed to be men, have a challenge and a cause when we realize we are “alive” in Christ our wives, children, churches and communities will be better for it.
David I would agree. I want my wife and kids to know that I am proud man. That I am the family leader. My wife needs to know that I stand for my convictions and will work hard for my family which means being competitive in my job. My wife and I work very hard together to make our family work. But at the end of the day the family knows that I am the man and leader of the home. That said, I have a tricky situation being married to a pk. Needless to say I cannot compete with her on the spiritual side! But its not a bad thing and she gives me the grace to follow!
I just found this blog and will be interested to learn more. We do learn from our parents to find our path as a parent. I have always learned though, take the good and learn from the bad. No parent/husband is perfect.
Outstanding piece – I’d add one thought – don’t stop improving, listening and acting – this is a “continuous improvement project” – and, also, don’t be discouraged if you “hit a foul ball” – I just did yesterday (after 47+ years of marriage and I immediately started to realign things. Just seek HIM first !!!