Why So Serious?

I recently took part in a funeral for a lady in our church who died at the age of ninety-three. Living to the age of ninety-three is remarkable in and of itself, but what was even more remarkable was that she and her husband (who is ninety-four years old) had been married for seventy-two years! As a marriage counselor, that makes these two my heroes!

What is it that helps a marriage stay together for seventy-two years?

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Selective Memory in Marriage

Wife: “Don’t forget we’re going to my parents this weekend to help them with that project.”
Husband: “What project?”
Wife: “Remember, they’re redoing their living room, and we have to help them move all the furniture and repaint.”
Husband: “You didn’t tell me we were doing that this weekend!”
Wife: “Yes I did. I told you Wednesday, when we were coming home from church.”
Husband: “I didn’t think you were talking about this weekend!”
Wife: “I swear you have a selective memory. You only remember what you want to remember!”

Sound familiar? The particulars of the conversation may be different, but most of us have experienced similar conversations.

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Genesis 40 – Look Beyond the Difficulty

It frustrates me when I see good and godly people try to do the right thing and suffer unfairly
and unjustly for it. It’s hard to watch this happen without somehow doubting the fairness and justice of God.
In Genesis chapter 40, you find Joseph continuing to quietly and consistently do the right thing. You would think he would be rewarded for his integrity, but by the end of the chapter, Joseph is not only unrewarded, he’s forgotten…and I’m frustrated. But I’m only frustrated if I stop reading at chapter 40.
If I look beyond chapter 40 to chapter 41, my attitude changes. When I look beyond chapter 40, I begin to see God bringing the pieces of the puzzle together and working things out.
Maybe that’s my problem with injustice in the world today. Maybe I need to look further out. If I look further out, I find that God will not abandon His people. (Hebrews 13:5) (Matthew 28:20). If I look further out, I know that God will sovereignly right wrongs and turn them for the good of His people. (1 Corinthians 10:13) (Romans 8:28) (Galatians 6:9).
When I experience injustice, my frustration comes from leaving my focus on what I see right now, rather than what God promises will eventually be. I encourage you not to get stuck in your chapter 40 of unfairness and injustice. Chapter 41 is next!
Do you feel you’re being treated unfairly? Has trying to do the right thing backfired on you? If so, go back to the Scriptures listed above, and find one that will help you look beyond the injustice to what is to come.

 

Bret Legg is the Teaching and Counseling Pastor at Warren Baptist Church in Augusta, GA.

Genesis 39 – Life’s Ups and Downs

Everyone experiences ups and downs in life. You can’t avoid it. The key is staying consistent despite the ups and downs.
Joseph is one of two people in Scripture that lived an exemplary life consistently, despite the ups and downs he faced. (Daniel is the other.) Joseph faced some great highs and some great lows, and though I doubt he was happy with everything he went through, he maintained his spiritual and relational integrity through it all.
There are some things mentioned in Genesis chapter 39 that I need to remember when it comes to successfully making it through the highs and lows of my life. I need to remember:
  • In every circumstance, God is with me…even if He doesn’t appear to be.
  • In every circumstance, I can depend on God…more than on myself.
  • In every circumstance, God wants to work for my good…even in the bad circumstances.
Consistently remembering these three things will help you maintain your integrity, outlook, and witness…even when the ups and downs of your circumstances pressure you to take the path of least resistance.
In the midst of life’s ups and downs, we need to be more like Joseph, the world needs us to be more like Joseph, and God needs us to be more like Joseph. It won’t always be easy, but making God (rather than circumstances) the compass that guides our thoughts and behaviors will pay the biggest dividends in the end. (See Genesis 45-46.)
Are the ups and downs of life throwing you for a loop? What is it you most need to remember in the midst of your circumstance? Stop right now and ask God to make something good out of your difficulties, then start looking for it. (See Genesis 50:20.)

 

Bret Legg is the Teaching and Counseling Pastor at Warren Baptist Church in Augusta, GA.

Is Your Marriage Boring or Confidently Comfortable?

My wife and I recently returned home from a five day trip to Washington D.C. Actually, if you include a day to drive there and a day to drive back, it was more like a three day trip to D.C.

After three days of walking over 13 miles to see the iconic sites, and two days of traffic laden driving, we were glad to be home. After unpacking, my wife sat in her chair and I sat in mine, enjoying a very boring evening of quietly surfing social media.

If you read stuff on marriage (including my stuff), you can easily walk away thinking that a good marriage is one where you and your spouse are regularly:

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Glory Days

Glory days are defined as “times in the past that are regarded as being better than the present.”

Glory days can be that winning pass of the high school championship, that time we were big on campus and had the hot date, or that carefree summer we spent at the beach with friends. Whatever they may be, we all have glory days in the past that seem better than the present.

As a married couple, you have glory days. Maybe it was when you were dating and everything was fresh and new. Maybe it was the excitement of your wedding day. Maybe it was the early days of marriage when hope and passion were always high.

But what if those glory days now seem like a distant memory? What if those glory days have been replaced with marital conflict, parenting demands, financial pressure, and work stress. What if the days of passion have changed from “I can’t beat them off with a stick” to “I want to beat them up with a stick?”

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Genesis 38 – Obligations

In Genesis chapter 38, Judah’s oldest son (Er) marries a girl named Tamar. But Er is considered by God to be wicked, and he dies before he and Tamar have a child.
In their culture, Tamar is to conceive a child with the next oldest son, Onan, and that child will be considered Er’s child. (This is for the purpose of carrying on a family name.) But Onan doesn’t like the idea that the child will not be his, so He sabotages the conception. God judges Onan for not honoring his obligation, and Onan dies.
Judah only has one son left…Shelah. Shelah is too young to conceive with Tamar, so Judah tells Tamar to wait until he is old enough. But when Shelah is old enough, Judah ignores the promise he made to Tamar. This leaves Tamar childless, vulnerable, and frustrated.
Sometime after Judah’s wife dies, he takes a trip to Timnah. When Tamar hears this, she dons a veil, disguises herself as a prostitute, and goes out to meet Judah by the roadside. Not recognizing her, Judah sleeps with her and leaves some of his possessions as a promise of future payment.
Tamar conceives a child from this encounter. Three months later, Judah finds out Tamar is pregnant and he is incensed that she didn’t wait for the youngest son. Judah makes plans to put her to death, according to the laws and customs of the day. Then Tamar reveals to Judah the possessions he had left with her when he thought she was a prostitute, and Judah is forced to admit that he had wickedly refused to fulfill his obligation to her.
It’s easy to get caught up in all the sex and secrecy of this story, but those are story elements to communicate a larger principle. We, like Judah, Er, and Onan need to remember that failing to keep our obligations, whether to God or other people, is a sin. (Ecclesiastes 5:4) (Romans 13:7.)
Have you made an obligation to a spouse, child, friend or employer you’ve not yet kept? Now would be a great time to take steps towards fulfilling that obligation.
Bret Legg is the Teaching and Counseling Pastor at Warren Baptist Church in Augusta, GA.

Bull Riding and Marriage

I often tell people that marriage can be like a bull ride. Here’s what I mean by that…

In the beginning, when the bull rider gets on the bull, they look good, feel confident, and are surrounded by a lot of supporters. Those supporters speak words of encouragement, slap them on the back, and tell them, “You can do this!”

All this is like a bride and groom on their wedding day.

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3-Way Love

Before you misinterpret the title of this post, let me explain. This post is not about making love to two other people at the same time. It’s about making love to one person for a very long time. Wait… that didn’t sound right either. Let me start again.

There are 3 ways of displaying love to your spouse….not to be confused with what Dr. Gary Chapman describes as the 5 Love Languages. (All of a sudden, love is starting to sound a lot like math.) Anyway, as I was saying, the three ways of love are:

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