THERE IS NOTHING TO LOSE

THERE IS NOTHING TO LOSE

I remembered when Jesus was being introduced to me about two decades ago I was afraid. Afraid of what? I thought of all I might lose – my friends, my hobby, my career, education, fame and influence in the society. I have ever loved to be a great farmer so I was afraid that if I receive Jesus, I might not realize my dream anymore. But I was wrong, so you are! Peter, one of the disciple of Jesus was also worried when he said to Jesus “Behold, we have forsaken all and followed thee; what shall we have (gain) therefore?” See what Jesus said in reply “ And everyone that has forsaken house, or brethren, or sister, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my name’s sake, shall receive an HUNDREDFOLD, and shall inherit everlasting life”.(matt.19:27,29)

There is nothing to lose with Jesus. It is like someone taking your raw food and helps you cook and then bring it back for you. Any life that is once in the hands of the devil is already a battered life. You need someone in the likes of a loving Jesus to help you take it away, renew it and return it to you. According to the words of Jesus above, anything that is forsaken for Christ’s sake will be returned and in a greater number (hundredfold), and in addition everlasting life will be yours.

The only clause is that, for harvest to be recorded there must have been a period of planting. Initially when you receive Jesus, your parents, siblings, children, friends, wife or husband may desert you. You might initially lose your business contact. There are times some will lose a job or contract or other certain opportunity just because he meet Jesus. This is a period of sowing! But the word of God says he/she will receive it back even in greater form. Your parents or new parents will come. More and better friends will surface, opportunities will open again and eternity will also be guaranteed.

You have nothing to lose but much to gain. More life to gain! (John 10:10). Every seed that is sowed comes back better. There is nothing in this world that should hold you back from Jesus. There is nothing to loos. All is well!

If you want to receive Jesus; do the following:

1)    In submission, knee down before Jesus where you are. 2) Verbally confess your sins to Him. 3) Beg Him to come into your life and save you from sin. 4) Locate where you could know Him better (a Church or Fellowship)

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Uncategorized

UNIVERSAL LAW ON HUMAN RELATIONSHIP

LAW NUMBER FOUR (4)
You will still get frustrated in life though you are good, in as much as you keep sound relationship within a wrong discipline, career, profession or company.
(The law of human misplacement)
So many people have died not because they were bad; but simply because they were with the bad ones. So many people with great ideas have lost several opportunities in life, not because they were not qualified but because they were found in a controversial environment. I know a beautiful modest lady who had a little delay in marriage. And when the man that will marry her found out that she is a Corps member (police officer), he was somehow skeptical. It took a great deal to convince him to go ahead with her. I am not saying that to be a corps member is bad, but definitely some people may not be convinced otherwise. There are much better potentials out there in the open country whose star will never shine. Why? They are good but are in a poor club. They are well trained but in a wrong church. They have better things to offer their society but are in the wrong political party. They have good heart that would have taken them far in life, but they found themselves following a multitude who serves the wrong god. Several people would have been candidates of heaven but they follow contrary beliefs, so they forfeit the golden offers of salvation. Moreso, many have been imprisoned, condemned, and even killed. So many have been raped, maimed, and end up being poor. Not because they are the worse of men, but because they engage in a wrong relationship, a wrong discipline, and a wrong company. With the right mind, and a loving heart and the keeping away from a wrong company, you can remain healthy, live long and become a celebrity.
Application:
·       Until you connect to the right group, right friendship, right party, right church, right religious belief and right profession; every of your good intention may end you in frustration.
·       On the other way round, it has been discovered at times that people with moral deficiency and cases of abuse got better off simply because they associate with the right set of people.
·       When you have great ideas, the next important thing is to look for the right human environment to share it; else you may get stocked down.
Note: I am not saying you should offensively or outrightly keep away from certain people, no! The right standard on Human Relationship is that you cannot be a friend of all, but you must be at peace with all! You cannot do away with some people of opposing views but you can choose to live at arms’ length with them. There are certain companies you cannot totally keep off from; especially when their opinion, beliefs and lifestyle are controversial and they hence posed to be the target of the majority – your family, home town, your siblings, people of the same race and color etc. But you can by wisdom and counsel survive their negative influence on you.
You can choose not to do certain job; you can choose not to go certain places. You can choose the right company, you can! You can secure your beautiful future by keeping the right company and discipline. You can!
Meet you next time on the next law
By: ‘Biodun D. Eniola
Marriage related

Welcome message By Pastor Eniola

Pastor & Mrs Eniola

I remember that my first ever preached sermon was not to non-religious body but to a group of Christians at Fellowship of Christian Students (FCS) in 1992. I titled the message “LET BROTHERLY LOVE CONTINUE”. All I could see at that time was a dispersed body. I saw segregation and disunity amidst Christians and among men in general. Taking my text from Hebrews 13:1; I preached that the heartbeat of God is to see a united Church on earth. It was years after that I realized that the 5 minutes message in 1992 would later be my reason for living.

The desire of God is to have many sons with varied gifts and visions but His topmost concern is to see them working and walking together. His ever living (breathing) word is sum up in His word in John 17:21. He says ‘that they all may be one’! The entire gospel message hangs on: “Love God and Love Others as Yourself” – Matthew 22:36-40. Every other messages of life revolve around these words.
A man who loves God without loving man is like someone who began a journey on a good term but will never enjoy that journey, because he will continue to stumble all through the journey. A man who loves other people without first loving God is like someone who desires a good ending without stepping out at all into the journey; for God is the beginning of all things. Someone who loves God and others without loving himself is someone who started well on the race of life and really enjoys it but may never end well. Why? He will soon submerge the main carrier of both before reaching the end. It is when you discover self that you really begin to value life and guide against killers of self. It is then and there that God and others becomes sort after. It is the proper integration of both God and others into self that make a balance life.
How would you know a true religion, a true church, a true denomination, a true family, a true tribe, a true man of God, and a true person? As they love self, they love others. As they promote self, they promote others. As they are striving to please their God, they please others. As they fear God, they fear man. As they make effort to build their church/ministry, they build other churches and ministries along side. As they are raising their children, they raise other children … A true organization wants to belong and contribute to the larger body “Share each other’s troubles and problems, and in this way obey the law of Christ. If you think you are too important to help someone in need, you are only fooling yourself. You are really a nobody.” – Galatians 6:2-3, NLT.
That is why I say: ‘this concern of God is His Living Word!
The balancing of these three laws of Christ is His heart beats
The summary of this gospel message is the BREATHING WORD.
Thank you for coming to this life-changing site. Thank you for celebrating the faithfulness of God over our lives since year 2000.
Once again, you are warmly welcome.
ABIODUN DAVID Eniola
President
The Breathing Word.
Marriage related, Uncategorized, Unity related

LOVE IS NOT JEALOUS:Family Study Guide, Week 25, June 2011

LOVE IS NOT JEALOUS (Love test #4)

Hints: … you must remain comfortable whenever your partner is moving ahead of you. In this, you’ve just proven that your love is genuine.

TEXT: “Charity envieth not…” 1Corinthians 13:4 – KJV

“Love is not jealous…” 1Corinthians 13:4 – NLT

OTHER PASSAGES: 1Samuel 18:6-11; Proverb 6:34; Songs 8:6

INTRODUCTION

A Marriage Counselor asked a man why he prefers his wife withdraw from her place of work and become a permanent full House-wife. He replies by saying ‘I am afraid, if she gets highly promoted and brings in more money, then she will become proud and will not be submissive again’. Another woman will always feel uncomfortable whenever her husband cooks for the family. Why? The husband seems to cook better than any other at home. So, she will make sure the husband did not come around the kitchen to instruct her whenever she is cooking.

According to Oxford Advance Learner’s Dictionary, Jealousy is the act of feeling angry or unhappy because you wish you had something that somebody else has. Once you feel jealous, your love is not perfect. Apart from giving, patient and kindness; to test for genuine love in a relationship, you must remain comfortable whenever your partner is moving ahead of you. When he/she is furthering education, getting promoted, sharing more innovative ideas, gets governmental opportunities, or suddenly become the family bread winner; you must be calm, articulate, supportive, and appreciative. In this, you’ve just proven that your love for him/her is genuine.

WORDS FOR THE MOMENT (Family nuggets for the week)

  • It is a plus for you if a member is ahead of you in certain areas or has more privileges than you. If you know how to handle a relationship well, every opportunity someone has will turn out to be a bonus for you.
  • Do you know what jealousy does? It kills talents and person that could have become a blessing to you.
  • When someone is bitterly jealous of you, his love is not there or rather her love is not perfect yet.
  • Several talented children have been persecuted, wives devoiced, maids driven out and even staff sacked simply because they were envied.
  • In dealing with jealousy, we need to know that every promotion, achievement, or income that comes to a member of a family is owned by all the family members. You could be the medium of the blessing, but you don’t own it alone.
  • When you are jealous of your good reputation, not wanting to loose it; that is a good type of jealousy.

CASE STUDY

1)   David could have become one of the great pillar in the cabinet of king Saul, but because of jealousy, king Saul drove him away and made several (about 21) attempts to assassinate him.

2)   We knew a man who out of jealousy killed the domestic animals of his wife. Eventually, partly affecting the source of finance to their family. Out of envy, he made much attempt to stop his wife from furthering her educational career.

3)   To prove his genuine love and that he was not envious of David’s multiple successes, Jonathan decided to become an assistant – 1Samuel 19:12; 23:16-17.

FAMILY GROUP DISCUSSION

One of the secrets of victory is for one to voice out his/her mind. Can you sincerely tell areas you have been jealous of your husband, wife, child or any other member of your family?

LET US PRAY TOGETHER

Pray for the restoration of all you’ve lost to jealousy

BOLD STEP

1)   This week, appreciate all the good areas your wife, husband, or child has been better than you.

2)   This week, call back someone whom you have despised out of jealousy.

PRAYER NETWORKING GUIDE (Praying for other participating families)

Incase your family or other participating families have once persecuted someone out of jealousy, ask for God’s mercy.

SEED TIME

In the light of 1 Corinthians 16:1-2, this week sow a seed to the Home Caring Centre. “For God so love the world that He gave…”

OUR PRAYERS FOR YOU THIS WEEK

Blessed God, restore every good opportunity, favour and help this family have lost because they were envied. Turn their captivity around!

SIDE VIEW: Unity in the body of Christ

How many Christian denominations has your Church despised or persecuted out of envy. Some Churches & Ministries has refused to participate in joint programmes with other thriving Christian bodies because of jealousy – The Breathing Word.

LAST WEEK ON THE FSG

Topic: LOVE IS KIND. Kindness is an act of handling someone

with care and tenderness in the process of waiting patiently for him/her to change

NEXT WEEK ON THE FSG (Week 26, June-July 2011)

Event: Special Family Prayer Week. Participating families are encouraged to spend the hour of Home Caring Centre to pray for their families this week.

Written by ‘BIODUN & ‘BIMBO ENIOLA

 

FOR DETAILS ABOUT THE HOME CARING CENTRE AND  HOW TO USE THE FAMILY STUDY GUIDE, PLEASE CLICK THE PAGE OF:HOME CARING CENTRE(family study guide) ON www.thebreathingword.org

If you are blessed with this study, forward it to another family around you. Be a source of healing to other family around the world. You could also become one of our official CONTACT FAMILY in reaching other families around your locality. Thanks.

 

The Home Caring Centre is the vision of The Breathing Word Ministry to families around the world; bringing healings and promoting love, unity and harmony. Make your own home a caring centre!

Family Study Guide is produced by The Breathing Word.

Written by ‘Biodun & ‘Bimbo ENIOLA.

For further enquiry, visit  our Secretariat @ Kwara Cooperative Building, No 16 Sulu Gambari road, along State Library, P.O. Box 5842 Ilorin, Nigeria. Or call +2348038577804, +2348072409516, +2347030062880. Email: info@thebreathingword.org, biodunadewumi@thebreathingword.org

Marriage related ,

The need for unity in the church

“Make my joy complete by being of the same mind, maintaining the same love, united in spirit, intent on one purpose,” (Phil. 2:2).

One of the signs of apostasy (falling from the truth) in the Christian Church is the bickering and disunity among Christians.  Jesus said that the world would know that we were His disciples by the love that we have for one another (John 13:35).  In Col. 3:14, it says that love is the perfect bond of unity. The New Testament speaks about us being unified in Christ (Eph. 4:5).  In response to Christians who follow after individuals rather than Jesus, Paul says that Christ is not divided (1 Cor. 1:12-13).  Though Christ is not divided, His body of believers is.  Divisions in the Christian church can be a healthy and necessary thing: “For there must also be factions among you, in order that those who are approved may have become evident among you,” (1 Cor. 11:19).  But too much of a good thing isn’t good.

It is all right to have differences of opinion on the non-essential matters like worship styles or days, pre-trib rapture, post-trib rapture, Arminianism, Calvinism, etc. Whether you believe one or the other, do not affect salvation. Yet far too many Christians use these non-essential differences as justification for division and sometimes even insight anger. When this occurs, the love of God in our hearts is sacrificed to our pride. Instead of saying to one another, “I am right and you are wrong,” we should be saying something like, “It is certainly possible that you are correct.  Now, let’s work together to glorify God and expand His kingdom.”  Perhaps this is too simplistic, but at least it displays an attitude of humility that helps to bring unity.  It is the devil that wants us to fall into the self abuse of division and bickering.

Sometimes apostasy means remaining united

There is a time for division in the body of Christ.  When an individual or a church group is denying clear scripture and remains unrepentant after being admonished, then it is time to break fellowship with that group.  Such is the case with the Metropolitan Community Church denomination which openly advocates the support of homosexuality.  Also, the Evangelical Lutheran church is in risk of apostasy by entertaining the idea of accepting homosexual relationships into church as is also the case with United Church of Christ:  “The United Church of Christ set up a $500,000 scholarship fund for gay and lesbian seminarians Friday and urged wider acceptance of homosexuals by other denominations.” (United Church Makes Gay Scholarship, CLEVELAND, Jun 16, 2000, AP Online via COMTEX).  Or “The supreme court of the United Methodist Church was asked Thursday to reconsider the denomination’s ban on gay clergy. (Church court of United Methodists asked to decide on gay clergy ban, NASHVILLE, Tennessee, Oct 25, 2001, AP WorldStream via COMTEX).  Such movements by churches toward accepting in Christianity are clearly a sign of apostasy.  If they don’t believe God’s word in such a fundamental issue, how can they be trusted to understand God’s word in other issues?

Church groups like this are in open rebellion against God and His word and it would not only be prudent, but it would be biblical to not fellowship with these groups.

What is it that unites us?

Primarily, it is the saving work of Christ that unites us.  Secondarily, it is the essential doctrines that define orthodoxy. We have, as a common heritage, the blood of Christ that has been shed for the forgiveness of our sins.  True Christians serve the true and living God and we know Jesus in a personal and intimate way (1 Cor. 1:9). We have been redeemed by God himself.  Furthermore, we have the body of Scriptures which tell us the essentials of the faith and deviating from these essentials means to be outside the camp of Christ.  It is the essential doctrines that we must know and unite in.

Why then, for all practical purposes, do we elevate the non-essential to the place of essentials?  I believe it is because of immaturity and pride in various Christians.  Should we not sacrifice our “perfect” opinion on a biblical matter for being gracious to another brother or sister in Christ?  Of course we should, but when that doesn’t happen, we have denominational splits.  I cannot see how such a huge fragmentation in the Christian Church in denominations and sects glorifies God.

The Christian church, as a whole, needs to repent. We need to look at ourselves. We need to look at our churches. We need to look at one another and decide that we will stand on the essential doctrines of the faith and that we will be united against the enemy. Those of us who are united by the blood of Christ are not enemies with one another whether we be Presbyterian or Baptist or Lutheran.  It may be difficult for many of us to look lovingly into the eyes of those of a different denomination without thinking in our hearts that they are wrong about this doctrine or that doctrine.  But, we need to be reminded that there is neither a Presbyterian nor a Baptist nor a Lutheran on the throne of God.  All of us I am sure, will have our theologies corrected when we stand before the throne of God.  Therefore, we need to seek to work together to further the Kingdom of God.

Romans 14:1-12 speaks about accepting Christians of differing opinions and to not judge them because, “To his own master he stands or falls; and stand he will, for the Lord is able to make him stand.  One man regards one day above another, another regards every day alike. Let each man be fully convinced in his own mind…But you, why do you judge your brother? Or you again, why do you regard your brother with contempt? For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of God,” (Rom. 14:4-5,10).  The whole point is that we need to be united, not bickering.  We need to move beyond the denominational barriers of what separates us into the common ground of what unites us:  Jesus!

Ask yourself what is most important in life. Is it your relationship with God?  If it is, and it should be, should you not also be seeking the same thing that God wants?  Should you not also be seeking to love one another as Christ commanded us? Love is the perfect bond of unity, (Col. 3:14).

Apostasy begins in our hearts when we put distance between ourselves and our brothers and sisters in Christ because of a difference of opinion on a non-essential doctrine. Apostasy means that we fall away from the truth. This falling away can be complete or it can be slight. Let’s not commit apostasy in our hearts by abandoning the truth of God’s call of unity and love within the body of Christ.  Remember, it is the devil that wants us to fight each other so that he can be freed up to deceive the world. If we are fighting each other then we are falling prey to His tactics.

I know that it is easy to speak these words and it is very difficult to apply them. That is true because true love is difficult to live.  But what if the world began to see the Christian Church uniting in spite of its differences? What if the world started to see how the Christian Church started to love not only their own church members but other church members? What do you think the world would say if the churches’ bickering stopped? What do you think the unbelievers would say if they saw us living more and more the loving attitude and a sacrificial life of Christ across denominational barriers? It would be a tremendous witness for Christ. It would be a tremendous assault on the enemy and I know that God would use it mightily to bring others to Himself by his grace.

Apostasy begins with the individual. Apostasy begins in the heart and the mind. Whichever comes first is not important. Whether we think something wrong and then feel it or feel something wrong and then think it. The heart and the mind are so closely related that we must guard them both. We must focus on the truth of God’s word and let our minds be shaped by it. We must seek to have our minds shaped by the love of God as we move not only to learn about Him, but also to carry out His desires.

What should we do to bring unity wherever possible?

We need to look at our own hearts and our own minds and compare them to Jesus and the Scripture. Where ever the two are not in agreement, it is we who need to change.  We need to pray that the Lord would provide opportunities to work with other Christians across denominational lines.  We need to recognize that we have differences of opinions and worship styles and that that is okay.  But we need to lift each other up and be united in Christ.

Unity related , ,

Six Steps for Resolving Conflict in Marriage Dennis & Barbara Rainey

There is no way to avoid conflict in your marriage. The question is: How will you deal with it?

Few couples like to admit it, but conflict is common to all marriages. We have had our share of conflict and some of our disagreements have not been pretty. We could probably write a book on what not to do!

Start with two selfish people with different backgrounds and personalities. Now add some bad habits and interesting idiosyncrasies, throw in a bunch of expectations, and then turn up the heat a little with the daily trials of life. Guess what? You are bound to have conflict. It’s unavoidable.

Since every marriage has its tensions, it isn’t a question of avoiding them but of how you deal with them. Conflict can lead to a process that develops oneness or isolation. You and your spouse must choose how you will act when conflict occurs.

Step One: Resolving conflict requires knowing, accepting, and adjusting to your differences.

One reason we have conflict in marriage is that opposites attract. Usually a task-oriented individual marries someone who is more people-oriented. People who move through life at breakneck speed seem to end up with spouses who are slower-paced. It’s strange, but that’s part of the reason why you married who you did. Your spouse added a variety, spice, and difference to your life that it didn’t have before.

But after being married for a while (sometimes a short while), the attractions become repellents. You may argue over small irritations—such as how to properly squeeze a tube of toothpaste—or over major philosophical differences in handling finances or raising children.   You may find that your backgrounds and your personalities are so different that you wonder how and why God placed you together in the first place.

It’s important to understand these differences, and then to accept and adjust to them. Just as Adam accepted God’s gift of Eve, you are called to accept His gift to you. God gave you a spouse who completes you in ways you haven’t even learned yet.

We were no exception. Perhaps the biggest adjustment we faced early in our marriage grew out of our differing backgrounds. I grew up in Ozark, Missouri, a tiny town in the southwestern corner of the “Show-Me” state. Barbara grew up in a country club setting near Chicago and later in Baytown, Texas. Barbara came into our marriage a refined young lady. I was a genuine hillbilly.

It was as though we came from two different countries with totally different traditions, heritages, habits, and values. The differences became apparent early in our marriage. Take furniture, for example. Barbara had an Ethan Allen dream book and she was always looking at it. It was full of things made of solid cherry, solid walnut, solid mahogany. It was nothing for chairs to cost $189.95—per leg.

I didn’t understand why she wanted to go buy this kind of stuff when, in southwest Missouri, you could go to K-Mart and get a formica table with chrome legs and six chairs! And for a lot less than $189.95. You can eat off that kind of table for years and it will never show any wear.

So, how did we compromise? We bought an antique and I was expected to refinish it—which created an opportunity for another major difference in our backgrounds to surface. Barbara’s father was an engineer. He is mechanically gifted, can fix anything, and actually enjoys it. I’m convinced he could fix a nuclear reactor.

My dad had a background in sales. Fixing things was not his idea of fun. If bailing wire or a little duct tape wouldn’t work, he usually called the plumber or whatever repairman was necessary.

And so there we were, just married, with an antique table that needed refinishing. I went at it reluctantly, but I got it done. In some ways it saved our marriage in the early going.

Step Two: Resolving conflict requires defeating selfishness.

All of our differences are magnified in marriage because they feed what is undoubtedly the biggest source of our conflict—our selfish, sinful nature.

Maintaining harmony in marriage has been difficult since Adam and Eve. Two people beginning their marriage together and trying to go their own selfish, separate ways can never hope to experience the oneness of marriage as God intended. The prophet Isaiah portrayed the problem accurately more than 2,500 years ago when he described basic human selfishness like this: “All of us like sheep have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way” (Isaiah 53:6). We are all self-centered; we all instinctively look out for number one, and this leads directly to conflict.

Marriage offers a tremendous opportunity to do something about selfishness. We have seen the Bible’s plan work in our lives, and we’re still seeing it work daily. We have not changed each other; God has changed both of us. The answer for ending selfishness is found in Jesus and His teachings. He showed us that instead of wanting to be first, we must be willing to be last. Instead of wanting to be served, we must serve. Instead of trying to save our lives, we must lose them. We must love our neighbors (our spouses) as much as we love ourselves. In short, if we want to defeat selfishness, we must give up, give in, and give all. As Philippians 2:1-8 tells us:

Therefore if there is any encouragement in Christ, if there is any consolation of love, if there is any fellowship of the Spirit, if any affection and compassion, make my joy complete by being of the same mind, maintaining the same love, united in spirit, intent on one purpose. Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves; do not merely look out for your own personal interests, but also for the interests of others. Have this attitude in yourselves which was also in Christ Jesus, who, although He existed in the form of God, did not regard equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied Himself, taking the form of a bond-servant, and being made in the likeness of men. Being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.

To experience oneness, you must give up your will for the will of another. But to do this, you must first give up your will to Christ, and then you will find it possible to give up your will for that of your spouse.

Step Three: Resolving conflict requires pursuing the other person.

Romans 12:18 says, “If it is possible, as much as it depends on you, live peaceably with all men.” The longer I live the more I realize how difficult those words are for many couples. Living peaceably means pursuing peace. It means taking the initiative to resolve a difficult conflict rather than waiting for the other person to take the first step.

To pursue the resolution of a conflict means setting aside your own hurt, anger, and bitterness. It means not losing heart. My challenge to you is to “keep your relationships current.” In other words, resolve that you will remain in solid fellowship daily with your spouse—as well as with your children, parents, coworkers, and friends. Don’t allow Satan to gain a victory by isolating you from someone you care about.

Step Four: Resolving conflict requires loving confrontation.

Wordsworth said, “He who has a good friend needs no mirror.” Blessed is the marriage where both spouses feel the other is a good friend who will listen, understand, and work through any problem or conflict. To do this well takes loving confrontation.

Confronting your spouse with grace and tactfulness requires wisdom, patience, and humility. Here are a few other tips we’ve found useful:

  • Check your motivation. Will your words help or hurt? Will bringing this up cause healing, wholeness, and oneness, or further isolation?
  • Check your attitude. Loving confrontation says, “I care about you. I respect you and I want you to respect me. I want to know how you feel.” Don’t hop on your bulldozer and run your spouse down. Approach your spouse lovingly.
  • Check the circumstances. This includes timing, location, and setting. Don’t confront your spouse, for example, when he is tired from a hard day’s work, or in the middle of settling a squabble between the children. Also, never criticize, make fun of, or argue with your spouse in public.
  • Check to see what other pressures may be present. Be sensitive to where your spouse is coming from. What’s the context of your spouse’s life right now?
  • Listen to your spouse. Seek to understand his or her view, and ask questions to clarify viewpoints.
  • Be sure you are ready to take it as well as dish it out. You may start to give your spouse some “friendly advice” and soon learn that what you are saying is not really his problem, but yours!
  • During the discussion, stick to one issue at a time. Don’t bring up several. Don’t save up a series of complaints and let your spouse have them all at once.
  • Focus on the problem, rather than the person. For example, you need a budget and your spouse is something of a spendthrift. Work through the plans for finances and make the lack of budget the enemy, not your spouse.
  • Focus on behavior rather than character. This is the “you” message versus the “I” message again. You can assassinate your spouse’s character and stab him right to the heart with “you” messages like, “You’re always late—you don’t care about me at all; you don’t care about anyone but yourself.” The “I” message would say, “I feel frustrated when you don’t let me know you’ll be late. I would appreciate if you would call so we can make other plans.”
  • Focus on the facts rather than judging motives. If your spouse forgets to make an important call, deal with the consequences of what you both have to do next rather than say, “You’re so careless; you just do things to irritate me.”
  • Above all, focus on understanding your spouse rather than on who is winning or losing. When your spouse confronts you, listen carefully to what is said and what isn’t said. For example, it may be that he is upset about something that happened at work and you’re getting nothing more than the brunt of that pressure.


Step Five: Resolving conflict requires forgiveness.

No matter how hard two people try to love and please each other, they will fail. With failure comes hurt. And the only ultimate relief for hurt is the soothing salve of forgiveness.

The key to maintaining an open, intimate, and happy marriage is to ask for and grant forgiveness quickly. And the ability to do that is tied to each individual’s relationship with God.

About the process of forgiveness, Jesus said, “For if you forgive men for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men, then your Father will not forgive your transgressions” (Matthew 6:14–15). The instruction is clear: God insists that we are to be forgivers, and marriage—probably more than any other relationship—presents frequent opportunities to practice.

Forgiving means giving up resentment and the desire to punish. By an act of your will, you let the other person off the hook. And as a Christian you do not do this under duress, scratching and screaming in protest. Rather, you do it with a gentle spirit and love, as Paul urged: “Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving each other, just as God in Christ also has forgiven you” (Ephesians 4:32).

Step Six: Resolving conflict requires returning a blessing for an insult.

First Peter 3:8-9 says, “To sum up, all of you be harmonious, sympathetic, brotherly, kindhearted, and humble in spirit; not returning evil for evil or insult for insult, but giving a blessing instead; for you were called for the very purpose that you might inherit a blessing.”

Every marriage operates on either the “Insult for Insult” or the “Blessing for Insult” relationship. Husbands and wives can become extremely proficient at trading insults—about the way he looks, the way she cooks, or the way he drives and the way she cleans house. Many couples don’t seem to know any other way to relate to each other.

What does it mean to return a blessing for an insult? Chapter three of 1 Peter goes on to say “For, ‘the one who desires life, to love and see good days, must keep his tongue from evil and his lips from speaking deceit. He must turn away from evil and do good; he must seek peace and pursue it’” (verses 10-11).

To give a blessing first means stepping aside or simply refusing to retaliate if your spouse gets angry. Changing your natural tendency to lash out, fight back, or tell your spouse off is just about as easy as changing the course of the Mississippi River. You can’t do it without God’s help, without yielding to the power of the Holy Spirit.

It also means doing good. Sometimes doing good simply takes a few words spoken gently and kindly, or perhaps a touch, a hug, or a pat on the shoulder. It might mean making a special effort to please your spouse by performing a special act of kindness.

Finally, being a blessing means seeking peace, actually pursuing it. When you eagerly seek to forgive, you are pursuing oneness, not isolation.

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Three steps to take if you are considering divorce. by Dennis Rainey

What Does the Bible Say About Divorce? When Is It Allowed?

In our culture today many see divorce as a positive solution to a troubled marriage. But Harvard sociologist Armand Nicholi III concluded, “Divorce is not a solution, but an exchange of problems.” In a more personal way, novelist Pat Conroy said of his own marriage break-up, “Each divorce is the death of a small civilization.”

One woman wrote after her divorce, “Our divorce has been the most painful, horrid, ulcer producing, agonizing event you can imagine….I wish I could put on this piece of paper for all the world to see, a picture of what divorce feels like. Maybe my picture would stop people before it’s too late.”

Marriage Is a covenant

It should not be surprising that God declares, in Malachi 2:16, “I hate divorce!” And why does He hate divorce? One reason is that marriage is meant to be a special covenant between a man, a woman, and their God.

The vows I shared with Barbara went like this:

I, Dennis, take you, Barbara, to be my lawful wedded wife. I promise and covenant, before God and these witnesses, to be your loving and faithful husband; to stand by you in riches and in poverty, in joy and in sorrow, in sickness and in health, forsaking all others, as long as we both shall live.”

When we spoke these words, Barbara and I weren’t agreeing to provide some personal services via a contract that could be terminated if one of us defaulted. Instead, we were entering into a covenant—the same type of sacred obligation that God made with His children on several momentous occasions, such as with Noah after the flood.

Any covenant—including the marriage covenant—is a binding, weighty obligation. In Proverbs 20:25 we read, “It is a trap for a man to dedicate something rashly and only later to consider his vows” (NIV). Deuteronomy 23:23 says, “You shall be careful to perform what goes out from your lips, just as you have voluntarily vowed to the Lord your God what you have promised.” Jesus said that “every careless word that men shall speak, they shall render account for it in the day of judgment” (Matthew 12:36).

God takes the wedding covenant seriously, even when we do not.

God’s purposes for marriage

Another reason God hates divorce is because it tears at the very heart of God’s redemptive plan for the world. It is interesting to note the conversation between Jesus and the Pharisees in Matthew 19:3-9. When the Pharisees ask, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any reason at all?” Jesus answers by pointing them to God’s purposes for marriage:

And He answered and said, “Have you not read that He who created them from the beginning MADE THEM MALE AND FEMALE, and said, “FOR THIS REASON A MAN SHALL LEAVE HIS FATHER AND MOTHER AND BE JOINED TO HIS WIFE, AND THE TWO SHALL BECOME ONE FLESH’? “So they are no longer two, but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate.”

One of God’s major purposes for marriage is to mirror His image . After God created the earth and the animals, He said, “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; and let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” The account continues, “And God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them” (Genesis 1:26–27).

What does it mean to mirror God’s image? Your marriage should exalt God and glorify Him to a world that desperately needs to see who He is. Because we’re created in the image of God, people who wouldn’t otherwise know what God is like should be able to look at us and get a glimpse of Him.

A second purpose is to complete each other and experience companionship. Scripture clearly outlines a second purpose for marriage: to mutually complete each other. That’s why God said, “It is not good for the man to be alone; I will make him a helper suitable for him” (Genesis 2:18).

A third purpose for marriage is to multiply a godly legacy. God’s original plan called for the home to be a sort of greenhouse—a nurturing place where children grow up to learn character, values, and integrity. Deuteronomy 6:6-7 tells us, “These words, which I am commanding you today, shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your sons and shall talk of them when you sit in your house and when you walk by the way and when you lie down and when you rise up.”

Marriage is far more important than most of us realize. It affects God’s reputation on this planet. That’s why He hates divorce. And that’s why it’s essential for you to set Jesus Christ apart as the Builder of your home.

The “exception clauses”

If I could end this discussion about what the Bible says on divorce at this point, the lives of many pastors across this country would be much easier. But Scriptures also discuss what some call the “exception clauses” for divorce.

Earlier I quoted from the discussion between Christ and the Pharisees in Matthew 19. After Jesus refers to God’s original purposes for marriage, He is asked, “Why then did Moses command to GIVE HER A CERTIFICATE OF DIVORCE AND SEND her AWAY?” Jesus then answers, “Because of your hardness of heart Moses permitted you to divorce your wives; but from the beginning it has not been this way. And I say to you, whoever divorces his wife, except for immorality, and marries another woman commits adultery” (Matthew 19:7-9).

Another passage, 1 Corinthians 7:15-17, tells us:

Yet if the unbelieving one leaves, let him leave; the brother or the sister is not under bondage in such cases, but God has called us to peace. For how do you know, O wife, whether you will save your husband? Or how do you know, O husband, whether you will save your wife? Only, as the Lord has assigned to each one, as God has called each, in this manner let him walk. And so I direct in all the churches.

However you interpret these passages, one thing is clear: God never ordained or created the institution of divorce. Man did.

Beyond that, the generally accepted interpretation among a majority in the conservative evangelical community is that these passages indicate there are a couple of circumstances in which God releases a couple from the lifelong covenant of marriage:

  • In the case of consistent, unrepentant immorality
  • When an unbelieving spouse deserts a believer.

Most pastors and Christian leaders will discourage divorce even in these situations but ultimately will not discourage it when all other options have been considered. This is the position held by FamilyLife.

The minority interpretation among evangelical Christians holds that the only exception for divorce is death. A key verse in is Matthew 19:8 where Jesus says to the Pharisees, “Because of your hardness of heart Moses permitted you to divorce your wives; but from the beginning it has not been this way.” In addition, Paul states in 1 Corinthians 7:24, “Each man must remain in that condition in which he was called….Are you bound to a wife? Do not seek to be released.”

Clearly, this is a difficult, thorny issue, around which there is much debate. But both sides on this debate would agree that most couples seeking a divorce today do so for unbiblical reasons. They cite reasons such as poor communication, incompatibility, financial problems, lack of commitment to the relationship, changes in priorities. In short, when marriage isn’t working, the common solution is to get out.

If you are considering divorce

During my years of ministry I’ve seen story after story of couples deciding to trust God for a reconciliation. Many have been on the verge of obtaining a divorce—even for reasons we might consider biblical—yet have decided instead to allow God to work in their relationship.

In our culture, which emphasizes meeting individual needs no matter the cost (so as to gain pleasure and avoid pain), I believe we need to challenge Christians to be open to trusting God’s plan to come to pass in their marriage. Remember, God’s plan is to redeem. And very few spouses who consider divorce have done everything they can to salvage their marriage.

At this point, some of you might be saying, “Dennis, you just don’t understand my mate and my situation.” And you’re right, I don’t. However, given the seriousness of this subject, let me clearly say a few things here.

First, you need someone who is willing and able to walk with you during this time. Someone who will not just sympathize with you, but will also hold you accountable to look at the biblical issues and do what is right. I believe that if at all possible, the best person to do this is your pastor. Another person might be a counselor trained to use the Bible.

Second, you need the church of Jesus Christ surrounding you. Be very careful you don’t pull away from the church. Each part of the body needs the other. Make it clear to others in your church you don’t want to be left alone. You need their love, encouragement and good counsel. The last thing you need to do is make any decisions about your marriage in a vacuum.

Third, you need to seek God in His Word and cry out to Him to know His ways and His heart for what you should do and how you should respond to your spouse. If you are looking to legitimize your reasons for divorce … slow down, even stop. Notice how much of Scripture is given to God’s messages of forgiveness, reconciliation, peace, understanding, and patience.

How much value will you place on the vows you spoke to your mate before the face of your God? When you consider how much God values a covenant, what are the obligations of your marriage covenant before Him?

Will you be patient to wait for God to work in your marriage in a way you have not considered? Will you look to Him to give you the wisdom, the resources, the encouragement you need to do above and beyond what you ever could imagine or think?

Ask God to show you what you can do to rebuild your marriage. Remember, God specializes in redeeming the unredeemable. It is His preeminent desire for your marriage.

In closing, I’d like to challenge you to begin to pray together for 30 days as a couple that God will restore your marriage? That He will be the Builder of your home and that He will bring healing to your relationship. Ask Him for a miracle. Then join us at one of our Weekend to Remember marriage getaways so that you can be equipped with the biblical blueprints for your marriage and family. You will never regret that you prayed and then joined us for a life-changing weekend.

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The Most Romantic Thing My Husband Ever Said to Me by JoHannah Reardon

The dictionary defines romance as: Ardent emotional attachment or involvement between people. I like that definition. One of the most romantic things my husband ever said to me was when I was puking my guts out after an airline flight. Feeling like the scum of the world, I apologized that I’d once again put a damper on our trip by getting airsick (for about the 3,000th time). His response? “You’re the bravest person I know.” In that moment, I felt an ardent emotional attachment that was much greater than if he’d bought me 10 dozen roses and suitcases full of candy.

So what’s the key to having an ardent emotional attachment and involvement? I can think of at least five things.

1. You have to set aside time together. Regularly make a date to get away from jobs, ministry, kids, and the phone. If you’re living in the same house and never interacting, that isn’t ardent emotional attachment.

 

2. Become each other’s warrior and defender. Stick up for each other in front of the kids, in front of extended family, and in front of your friends. That doesn’t mean that you don’t see the other’s faults and face them, but do that privately after much prayer and thought. On a daily basis, make a commitment to build that person up whenever possible.

 

3. Return blessings for arrows. Whenever possible, return kindness for unkindness. Not only will it improve your marriage, but it will make you more Christ-like.

 

4. Talk about everything. If you’re afraid to talk to your spouse about how you really feel about something, you won’t feel an ardent emotional attachment. You’ll feel that you’re placating him or her so that you don’t have a blow out. That will end up feeling like walking on eggshells after a while. I’d rather see a couple have a shouting match about something they disagree on than refuse to talk about it at all. Every once in a while, my husband and I have a good old yelling match, which lets us know how strongly we’re feeling about the subject, then we calm down and really talk about it.

 

5. Sincerely desire the other person’s best. Most times that I’m angry with my husband, it’s because I didn’t get my way. When I step back and think about how I can help him be everything he can be in Christ, I feel a lot more compassion for him—indeed I feel an ardent emotional attachment that I would call romance.

 

Marriage related

Hello world by Pastor Eniola

Welcome to thebreathingword.org We hope you will find most of our articles interesting and exciting. Our main focus will be marriage related subject and issues concerning unity in the body of Christ. We invite you to visit with us from time to time. We also encourage you to make comment on any of the articles posted on this site. Thanks for visiting with us.

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