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Operation: Thriving Marriage

Operation: Thriving Marriage

Bryon and Jennifer Harvey

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bible

How Much Do We Have to Agree?

August 10, 2022 by Bryon Harvey

A few weeks ago in a conversation with a friend, the topic of Roe v. Wade came up. As we talked about the US Supreme Court’s decision, he asked me if I was going to address it here. I told him no. I didn’t see how this particular decision was relevant to building a thriving marriage.

Yes, I know that this is a huge cultural shift in the United States. I know that this affects thousands of people as they wrestle with decisions before them and in their past. I know that the decision is significant, but I didn’t see it as specifically relevant to what we do here.

My friend pointed out to me that there is something about this decision that should probably be addressed here.

What if you and your spouse disagree about the Supreme Court’s decision? What if you disagree about other significant issues? How do you have a thriving marriage when you disagree on things that one or both of you think are important.

These emotionally charged issues can be significant struggles in a marriage. In some cases such disagreements cause couples to question the health of their marriage.  I’ve even heard of couples considering divorce because they felt they could not live with someone who disagrees on such an important issue.

So what should you do when you find yourselves disagreeing on issues that you feel are important? How do you manage these intense emotional conflicts?

  1. Remember your marriage is more important than whatever the issue is that you are facing. 

This does not mean that the issue you are facing is unimportant. It means that you have to correctly prioritize the issue and your marriage. In the end, your marriage is a greater priority than this argument. Even arguments over doctrine carry a lower priority than your marriage. In 1 Corinthians 7:12-14, Paul tells believing men and women not to divorce their unbelieving spouses. Our commitment before God to our spouses is one of the highest commitments we have ever made. We must maintain it as a priority.

  1. It is not your job to change your spouse’s mind.

We often say that marriage is about holiness not happiness. Time and time again we emphasize that your spouse is there to make you more holy. It is easy to think in these cases that our role is to convince our spouse of our side because our position is clearly the godly one. We even have Scripture to back up our position. What happens when your spouse is equally convinced that their position is the godly one and they have Scripture to back it up? This quickly becomes a me against you proposition rather than a Team Marriage approach. Which one do you think builds unity in a thriving marriage?

Here’s the thing. Holiness isn’t what you think. It’s what you do. No, I’m not saying you earn salvation by what you do. Salvation was earned for you by Jesus and what he did on the cross. The only thing you can do is put your faith in Him. Once you have received that salvation, though, you grow in holiness, not in doctrinal correctness, but in living a godly life. God made you holy through the washing of Jesus’ shed blood. You grow in that holiness by how you live in light of that reality. In these cases of intense disagreement, you help each other grow in holiness not by convincing your spouse of your side, but by loving each other through the disagreement.

  1. Never stop loving.

The rulers, powers, and spiritual forces of darkness want to destroy your marriage (Eph 6:12, John 10:10). They want to undo the work that God is doing in and through you. They will use these conflicts to attempt to put a wedge between you and create distrust in your marriage. But, the one who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world and he has come to give you life to the fullest (1 John 4:4, John 10:10). The Holy Spirit can use this same conflict to teach you how to love each other when you disagree. As you learn this deeper love it will bring you closer together and build greater oneness in your marriage. This love will be a testimony to the world of the power of God. The world does not understand how to live together in peace and disagreement. The impulse to separate and form different communities based on thoughts and opinions is of the devil. The power of God brings differences together and says His love and power is greater than all.

In your marriage there will be conflict. You will disagree. In the midst of this conflict you will strengthen your marriage if you prioritize your marriage, do not demand that your spouse change their mind, and never stop loving them.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: argue, bible, christian, conflict, marriage, politics

Who’s The Boss: Dealing With the Struggle for Control

March 28, 2022 by Bryon Harvey

Back in the 80’s there was a popular sitcom starring Tony Danza and Judith Light called Who’s the Boss. If you’re my age you might not remember Judith Light but you certainly remember Alyssa Milano. For a lot of us, she was our first TV crush. The comedy of the show revolved around the non-tradional gender roles of the successful career woman working outside the home and the male housekeeper. This of course included struggles for control between the two. 

Struggles for control between men and women at home are a pretty common device in sitcoms. Watching these struggles makes for some pretty entertaining television. These same sorts of struggles, while common in marriages, are far from entertaining. These struggles can create conflicts that when not handled well can create significant problems in a marriage.

It helps when dealing with struggles for control to remember why these struggles exist in the first place. The first reason we struggle for control is our own sin. The foundation of our sin and all the sins we commit is pride. In Mere Christianity C.S. Lewis says, “According to Christian teachers, the essential vice, the utmost evil, is Pride. Unchastity, anger, greed, drunkenness, and all that, are mere fleabites in comparison: it was through Pride that the devil became the devil: Pride leads to every other vice: it is the complete anti-God state of mind.” The first and primary reason we struggle for control is our pride, our sin. We want things to be as we imagine or desire them to be. When things are not so, we fight to gain that control.

The second cause of the struggle for control is, of course, the sin of your spouse. The same pride that lives in us lives in them. The same desire to control situations and outcomes that lives in us, lives in them. Two people with the same desire to have things their way are guaranteed to experience conflict. 

Once we know the cause of the struggle for control, the solution becomes clear. Both spouses must relinquish control in their marriage to Jesus. This sounds simple, but we all know how difficult it is to consistently submit ourselves to Jesus. Even Paul in Romans chapter 7 shared his struggles with consistently submitting to Jesus.

There are a couple of specific things in marriage that will help you overcome the struggle for control. The first is a change in attitude. To stop fighting for control in your marriage, stop thinking that you should be in control. “Instead of being motivated by selfish ambition or vanity, each of you should, in humility, be moved to treat one another as more important than yourself” (Phillippians 2:3). “You should have the same attitude toward one another that Christ Jesus had, who though he existed in the form of God did not regard equality with God as something to be grasped, but emptied himself by taking on the form of a slave, by looking like other men, and by sharing in human nature. He humbled himself to the point of death – even death on a cross!” (Philippians 2:5-8). This change in attitude can have a very quick effect on the quality of your marriage. When you choose to stop trying to be in control, you will stop fighting for control. 

Relinquishing your desire for control in this way requires a huge amount of trust. How much do you really trust God to meet all of your needs? Your ability to relinquish control in your marriage will tell you a lot about how much you truly trust God.

A change in attitude will help stop the struggle for control. The second change is a change in action. Submit to your spouse. Paul tells spouses in Ephesian 5:21, “Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.” Did you notice why you should submit to one another? It’s not because your spouse deserves your submission. It’s not because one of you is less than the other. It is because of Jesus. Out of reverence for the one who died for you and now reigns over all you should submit to each other. Submitting to each other eliminates the struggle for control in your marriage.

Submitting to each other also requires a great amount of trust. It requires that you trust your spouse to not take advantage of your submission. It requires that you trust that your spouse is going to put equal effort into maintaining the strength of your marriage. But then, that’s what marriage is, isn’t it? It is trusting another person to live a godly life where you both work to build a relationship that honors God and represents his love to the world around you.

Who’s the boss? Jesus is. In light of that, serve and submit to one another and you will overcome the struggle for control in your marriage.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: argue, bible, conflict, control, marriage

Sex and Intimacy

March 14, 2022 by Bryon Harvey

Questions from the “Under Construction” marriage conference at Grace Bible Church in Ann Arbor, MI.

We were not able to answer all the questions that were texted to us during our breakout at the Under Construction marriage conference at Grace Bible Church in Ann Arbor, MI. In this blog post we have provided answers to the questions we were unable to address.

Q: Sex is almost always scheduled for us because our jobs are crazy and we have a little one. Is that okay? Or should our relationship foster more spontaneity?

A: It’s great that amidst your busy schedules, you have made it a priority to carve out time for intimacy together. If this is working for you then it is absolutely okay! You are the co-authors and co-architects of your sex life together. Your sex life is your sex life. The worst thing you can do is try to compare it to what you perceive other couples are doing or some unattainable idealized expectation. Check in with each other about how your current arrangement is working out for both of you. Are you both honestly comfortable with this and enjoying your sex life together?  Sometimes this can be personality driven regarding preferences to scheduling versus spontaneity. Scheduling will give you the opportunity to look forward to a day and time for intimacy together; spontaneity can be a great surprise to both of you. As you discuss what works well right now, be ready to adjust as your life stage, schedules, and other factors change.

Q: What one thing made the biggest difference in having a healthy, thriving sex life over the years?

A: Time and time again we hear that “great communication makes for great sex.” Work on your relationship outside of the bedroom. If your spouse isn’t already your best friend, take steps to achieve that relationship goal together. Have fun together. Let your spouse know that he/she is important to you and desired for who he/she is right now. Talk about what each of you enjoy and do not enjoy during sex. We recommend that you have sex frequently – whatever you define that to be – as you are able to do in your current context and understand that will change as time goes one.

Q: Could you dive more into what’s the difference between biblical sex and cultural sex? Is there overlap? Or the difference between objectification and cherishing?

A: American culture has cheapened sex. Rather than the fulfilling connection of two people committed to each other “knowing” one another, it is treated as a mere animal instinct. Sex in the mass media is communicated as an irresistible force rather than the thoughtful passion of two people communicating love to each other. Secular culture views sex as merely a hormonal response to stimuli. Humans are viewed as no different from other animals with an irresistible sex drive that must be addressed. Ultimately, our culture says that sex is first and foremost for pleasure and secondarily for procreation. The life-long bond that sex is designed to create and maintain is rejected as backwards and a vestige of puritanical repression. The Bible, on the other hand, proposes a very high view of sex. It is an act of love and commitment between two people. It celebrates sex as a means of procreation, pleasure, and maintaining a life-long bond.

With regard to the difference between objectification and cherishing, author Gary Thomas has the quote “Use sex to cherish your spouse; do not use your spouse to cherish sex.” That means that God has given humankind the act of sex as the ability to communicate love and cherish your spouse. Objectification, instead, is using a person for your own gratification; with objectification there is no mutuality between the spouses but it is self-centered and self-serving. Ultimately we use our spouse to cherish sex when we focus on our own pleasure and sexual release. We use sex to cherish our spouse when we focus on connection, intimacy, and transparency through the physical union of our bodies.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: bible, intimacy, marriage, sex

Marriage is More Than a Piece of Paper

March 2, 2022 by Bryon Harvey

One of the common objections we hear to marriage is that it’s “just a piece of paper.” 

Non-Christians will often argue that marriage is merely a social institution with no inherent value. The only value to marriage is what people or societies apply to it. In which case, marriage is a construct in which you can choose to or not to participate. Other family structures are equally valid and marriage should not be given preferential treatment.

[Read more…] about Marriage is More Than a Piece of Paper

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: bible, christian, marriage, wedding

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About OTM

Operation: Thriving Marriage exists to be a resource for couples and churches to build thriving marriages. After writing the book, Bryon and Jennifer felt God calling them to expand on that work to use what he had taught them to help strengthen Christian marriages. After a lot of prayer and conversation the vision of being a resource for couples and churches began to come into focus. We believe that God doesn’t want marriages to merely survive. God wants marriages to thrive.  Whether it’s through the book, podcast, coaching, or a live event, we pray that God uses Operation: Thriving Marriage to encourage you and strengthen your marriage and the marriages in your community.

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