Afleveringen
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Praising the Positive
Guest: Barbara Rainey
From the series: Letters to My Daughters (Day 2 of 2)
Bob: Barbara Rainey has some advice for wives. She says, when youâre husband messes upâand, by the way, he willâwhen it happens, how you respond may determine whether he learns anything from his mistake or not.
Barbara: If you rail on him, and if you criticize him, and you tell him how stupid it was that he made that decision, he may not learn the lesson that God wanted for him; and he may have to repeat it again. The best thing that a wife can do is trust God, even when itâs hard, and ask God to use it for good in their life and that God would use it to grow him in that area where he just blew it royally.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Thursday, April 28th. Our host is the President of FamilyLifeÂź, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. The words you say have profound power in your marriage relationship. Weâll examine that subject with Barbara Rainey today. Stay tuned.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. Have you ever stopped to just ponder who you would be: (A) if you had been single all your life or (B) if youâd married somebody other than Barbara?
Dennis: Yes; I guess I have because I tried to marry a young lady from SMU before Barbara and I started dating.
Bob: You proposed?
Dennis: She didnât want to marry me. No, no. It wasnât at that point.
Bob: It was clear enough that you didnâtâ
Dennis: But there was a DTRâa âdefine the relationship.â
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: How she defined it and how I defined itâ[Laughter]ââThumbs down, baby!â
Bob: Okay.
Dennis: âThumbs down!! Youâre out of here!â [Laughter]
2:00
It was good becauseâit was okay because I wasnât in search of a myth. I wanted a real relationship with a real person.
Back to the previous part of the question, though, Bob: âHave I ever thought about who I would be if I hadnât married Barbara and was single?â I have. I donât visit that picture very often because thatâs a horror film. [Laughter]
Bob: Pretty ugly; huh? [Laughter]
Dennis: Sheâs laughing really hard because she knows what happened behind the curtain. [Laughter]
Bob: Are you saying, âAmen,â to that? Is that whatâ
Barbara: No, I just think thatâs funny that he said it would be a horror film because I donât think it would be that bad.
Dennis: Well, I donât know what you would compare marriage toâthat teaches you how to love, that instructs you in how to sacrifice for another person, to care for, to cherish, to nourish, and to call you away from yourself and forceâ
3:00
âI mean, if youâre going to do marriage Godâs way, it is the greatest discipleship tool that has ever been created in the history of the universe. It demands that both a husband and a wife pick up their cross, follow Christ, deny themselves, and ask God, âOkay, God, what do You want me to do in this set of circumstances?â
Bob: And thatâs true. It works both waysâfor husbands and wivesâbut our focus this week is on the responsibility a wife hasâthe privilege she has / the assignment she hasâfrom God to be the helper that Heâs created her to be.
Barbara, weâre talking about some of the themes that are found in your book, Letters to My Daughters, which is just out. Weâre getting a lot of great feedback from women who have gotten copies of this book and started reading it.
Some women recoil at the idea that theyâre called to be helpersâit sounds demeaning to them. Your book affirms that itâs a noble thing that God is calling wives to.
4:00
Barbara: It is a very noble assignment that God has given us. Itâs equally noble, I think, to the calling that God has put on a manâs life too. What makes it even better is that, together, marriage is a high and holy callingâit says that in Scripture. It also says that itâs a mystery. I think thatâs the part that we wish God hadnât said about it because it would be nice if it was a little bit more black and white / more obvious.
But God says it is a mystery. God is an artist / God is an authorâGod didnât make robots. So figuring this outâthis uniqueness / this relationship that Dennis and I have thatâs unlike anybody elseâs relationship on the planetâjust as your marriage with Mary Ann is unlike anybody elseâs on the planetâthe ingenuity of God to create these little duos all over the planet that represent Him / that are a picture of Christ and the Churchâall of that mystery is profound and baffling.
5:00
We wish sometimes that marriage was a whole lot easier, but it illustrates that marriage is a very high and noble calling. We think it is drudgery / we think itâs dispensableâand itâs not.
Dennis: Yes. In the book that Barbara has written, called Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife, you quote Mike Mason. Speaking of mysteries, he wrote a book called The Mystery of Marriage. This comes from that bookâhe says this: âLove convinces a couple that they are the greatest romance that has ever been, that no two people have ever loved as they do, and that they will sacrifice absolutely anything in order to be together.â Then I love the conclusion to the statement. It says, âThen marriage asks them to prove it.â
Well, thatâs whatâs at stake. Youâve got this noble relationship that wasnât created by manâit was created by Almighty God.
6:00
His image is stamped all over a marriage that seeks to follow His blueprints for what He wants us to do. Heâs trying to teach us how to loveâhow to love sacrificially / how to give up our lives on behalf of another. Youâre never going to be able to do it if you try to have it your way.
Bob: I would love for you to expand on something that I just had to stop and ponder for a second. You said what a wife believes about her husband is the starting place for everything she says or doesnât say about her husband.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: And what you believe about Dennis is the starting place for everything you say or donât say about him.
Barbara: Correct.
Bob: Unpack that for me.
Barbara: Well, let me explain something about photography that I think will help answer your question for you. Anybody, who has ever used a 35mm camera that has a lens that you turn so you can focus, understands the principle that the person who is holding the camera chooses whatâs going to be in that image.
7:00
You can choose a broad panorama and you can get as much in that frame as you can get, or you may choose to tighten that zoom lens and focus on somebodyâs eyes only. Youâve got great choice, as the photographer, in what youâre going to get in that lens of the camera. And the same is true in marriage. I have complete control over what people know about my husband. If Iâm talking about Dennis and I talk about his faults, or I talk about how crummy it is that he just doesnât ever do this and I think itâs terrible that he doesnât ever do that, anybody who hears that description that I just made of him will think of him that way. When they think of him, theyâre going to remember that.
But, on the other hand, if I choose to leave that out of the description, and instead, I choose to describe him for my friends, or my small group, or wherever I am talking about him, and I say: âYou know, one of the things that I appreciate about Dennis is that he really makes our family a priority.
8:00
âYes, he travels. Yes; sometimes he has to say late and work / sometimes he is gone on the weekends, but I know that his heart is to make our family a priority.â Thatâs focusing the lens of my camera on what is good and what is right about my husband. If he knows that Iâm saying that about him, heâs going to want to live up to that expectation.
Bob: So some wives will hear you say that and say: âYou want me to airbrush my husband. You want me to just brush away and pretend like all those flaws that are there just donât exist and just pretend like heâs better than he is.â
Barbara: Okay. And I would say to her: âHow does God see you? Is God pointing out to you the hundreds of things that you do wrong every day? Um, I donât think so. Heâs very gentle and very gracious, and He shows us one thing at a time that we do wrong.â
9:00
I just think: âOkay, you want to call it airbrushing? Alright, Iâll take thatâit may be airbrushingâbut I would rather focus on what he does right than what he does wrong becauseâwhen I focus on what he does wrong, and I have done thatâall I can see are the things he does wrong. They grow and they just become these huge things. I become obsessed with everything thatâs wrong and everything heâs not doing thatâs right. And thatâs not fun! I donât like that about me!
âI donât want him to be focusing on all my weaknesses and all my flaws. I donât want him talking about my weaknesses and flaws to other people because I donât like them / I donât want to be known for what is wrong with me. I want to be known for what I do well and what I do right. So the same is true for him. So, yes, I airbrush itâI donât talk about the things that he does wrong, or his weaknesses, or his flaws. Thatâs for him to deal with before the Lord. Thatâs not my businessâthatâs his business.â
Bob: Youâre not living in denial about those things?
Barbara: No; no.
10:00
Dennis: That doesnât mean that the airbrush doesnât get turned off at a point.
Bob: And the flaws are exposed? [Laughter]
Barbara: Well, or that I talk about them with him from time to time.
Dennis: Yes.
Bob: And youâre not being unrealistic about the nature of your relationship.
Barbara: No.
Bob: But I think what I hear you sayingâand this goes back to where we startedâwhat a wife says about her husband is going to begin with what sheâs thinking about her husband.
Barbara: Correct.
Bob: And she can chooseâ
Barbara: Correct.
Bob: âwhether to dwell on all of his flaws or whether to set her mind on those things that are his virtues.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: And every husbandâs got at least a couple of them; right?
Barbara: Well, if he doesnât, why did you marry him? I mean, all of us got married because we admired something about this man that we fell in love with. So focus on those things. I remember, years and years ago, when we were in a new church that we were a part ofâit was a fairly small churchâand we had this community group of other couples that we met together every couple of weeks.
11:00
I remember standing in a small group of maybe three or four of us. This wife started talking about her husbandâshe was talking negatively about her husband. Iâll never forget that uncomfortable feeling that all of us in that little, tiny circle felt. We just felt kind of: âOuch! Oooh! That hurts! I donât know that I want to hear that about your husband.â
And then, out of the corner of my eye, I saw him, standing not that far away. I think he had heard what she said. I have just never forgotten that picture, even though it was probably 30 years ago / maybe 20 years agoâbut it was a long time agoâbecause I saw what the power of her words did. I saw what it did to meâit made me, as a listener, uncomfortable. It made me wonder about him, as a man. And then, when I saw that he heard, it was like an ice pick to his heart. I realized how powerful our words are as wives.
12:00
So my whole intention in what I share in this chapter about this is to help women understand that your words are very, very significant. Those who hear them are going to be influenced by what we say.
Dennis: Thereâs a proverb that is so applicable hereâProverbs 18:21: âDeath and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruits.â
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: So you literally have the opportunity to use your tongue like a paint brush to paint a positive picture, or like an ice pick to tear another person down. To the woman, who is listening to usâor for that matter, a man, who may be listening in right nowâif youâre a critical person / if youâre negative, you need to ask God to do a work in your soul.
13:00
You know, no one wants to be in the corner of an attic with a cranky woman or a cranky man, who is bitter, and negative, and all they can do is find fault. Thatâs not who you want to grow old with. What you need to askâyou need to ask God to do a work in your soul and to help release you from being critical of your husband or your wife and find a way to begin to focus onâas Barbara is calling women to do hereâto focus on that which is positive in their spouse / why you married them in the first place and what you like about them. Brag on your wife / brag on your husband in front of the kids.
Bob: One of the things Dennis has shared over the yearsâyouâve heard him say itâyour belief in him has been massive in terms of his confidence in doing what Godâs called him to do. Iâm just wondering: âWas that just natural to express belief in him? Was that just something that came instinctively to you; or were you conscious and deliberate about saying: âI need to verbalize to him. I need to express confidence in himâ?â
14:00
Barbara: The answer is, âYes,â to both because I think most of us women, when we first get married, we marry this guy because we believe in himâwe think heâs the greatest. Most women marry with those thoughts, those feelings, and those emotions. I think that what happens isâwhen we do get disillusioned, and we do find discouragements, and we butt heads because weâre differentâthat belief can come down with it. Then, thatâs when it becomes a choice.
In the beginning, it was really easy for me to believe in him because I just did believe in himâthatâs why I married him. But then there come those times, farther into the relationship, when belief becomes a choice. So rather than expressingâand itâs not that I donât express fear / itâs not that I donât express anxiety because I express plenty of thatâbut the bottom line is: âIn the end, no matter what, I believe in you. I believe that God is at work in your life and in our marriage. I believe that God is going to see us through this, and Iâm going to be with you there to the bitter end.â
15:00
Dennis: And what Iâd want a woman to know isâthat no matter how competent and confident a man looks, whether heâs young or whether heâs older / it does not matterâthere isnât a man, within the reach of my voice right now over the radio across the country, who doesnât need his wifeâs steady and certain words of affirmation and belief. He needs it. I donât care if he says nothing to you when you say it. The words are sinking and soaking into his soul because there are not that many people in a lifetimeâin fact, Iâd ask the question, âIs there anyone who goes a lifetime with you and who believes in you all the way to the end?â The answer is, âWho would it be?â
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: âWhoâs going to do that?â Thatâs the nature of marriage!
16:00
When you say, âI take you âtil death do us part, for better or for worse, in riches and in being poor,ââwow! Itâs the pay-off!
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: Itâs not always easy. Weâre not trying to paint some kind of rosy picture here, but it is a necessity.
Bob: There has to have been a timeâand I donât know if it will come to mind immediately for you or notâbut a time when you were facing a decision and you were thinking, âI think we should do this.â And Dennis was thinking, âNo, I think we should do this.â And you said: âOkay, Iâm going to trust you. Iâm going to follow youâ; and it turned out that it would have been better off if youâd have done it your way. Iâm just wonderingâfor a wife in that situation, where she says, âI think this is the right thing to do,â and the husband says, âWeâre going this way,â and they go down a dead-end and the wife finds herself, in that moment, thinking, âIf heâd have just listened to me, weâd be in a lot better shape right now than we are!ââ
17:00
âwhat does she do in that moment?
Barbara: Well, I canât think of a specific time; but there have been times like, for instance, driving in the car, when he would choose to go one way and I was thinking, âI donât think thatâs the right way!â And, sure enough, it wasnât. That hasnât happened very often, but it has happened. I remember one time, early in our marriage, when we were discussing a financial decision. I donât remember thinking it was a bad decision at the time; but it was a bad decision, and it cost us financially.
Regardless, it doesnât really matterâif itâs a big thing or a small thingâbecause the choice is still the same in the end for a wife; that is: âEven when he makes bad decisionsâand he will / when he decides to do things that will cost youâand he willâwill you still believe in him? Will you still trust God? Will you put your faith in Godâs sovereignty that God can turn this into good in his life?â
18:00
Maybe thatâs exactly what he needed to experience to grow in the way God wanted him to grow. If you rail on him, and if you criticize him, and you tell him how stupid it was that he made that decision, he may not learn the lesson that God wanted for him; and he may have to repeat it again. The best thing that a wife can do is trust God, even when itâs hard, and ask God to use it for good in their life and that God would use it to grow him in that area, where he just blew it royally, because men are going to make big mistakes. Itâs how we respond to that mistake that will make the difference in whether he benefits from it or he canât benefit from it because heâs been beat up by his wife.
Dennis: This is not an easy message for a lot of listeners to hear, but I just want you to comment on why you decided to write a book that is called Letters to My Daughters to call them to the art / the biblical art of being a wife because youâre calling them to a high standard.
19:00
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: These are our daughters and our daughters-in-law.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: Why did you want to do that?
Barbara: Well, I think our culture has lost the vision for what marriage can beâwhat it was intended to be. Yes, we have all seen countless examples of marriage done the wrong way, but that doesnât mean marriage is broken. It means the people are broken who are in it. I want the next generation to understand that marriage is really worth working onâit is transformative, it is redemptive, it is holy. There are so many good things about marriage; but we donât see those good things, commonly, in our cultureâwe see all the negatives.
I tell the story of: âWhat would it be like if you went to the Louvre Museum in Paris, with all these magnificent art works? And what if, while you were standing in line to get your ticket, there was an earthquake?
20:00
âAnd after you got your ticket, you walked in and half of these masterpieces were lying on the floor. There were still half of them on the wall / there were still statues and all of these magnificent things aroundâwhat would your eyes be drawn to? Your eyes would be drawn to the tragedy, to the loss, to the broken pieces lying all over the floor.â
I think thatâs a picture of our culture. We see all of these wrecked marriagesâwe see these abused women, we see these lost men, we see the damaged childrenâand we just think: âMarriage is hopeless. Why should I even try?â What I want to do in this book is say: âLook at whatâs on the wall! Look at what God has said. Look at what God has designed. That is our goal. Donât get distracted by the broken pieces. Itâs tragic, itâs wrong, itâs sad; but the institution of marriage is still worthy. Itâs still worth striving for.
21:00
God didnât make a mistake when He made marriage. Weâre the ones who are messing it up.
Dennis: And Bob, I think about what FamilyLife is talking about all this year in our 40th anniversary of doing ministryâcalling people back to their anniversary and back to their commitmentâaround the whole concept of the Proud Sponsor of Anniversariesâą. What Barbara is challenging people with isâjust because people have failed, donât give up on what the Bibleâthe transcendent beauty and model of the Scriptures and what itâs calling us to be, as human beingsâto call us away from our selfishness, to call us to the biblical model of following Jesus Christ, and training our kids to do the same.
Iâm going to tell you somethingâthereâs a lot on the line in every marriage that is listening to us right now. Generations are on the lineâ
22:00
âyour children! The best picture that theyâll ever see, apart from the Scriptures, of what a real marriage ought to be is your marriage.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: Even in its imperfections, it can display what Barbara is talking aboutâthe nobility / the grandeur. Your kids will see somethingâthat they are going to say: âYou know what? Mom and Dad could have ended it, but they didnât! They experienced the redemption of Jesus Christ. I want what theyâve got! When I get married, I want one of those! And Iâm not going to settle for anything less.â
The way they get it is by absorbing your teaching about Jesus Christ, following Him, and deciding to make their parentsâ faith their own. But that means the parents need to have it first.
Bob: Well, and I would say that part of the way they get it, too, is by aligning themselves with Godâs design for usâas men and women / as husbands and wivesâthe unique assignment God has for us.
23:00
Itâs one of the issues youâre addressing, Barbara, as you talk to young wives about what it means for them to be godly wives. Iâd just encourage our listenersâget a copy of Barbaraâs book, Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife. This is a book that weâre making available this month to folks who make a donation to help support the ministry of FamilyLife Today.
You can go to FamilyLifeToday.comâmake an online donation. You can call 1-800-FL-TODAYâmake a donation over the phone; or you can mail a donation to us and request a copy of Barbaraâs book, Letters to My Daughters. Weâre happy to send it out to you as a âThank you,â for your support of the ministry of FamilyLife. We couldnât do what we do if it werenât for folks, like you, helping to support this ministry. So âThanks,â in advance, for whatever gift youâre able to help with. Weâre happy to send you Barbaraâs new book, Letters to My Daughters, when you get in touch with usâagain, online at FamilyLifeToday.com; or call 1-800-358-6329; thatâs 1-800-âFâ as in family, âLâ as in life, and then the word, âTODAY.â
24:00
Now, tomorrow, weâre going to hear Barbara and a number of other women interacting in a panel conversation that took place a few years ago with a large crowd of women. You were talking about Godâs design for you, as a woman, as a wife, and as a mom. Weâll hear that dialogue tomorrow. I hope our listeners can tune in for that.
I want to thank our engineer today, Keith Lynch, along with our entire broadcast production team. On behalf of our host, Dennis Rainey, I'm Bob Lepine. We will see you back tomorrow for another edition of FamilyLife Today.
FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Help for today. Hope for tomorrow.
We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to produce them for our website. If youâve benefited from the broadcast transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs?
Copyright © 2016 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Building up Your Man
Guest: Barbara Rainey
From the series: Letters to My Daughters (Day 1 of 2)
Bob: See if you can spot where the challenge is here: Youâre a wife and a mom who wants things to go right. Marriage and family is messy, and your husband isnât perfect. You see how that can be a problem? Hereâs Barbara Rainey.
Barbara: One of the things that is true about us, as womenâI had a conversation with my daughter just yesterday on the phone about thisâis that itâs so easy for us because of our emotional makeup to get very overwhelmed by the circumstances of life. So a woman, who is married and is discouraged by her relationship with her husbandâshe can get so overwhelmed to the point where she just doesnât see clearly.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Wednesday, April 27th. Our host is the President of FamilyLifeÂź, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. What do you do, as a wife, when you get overwhelmed / discouraged by all thatâs going on? How do you deal with that? Weâre going to talk about it today with Barbara Rainey. Stay tuned.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife. Thanks for joining us on the Wednesday edition. Weâre diving back into a rich field of ore today. I mean, there is some good stuff that weâre going to be digging into.
Dennis: We have some pretty fair guests on FamilyLife Today from time to time.
Bob: We do; yes.
Dennis: Max Lucado, Tony Evans, Crawford Loritts, Mary Kassian, Nancy Leigh DeMoss Wolgemuthâa lot of, really, pretty fair country guests.
Bob: Pretty good communicators with some pretty good biblical knowledge.
Dennis: Yes; this one is a cut above.
Bob: Somebody who isâ
Dennis: âjust a cut above.
Bob: âkind of your favorite?
Dennis: Definitely my favoriteâmy bride of 43 years.
2:00
Sweetheart, welcome back.
Barbara: I donât know if I can live up to all of that.
Dennis: Thatâs pretty strong; wasnât it?
Barbara: Very strong.
Dennis: Well, our listeners love you. We were with some friends here this past weekend and ran into a number of listeners. They came up and talked to Barbara about her books and Ever Thine HomeÂźâall the resources sheâs creating for wives, and moms, and women to be able to display their faith in their homes. It was kind of fun to watch them come out of the woodworkâout of a large gathering of peopleâcome by and say, âHi,â to Barbara and say, âI appreciate you.â
Bob: Well, and a lot of buzz around your new book, which has just been out now for a few months. Itâs called Letters to My Daughters. This really didnât start as a book; did it?
Barbara: It absolutely didnât. When our oldest son was engaged to be married, his fiancĂ©e came to me and said, âYou know, I would really love to hear some encouragement from you about being a wife.â And I thought, âWow!â
Bob: She just opened the door; didnât she?
3:00
Barbara: I know. And I thought: âWow. She opened the door. Then Iâm going to gently and cautiously walk through that door.â And so I wasnât sure exactly how to go about doing it because we all lived in different places. It wasnât possible to take her out for coffee and have a conversation. So I decided I would start writing some lettersâjust to share some of the lessons that I had learned over the years in being a wife / just by way of encouragement and, âHere are some things that I learned, and maybe this will help you.â
Bob: Did you write them one-on-one to her or did you copy everybody else when you started?
Barbara: I copied all three married girls. So our oldest, Ashley, who was already married, and then our son, Samuel, had married the same summer. So it went to three married girls.
Bob: Then you expanded it out as this snowballed and continued?
Barbara: We traded aboutâI sentâIâll rephrase thatâI sent about a dozen emails total. I donât know how much of it was that they didnât know me that wellâso there wasnât a lot of responseâ
4:00
âwhich I understoodâI mean, you knowâweâre talking about subjects about marriage and this is your mother-in-law. What do you say?
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: So I didnât get much feedbackâso they kind of dried up. Then, when our daughter Rebecca got married in 2005, I went and dug them all up and sent them to her kind of as a batch / a couple of them at a time. And that really was the end of it after thatâthe email version.
Dennis: I think whatâs interesting about this is the whole idea came from a couple of sources. One was a book that was famous and very popular, back when Barbara and I were college students, by Charlie Shed. Itâs called Letters to Karen. It wasnât Letters to My Daughter, it wasâalthough, was Karen his daughter?
Barbara: Karen was his daughter.
Bob: Because I also got Letters to Phillip, which was the follow-up, which heâd written letters to his sonâboth of them around marriage subjects, right?
Dennis: Exactly; exactly.
5:00
But there was another kind ofâI donât knowâbirthplace of this idea of sending letters that was a part of Barbaraâs family.
Barbara: When I was growing up, I remember my mother used to anxiously look for this large legal-size envelope that would come in the mail probably every couple of months. She had married my dad and they had moved two or three states away from where she grew up. It was a place where she knew no one. Although she developed friends, there were no family members anywhere near. She, and her mother, and some other relatives in the family, and friends had this exchange of letters, that were all handwritten, that went by the postal service. It was called a round robin.
My mother would write her letter, put it in the envelope, and send it on its way, where the next person would read my motherâs letter and all of the other letters that were in it. She would take out her original letter, and put in a new letter, and send the packet on its way.
6:00
It would just make this circle between these six or eight women that were a part of this group because nobody got on the phone and talked for fun in those days. You only used the phone for emergencies, or business, or important things. You didnât just get on it to chat. Letter writing was the only way that you really kept up with people who lived far away. They had this letter exchange that they passed around.
I just remember, very vividly, that every time that letter came / that packetâwith all those messages from home / touches with her family and friends that she didnât get to see very oftenâshe would get a cup of coffee and sit down. She relished those lettersâshe read them and absorbed all that she could out of those communications from friends that she loved, and cared about, and missed deeply. That became a way for her to stay in touch with those friends.
Dennis: You know, itâs interesting, Bobânow, in the present age of social media and having communication soâ
7:00
Bob: âtweets, and texts, and emails.
Dennis: âitâs so easy, you know. We have access to so much that the art of letter writingâI mean, a really good thoughtful letterâin fact, I have back on my desk a letter that was given to me by Steve Green, who is the President and CEO of Hobby Lobby, that heâd obtained that was written by Thomas Jefferson, during his presidency. Itâs just interesting to have a copy of a letter thatâs over 200 years old and to think about the words being craftedâhow thoughtful it was. I think thereâs a need to recapture thatâboth personal side but also just the thoughtful side / the contemplative side of: âYouâre facing some issues, let me step into your life and provide some guidance in a personal way for you.â
Bob: Not just shoot from the hip, but give some real thought to the response. Some of the lettersâbecause you will print a letter in hereâwe should say this is not an actual letter from one of your daughters. People shouldnât read this and try to figure out which daughter was asking this question.
8:00
Barbara: Correct.
Bob: You would take a composite of questions that were being asked of youâsubjects that your daughters were asking you about.
Dennis: âand people who were coming up to Barbara at a Weekend to RememberÂź marriage getaway.
Bob: Right.
Dennis: We have tens of thousands of people, who come to those events. When Barbara speaks, women stand in line to talk to her. These questions that are in the book are really questions that these women had asked Barbara from the Weekend to Remember.
Bob: Iâm looking at one of the letters that you respond to in your book. Youâre tackling some pretty interesting stuff here. I mean, one of these letters asks this questionâit says: âHey, Mom, sometimes I get tired of being discouraged by all the unexpected things that I have to deal with that come from the way my husband lives life. Itâs not just that weâre differentâyou already wrote me aboutâthat itâs more than that. Itâs like I think, âIf I didnât have him, sometimes life would be easier.ââ
9:00
Now wait a sec! Do wives really feel that way? [Laughter] I mean, Iâm starting to feel a little insecure here! Does a wife really feel like sometimes life would be easierâ
Dennis: Let me just stop you. What if your wifeâs name is on the bookâ[Laughter]
Bob: You can feel real insecure now! [Laughter]
Dennis: âand youâre on the radio!
Bob: Let me finish thisâit says, âItâs kind of nice when heâs out of town for a few days.â This is a wife, who is saying, âSometimes, I wonder if Iâd be happier, more satisfied, more fulfilled if I didnât have a husband to deal with.â
Barbara: Well, I think there are those moments when women do feel that way because the differences never go awayâthatâs the first chapter in the book. I write in the book that itâs the first and most lasting adjustment to marriage because the differences never go away. Even though Iâm used to things that he brings to our worldâhis personality, the way he approaches life, and his malenessâ
10:00
Bob: His perspective is different.
Barbara: âitâs very different. I think what this question is saying isâthat, sometimes, when a husband travels, there feels a little bit of a: âOh I can do things the way I want to do things. I donât have to be just thinking about what I would like to do and âHowâs this going to make him feel? How heâs going to respond to this?â I can just do what I want to do.â
Bob: You know, I get that because I think, for husbandsâI think thereâs a similarâ
Barbara: I would expect so!
Bob: âto have a break and just to be able toâtimes when Iâm traveling, Iâm focused on whatever Iâm doing, traveling-wise, andâ
Barbara: Or if your wife goes on a womenâs retreat, you can just kind of veg and eat pizza all day long and not worry about anything; right?
Bob: Sometimes, those breaks are nice to have; but you wouldnât want them to go on for very long.
Barbara: No; no.
Bob: In the midst of them, you do have a sense of something lacking, even if youâre enjoying just the pause in the relationship; right?
Barbara: Right. Without question because we are complete in one another, and marriage does complete that which is lacking.
11:00
I mean, God says, âThe two shall become one.â There is a sense in which you can relax about some things when your husband or your wife is out of town, but there is that realization that life isnât the same without him in it. So it makes you miss one another and appreciate those differences / those things that the other person brings that are so very contradictory at times. But it is for good.
Bob: When should a wife start to be concerned if sheâs thinking, âI kind of wish heâd go away for a few days because I really like it when heâs gone.â When can she tell: âThis is an okay break,â versus âNo, this is us drifting toward isolation in our marriageâ?
Dennis: âor âThis is unhealthy thinking.â Hereâs what weâre talking aboutâweâre talking about the very essence of marriage goes back to Genesis, where it says it was not good that man be alone.
12:00
So it says, âFor this cause a man shall leave his father and his mother; shall cleave to his wife and the two shall become one.â I think we get married because thereâs something lacking in our lives and that something is a person. Itâs the completeness of a husband and a wife in a marriage relationship designed by God.
The two are asked to deny themselves, and to defeat isolation, and not grow into an unhealthy relationship where you long for the times when youâre going to be separated. You need to keep the relationship alive and not forget why you married the other person in the first place. God brought you togetherâyou need to get on with it, and you need to learn how to embrace the differences.
Barbara: Itâs okay to have a break occasionally; but the goal of marriage is being together, and becoming one, and allowing God to do his redemptive work in our lives.
Dennis: Ultimately, what marriage is all about isâabout two imperfect people learning how to love one another within the commitment of marriage.
13:00
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: Youâre going to school, with God teaching you from the Bible. Iâd have to say I didnât understand that when I enrolled in this course called marriage. But looking back over four decades of marriage, Iâd have to say I know more about love because of marriage than any other relationship in my life.
Bob: Some of the wives, who are listening to us have this conversation, are thinking: âThe negatives that youâre talking about with my husbandâsome of these are pretty dark negatives. Some of these are negatives that cast such a shadow over the relationship that itâs hard for me just to hold things together. How do I turn that into a positive? Or what do I do with those negatives? How do I deal with a husband whoâman! the negativesâtheyâre stark, and theyâre real, and itâs really challenging?â
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âIâm not married to Dennis,ââ[Laughter]â
14:00
âyou know, a wife, whoâs listening, is saying: âIâm not married to Dennis, whoâs a godly virtuous man, who is pursuing a walk with the Lord. Iâm married to a guy whoâs marginally interested in spiritual things, and whoâs yelling at the kids, and whoâs drinking too much. What do I do?â
Barbara: Thatâs a very complex question because there are so many levels and degrees of what constitute negatives and difficult things in a relationship. So let me answer it two ways. One is: âAny wife has to start by looking at herself and saying: âOkay; God, am I accepting the man that Youâve put in my life? Am I giving thanks for him in his strengths and his weaknesses? Am I looking to You to do the transforming work?ââ because you even said in your question / a woman says: âWhat can I do? How do I relate to him and help transform him?â
Well, itâs not the wifeâs job. I think we so easily get caught up in thinking that itâs our responsibility to fix him / to change him.
15:00
We do that with our kidsâweâre always helping our kids. We talked about that on another broadcast that helping a husband is different than helping your kids. But it starts by her attitude and her perspective, and her belief in God and His sovereignty, and His ability to work. It starts with where sheâs focusing her eyesâis she looking at all of the negative in his life to such a degree that sheâs totally forgotten all the good that there is? My first challenge is to her: âAre you open to God being at work? Have you totally given up on Him? Are you giving thanks for your relationship the way it is?â
And then the other side is: âIf it really is indeed very, very difficult things that are beyond a womanâs responsibility to deal with, you may need to see a counselor, you may need to get a pastor or someone whoâs wise and skilled to interveneâto help you, to coach you, to guide you. Find an older woman who can be your mentor to help give you perspective.
16:00
One of the things thatâs true about us, as womenâI had a conversation with my daughter just yesterday on the phone about thisâis that itâs so easy for us, because of our emotional makeup, to get very overwhelmed by the circumstances of life. So a womanâwho is married and is discouraged by her relationship with her husbandâshe can get so overwhelmed to the point that she just doesnât see clearly.
Thatâs why a mentor is so helpfulâsomeone who can look at it objectively and say: âYou know, itâs probably not as bad as you think it is. Let me give you one or two things that you can tryâone or two practical suggestions that might make a difference for you,â because we do lose perspective and we doâwe just get all out of sorts. Itâs very common for us, as women, to get discouraged with our marriages because weâre just discouraged about life in general.
So check your heart.
17:00
Find someone to help you / find a mentorâfind another woman who can speak objectively into your life and say, âIt may not be as bad as you think it is, and here are some things you can try.â
Dennis: What Iâd say to my daughters isâIâd say: âDo you remember when youâd get up in the morning and see your mom reading the Bible? What was that symbolic of? It was that your mom was teachable, that she was trying to meet with God, and ultimately that her hope was in God.â
So the woman, whoâs listening to us right now, who has lost hopeâsheâs got to have a spiritual thermometer check: âHowâs your relationship with God?â Youâve got to be reminded of who He is, how He operates in this imperfect world that we live in, and what heâs calling us to do, which is live and walk by faith in the power of the Holy Spirit.
Barbara: I just want to say to the moms, who are listening, whoâve got a houseful of kidsâor even maybe one or two kids, but it feels like a full house to youâI did not get up every morning and read my Bible.
18:00
My kids didnât see me doing that every day. I just donât want anyone listening to think that I was that woman that got up every morning and read my Bible. There were weeks that I would go by and not read my Bible in the morning. I would talk to God, and I would pray, and I would try to catch snippets of the Bible here and there in different places; but I was pretty overwhelmed and pretty buried with kids and with life.
Yes, I totally agree with what you just said, Dennis, that it is absolutely crucial that your hope is in God and no place else. Your hope canât be in your husband because he will fail, thatâs a given. Put your hope in God, and keep it there, and do all that you can to maintain that. I just donât want anybody to feel like thereâs this standard of: âI have to get up and read my Bible every morning before my kids are up.â If you can do that, great! I couldnât do that, and I failed miserably many times; but my hope remained in Christ for the most part.
19:00
Dennis: There is a Proverb that I was thinking about as I was thinking about our listeners today, who are going to hear Barbara on this subjectâit is Proverbs,
Chapter 4, verse 23âwe quote it quite frequently, here on FamilyLife Todayâit says, âKeep your heart with all vigilance for from it flow the springs of life.â You may not be able to get in the Bible every dayâIâm glad you said that, just to remove this mythical phantom that exists of the super spiritual mom, but your heart needs to know whom it is that you serve / who is your hopeâand you need to cultivate that.
Iâm glad you mentioned a mentor, or a friend, or even a counselor if things really go southâor to keep them from going southâsomeone that you can lean into and you can spill out your emotions in safety and talk about itâ
20:00
ânot just being negative but try to find someone who can coach you out of the ditch that you may be in. Thatâs what church is all about / thatâs what the community of faithâof Christ followers ought to be about. We ought to be meeting each other in our ditches and saying: âYou know what? Itâs safe. Weâre all broken. There is nobody whoâs got it all together!â But to maybe dig in with a group of women into a book like this, Bob, and decide: âWeâre going to get real with each other. Weâre going to get honest, and weâre going to make sure our hope is in the right place.â
Bob: I was going to sayâat one level, thatâs what this book is all about. It is a mentoring book. It is an older woman mentoring younger women on what it means to be a wife according to Godâs design.
Dennis: I would just like to say hereâand I know Iâm biasedâso the listenersâthey already know that / theyâve already heard me talk about Barbara in the pastâIâm biased toward her. This is not a fluffy, feel-good book.
21:00
This is a real-life book that talks about where you are living, as a woman, wife, mom, grandmother. I think it is life-givingâitâs the words of a wise woman that are bringing life to others because sheâs reminding people of the truth. People today need to get away from the culture, and the messages of the culture, and the messages of all their buddies on FacebookÂź or TwitterÂź, and they need to dig in deep with someone whoâll tell them the real truth and nothing but the truth.
Bob: If it was just you and this book alone, that would be good for your soul; but if it could be you and three or four other women and this book together, I think that just adds a dimension to where thereâs wisdom in a multitude of counselors / thereâs life-on-life happening. Thereâs a support that can happen there.
Dennis: Yes.
22:00
Bob: Iâd encourage women to get together with three or four other women and get a copy of Barbaraâs book, Letters to My Daughters. We have a downloadable discussion guide that is available so that you and your friends can go through this book together, and then, there are questions you can ask. Again, you can find out more when you go to FamilyLifeToday.com. Order the book from us, online, at FamilLifeToday.com; or call 1-800-FL-TODAY if youâd like to order a copy of Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife. Itâs the new book by Barbara Rainey.
Now, we have an anniversary we want to acknowledge todayâRick and Jill Bridges from Whittier, California, celebrating six years of marriage together. âCongratulations!â to the Bridges on their sixth anniversary.
FamilyLife is celebrating an anniversary this year as wellâit is 40 years of ministry for us / we started back in 1976.
23:00
Our whole goal with this ministry is to help more couples have more anniversaries. We want to provide you with practical biblical help and hope for your marriage and your family so that you have more years togetherâmore years where you are thriving, as a couple and as a family. We want to effectively develop families, who are anchored firmly in Godâs Word.
We appreciate those of you who partner with us in this effort. FamilyLife Today could not exist if it werenât for friends, like you, who help support this ministry with your donations. Thank you for the part you play in helping to make FamilyLife Today possible.
By the way, if youâd like a copy of Barbara Raineyâs new book, we are making that available to anyone who makes a donation today. You can go online at FamilyLifeToday.com make an online donation and get a copy of the book. Or request the book when you call 1-800-FL-TODAY and make a donation. Or you can mail your donation to us, along with your request for Barbaraâs book.
24:00
Our address is FamilyLife Today, PO Box 7111, Little Rock, AR; and our zip code is 72223.
We want to talk more tomorrow about how a wife can stay positive and stay focused on affirming her husband, even when things arenât going well / even when heâs not doing a great job. Weâre going to talk more about that tomorrow. Hope you can tune in.
I want to thank our engineer today, Keith Lynch, along with our entire broadcast production team. On behalf of our host, Dennis Rainey, I'm Bob Lepine. We will see you back tomorrow for another edition of FamilyLife Today.
FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Help for today. Hope for tomorrow.
We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to produce them for our website. If youâve benefited from the broadcast transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs?
Copyright © 2016 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com
-
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Facing the Storms
Guest: Barbara Rainey
From the series: Letters to My Daughters (Day 1 of 1)
Bob: To be the woman and the wife that God created you to be, you have to know how to walk by faith on the good days and on the dark days. Hereâs Barbara Rainey.
Barbara: Most people who have been through sufferingâwhether itâs shallow, small things or really deep, tragic thingsâcan say, on the other side, âI didnât enjoy it / I didnât like it, but I knew God better as a result.â Iâve heard so many people say that. I would say itâs true about us too. Weâve learned more about God in the valleys than we have on the high places and hills in the sunshine.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Monday, April 11th. Our host is the President of FamilyLifeÂź, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. Weâre going to spend time today exploring how a husband and wife can draw closer together and become one when theyâre walking in the valley in the path of suffering. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. Anybody who has ever been to one of our Weekend to RememberÂź marriage getaways knows that, on Friday night, as we are getting underway, we spend some time talking about the common potholes that derail/destabilize marriage relationships. There are some things that are pretty standard / pretty common that can cause a marriage to wobble at high speeds.
Dennis: And we begin the conference with a message that is really about five threats to your onenessâfive threats to your marriage / five threats to your marriage going the distance over your lifetime.
2:00
Bob: One of those threats is a failure to anticipate the unexpected trials that come into a marriage. Itâs not a question of whether unexpected trials will come into a marriage; but âHow do you respond when they do?â because all of us are going to hit them; arenât we?
Dennis: Well, if you think about itâthe vows are built / the traditional vows: ââŠin sickness and in health / in financial success and in also being poor.â I mean, the basis of what we promise, when we establish the marriage covenant, is that weâre going to take the storm head-on. We donât know what it will be; but weâre pledging to one another to not quit, but to keep on loving, keep on believing, and make our marriage go the distance.
Bob: And we are taking some time this week to talk with your wife Barbara. Welcome back to FamilyLife Today.
Barbara: Thank you, Bob.
3:00
Bob: Weâre going to talk about some of those valleys and dark places that the two of you have walked together in 40-plus years of marriage and how youâve not quit in the midst of that.
Dennis: And what Barbara has done isâshe has taken the pastâalmost tenâyears to complete a book to wives called Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife that is designed to be what it is. Itâs an older woman stepping into the life of a younger woman with sage advice / with seasoned adviceâwith the advice that comes after four decades of marriage. I love what youâve done here because, honestly, there are a good number of books out there about being a wifeâand there is a lot of fluff / itâs kind of âHow toâŠââbut not really tied into the reality of what women are facing today.
The way this book is constructedâyou end it with this subject that Bobâs talking about hereâthe subject of suffering.
4:00
I guess Iâd have to ask you: âIs that because of what you and I have been through in 40/ almost 44 years of marriage?âbecause we have been through some dark valleys together.
Barbara: Well, thatâs why itâs in there; because it has been an integral part of our marriage relationship. Itâs in there because I think most brides / most young women get married with some of what I call âfairy tale theology.â They get married thinking that: âEverything is going to be great for us. Weâre not going to have difficulties. Yes, there will be some uncomfortable moments, but weâre not going to really have hard stuff. Weâre going to be great. We love each other, and everythingâs going to be great.â
For those who are Christiansâlike you and I were when we got marriedâwe also start our marriages out thinking: âYou know, we believe in God. If we do it Godâs way, itâs going to all be good. Weâre not going to have any hard things.â That was how I started our marriageâthinking: âA plus B equals C.
5:00
âIf I obey God and I do these things that are in the Bible, then God, therefore, will give us an easy, nice life.â
Bob: So, do you have a new equation now if itâs not âA plus B equals Câ? What would you say to a young wife, who says, âIf itâs not that, what is it?â
Barbara: Thereâs a lot of algebra! [Laughter]
Bob: Some calculusâ[Laughter]âa little geometryâ
Barbara: And I donât know algebra very well; so I canât even give you the formula! [Laughter]
Dennis: And weâre laughing, but itâs the hard stuff of life. This is a broken world. There is a heaven, and itâs not here / itâs not now.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: God came, in the person of Jesus Christ, to give us an abundant life now and help us face these hardships; but itâs like the funeral you and I participated in earlier this yearâa dear couple that we love greatly, who buried the body of their 15-year-old son. Itâs unthinkableâ
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: âthe grief of losing a child!
6:00
No coupleâstanding at the altar, about to say their vows to each otherâcan even fathom the grief, the loss, the agony, the darkness of the valley. And yet, there are a lot of our listenersâwho are in it right now, or who are about to go in it, or who have been in the valley and theyâve come out the other sideâtheyâre nodding their heads.
Bob: And one of the things Iâve heard you say before, Barbaraâis knowing that those valleys are aheadâyou donât know when theyâre coming / you donât know where they areâit could be months / it could be years before you head into oneâbut the time to prepare your marriage and the time to get ready to walk through the valley is not when you find yourself in itâitâs while youâre still walking in the sunlight.
Barbara: Yes. And I think that it also illustrates that the importance of building your marriage today because we donât know how many days we have. Our days are all numbered, but we donât know what the last number is.
7:00
That reminds us that today is the day we need to focus on. Today is the day we need to liveâas if it were our last, even though thatâs hard to do in a practical wayâbut we need to focus on making our marriage all it can be today. Focus on getting to know Christ today / focus on growing today so that, when those hard times do comeâand they will comeâbecause Jesus said, âIn this world, you will have trouble,ââperiod / doneâââŠyou will have trouble.â
We donât like that / I never liked that verseâI always kind of wondered why it was even in there. It is because Heâs telling us the truth that we will have trouble and we will have difficulty. So the best way to prepare is to live each day on purpose and to live each day with focus and intentionality in your relationship.
Dennis: You donât prepare for the storm in the middle of the storm.
8:00
I will never forget a Green Beret, who came up to me at one of our Weekend to Remember marriage getaways, way back when we started FamilyLife years and years ago. He came up and said, âDennis, as a Green Beret, we practice what to do in a crisis over, and over, and over again in training so that, when we were in the crisis, it was second nature / we knew what to do.â
I think what people need to look at isâto look at the Bible as the training manual. We need to know how to live now in light of eternity. As a married couple, you have to know how to live together. Weâve been through some hard things in our family / some difficult challenges. Itâs true, Bob, husbands and wives do not suffer the same / they do not process grief in the same way. Weâre different, as male and female.
Iâm so glad that Barbara has this chapter in her book to coach women to know how to view suffering / how to view the valley in their marriage and not lose heart / not lose hopeâbut to not give up.
9:00
Bob: Sometimes in a marriage, Barbara, we are plunged into a deep valley, where itâs the kind of darkness weâve talked about hereâburying a child orâI know, for you and Dennisâthe loss of a grandchild, years ago, was one of those deep valleys.
For a lot of wives, the valley is not as deep; but itâs kind of a shallow, prolonged valley. You wouldnât necessarily even call it suffering, but itâs just a general discontentedness about life and where you are. It drags on you every day. If a wife is in that moment, where sheâs saying, âThis is not what Iâ
Barbara: ââsigned up forâ?
Bob: âJust not what I thought life was going to be.â
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âItâs not what I thought marriage was going to be. I thought having kids would be more fun than this.â
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: What does she do in that moment?
Barbara: Well, first of all, I want to say that that is suffering. Itâs just a different kind of suffering because I think that is a common experience for many, many women.
10:00
I think a lot of us go through seasons of life, whether itâs because of hormones or itâs because of the season that our kids are in. I remember a season like that for me, in the late teen years, before we became empty nesters. I remember being so exhausted every single day. I think thereâs a cumulative effect that a lot of mothers feelâit just kind of buildsâso that by the time youâre in your 40s or pushing 50, thereâs this general fatigue with life.
I think that is a kind of suffering because we do live in a broken world. That is a difficult thing to deal with because it affects everything about youâit affects your marriage, your kids that are still at home, your perception of yourself, your perception of life, your enjoyment of life. So I think that those really can be called kinds of suffering.
11:00
So the answer is--and I donât want this to sound like a pat answer because there isnât a pat answerâbut I think the bottom line is: âContinuing to believe God that He is in control and that this too shall pass.â Itâs pulling back and looking at the big picture. I describe this as watercolor painting in my book because one of the things about creating a painting isâyou come up with an initial sketch, and youâve got to decide where the horizon line is, and whatâs going to be your focal point. Often, when youâre doing a painting of any kindâand even a sculpture, although I donât do that, but I think the same principle is true with any kind of artâyou have to pull back. One of the things thatâs important about doing a painting isâyou walk six feet away and look at it / or maybe even fartherâand you see the whole more clearly when youâre away from it.
The same is true in our livesâwe need to pull back / remind ourselves of the big picture:
12:00
âGod is in control. He still loves me. Heâs working good in my life, even though I donât see it or feel it and I donât know what the outcome is going to be. I can trust Him.â I think the message is, âDonât quit when it gets hard.â Our temptation is to want to run away when things get hard or when things get difficultâto escape from the pressure, escape from the pain, escape from whatever it is that youâre feeling as a result of the suffering. But God is saying: âNo. Stay there. Iâm with you. I wonât abandon you. Iâm going to use this for good.â
Dennis: And back to the motif or the illustration of watercolors. Bob, Iâve watched Barbara create paintings; and itâs fascinating how she shows off light. You would think that would be pretty simple; but to a non-artistic person like me, itâs fascinating how you use dark colors to show off the light.
13:00
What Barbaraâs actually talking about here isâI think that God allows the darknessâGod allows the valleys / He allows the disappointments and the unmet expectationsâthose things to come into our lives to create some contrast that will call us to trust Him. Because, frankly, if everything went our own way,â
Barbara: âwe wouldnât need Him or we wouldnât trust Him.
Dennis: âwe wouldnât need God.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: And we could live our whole lives just being âhappy.â Well, you know what? That isnât going to happen!
Barbara: Right.
Dennis: Youâre not going to be able to live âa happy life.â
Bob: But I do think there are a lot of wives whoâwhen they are not happy / theyâre in a prolonged season, where, âI just havenât felt happy for a while,ââthey start to look around and go: âOkay, how come Iâm not feeling happy? Whoâs the cause of this!?â [Laughter] Guessâwho is the closest person there to take the blame for: âIâm not happy! Itâs got to be something heâs doing! If he was doing his job, Iâd be happy!â?
14:00
Do you think thatâs right?
Barbara: Do I think it is right that sheâs thinking that?
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: Well, no! Itâs not right that sheâs thinking that. [Laughter]
Bob: Is it accurate that she might be thinking that?
Barbara: Oh, I think itâs common.
Bob: Yes! But itâs not right.
Barbara: But itâs not right; yes. [Laughter] I mean, itâs very easy to blame somebody else. Thatâs one of the hard things about marriageâis that itâs so easy for both of usâhusband or wifeâto blame the person whoâs right there because theyâre handy, and itâs really easy to find fault and say, âWell, if you onlyâŠ, my life would be so much better.â
But thatâs not really what the reason is. The real reason is that Godâbecause Heâs our Father, and Heâs a loving, kind, gracious Father / is so patientâand Heâs saying to us: âYou need this right now. This will be for your good right now. I know you donât like it / I know it doesnât feel good, but Iâve got purposes and Iâve got plans for you. You will be glad in the end.â
15:00
Most people who have been through sufferingâwhether itâs shallow, small things or really deep, tragic thingsâcan say, on the other side: âI didnât enjoy it / I didnât like it, but I knew God better / I came to know Him better as a result. I wouldnât trade that for anything.â Iâve heard so many people say that, and I would say itâs true about us too. Weâve learned more about God in the valleys than we have on the high places and hills in the sunshine.
Dennis: I just want to read a couple of passages, just based upon all Barbara is talking about here. If youâre going through a hard time, Iâd like to recommend the best-sellerâthe Bibleâand the Book of 1 Peter, which was written to a group of people, who had been scattered and who were followers of Christ. They were called the diasporaâthey were scattered saints, having to represent Christ in cultures that punished them for it.
Barbara: Well, they werenât just scatteredâbecause we tend to think of scattered as they are just living in different placesâbut they lost homes / possessions.
16:00
I mean, they had really experienced some difficult traumas that we face today when houses burn down or we go bankrupt and we lose everything. That puts a little more context in what these people were living in.
Bob: They were refugeesânot just scatteredâbut refugees.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: So I just want to read what God wanted to say to some folks who were going through some hard times. Just listen to how God coaches and gently nudges people who are in the valleyâ1 Peter, Chapter 3, verse 13: âNow who is there to harm you if you are zealous for what is good? But even if you should suffer for righteousnessâ sake, you will be blessed. Have no fear of them, nor be troubled, but in your hearts regard Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you, yet do it with gentleness and respect, having a good conscience, so that when you are slandered, those who revile your good behavior in Christ may be put to shame.â
17:00
But listen to this conclusion to this passage: âFor it is better to suffer for doing good, if that should be Godâs will, than for doing evil.â
So you hear the Scripture calling us to have the right perspective of our valley. Donât just look at it from a human perspective. Wherever you are, maybe pull out this book and read 1 Peter, Chapter 3. Then, across the page, go look at Chapter 4, verse 12 and listen to what Peter says here: âBeloved, donât be surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you.â
18:00
Iâve got to stop there because I think we, as human beings, are really odd. We think, when we get married, thereâs never going to be a valley. Itâs in the fine print of the marriage covenantâyouâre going to go through testing / through trials. But listen to thisâverse 13 of Chapter 4: âBut rejoice insofar as you share Christâs sufferings, that you may also rejoice and be glad when His glory is revealed.â
The Bible so calls us away from our temporary thinking / from how Iâm feeling right now. Itâs calling you, not to live by feelings, but itâs calling you to faith: âAre you going to believe that thatâs true?â As a couple, will you allow the things that are coming at you to bind your hearts to Hisâfirst of all to Godâsâbut then, secondly, to one another and to not give up?âand as Barbara said, ââŠnot quit and not toss the towel in.â Weâre talking to people, right now, who have secretlyâor maybe verballyâthreatened divorce to their spouse.
19:00
I mean, it is commonplace in our culture. But this is the biblical way to look at suffering, and the biblical way to run the race all the way to the finish line.
Bob: Well, what Iâve heard both of you saying throughout this isâfirst of all: âTrials are coming; so be ready, and the way you get ready is by learning how to trust God in the sunshine so that, when youâre in the valley, youâve already learned what walking by faith looks like. You donât wait to get to the valley to learn.â
Dennis: You donât wait âtil the storm comes and it starts raining to go up on top of the roof toâ
Bob: âto fix the leak.
Dennis: âto fix the leak.
Bob: And then, the second thing is: âWhen youâre in the valley and the circumstances are pressing, you have to pull backâstep away from the painting, get the bigger picture, and counsel your own soul with what you know is true in the sunshine.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âPreach it to yourself in the shadow. Thatâs how Jesus walks through that with you.â
20:00
So a wife who finds herself in a season of sufferingâwhether itâs the mild malaise we talked about earlier, where itâs just discouragement, or whether itâs a significant period of sufferingâshe has to counsel her own soul and remind herself of whatâs true and hang onto that.
Barbara: And she needs to realize that God wants to use the hard times for the good of her marriage. Itâs not just for her good or her husbandâs good, or for the betterment of some circumstance, but God really wants to use these difficulties to help them, as a couple / a husband and a wife, grow closer together. We suffer differently / we handle things differently, but thatâs part of what God wants to do to help us become more oneâis for me to share what Iâm feeling when weâre suffering, and for me to listen to Dennis share what heâs feeling or, when he doesnât share what heâs feeling, to trust that God is at work in his soul.
21:00
As we go through that experience together, it bonds us together more than on days when weâre not struggling.
Dennis: What Iâd have to say to that isâI wish, at this point, I could reach through the radioâwhether itâs a phone, or a computer, or your car, or in your shop / wherever youâre listeningâand just put an arm around you and say, âOh, we have such a shallow view of love!â
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: We think love is like the movies depict itâa couple walking off in the sunset, arm in arm, with the soft breeze, and the music swelling, and people applauding. The reality isâa lot of love is learned in the valley, where two people arenât feeling the same thing / where two people arenât finding a lot of romance because thereâs no room in the valley, sometimes, for romance. Itâs where two people learn how to really love because they meet the God of love in the valley, and they begin to understand He loves themâ
22:00
âthatâs what theyâre supposed to reflect to one another.
Bob: I think there are a lot of wives who are really going to be helped as they get a chance to read your reflections on how God uses suffering in a marriage relationship and in a familyâhow God has used it in your life as youâve gone through seasons of suffering. You write about this in your new book, Letters to My Daughters.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: We are making that book available this month to listeners who can support the ministry of FamilyLife with a donation of any amount. We are a listener-supported ministry. We depend on your donations to be able to continue the work of FamilyLife Today. If you can help with a donation this month, weâd like to send you a copy of Barbaraâs brand-new book, Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife.
Go to FamilyLifeToday.comâyou can make a donation online if youâd like. Or call 1-800-FL-TODAY to make a donation over the phone.
23:00
Or you can mail your donation to FamilyLife Today at PO Box 7111, Little Rock, AR; our zip code is 72223. Let me just say, âThanks,â in advance for your support of this ministry. We hope you enjoy Barbaraâs new book, Letters to My Daughters.
We want to say, âCongratulations!â today to our friends, Wayne and Carrie Owen. They live in Sacramento, California. I lived in Sacramento for a while. In fact, I worked at the radio station where they listen to FamilyLife Todayâat KFIA. The Owens have been married 29 years todayââCongratulations!â to them.
If you have an anniversary coming up later this year, weâd like to help you celebrate. We will send you some text messages or emails just prior to your anniversaryâjust some little prompts for you to begin to get ready to celebrate your special day. We just need to know what your special day. So call us at 1-800-FL-TODAY and let us know your anniversary date.
24:00
Or you can go online at FamilyLifeToday.com and leave us your anniversary date and let us know whether youâd like those messages sent to you by email or by text message.
Now, tomorrow, we want to spend time talking about how fear can affect a family. We especially want to look at blended or stepfamilies. Weâre going to hear from Ron Deal tomorrow with thoughts on the subject of fear. I hope you can tune in for that.
I want to thank our engineer today, Keith Lynchâspecial help today from Mark Ramey. On behalf of our host, Dennis Rainey, I'm Bob Lepine. We will see you back next time for another edition of FamilyLife Today.
FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Help for today. Hope for tomorrow.
We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to produce them for our website. If youâve benefited from the broadcast transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs?
Copyright © 2016 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Embracing the Differences
Guest: Barbara Rainey
From the series: Letters to My Daughters (Day 1 of 3)
Bob: Engaged couples often look at one another and think, âWeâre so much alike!â Then, after they have been married for a little while, they look at each other and think, âWho are you?!â Hereâs Barbara Rainey.
Barbara: What happens when weâre engagedâwe tend to think: âOh, weâre so much alike. We love each other so muchâweâll never have clashes.â I think one of the first difficulties for most young couples is theyâre caught off guard by these differences. They donât know what to do with themâthey go from being cute and attractive to being downright ugly or frustrating. All of a sudden, what was cute isnât so cute anymore; and you think, âNow what do I do?â
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Monday, February 15th. Our host is the President of FamilyLifeÂź, Dennis Rainey, and Iâm Bob Lepine. So what advice would you give to young wives and their husbands about the adjustments we make in marriage? Weâre going to hear what Barbara Rainey has to say about that today. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. I am really enjoying learning lots of new things about you, Barbara.
Dennis: Youâre eavesdropping.
Bob: Well, itâs legitimate eavesdropping because of what your wifeâs been writing about. This has been so much fun to read. [Laughter]
Dennis: I think I want to welcome her to FamilyLife TodayâSweetheart.
Barbara: Maybe we donât; huh? [Laughter]
Dennis: This is my bride, and she has plenty of stories to tell.
Bob: And she has just recentlyâby the way, welcome, Barbaraânice to have you here.
Barbara: Thank you, Bob.
Bob: Youâve been collecting these stories, not to share with the world your stories, but really to mentorâyouâve become an e-mentor; havenât you?
Barbara: Yes. Iâm really writing this for six women / six young women, who happen to be my four daughters and two daughters-in-lawâto share with them the lessons that Iâve learned over all these years of marriage in hopes that it will encourage them, and give them hope, and help themâhelp them persevere for the long haul.
2:00
Dennis: But it actually startedâback to Bobâs point aboutâfrom an e-mentoring standpointâreally started on the internetâ
Barbara: It did. Thatâs right; I had forgotten.
Dennis: âas you were writing emails to your daughters and daughters-in-law so that youâd be able to coach them / encourage them in the process.
Bob: Did you start doing this right after Ashley got married?
Barbara: No; actually, it was after our two boys got married. They got married the same summerâthe summer of 2001. One of those two girls asked me if I would give her some advice on being a wife. I thought: âWow! She really wants my advice?â I thought, âIf she cracked the door open a little bit, Iâm going to just walk right on through while the doorâs open!â I said, âSure, Iâd love to!â
I began writing a series of letters in the fall of 2001 to my two brand-new daughters-in-law and to my daughter, Ashley, who, by then, had been married four years.
Bob: A lot ofâa wife will hear you say that and theyâll think, ââBoy, if somebody asked me, I wouldnât know where to start or what to say.â
3:00
But it sounds like you were ready to dive right in with wisdom.
Barbara: Well, I donât know that I would say it that way, but I was ready to dive inâin the sense that I felt like, âNow was the time,â because all new brides are extremely teachableâtheyâre eager, they want to learn, they want to do it right, they donât want to make mistakesâthey really love this guy they just married. Theyâre most teachable and most coachable in those early years. I wanted to begin by sort of exploiting thatâin a sense, in a good wayâby saying: âHere are some things that I learned / here are some lessons I learned along the way. Here are some stories of what we went through / what Iâve learned from it. Perhaps, it will be helpful.â
Dennis: Over the years, weâveâwho knows how many hundreds of Weekend to RememberÂź marriage getaways have been held by FamilyLifeâweâve looked into the eyes of those in attendance.
4:00
It does seem that the engaged couples and the newly-marrieds are, not only on a steep learning curve, but theyâre much more teachable and kind of spongy in terms of soaking in the truth.
What we wanted to doâand what I encouraged Barbara to do with this bookâis take advantage of a window into the soul to speak a lot of relevant truth that sheâs learned, as a woman from the Scriptures and from other older women who have coached her, and really help these young wives get started on the right trajectory.
Bob: They didnât ask you about a specific subject. They just said, âHelp me be a wife.â How did you know, âOkay; Iâll start hereâ?
Barbara: Well, what I did isâI just thought back to those early days in our marriage and tried to remember: âWhat were the lessons that I learned? What did I do right? What did I do wrong?â
Bob: Like that early romantic date that Dennis took you on?
Barbara: Yes, like that one.
Bob: Tell our listeners aboutâ[Laughter]
Barbara: You like this; donât you? [Laughter]
5:00
Bob: âhow ââPrince Charmingâ swept you off your feet. [Laughter]
Barbara: Yes. While we were dating in the summer of 1972, which was of course in the dark agesâone Saturday / it was probably on a Friday afternoon Dennis asked if I wanted to hang out on Saturday afternoon. I said, âSure.â He picked me up in hisâ
Bob: Now, let me interrupt you just so we get a context.
Barbara: Okay.
Bob: You guys had been friends for yearsâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âsince college.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: Right.
Bob: [To Barbara] After college, you went to the east coast and worked with Campus Crusade.
Barbara: Correct.
Dennis: University of South Carolina.
Bob: [To Dennis] Where did you go?
Dennis: I was in Dallas/Ft. Worth area, working with high school kids.
Bob: You kept up your friendshipâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âbut there was nothing romantic between the two of you.
Barbara: No, nothing romantic. We had been really good friends for three years. I really thought of Dennis as a brotherâhe was just a great, great friend.
Dennis: She showed up in Dallas and needed to be shown aroundâkind of where everything was / kind of how you get aroundâso Iâd pick her up, take her to work.
Bob: Now, were you thinking of her like your sister at this point?
6:00
Dennis: Yes, I really was. It was not romanticâit really wasnâtâwhich is really a cheap shot on your partâ[Laughter]âto call out this thing that I took her on as a romantic date because we were just hanging out!
Barbara: Thatâs rightâwe were.
Bob: Was this beforeâthis date weâre about to talk aboutâwas this before or after you had tried to hold hands with her in the parking lot?
Dennis: Way before.
Barbara: I have no idea.
Dennis: Way before.
Bob: Really?
Barbara: I would think soâyes.
Dennis: Oh, yes; oh, yes.
Bob: Okay.
Barbara: I would guess.
Bob: Itâs just friends: âHey, do you want to hang out tomorrow?â
Dennis: Yes. Iâd take her back to her apartment, and weâd kind of sit on the stairs and talkâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Just visit.
Dennis: âuntil about 2:00 in the morningâ[Laughter]âjust like a couple of friends.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: Yes. [Dennis laughing]
Bob: Okay. So he says, âDo you want to hang out tomorrow?â and he comes and picks you up.
Barbara: He did.
Bob: Did you know where you were going?
Barbara: You know, I donât rememberâit was too long ago. I donât remember if I knew or not, but I knew it was casual. I knew we were going to go on a picnic. He took me to some remote place outside of Dallas/Ft. Worthâ
7:00
Bob: Now wait. Iâve got to stop you here. Youâre taking her on a picnic. Youâre not taking your buddyââLetâs go hang out,ââ on a picnic. Thereâs more going on here in your mind [Barbara laughing] than just, âLetâs hang out together.â
Dennis: She needed to understand where the riverbanks wereâ
Bob: Alright.
Barbara: Like I really care!
Bob: We understand one another here; okay. So he picks you up? [Laughter]
Barbara: Yes. We take off to parts unknown because Iâd never really been in Texas in my life. I didnât know where we were going, but I trusted him. We show up at this stream, or river, or pool of water, or somethingâI donât know where it was!
Dennis: I donât know where it wasâit was below a dam somewhere.
Barbara: Gosh; I couldnât begin to tell you.
Dennis: It was murky / it was fishy-smelling. It was a great date!
Barbara: All I know is he pulls out a fishing poleâfishing rod / fishing thingâI didnât know what a fishing thing was! [Laughter] Oh, how funny!
Bob: One of the things you observed or learned, when you shared this story with your daughtersâit was really to talk about the fact that, in relationships, youâve got to make some adjustments and be ready for the fact that youâre two very different people.
Barbara: Exactly; because after we married, about three months later, we moved to Colorado.
8:00
In Colorado, there was abundant fishing.
Bob: You married three months laterâafter the fishing date?
Barbara: Yes!
Dennis: You caught up on that small detail. [Laughter]
Bob: I just thought our listeners ought to be aware. [Laughter] It went from zero to sixty.
Dennis: Iâm a man of action, Bob.
Bob: This was a sports car relationship. [Laughter] So, from the day you said, âWill youâŠâ to the day you said, âI do,ââ
Barbara: âwas six weeks.
Bob: Six weeks?
Barbara: Six weeks.
Bob: You said, âIâll be the Fish Queen for as long as we both shall live.â [Laughter]
Dennis: Then, on our honeymoon, I took her camping and trout fishing. [Laughter] We need to get to the point of the book thoughâsheâs talking about how we, as men and women, are different.
Barbara: Thatâs right.
Dennis: I mean, we did start out our marriageâreally, not polar oppositesâbecause we enjoyed one another.
Barbara: Yes, we had a great time; but, had you asked me what I would have pictured for the early years of our marriage, I would not have pictured traipsing around in the mountainsâ
9:00
âfishing, and camping, and all of those thingsâbecause none of that was a part of my background, growing up. They were totally brand-new experiences. I learned, by those experiences, that marrying someone is merging together two vastly differentânot just personalitiesâbut life experiences. As Dennis used to say, all the time, âItâs like merging two countries.â
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: Because we are very different, as men and womenâweâre very different in our life experiences / our outlookâeverything is different. So those early years are years of discovery. What you do with what you discover sets the tone and the foundation for your marriage.
Bob: Obviously, weâre talking to Barbara Rainey, who is joining us today on FamilyLife Today. Weâre talking about the wisdom that you want to pass on to younger womenâspecifically to your daughtersâabout being a wife. Youâve just written a book called Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife.
10:00
What are the big ideas that you want to pass on to your daughters in this area of marital differences?
Barbara: First of allâthe first big idea is that there are going to be differences. Itâs normal to be diametrically opposite on all kinds of fronts. Because what happensâwhen weâre engaged / and dating but then engagedâwe tend to think: âOh, weâre so much alike, and we love each other so muchâweâll never have clashes. Yes; if we do, we can handle them. We love each other so much that itâs not going to be difficult.â
I think one of the first difficulties for most young couples is theyâre caught off guard by these differences. They donât know what to do with themâthey go from being cute and attractive to being downright ugly or frustrating.
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: All of a sudden, what was cute isnât so cute anymore; and you think, âNow, what do I do?â
Bob: We have this tendency to think different means wrong.
Barbara: Wrong; yes.
11:00
Bob: âThis is the way I think; and itâs the way I think naturally. So I must be right; and if you think differently, we need to fix you so you think like me.â
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Thatâs part of the awakening and adjusting that both wives and husbands have to do in the early stages of a relationship; right?
Barbara: Exactly; because thatâs one of the beautiful things about marriageâis how it broadens our perspective. I write about that in telling these stories about fishing. I knew nothing about fishing; but because of who I married, the horizons of my life have been greatly expanded and broadened. I could have either fought that, and resisted that, and said: âI donât want any part of that! Thatâs foreign to me. I donât like itâ; but by embracing who he was, and his differences as a person, my life is much richer because of that.
I think, if we can encourage these young wivesâand husbands too / but this is for the wives right nowâto welcome those differences as an opportunity to grow as an individual, it will make it easier.
Dennis: I like what you wrote in your book hereâ
12:00
âyou said: âThese new realities created some minor earthquakes in my lifeârumblings that shook my familiar, comfortable foundation. I was discovering that we were not as much alike as Iâd originally thought. We were opposites who were attracted to one another but found ourselves, like magnets, that repel each other.â
And then she goes on to write about how I would make a decision compared to how she would make one.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: Iâd see something that needed to be done or something I felt like we ought to go doâIâd process at the speed of light and off weâd go.
Bob: Right.
Dennis: Barbara, on the other hand, processes a little slower. In factâ
Barbara: âa lot slower.
Dennis: âa lot slower.
Barbara: Is that what you were going to say?
Bob: A little more thoughtfullyâwith a little broader perspective.
Dennis: Iâve been enriched by that, but I promise youâif, early in our marriage, we had set up war with one another in two separate bunkers.
13:00
You could easily have built a case between two very different people, who had started out their marriage together, but now really canât get along and donât see one anotherâas we teach at the Weekend to Remember marriage getawayâas âGodâs perfect gift for you.â
Bob: You describe how you began to approach these differences in your marriage. You call it the âBookend Principle.â
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Explain what that is.
Barbara: The Bookend Principle is something that Dennis and I practiced with one another; and then, after the fact, sort of came up with the name for that. What we have done through the years isâwhen weâve had disagreements over our differences or conversations trying to understand one anotherâwe would say to each other: âI love you, and I would marry you all over again. This may be hard, this may be confusing, this may be difficultâit may not be fixed in a single conversation, like we would always like; but thatâs okay. I love you and Iâm committed to you, and I would do it all over again.â
14:00
That statement of reaffirmation of our vows and commitment to one another provides a level of security to continue to have these discussions about our differences. I think itâs a good habit. It was a good habit for us because you can get so caught up in how different we areâand how his differences grate on me or make life difficult for me and my differences make life difficult for himâthat you can subtly switch to becoming enemies rather than allies.
Bob: Were there times, or events, or evenings when you werenât sure you loved him and you werenât sure youâd marry him all over again?
Barbara: No. There were times when I didnât feel lovingâwithout questionâbut I never got to the place where I thought, âThis was a big mistake,â because I knew that God had called us to marry each other. I knew that we were doing what we were supposed to do. So, therefore, if this was Godâs will, and it was, then He would enable us to figure it out with time.
Bob: That issue was settled.
Barbara: Yes; âDone.â
Bob: That wasnât open for reevaluationâ
Barbara: No.
Bob: âreexaminationâ
Barbara: No.
Bob: âre-discussion.
15:00
At some pointâwhen you stood and said, âI do,ââthe ships were burned. You werenât going to reconsider whetherâ
Barbara: I think thatâs the mistake too many young couples are making todayâis they get into it, and it becomes difficultâinstead of saying, âWe can work this out,â they say, âGosh; we must have made a mistake.â They move to, âThis is a mistake, and maybe thereâs a way out,â rather than, âWe can find a way through this / we can make it work,â and stick with it for the long haul.
Dennis: I look back on our marriage. I donât remember ever entertaining the thought. And I mean by entertainingâIâm talking about cultivating the thought that Iâd made a mistake.
I do wonder, looking back on itâthis Bookend Principle of kind of starting out with a commitment that says, âI love you,â and then maybe, in the midst of an argument or after the argument has been exhausted, you say again: âIâm committed to you. Iâd marry you all over again.â
16:00
It creates a safe place for two imperfect, very different people to hammer out their relationship together.
I think weâre an instant culture that is not used to having to take a lifetime to achieve this thing called âoneness.â What we were doing, back thenâwe were going through some very hard ground. I mean, it had not been plowed beforeâtwo very independent peopleâwho had joined together in marriage, and who did rub one another the wrong way, and who, in their differences, missed each other over, and over, and over againâand, as a result, mis-communicated, disappointed, hurt one another. How do you maintain a relationship in the midst of that if youâre not committed?
Bob: I think itâs important because we can laugh about fishing dates, and whether you like fishing or not; but a lot of folks, who are listening, are going, âLook, our differences are not around whether you like fishing or notâ
Barbara: Yes; exactly.
17:00
Bob: âOur differences are around core, fundamental, deeply-held issues in life. The fact that weâre miles apart on thisâI just donât know how to live with a husband / or a wife who does not embrace whatâs dear to me at the center of my being.â
Barbara: Yes. That is a very difficult place to be. Even though Dennis and I never really had a crisis quite to that depth, we missed each other plenty of times. There are seasons in a marriage when itâs very dry and when there doesnât feel like thereâs much life. I would have to say that: âThere is hope. Thereâs always hope, as long as we have breath, that if you are committed and you are teachableâboth of you are teachableâand you hang in there, there will be a solution, given time.â
I think that we expect too much too quickly. We would like to have it happen quicklyâI would like to have it happen more quickly too, but thatâs just not the way of a marriage.
18:00
A marriage is slow, steady growth over a long length of time.
Dennis: If you go back to Genesis, Chapters 2 and 3, the way God commands a marriage to start is He commanded a man and a woman to leave father and mother. He commanded them to cleave to one another / to be committed to one another. And third, He commanded them to receive one anotherâto receive the other person as Godâs gift for you.
If you practice those three conceptsâleave, cleave, and receiveâover, and over, and over againâif you practice that in your marriage / especially, in the early yearsâit doesnât mean itâs ever going to be easy.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: I asked Barbara how she would summarize our marriage. I was kind of hoping for âromantic,â [Laughter] âchill bumpsââ
Barbara: ââwonderful.â
Dennis: You know? But instead, you said?
Barbara: âItâs been hard.â
Dennis: âHard work.â
Barbara: âHard workâ; yes.
19:00
Dennis: Lots of hard work. I think a lot of young couplesâand for that matter, older couplesâare starting out marriages today not really expecting it to be as challenging and to demand perseverance like it does
Bob: I just have to come back around here because youâre right in this section of your book thatânot only did your marriage start off with fishingâbut through the years youâve learned to enjoy hunting with your husband? [Laughter] Is that true?
Barbara: Well, not by his definition; no. Not byâ
Dennis: I was waiting for the answer to that question.
Bob: Iâm going to read to you what you wrote.
Barbara: Okay; okay. Read what I wrote.
Bob: âAnd I have learned to appreciate hunting.â
Barbara: Yes, âappreciate it.â
Bob: Maybe âappreciateâ is a better word thanâ
Barbara: âAppreciateâ is a better word. Yes
Bob: âI actually went with him on an elk hunt a few years agoâ
Barbara: Yes. I did.
Bob: â âwith the camo, the face paint, and the human scent killers sprayed on my body.â
Barbara: [Laughing] I did!
Barbara and Bob: âArenât you impressed?â [Laughter]
Bob: Thatâs what you say right here: âArenât you impressed?â [Laughter]
20:00
âWe hiked and hiked and snuck up on a herd of elk hiding behind trees like clandestine spies following a double agent down a dark alley in Eastern Europe. It was really fun!â
Barbara: It was fun! [Laughter]
Bob: But the point is that weâre going to face these differences in the first years of our marriage.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Some of them crop up ten years inâfifteen. Itâs a life-long process of understanding âWeâre different,â and making those adjustments.
Barbara: Exactly. That really is the point that Iâm trying to make with these girlsâis that the differences are thereâtheyâre not to be changed and theyâre going to be there for life. I think we somehow assume, early on, that a lot of this stuff is going to subside, or change, or moderate; but who we are is who we are.
Iâm just amazed at how little really changes over time. You either fight it, and resent it, and resist it, or you join and learn to actually enjoy it and appreciate it.
21:00
Now, do I love to go hunting? No. I enjoyed that because it was active. We were hiking in the mountains, and it was beautiful.
Dennis: And it was warm.
Barbara: And it was reasonably warm; yes. But the kind of hunting that he is often inviting me to go onâwhich I have refusedâis the kind where you get up at 3:00 or 4:00 in the morning, in the winter, and you go sit. You canât talk / you can hardly breathe, and itâs freezing. [Laughter]
Hiking in the mountainsâwe could talk as we wentâuntil we actually saw the elk / then we had to be quiet. It was a much different kind of experience so I could appreciate that one. But sitting in a deer standâIâve done it once and Iâm not real interested in going there again.
Bob: The point isâyou donât have to be interested in going there again to make your marriage work. This is a part of the dance. One of your chapters in your book, âMarriage Is Like Beautiful Dancingââ
22:00
ââPart of the dance is understanding what we do together and where itâs better to leave each other some space and some time to do things apart.â
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: I just think you have given some real great practical wisdom to a lot of wives in what youâve written in your book, Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife. Itâs brand new, and you can go to FamilyLifeToday.com to request your copy. Or you can call 1-800-FL-TODAY and ask for the book, Letters to My Daughters, when you get in touch with us.
Now, as both of you guys know, this is our 40th anniversary as a ministryâ2016. All year long, we are celebrating anniversaries. Today, we want to congratulate Abigail and Angelo Pinheiro. They live in Princeton, New Jersey. They listen to FamilyLife Today on WFIL. Theyâre celebrating 21 years of marriage today. âCongratulations!â to the PinheirosââHappy Anniversary!â
23:00
Weâd love to help you celebrate your anniversary this year. In fact, if you will go to FamilyLifeToday.com and leave us your anniversary date, weâll have some suggestions for you this year on how this yearâs anniversary can be the best anniversary ever. Itâs all because we are the âProud Sponsor of Anniversaries.â There are a lot of anniversaries that have happened over the years because of how God has used FamilyLife in peopleâs lives for 40 years now.
Thanks to those of you who make FamilyLife possible. Weâre listener-supportedâwe depend on your donations in order for this ministry to exist. This month, weâre hoping that God might raise up, in every state where FamilyLife Today is heard, 20 new families who would join us as Legacy Partners. Weâre asking youâif youâre a regular FamilyLife Today listener / if Godâs used this ministry in your life: âWould you be one of the families in your state to help support this program?â
Itâs easy to doâgo to FamilyLifeToday.com and click the button that says, âDONATE.â
24:00
There is information there about becoming a Legacy Partner or about how you can make a one-time gift to FamilyLife Today. Again, the website is FamilyLifeToday.com. You can also call and say, âIâm interested in becoming a Legacy Partner.â Weâll explain the whole process to you when you call 1-800-âFâ as in family, âLâ as in life, and then the word, âTODAY.â
Now, tomorrow, weâre going to talk about the spiritual foundation in a marriage and how important that is. Barbara Rainey will be back with us. Hope you can be here as well.
I want to thank our engineer today, Keith Lynch, along with our entire broadcast production team. On behalf of our host, Dennis Rainey, Iâm Bob Lepine. We will see you back tomorrow for another edition of FamilyLife Today.
FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Help for today. Hope for tomorrow.
We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to produce them for our website. If youâve benefited from the broadcast transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs?
Copyright © 2016 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Leaning on God
Guest: Barbara Rainey
From the series: Letters to My Daughters (Day 2 of 3)
Bob: Barbara Rainey says thereâs a lesson that every couple needs to learn really early in their marriage. The lesson is this: âYou canât do this on your own.â
Barbara: The bottom line is going to be the same for the rest of your life; and that is, when God brings you to a place that you realize you cannot do this thing called marriage, you canât do this thing called mothering, you canât even do the Christian life on your ownâthat you come to Him and you say: âI give up. I surrenderâYour will, not mine.â
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Tuesday, February 16th. Our host is the President of FamilyLifeÂź, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. Weâll find out today just how important it is to have a spiritual foundation poured in your marriage if youâre going to try to build a home on top of it. Stay tuned.
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. Iâm curiousâdid you think, when you and Barbara, in the summer of 1972âI guess September of â72 / late summer; right?
Dennis: Right; right.
Bob: Thatâs when the two of you stood and faced one another and said your vows.
Dennis: It was still summer in Houston.
Bob: Did you think, âThis is going to be a breeze,â or did you think, âI know there will be some challengesâ?
Dennis: I just didnât think. [Laughter] Honestly! I was in love. I was committed. I was ready to get on with life with my new bride and my new love. Honestly, I didnât do a lot of cost-counting; but I did make a commitment.
Bob: We heard your wife laugh as you said, âI wasnât really thinking.â Barbara, welcome to FamilyLife Today.
Barbara: Thank you.
Dennis: Were you thinking, Barbara?
Barbara: Not much more than you were.
Bob: But were you confident?
Barbara: Yes, I really was.
Bob: Did you start marriage, thinking, âI can do thisâ?
Barbara: Yes; I really did because I had grown up in a good home. My parents were not divorced. I had seen them work out their marriage andâthough there were things I wanted to do differentlyâI felt like I could do this. Added to that, I was doubly confident because I was a Christian and my husband was. We were not just pew-warmers / we were committed Christ followers. I thought: âThis is guaranteed to work because weâve got the right ingredients: We love each other. We love the Lord. We are going to do this the right way. Weâre going to follow the instructions in the BibleâA+B=C. Itâs going to work out great!â
Bob: The reason weâre exploring this is because youâve been spending a lot of time, recently, working on editing a series of lettersâactually, emails that grew into letters.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Letters that youâve written over the years to your daughters and your daughters-in-law, where youâve just offered counsel from your own life and experience about getting married.
Barbara: Yes. I started writing this series of letters the summer that both of our sons got married. It wasnât so much that I wanted to teach themâand I was invited to do so by the wayâI didnât do this without an invitation. It was that I wanted to encourage them by sharing some of the stories of things that I had learned so that they would know that: âOh, itâs normal to have disagreements. Oh, itâs normal for this to happen or that to happen,â so that they would understand the long view of marriage and the big picture of marriage.
Dennis: One of the things that had occurred in our marriage that I think really pointed out the importance of perhaps Barbara doing thisâearly in our marriage, she had kind of run into the differences between us and how that was impacting her. Someone told usâand I donât remember whoâbut said, âYou really ought to go spend some time with an older woman who has experienced more of life and been around the barn a few more times than you have.â Just to spend some time and to know that what youâre going through is normal.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: I think couples start out their marriage together and they get isolated. They donât realize that what theyâre going through is what everybody else is dealing with. But if they have someone who is seasoned / whoâs authenticâand not going to create some kind of pie-in-the-sky approach thatâs: âA+B=C, and youâre going to have all your problems solved by sundown tonight,ââif youâve got somebody whoâs real and helps you understand that it takes a lifetime to work out this thing called marriage. Thatâs what really fueled Barbara in writing our daughters and our daughters-in-law to be able to enter in to these first months and years of their marriage.
Bob: Barbara, one of the issues you felt like you needed to mentor your daughters and daughters-in-law in was this issue that we talked aboutâyour confidence that you could be the wife and mom that God called you to beâthat, at some point along the way, you kind of woke up and went, âThis is harder than I thought it was going to be.â
Barbara: Yes. I think that realization was an on-going realization. What Iâve realized, as I look back over my life, is that, along the wayâfrom those early months of our marriage all the way up until the presentâGod has been saying to me, over and over again, âYou canât do this on your own.â Now, my initial response is, âOh, yes; I can.â
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: Because Iâve gotâespecially in the early yearsâa lot of motivation, a lot of energy, a lot of enthusiasmâto really do a good job being a wife. Most young women start out that way / most new brides start out that way. Weâre highly motivated, highly teachable, energetic, ready to go and be the best we can be; but God knows that, if we really are able to produce on our own, then our confidence is in our self and not in Him.
In this section of the book, I tell lots of stories of how God took me places where I realized I could not do it on my own; and I could not garner up enough strength on my own to see the situation through.
Bob: The book youâre talking about, of course, is called, Letters to My Daughters. Itâs your brand-new book. The subtitle is The Art of Being a WifeâBarbara Rainey is showing us on FamilyLife Today.
Barbara, you started marriage as a committed follower of Christ. You were involved in ministry, but there were cracks in your spiritual foundation that started to show up under the pressure of marriageâ
Barbara: Yes; they did. I first felt it most dramatically after our first child was born. We had moved for probably the fourth or fifth timeâI canât remember. Weâd moved a bunch in those first two-and-a-half years of marriage. I remember one day just feeling really overwhelmed with these jobs I had. I was a wife, and I was a motherâand it was 24/7. Our new little baby didnât come with an instruction manual, and I didnât know what I was doing. We lived in California, and my mother was in Texas. Itâs not like I could call her every day, or I could go visit her, or she could come over in the afternoon and babysit so I could take a nap. I mean, I was really very, very lonely. I was very isolated, and I was very bewildered as to how to make this thing work: âHow do I do this wifing and mothering thing without any instructions?â I really remember feeling a sense of real aloneness in that season of my life. I tell a story in the bookâwould you like to hear it?âabout how I ran away?
Bob: You ran away?!
Barbara: I ran away. [Laughter]
Dennis: It wasnât farâbut she did run away. [Laughter]
Barbara: No; it wasnât farâNo; it wasnât farâbut I had thisâit really is what it was though. I wouldnât have even said so at the time but, looking back on it, it really is a good expression of what I was feeling.
I wentâout of just sheer frustrationâI wasnât really angry / I was just bewildered. I left Ashley sleeping in the crib or, maybe, she was in the infant seat or something in the living room. I donât even know what Dennis was doing, but all I remember is that I went into the bathroom in our bedroom / our master bathroom and shut and locked the door. It was a teensy little master bathroomâit had a tub, and a toilet, with a little tiny counter with a sink in the middle. I sat on the toilet. Then I got uncomfortable, and I sat on the side of the tub. Then that got uncomfortable, and so I sat on the toilet again. The walls started to kind of close in on me and I thought, âOh, now what do I do?â
I was just absolutely lost because I didnât know how toâI just didnât know how to do this thing. Finally, I came out. Thankfully my husband, in his love for me, did not go: âWhat an idiot you were! What were you thinking?ââyou know, going in the bathroom and locking the doorââWhat was the point of that?â He didnât belittle me / he didnât make fun of me. He didnât criticize me. He, Iâm sure, gave me a hug; and we sat down and talked.
Now, what it was all aboutâI canât even begin to tell you. What he said to meâI donât rememberâbut I remember the emotion of the momentâthat I was lost. I didnât know how to do this thing called marriage, I didnât know how to do this thing called mothering, and I didnât know where to go for help. That was the first real sort of moment of awakeningâwhen I realized this was all bigger than I could handle, and I needed something outside of myself to make it work. It was Godâs bringing me to this place of going, âYou canât do this on your own.â
Dennis: I think, as a husbandâtruthfully, I think I was clueless that she didnât feel that confidence.
Barbara: Well, of course, you were! How could you know?
Dennis: This was an internal battle she was fighting.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: So, when she did come out of the bathroom, I donât think I had realized that she had actually locked herself in thereâ
Barbara: No; Iâm sure you didnât.
Dennis: âand had kind of run away from her responsibilities for a few minutes. I donât think you were in thereâprobably, an hourâ
Barbara: No; not more than an hour.
Dennis: âbut the point isâas a husband, at that point / however imperfectly you may loveâbut just allow your wife to express the inability and to express her need for something to change / something to be different for her to move forward.
I think marriage is an opportunity for us to finish the process of growing up. In fact, I think it was Erma Bombeck who used to say, âMarriage is the last chance God gives us to grow up.â
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: I think itâs one of the tools God uses in our lives to take us to the end of ourselvesâ
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: âwhere He kind of puts an exclamation point at the end of the sentence that says: âYou need Me! Signed, God.â
Barbara: Exactly; exactly.
Bob: But Barbara, you were a Christianâyou studied the Scriptures, you were in church, you wereâ
Barbara: Yes! Thatâs what I thought! [Laughter]
Bob: So, what was missing?
Barbara: I think what was missing was an experiential understanding of my need for Christ. Yes, I knew I needed Christ when I received Him. Yes, I knewâhad you asked me, an hour before I went into the bathroom and locked the door, âDo you need Christ?ââI would have said, âOf course!â But it was knowledge more than it was heart experience.
God loved me enough that He wanted me to feel my need for Himâfor me to experience that I could not do this on my own. I think God loves us enough that He wants to take it from merely head knowledge to heart knowledge. It was the process that God was beginning to work in my life, where He was showing me: âNo, you canât do this on your own. Your knowledge of Me is not enough. You need to experience a need for the Holy Spirit to control your lifeânot just know it in your head that, âYes, thatâs the way youâre supposed to do it,ââbut you need to be aware of your need for Me so you will, in fact, depend on Me.â
Bob: Okay; so, youâre aware of your need. Now, youâre going to do something different than you were doing. Whatâs that different thing? How does somebody come out of the bathroom and say: âOkay; I realize I need to rely on God, I need the Holy Spirit to work in my life; but what can I do to make that happen? How do I walk in the power of the Holy Spirit?â
Barbara: For me, it was very much an on-going process. It was a growth that happened over decades. But, in that moment, as much as I knew how, in that day of my life, I said: âFather, I want to trust You more. I want to be filled with the Spirit. I want You to control my life. I want You to give me the power and the strength to live the way that You want me to liveâto do this thing called marriage that Youâve designed. This was Your idea in the first place; so therefore, You know how to make a marriage work. I want to depend on You more than I have in the past.â
I believe that I did; but then there came another point, on down the road, where God said: âOkay; now, you need to step it up a notch. You need to trust Me some more,ââ
I was trusting myself again too much. There was another lesson; and then, a few years later, another one.
I think that, just as our children grow up, incrementally, through the yearsâthey donât go from being a baby to being 18 overnight. Physical growth is a slow process. There are all kinds of little things going on in their bodies, as they grow up, that we canât even see. It does take a long time for an infant to become an adult. I think the journey is similar in our spiritual growth. We start out as spiritual infants. God gently and slowly works in our lives and our circumstances so that we become mature adults, spiritually, and donât remain infants.
Bob: One of the areas where you had to learn to rely on the power of the Holy Spirit in your own life was when you decided you wanted to do a make-over project on your husband; right?
Barbara: [Laughing] Yes, I did that.
Bob: This was Extreme Makeover. Is that what you wereâback before it was on TVâyou wereâ
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: It felt that way! [Laughter]
Barbara: Yes, it probably did. What is so sad about this story is that I really thought I was doing the right thing! I was a Christian and I thought: âOkay; if there are some problemsââand there wereââif there are some things that I think are not right in our relationshipââand there were those things that I thought werenât rightââWhat are you supposed to do about it? Youâre supposed to pray about it; arenât you? Yes, that makes sense.â
I made this listâI began to make a list of all the things that I thought were not rightâprimarily were not right about him / not so much things that werenât right about meâbecause I really didnât think there were that many thingsâ
Bob: That was a small list / little, tiny list. So youâre setting off to try to fixâwhat kinds of things were you trying to fix?
Barbara: You know, thatâs whatâs sadâI canât even remember what they wereâbut Iâm quite sure it was all personality related because, as Dennis said earlierâhe would get an idea, and [snaps fingers] process it that fast, and heâd be off and running. He didnât think things through thoroughly like I did. He was much more spontaneous and spur of the moment. Iâm sure it was related to these personality differences that I saw, early on.
I made this list, and I thought that the right thing to do was to pray about all the stuff that needed to be changed in his life.
Dennis: It was a long list too.
Bob: Wellâ[Laughing]
Barbara: It wasnât really that long. [Laughter]
Bob: Is there something wrong with a wife identifying: âThese are areas that I think God needs to be at work in my husbandâs life, and Iâm going to pray about God doing that workâ?
Barbara: Yes; I think itâs probably not a real good approach.
Bob: Really?!
Barbara: Really; because what happened to me isâI had this list of 10 or 12 things. I prayed about them every day. What happened wasâI thought about them all day after I repeated them to God in the morning. I would say: âOkay, God. Here are the things I think You need to work on in his life.â It was as if they were written in neon block letters on his back. Every time I saw him, I saw what was wrong because I was reminding myself, every dayââbefore God, of courseâbut nonetheless, I was reminding myself every day of what I didnât like and what I thought needed to be fixed.
I decidedâafter doing this for a couple of weeksâI thought: âYou know, I donât like the way this feels. This is not really a fun way to approach God.â Itâs not funâthe results in my marriageâI just didnât like the fact that I was constantly seeing all these things that I didnât like.
Bob: [To Dennis] Did you have any idea there was neon on your back?
Dennis: I think I did know about the list.
Bob: Really?
Dennis: I do, and I think I definitely felt it when she threw the list away.
Barbara: That doesnât surprise meâ
Dennis: Yes.
Barbara: âbecause I felt it when I threw the list away too.
Dennis: I mean, all of a sudden, Iâve got my friend back instead of my judge.
Bob: What prompted you to throw the list away?
Barbara: I just began to realize that this wasnât fun. I didnât like focusing on everything that I thought was wrong with him. I thought: âYou know, I didnât used to feel this way. I used to like all these things about him, and now I donât.â It wasnât this great revelationâI just thought: âYou knowâthis isnât fun. I donât like the way this makes me feel. I donât like the flavor in our relationship.â
I told God specifically one dayâand I remember saying thisâI said: âGod, if You want to change these things in his life, it is Your business. I am not going to ask You about this anymore because I donât like what this is doing to our relationship. If You never change him, that is fine with me. Itâs Your business, not mine. Iâm going to move forward and not pray about all these things that I think need to be corrected anymore.â
I tore up the list, and I literally threw it away. Within days, I wasnât thinking about all that stuff anymore.
Dennis: You knowâ
Barbara: It was a great relief.
Dennis: Thereâs a common thread hereâto what sheâs talking aboutâthat I want Barbara to comment because this has been a theme of her life. Youâre talking about, first of all, coming to the end of yourself, not once, but on multiple occasions, where you realize you couldnât do this thing called âbeing a wifeâ / you couldnât do this thing called âbeing a momââand you couldnât change your husband.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: Itâs not you thatâs going to do any of this. You came to the conclusion that it had to be Christ in you and you yielded to Him.
Barbara: Exactly.
Dennis: What would you say to a wife, whoâs listening, whoâs going: âGot me! Iâm raising my hands, saying, âThatâs me youâre describingââ? Whatâs the hope? Whatâs the solution?ânot in terms of a formulaâbut what does she need to begin to practice?
Barbara: I think the bottom line is going to be the same for the rest of your life; that isâwhen God brings you to a place that you realize you cannot do this thing called marriage, you canât do this thing called mothering, you canât even do the Christian life on your ownâthat you come to Him and you say: âI give up. I surrender. I need You. Will You empower me? Will you fill me with Your Spirit? Will You lead me?â because it really is coming to a point of giving up because what I was doing, when I was praying for you, isâI was trying to take over.
I was trying to tell God what I thought He needed to do in your life. I realized that I needed to give up. I need to let God do what He wanted to do, in His timetable. I basicallyâin essence, by saying, âIâm not going to do this anymore,ââI surrendered and I said, âYour will, not mine.â
Bob: You know, just about every time I speak at a Weekend to RememberÂź marriage getawayâfirst night, Iâll say, âIf you brought your spouse here, hoping that together we could get her fixed or get him changed, I have bad news for you.â [Laughter] I say, âIâm not even going to be talking to your spouse this weekend. The only person I came here to talk to is you.â I think sometimesâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: ârather than focusing on, âGod change this other person,ââ
Dennis: Yes.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âour prayers need to be redirected: âLord, change me.â
Barbara: Exactly.
Bob: I had to chuckle, Barbara, because, at the end of this âNote to Your Daughters,â as you shared this storyâyou said, âMore stories about my failures to come. [Barbara laughing] Love you, Mom.â
Really, this collection of letters that youâve written to you daughters are lessons youâve learnedâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âsome of them through not doing it right.
Barbara: Oh, lots of them learned through not doing it right because I think thatâs when God gets our attention. When weâre sailing along, and everythingâs smooth, thatâs when we donât think we need God; but when we realize we canât do it, and weâre making mistakes, then we go, âOkay; then maybeâmaybe I need some helpâ
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: ââand God needs to be my help.â
Dennis: ââand Jesus is that help.â
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: If the story of Easter is trueâand it is / Christ is alive from the deadâthen He can make this claimâHe said in John 15, âI am the true vine.â Later on, in the same passage, He says, âAs a branch cannot bear fruit by itself,ââdoes that sound familiar?
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: âYou canât do it on your own!âââAs a branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in Me. I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in Me and I in him, he it is who bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing.â If youâve come to the end of yourself, itâs a good thing!
Barbara: It isâand thatâs what God was trying to show me through this story and many, many other circumstances in my life. He was saying: âApart from Me you can do nothing. Do you get it?â
Dennis: And I think lifeâ
Barbara: And I said, âYes!â
Dennis: And I think life is one long process of Him saying, âDo you get it yet?â
Barbara: Yes, it is.
Dennis: âDo you get it now?â [Laughter]
Bob: And one long process of surrender because we keep doing it, as you said, over and over again. I think, in addition to the surrender then, there needs to be godly counsel that helps point us in the right directionâto help us correct the patterns that are the patterns of the flesh that are with us and point us to new habits, that are spiritually-informed and spiritually-motivated.
Barbara, I think you are helping to provide the wise counsel for a lot of wives in what youâve shared today and what youâve written in your brand-new book, Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife. Weâve got the book in our FamilyLifeToday Resource Center. Itâs brand-newâjust now out in stores. Weâd love for you to have a copy. Go to FamilyLifeToday.com or call 1-800-FL-TODAY. Ask about the book, Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife by Barbara Rainey when you get in touch with us.
We want to say a quick, âCongratulations!â and âHappy Anniversary!â to our friends, David and Diana Aguilar, who live in Union, Missouri. Today is their 29th wedding anniversary. The Aguilars listen to KSIV, out of St. Louis. Theyâve been married since 1987.
We are the âProud Sponsor of Anniversaries,â here at FamilyLife. Weâre celebrating our 40th anniversary this year; but honestly, itâs not our anniversary that mattersâitâs all of the anniversaries that have happened because of how God has used FamilyLife in the lives of so many couples over the last 40 years. Itâs been humbling to be a part of that whole process.
If you help support this ministry, as a Legacy Partner or as somebody who gives an occasional donation, youâve been a part of the process as well. Your support is what makes FamilyLife Today possible. We could not exist and could not do what we do if it werenât for friends, like you, who help make this happen.
This month, we are praying and asking God that He would raise up 20 new families in every state where FamilyLife Today is heard to be new Legacy Partners, joining with us here at FamilyLife. Would you consider being one of those new Legacy Partner families? All you have to do is go to FamilyLifeToday.com and click where it says, âDONATE.â The information about becoming a Legacy Partner is available there. Or call: 1-800-âFâ as in family, âLâ as in life, and then the word, âTODAYâ; and say, âIâm interested in becoming a Legacy Partner.â
Be sure to join us back tomorrow. Weâre going to continue talking about a wifeâs responsibility in her marriage. Weâll talk tomorrow about what happens when a woman wants to be a helper but it starts to go badâand it can do that. Weâll talk about that tomorrow. Hope you can be here.
I want to thank our engineer today, Keith Lynch, along with our entire broadcast production team. On behalf of our host, Dennis Rainey, I'm Bob Lepine. We will see you back next time for another edition of FamilyLife Today.
FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Help for today. Hope for tomorrow.
We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to produce them for our website. If youâve benefited from the broadcast transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs?
Copyright © 2016 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Being His Helper
Guest: Barbara Rainey
From the series: Letters to My Daughters (Day 3 of 3)
Bob: The Bible calls women to be helpers to their husbands; but as Barbara Rainey points outâsometimes, when youâre trying to help, youâre not helping.
Barbara: I think, in most womenâs hearts, we do start outâin the early years, especiallyâgenuinely wanting to help. It switches somewhere, along the lineâto becoming a control issue, to becoming a management issue, to becoming a critical issueâwhere I am being his mother and not his helper. Iâm being his parent and not his partner.
I think that is the lessonâitâs that we, as women / we, as wives, need to be aware and to recognize when it does and to say: âOh yeah! I need to be his friend. Weâre peers, weâre equals, weâre teammates; and we can work this out together,â rather than itâletting it become this great obstacle.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Wednesday, February 17th. Our host is the President of FamilyLifeÂź, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. How can a wife be a helper to her husband?
1:00
Weâre going to explore that today with Barbara Rainey. Stay tuned.
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. I had somebody share something with me a long time ago. I always thought this was interestingâthey were talking about the ministry of the Holy Spirit in our life. They were saying that the word for the Holy Spirit in the Bible is the word, Paraclete.
Dennis: Right.
Bob: What they said was: âThereâs a difference between a paraclete and a parasite. A parasite is something that attaches itself to you and just sucks the life out of you.â
Dennis: Right.
Bob: âA paraclete is something that attaches itself to you and pours life into you.â I mean, thatâs always stuck with me. Iâve thought, âThatâs not only true of our relationship with the Holy SpiritâHe does attach Himself to us and pours life into usâbut all of our relationships tend to be parasite or paraclete relationshipsâ; donât you think?
Dennis: They do. Itâs interestingâ
2:00
âthat in the Scripture, God refers to Himself as our Helper. I think the Holy Spirit is our Helper.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: He comforts us / He gives us the power to live the Christian life.
Bob: Jesus said, âI will send another Helper,ââindicating that He had been the Helper. So Helper reallyâGod the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spiritâare all identified as âHelper.â
Dennis: Thatâs right; but if you go all the way back to the beginning of the Bible, the first use of the word, âhelper,â is not referring to God but referring to the woman that God made for man.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: I know, for Barbara, who joins us again on FamilyLife TodayâBarbara, welcome back.
Barbara: Thank you.
Dennis: Sheâs written a book that isâwas first written for our daughters, as they married, and our daughters-in-law as they married our sons. One of the first sections of the book talks about the role of being a helper. You believe thatâs important; donât you?
Barbara: I do. I think that we have come to think of helper in a more negative senseââmore as a servant.
3:00
Yet, when you go back to the very beginningâas you were just talking about a minute agoâand realize that God used that term to describe the woman / to describe Eve when He made her. He called her helper before the whole thing broke down and fell apart in the Garden. It wasnât Plan Bâit wasnât: âOh, well; now, that youâve made mistakes, and Iâm kicking you out of the Garden, and youâre going to have to start living in a different placeânow, you have to be the helper,ââit was helper from the very beginning.
If we really focus on that, and think about that, it means that I was made, as a female, to be a helperâI was built for that, I was fashioned for that, I was designed for that. Itâs not a second thought / itâs not Plan Bâitâs not an afterthought. Itâs intuitive in who I am, as a female, to be helper in the same way that God is helper to us.
Bob: You say, in the bookâwhen you got married, you say, âI was eager to begin being my husbandâs helper; but beyond cooking for him and doing our laundry, I honestly had no idea what the concept / the assignment really meant.â
4:00
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: I think there are a lot of women who, when they hear the term, âhelper,ââthey think, âWhat is it if itâs not cooking, cleaning, and laundry?â
Barbara: Those things are a part of what each individual couple works outâwho does the cooking / who does the laundry. All of that is a creative blend of the two that are in the marriage unit. And oftenâ
Bob: Who does the cooking at your house? Iâm just curiousâ
Barbara: Well, you know, right now, he does! [Laughter]
Dennis: But for the past 35 years, she did! [Laughter]
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Youâve givenâ
Dennis: So Iâve gotâIâve got a long timeâ[Laughter]
Barbara: I delegated! [Laughter]
Dennis: âIâve got a long time to catch up in this deal.
Barbara: Yes; yes. We have traded places on that one; but the point isâis that, oftentimes and through the centuries, most women have done those tasks in the marriage relationship. That isnât really what helper is all about. Helper is far greater than thatâitâs me completing my husband.
5:00
Itâs meâand who I am, and the way God made me, as a woman and as an individualâcompleting him, making him better than he is on his own or making him more complete / more fulfilled. Itâs me helping him, though the years, become all God intended for him to be. Itâs far more of a person-building / itâs far more of a relationship-building concept than it is just tasks around the house, which is what weâve relegated it to.
Bob: The phrase I usedâthe paracleteâto attach yourself to him and pour life into him.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: There really is something that a wife canâshe can pour life into her husband; canât she?
Barbara: Oh, absolutely. Thatâs why I have written about it in this sectionâabout the example that the Holy Spirit is to us because the Holy Spirit does give us life. I think, in ways that we, as women, donât realizeâwe give life to our husbands. I think the analogies between the two are great.
Bob: Youâre not saying your role is to be the Holy Spirit to your husband.
6:00
Barbara: No. [Laughter] I am not to be the Holy Spirit, and convict him of sin, any more than he is to be Jesus Christ for me. But we modelâ
Bob: But you can learn; yes.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: âhe models and imitates what Christ did in His sacrificeâand I can model my helping and being a helper after what the Holy Spirit does for us.
Dennis: Before we talk about what it means to truly be the helper, one of the things you believe strongly that itâs notâis itâs not being your husbandâs mother.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: Explain what you mean by that.
Barbara: I think what happens isâwhen we women have children and we become, not just wife, but wife and motherâthere are a lot of things that we do, as mother, that are helping tasks. Weâre constantly helping our children get dressed, weâre helping learn to tie their shoes, we help them learn to read, we help them with their homework, we help them get dressed, we help them in relationship issues when theyâve got friends and theyâve got problems in elementary school, junior high, and high school.
7:00
We are very much a helper with our children, but itâs an authoritative kind of helper. Iâm the one in charge, and my child is to follow me. What happens so often in marriage isâthat we wives forget sometimes to switch from being helper as mother to being helper as wifeâand theyâre very different. Iâm not an authority with my husband / Iâm not his teacher. For me to help him as if I am his teacher and he is to be my pupilâthatâs backwards / thatâs wrong. Thatâs not the kind of relationship that Iâm supposed to have with him as a helper.
Bob: And youâre supposed to be able to switch gears on the fly on that kind of a deal?
Barbara: Yes, I think so; but thatâs where it gets tricky. [Laughter]
Bob: So what does it look like if itâs not the kind of helper you would be with a kindergartener or a seventh grader? How is it different?
Barbara: Itâs different because I have a peer-relationship with my husbandâwe are equals. I am not a peer with my childâIâm an authority with my child. Thatâs the fundamental difference.
8:00
For instance, Dennis and I had a conversation not too long ago. I donât know if youâll remember thisâbut we recently remodeled our living room. We got our couch recoveredâbecause the kids are gone, we got it recovered in a very light color fabric, which I would have never done when we were raising kids. Now, that itâs just the two of usâwe can handle this.
Not long after we had finished the remodeling, we had gotten the couch back from being reupholstered. We were eating, and Dennis wanted to eat in the living room. He plopped down on the couchâ
Bob: I know where this is going. [Laughter]
Barbara: âwith his plate.
Bob: Yes! [Laughter]
Dennis: Never happened at your place; has it Bob?
Bob: It wasnât spaghetti; was it? I hope it wasnât spaghetti.
Barbara: No, it wasnât spaghettiâI donât know what it was. As we sat there, Iâm thinking: âThis isnât going to work. This isnât what I had in mind. I donât think this is a really good place to be eating our dinner.â We beganâwe had a conversation; and I said, âWhat would you think about always eating over there at the table?â He said, âI really would like to eat and watch TV some.â
9:00
Anyway, the point is that we talked through: âWhere would be an acceptable place for him to eat, in the living room, where he could watch TVâwatch a football game on Saturday afternoon.â We decided the couch is not where he would eat. He would eat over there in the chairâitâs on a part of the carpet that doesnât stain as easily as the part in front of the couch does.
Dennis: Actually, what she encouraged me to do is runâ
Barbara: So are you saying you donât remember it this way? [Laughter]
Dennis: ârun an extension cord outside and eat it in a lawn chair in front of the TV in the yard. [Laughter]
Barbara: Where there is a hose! [Laughter]
Bob: You didnât put a bib on him or [Laughter] say, âYou sit in this chair.â
Dennis: We were just talking about being a mother; were we not?
Barbara: Thatâs right; we were!
Bob: Thatâs whatâso this is an illustration of how you help your husband? [Laughter]
Barbara: Well, itâs an illustration of how Iâyes, how I help him [Laughter] eat like an adultâ
Dennis: We worked it out.
Barbara: We did!
Dennis: We worked it out, and it is okay. I do think the point isâif you listen carefully to the illustration Barbara gave, we had a discussion.
Barbara: âas peers.
10:00
I wasnât telling you that you couldnât eat on the couchâI said: âWould you be willing to eat over there?â / âCould we work out a compromise?â was the gist of the conversation.
Dennis: What Iâd want a man to hear in the midst of this is that he has a very important assignmentâto respect his wife, and her opinion, and her values, and what sheâs about at that pointânot just do what he wants to do. Philippians 2âweâve quoted that many times, here on FamilyLife Today: ââŠnot merely looking out for your own interests but for the interests of others.â
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: These little confrontations weâre talking about here are a clash of values. They donât have to turn out and become where the wife ends up being the mother of the husband.
Bob: You tell about, how in your marriageâwhen you are travelling, back in the days before cell phonesâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âyou used to mother your husband in the airport?
Barbara: Yes. You know whatâs interesting about this dilemma for women isâI donât think we start out with that kind of an attitude.
11:00
I think we genuinely/sincerely want to help. It just sort of evolves into a more parental attitude without even trying.
For instance, in the airport, when we used to travel before cell phones, Dennis would always want to make good use of his time. Heâd walk across the area to another gateâwherever there happened to be a pay phoneâand he would start making phone calls. I would sit in the waiting area and watch as every last passenger boarded the plane. They were about to close the door, and he was still on the phone.
Initially, I remember thinking: âHe must not know that theyâre boarding the plane. He must have not been paying attention.â I would get up and go over, and motion at the gate, and motion at my watch. Heâd go, âI know; I know.â Heâd get off the phone, and weâd get on the plane. Then the next time I would do the same thing. After a while, I started to become irritated because I thought, âI have to remind him all the time.â
Dennis: How many flights have we missed?
Barbara: Well, thatâs the point! We never missed a flight because you were on the phone! [Laughter]
12:00
But initially, I genuinely thought he didnât know what time it was and that he didnâtâhe was so engaged in the phone call that he didnât realize they were boarding. I wanted to help so that we didnât miss the flight. Over time, it became more of a parental attitude on my part.
Dennis: I was going to sayâI was going to say thatâparental.
Barbara: It really was because I thought: âWhatâs the deal? Why canât he get off the phone, and we can board with everybody else?â Then I started becoming critical.
So my point isâis that I think what we struggle with, as wives, is not necessarily starting out with a condescending attitude or a parental attitude. We really, genuinely want to help from our hearts; but it just sort of goes downhill sometimes.
Dennis: Let me take that, as an illustration though, and just ask this question: âHow can a wife, in a situation like that, be a true helper?â The point here isâyouâre not going to answer that question in the heat of the moment. You do it some other time when youâre not travelling.
13:00
The wife just simply says to her husband, âWhen everybodyâs boarding, what would you like me to do?â
Barbara: Exactlyâwhich is what I finally did.
Dennis: âWould you like me to come over and let you know, or am I to just trust you with that?â At that pointâ
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: âit is two peers respecting each otherâand the husband feeling like heâs being trusted.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: He mayâas I didâhe may want her help.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: Okay? Thatâs good! Youâre working as teammates at that point. I think, at critical times like thisâwe allow these little rough spots like this to become major disagreementsâat which we have a big argument and it ends up ruining the trip.
Bob: As I read through this part of the book, I have to confess to you that I think one of the challenges that I think a lot of wives / a lot of women struggle with is the issue of control.
Barbara: Yes; definitely.
Bob: âI want to be in control of my environment. I feel safer if Iâm in control of things.â
Barbara: No question; no question.
14:00
Bob: So this impulse to want to be a helperâsometimes is not, âI want to help my husband,ââitâs: âI want to manage my husbandâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: ââand control my husband because I feel more comfortable.â Youâre waving and saying, âEverybody else is boarding,âânot because youâre trying to help himâbut because youâre getting nervous, and youâd like to get on the plane.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: And he needs to hurry up and get on there with you.
Barbara: No question.
Bob: Itâs not helpingâitâs controlling.
Barbara:And thatâs why Iâm saying itâs a difficult thing because I think, in most womenâs hearts, we do start outâin the early years, especiallyâgenuinely wanting to help. It switches somewhere, along the lineâto becoming a control issue, to becoming a management issue, to becoming a critical issueâwhere I am being his mother and not his helper. Iâm being his parent and not his partner.
I think that is the lesson is that we, as women / we, as wives, need to be awareâthat that shift happensâand to recognize when it does and to say: âOh yeah; Iâm being his mother, not his partner.
15:00
âI need to be his friendâweâre peers, weâre equals, weâre teammatesâand we can work this out together rather than letting it become this great obstacle.
Dennis: So for wivesâas they look at the subject of being a helper to their husbandsâhereâs the question I would encourage every wife to ask her husband: âSweetheart, how can I be a better, customized helper to you?â because I really believe, Bob, if we could somehow zoom back and look at an individual marriage through Godâs eyesâI believe Heâs made the husband and the wife for one another. He made them with differencesâwith unique strengths, and abilities, and weaknessesâso they need each other and so they complement each other. I think many couples can live a lifetime and never ever understand how the wifeâ specifically: âIn what areas / how can she be a customized helper for her husband?ââ
16:00
âand then take good notes at what he says.
Barbara: Well, and thatâs what Iâone of the points that I really am hoping will come across in this book to my daughtersâI want them to see the beauty that God has made in marriageâthat the way I help my husband is different than the way Mary Ann helps you, Bobâ
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: âdifferent than the way my daughters will help their husbands because my husband needs something different than you would need. Thatâs the wonderful thing about marriage. God gave us very few rules for marriageâHe gave us some guidelines to run on / some very specific things in Scriptureâbut He didnât give us a hundred things to do in marriage. He gave us very few. Within that wonderful definition of marriage that we get out of Scripture, there is endless ability to be creative because we are two unique people. God wants us to design a unique relationship between the two of us.
17:00
Bob: Okay; Iâve got two questions. The first is: âThere are some wives who are hearing this and going, âWell shouldnât this thing work both ways? I mean, why am I the helper? Shouldnât he be the helper to me too? Arenât we supposed to help one another?ââ Youâre talking about teammatesâso youâre the helper, but heâs the helper too; right?
Barbara: Yes; I think Dennis should answer that, but I think the real bottom line isâis that God has called men to serve. In that servingâof the husband serving the wifeâthatâs how he helps. Heâs not given the title of helper, but heâs given the title of servant-leader. Thatâs how he would help his wife.
Dennis: Yes, I think Barbara mentioned the key term thereâservant-leader. A husband is given the title, in Ephesians 5, âhead,ââhe is the authority. The buck does stop with him. He has responsibility to deny himself, to love his wife as Christ loved the church, and to beâas Barbara saidâa servant-leader of her and meeting her needs.
I donât think a husbandâin the sense of what weâre talking about a wife being a helperâis to be his wifeâs helper.
18:00
I think heâs to beâthe servant, the lover, the leader, the nourisher, the cherisher of her soul, and to look out for her best interest, and her horizons, and maximize her lifeâbut heâs got a different assignmentâ
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: âwith her than she has with him.
Bob: Well, in fact, I was meeting with a group of guys recently. We were talking about this designation of servant-leader. We all kind of agreed that maybe it would be better to refer to husbands as shepherd-leaders than servant-leaders because the servant idea canâcan almost make it sound like: âAs long as your wifeâs happy, youâre doing what you need to do.â Thatâs the trap I fell in, for yearsâwas to think, âAs long as Mary Annâs happyâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: ââthen IâmâIâm being what God wants me to be.â Itâs not necessarily her momentary happiness that I should be focused onâ
Dennis: No, itâs not.
Bob: âitâs the shepherding and leading of herâwisely, gently, carefully, feeding, guiding, caring for her.
19:00
Dennis: âprotecting.
Bob: Thatâs right. So it was aâit was a helpful metaphorâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âto say: âA man should be a shepherd-leader and a wife should respond and should help in that process.â
My other question, though, for you is for the wife who would say: âIf I went to my husband and said, âHow would you like me to be your customized helper?â he would say, âGet off my back and leave me alone! Just let me do what I want to do.ââ
Dennis: But thatâs not a good answer.
Bob: So does she tell him that?!
Barbara: Well, I think she frames the question a little differently. I think she says, in a particular situationâlike, when Dennis and I were travelling, I could have said to him, âIs there anything I can do to help you so that we can get on our flight on time?â rather than some generic question that he might not be able to put words to. Itâd be much better if she said, âHow can I help you when we areâŠâ or ââŠwhen this situation happens?â or âHow can I encourage you when youâve had a bad day at work?â If she will be specific, then she might get a more specific answer that would be easier for her to perhaps know what to do with.
20:00
Bob: But if he says, âJust leave me alone,â how does she respond to that?
Barbara: I think she needs to say: âWhat do you mean by leave you alone? What do you want me to back off on?â I thinkâif she really, genuinely wants to be a better helperâthen she needs to ask some follow-up questions / find out: âWhat does he mean by that?â
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: I think, over a lifetime together, this is a great question to interact about. In fact, weâd been married for 38 years before the thought ever occurred to me. I was talking to Barbara about her bookâjust to explore a little bit: âWhat have we learned in our marriage about how you are a great helper to me?â One of the areas she isâis sheâs a wise counsellor.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: She gives me the perspective that I most count on for my life, from a human perspective. Now, I go to the Bible for my guidance and to guide in prayer; but sheâs my closest friendâknows me well, looking out for my best interest in multiple ways.
21:00
I go to her for her advice, her counsel, and her perspective. She is a greatâ
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: âhelper in that area. I think, for a man, if he can just pull back and askâif youâve been married 10 years: âHow is your wife a great helper to you? How do you see her having been designed by God to help you?â
Another way for Barbara isâand I told her thisâshe brings great beauty to my life. Sheâs an artistâshe likes design / she notices things years before I do. [Laughter] Then she points them out and I enjoy them. Because of her in my lifeânot only is she beautifulâbut she brings beauty to my life and an appreciation for the aesthetics that God has created.
Bob: She keeps the sofa looking beautiful, too, by assigning you a place to sit. [Laughter]
Barbara: Now Bob, I didnât assign nowâ
Dennis: âin the yard!
Barbara: âwe agreed!
22:00
Dennis: âin the garage, with the hose! [Laughter]
Bob: The thing isâthis is a part of the reality of marriage that you guys have, after more than 40 years of being togetherâyouâve figured out how to make all of this work. Barbaraânow for you to be speaking into the lives of younger women / younger wivesâIâm really excited about the book that is now available: Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife by Barbara Rainey. You can go online at FamilyLifeToday.com in order to request a copy of the book, or you can call us at 1-800-FL-TODAY. Again, the title is Letters to My Daughters by Barbara Rainey. Order, online, at FamilyLifeToday.com; or call us at 1-800-âFâ as in family, âLâ as in life, and then the word, âTODAY.â
By the way, I should have you give the shout-out today to some friends of ours, Keith and Mary Kirkland, celebrating their 15th wedding anniversary today.
23:00
They live in Montgomery, Alabamaâlisten to WLBF. Mary is a big fan of the resources youâve created for homes in the Ever Thine Home collection. Theyâve got the Easter banner, theyâve got Adorenaments, theyâve got your âBehold the Lambâ resourceâI mean, sheâs got a bunch of stuff in her home, and theyâre friends of this ministry. Theyâve helped support the work that FamilyLife Today is doing. If it werenât for friends, like the Kirklands, FamilyLife Today couldnât do all that we do. Weâre listener-supported, and your donations make this ministry possible.
During this month, we are hoping that God would raise up, from among our listeners, 20 new families in every stateâwho would be brand-new Legacy Partnersâmonthly donors, supporting the ministry of FamilyLife Today. Weâd like to ask you to consider being one of the families in your state helping to keep FamilyLife Today on the air in this community.
24:00
You can become a Legacy Partner by going to FamilyLifeToday.com. Click the link that says, âDONATE,ââthe informationâs available thereâor call 1-800- FL-TODAY and say, âI want to become a Legacy Partner.â We hope to hear from you.
We hope you can join us back tomorrow when weâre going to talk about whatâs at the heart of being a godly woman. Priscilla Shirer is going to join us, and weâll talk about a godly womanâs priorities tomorrow. Hope you can be here for that.
I want to thank our engineer today, Keith Lynch, along with our entire broadcast production team. On behalf of our host, Dennis Rainey, I'm Bob Lepine. We will see you back next time for another edition of FamilyLife Today.
FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Help for today. Hope for tomorrow.
We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to produce them for our website. If youâve benefited from the broadcast transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs?
Copyright © 2016 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Keys to a Healthy Marriage
Guest: Barbara Rainey
From the series: Letters to My Daughters (Day 1 of 2)
Bob: Barbara Rainey likens intimacy in marriage to a secret gardenâa place that only a husband and wife go together. She says itâs a risky place.
Barbara: It is a place of raw exposure. It is a place of being real with one another. It is the place where we are most transparent in our marriage relationship, so we need the walls of a commitment. Both of us need the security and the comfort of knowing that weâve got a perimeter around our marriage much like a rock wall around a secret garden. We need that commitment to be in place.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Monday, February 6th. Our host is the President of FamilyLifeÂź, Dennis Rainey. I'm Bob Lepine. Weâll talk today about how a husband and wife can work together to cultivate the secret garden of their marriage. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. Itâs been almost a year now since the release of your wifeâs book, Letters to My Daughters. Weâre finally getting around to Chapter 6â
Dennis: Youâve gotâ
Barbara: âwhich rhymes withâ[Laughter]
Dennis: âyouâve got a cheesy grin on your face.
Bob: Youâyou know, Chapterâ
Dennis: The listeners canât see your face! [Laughter]
Bob: âsix!âsix. If you replace one letter in âsix,â you get an idea of what weâre going to be talking aboutâ
Dennis: Wellâ
Bob: âtoday.
Dennis: Barbaraâs book, Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife, has flown off the shelf. Itâs really doing well. I understand why, because I think this is Barbaraâs best book ever. It is certainly a very honest look at our marriage.
I want to welcome her back to the broadcast. Thanks for coming back in, Sweetheart.
Barbara: Iâm happy to be here.
Dennis: I know you are.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: I know you are. Since weâre going to talk about sâsâsâ
Bob: Sex. Just say itâsex.
Dennis: Chapter 6.
Barbara: It is not that hard for you to say! [Laughter]
2:00
Bob: Youâve heard him say it before?
Barbara: I donât think itâs that hard for him to say! [Laughter]
Dennis: I just want to pray for our audience; because as I was preparing to come in here, reading Barbaraâs book, I thought: âYou know? Oh my! How broken are we as human beingsâhow many different perspectives we come at this subject.â There are some listeners whoâve been hurt deeply by their past choices and some are in present relationships. I just want God to intervene and minister toâwhether theyâre single, married, divorced, single parentsâI just want to ask God to meet every person where they are:
Father, You made us, male and female. There is no surprise in terms of how we function. You made us to merge together and become one.
3:00
Yet, what You designed, man has degenerated and has twisted. You know that as well.
You know where each listener is, who is tuning in to our broadcast today. I just would ask You to be gentle with each of them. Use these broadcasts, I pray, to minister to them just where they are. Produce some hope, some help, and some encouragement to each person listening.
For the guys, who are listening in, Father, I pray that they might listen with some understanding. We tend to be too quick to judgment on this subject. I pray for all of us just to be wise in terms of what we hear and what we apply. In Christâs name I pray. Amen.
Bob: Amen.
Barbara this is a subject that obviously is personalâitâs intimateâit really does get to the core of who we are as human beings. It can be threatening for a lot of people.
4:00
I was very interestedâas you invited your daughters and daughters-in-law to ask questions about marriage, the first question you got related to thisâIâm just going to read it from the bookââit says: âSo yeah. Sex. You gave me âthe talk,â and we had our pre-wedding conversation that was pretty short and hurried. No offense; it was busy. I get it. But now Iâm married. And itâs umâŠdifferent. Fine. FINE. But, well, I have to ask thisâŠwhatâs the big deal?â I thought that was an interesting question from a daughter to say, âIâm in the midst of it, but Iâm not sure I understand why itâs as big a deal as people say it is.â
Barbara: Itâs a great question. You know, it was one that I just had to think about a lot. Actually, I had to think about all these questions a lot because, as Dennis prayed, this topicâthis part of our marriage relationshipâis not easy.
5:00
Itâs not simple. Itâs not cut and dry / itâs not black and white. Itâs very complicated; and even though itâs very good, itâs very complicated.
My short answer to âWhat is the big deal?â is that it takes a long, long time to understand what God has built into us, as men and women. It takes a while to understand the purpose of sex. It takes a while to undo things that weâve brought into our marriage. It just takes time. I think, in our culture today, more than in any other generation, we expect instant results in every area of our lives.
Weâre so used to having instant access to information. We just donât know how to waitâwe donât know how to persevere. We donât know how to have patience.
I think, in this area of marriage, our expectation for change to happen quickly and for results to be mastered fast, is a misplaced hope; because I think, in the long run, the goal of marriage is a marathonâ
6:00
âitâs a lifetime race. Figuring out why itâs a big deal takes a lot of time. Itâs me getting to know my husband, as a man, and him getting to know me, as a woman. That isnât going to take place quickly.
Dennis: If you go back to Genesis, as it describes two people becoming oneâthere was a progression that God declared. He said, âFor this cause a man shall leave his father and mother, shall cleave to his wife and the two shall become one [emphasis added].â One of the problems, Bobâand many of our listeners may be experiencing this right nowâwe have reversed the order.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: Weâre trying to become one without the leaving and the cleavingâthe commitment that really bonds two broken human beings hearts to one another and gives you the only chance of two broken people experiencing marriage for a lifetime, as Barbara was talking about here.
7:00
Bob: Barbara, explain to our listeners why, for a wife / for a woman this issue of a solid commitment is so critical when it comes to intimacy.
Barbara: In the book I tell the story of a book that we used to read when our kids were growing up, called The Secret Garden. Itâs the story of a young woman / a young girl, who grew up in a huge manor estate in England. As she was growing up there, she discovered this garden; and it was a secret garden. It had walls all the way around it that were six to eight feet tall, brick or stone walls. As she dug though the ivy, she found a door. The door was locked and she couldnât get in. Over time, she began to continue to dig around. One day, she found a key and was able to unlock the door and go in.
I use that story in the book because I liken this area of our marriageâthis intimacy / this sex in our marriageâto a secret garden.
8:00
Itâs a place that only a husband and wife go togetherâno one else is allowed. It is for them only. I think the reason commitment is so important is because it is a place of raw exposureâit is a place of being real with one anotherâit is the place where we are most transparent in our marriage relationship. We need the walls that that secret garden had. We need the walls of a commitment. We need that security, as women in particular, but men need it as well for us to experience what God intended for us to experience in marriage. Both of us need the security and the comfort of knowing that weâve got a perimeter around our marriage much like a rock wall around a secret garden. We need that commitment to be in place.
Bob: Youâre talking about something that goes far beyond just the biological experience of intimacyâ
9:00
Barbara: Absolutely!
Bob: âbecause the biology may not need that, but the oneness weâre talking about hereâ
Barbara: Correct.
Bob: âreally requires that we can trust one anotherâ
Dennis: Yes.
Bob: âin order to be vulnerable with one another.
Dennis: In fact, Bob, I think what youâre hitting on here is so important. I think one of the least understood passages in Scriptureâthereâs a reason why we canât understand itâGenesis, Chapter 2, verse 25. Iâm going to read it and then Iâm going to explain why we donât understand itâit says, âAnd the man and his wife were both naked and were not ashamed.â That verse comes right after the leave, cleave, and become one. The reason we canât understand what that meansâwe have never experienced what Adam and Eve did in the garden before the fall.
Barbara: Thatâs right; yes.
10:00
Dennis: Two people, totally naked, totally exposed, totally transparent with one anotherâand there was no shame. There was joy / there was delightâthere was the experience of God and one anotherâthere was no hiding in a marriage back then.
When it comes to the subject of sex, I think weâre trying to get to that point of being naked and unashamed; but we donât know how to get there. So a lot of single people are co-habitingâtheyâre thinking they can experience the sexual delights of marriage without the commitmentâ
Bob: Right.
Dennis: âand they canât! Barbaraâs talking about a commitment that creates safety around this garden.
Bob: There is something about being able to say: âYouâre safe. Iâm not going anywhere.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âI will not expose what happens here. You can be who you are and still be loved.â Thatâs what we long forâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âand that is what is supposed to be going on in intimacy in a marriage relationship.
11:00
Barbara: Thatâs what we get married forâwe get married to be loved unconditionally. Thatâs our expectation and our hope when we say, âI doâ; but we donât realize that itâs not just the physical oneness that produces that. Itâs all of the conversationsâitâs learning to be, as Dennis just said, naked and unashamed. That does not happen quickly.
If youâll think about what happened in Genesisâafter that verse where Adam and Eve were naked and unashamedâand then, when the fall happened, what was the first thing that Adam and Eve experienced?
Bob: Their shame.
Barbara: Their shame and they were afraid.
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: I think we vastly underestimate the fears that we bring into marriage. All of us come into marriage with fears, even if we donât have past experiences that were negative or were difficult. We still have the fear of rejection; we have the fear of exposure; we have the fear of being knownâ
12:00
âjust the question, âIf you really knew me as I am insideâas I know I am insideâwould he still love me?â A man thinks the same thing, âIf she really knew what I thoughtâif she really knew who I wasâwould she still accept me?â
I think that fearâthat we all bring into a marriageâtakes time to expose those fears because itâs a risk to do so. It takes time to work toward that place of being unashamed. It doesnât ever totally go away, because it wonât until we go to heaven; but we can make great progress / we can make great strides in that comfort level that we all long for when we get married.
Dennis: Thatâs exactly right.
I have to use a present-day illustration, Bob, of something that really makes me sadâbut immediately after the evening news / the local news here, thereâs one of these Hollywood reports. It always is telling of some breakup of some Hollywood marriage.
13:00
I really feel a great deal of compassion, because they donât understand the God who made this relationship and how He made them to function. In their lost-ness, theyâre just trying to reach out to one another and experience that oneness and experience the intimacy of a great relationship.
But Iâve got to tell youâBarbara and I have been married 44 yearsâand there have been a lot of incredible highs and sadly, some tough, tough lows. The thing that has kept us safe and secure in our relationship is weâve never/ever used the âDâ wordâdivorce. It has never crossed our lips. We have used the âCâ wordâcovenant-keeping love for a lifetime. In the process of doing that, two imperfect people are wobbling their way to the finish line, attempting to represent how God designed marriage to proclaim His love to the world; because a marriage is to be a model of Christ and the church.
14:00
It is representative of a husband who loves, serves, leads, and gives his life on behalf of his wifeâand a wife who supports her husband and loves him back. One of the ways they both do this is through the gift of sexual intimacy in marriage.
Bob: Barbara, I had to smile when I read this letter from your daughter, saying, âSo, whatâs the big deal?â for two reasons. One is because there is a stereotype that says: âThis is how women view sex in marriage.â Men are very different. I stop to think to myself, âWould a man ever write to his father, âSo Dadââ
Barbara: âWhatâs the big deal?â [Laughter]
Bob: âââWhatâs the big deal? Weâre married now. I donât get itâwhatâs the big deal?ââ I also smiled because thereâs a sense in which the mystery of marital intimacyâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âis just beginning to unfold in the early days of marriage; right?
15:00
Barbara: Thatâs a word that I use a lot in my bookâis the word, âmystery,ââbecause I think it helps us be more at peace with the process. When we realize that marriage is a mysteryâthat we will never, totally understand itâbecause, as Dennis just said, it is a picture of Christâs relationship with us. Just accepting the fact that marriage is a mystery kind of gives you a sense of: âAh! I can rest. I can relax.â It is a mystery and it is a process of beginning to discover what God has built in this, all along, from the very beginning. As weâve been saying, itâs about getting to know one another and being transparent with one another.
Dennis: When we think of a mystery, we think of an unsolved murder case or a crime.
Bob: âa puzzle.
Dennis: Yes; exactly. This mystery is going to be revealedâ[Laughter] âin heaven, in eternity, with Jesus Christ and the church at the wedding feast of the bridegroom and the brideâthe church being the bride.
16:00
In between time, between nowâthis thing called âtimeââand eternity, here you are, as a couple, hammering out your commitment and attempting to be naked and unashamed in a way that honors God. Itâs tough, and itâs hard.
I would ask you, Barbara, as a young wife might come to youâwhat would you say is the most important thing she needs to know as she approaches this most intimate area of the marriage relationship? What does she need to know and do?
Barbara: I think the first thing she needs to knowâand she may already know thisâbut I think it bears repeatingâand that is that marriage is holy. I think that when we see it asânot just a gift, not just a privilege, not just something we get to experienceâbut there is an element of marriage that has a holy aspect to it; because God created it and because He lives in our lives, there is a holiness there.
17:00
I think that helps us put it in right perspectiveâit helps us go: âWell no wonder itâs so hard! No wonder itâs a challenge to discover the kind of oneness that we got married for.â
Secondly, from there, I want to say, too, that I would strongly encourage any young wife to remember that itâs an important part of the relationship. Itâs really a mirror of the rest of your relationship. You may feel like youâre having good sex; but if youâre not really becoming oneâif youâre not really being transparent with one anotherâthen youâre not going to be really growing together in other areas of your relationship.
Itâs important that you keep that area of your marriage healthy and growing and keep it alive. The temptation isâwhen it gets hard, is to just say, âWell, forget it!â but you canât give up on it because itâs one of the important parts that God has built into a marriage. Because God created it and God sanctioned it, then we need to learn what He wants us to do with itâwe need to figure it out.
18:00
Bob: You know a lot of wives, who are saying, âI hear you and I agree with you; and if I was not tired all the time,â
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: ââI would give more attention to this! But I am tired all the time! How do I make this a priority, and how do I make it important when Iâm exhausted?â
Barbara: Did you read that in my book?
Bob: Well, I did. Yes! [Laughter]
Barbara: Yes; I talk about that in the book, because that is such a common complaint for women. I get it! I was tired all the timeâand Dennis used to say he would be a very wealthy man if he had a dollar for every time I said, âI am so tired!â [Laughter] Right?
Dennis: Right! [Laughter]
Barbara: But even if we are so tiredâand we areâand a lot of women are exhausted all the time because of the responsibilities of jobs and kidsâand just the emotional weight of being in life. There are just so many ups and downs that we feel so deeply; and yet, itâs learning to prioritize your life.
19:00
Itâs deciding, during a particular day, that youâre going to take a nap so youâve got more energy for your husband at night or itâs choosing not to add these things to your schedule so that you can have more energy and more focus for your marriage. Itâs choosing to keep your marriage a priorityâmake it a priority. Thatâs hard to do sometimes. There were plenty of times when I would take a nap in the afternoon and Iâd still be exhausted at night.
Dennis: Thatâs correct! [Laughter]
Barbara: Itâs not a quick and easy solution. [Laughter]
Dennis: I just want to insert something. There are men, who are listening right now: âThatâs right! Sheâs just tired too much.â To which I would say to the guys: âAre you cleaning up the kitchenâ
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: ââafter dinner? Are you helping to get the kids ready for bed?âbrush their teeth, read them a story, pray with them. Get down on your knees, next to them, and look them in the eyes and ask them how their day was,ââbut take some of your wifeâs load off of her and assume it yourself!
20:00
There is a concept in the Bible called âbearing one anotherâs burdens.â I do think some guysâthey want sex, but they donât want the process of lovingâthat means nourishing, which is creating growthâand cherishing, which is creating valueâ
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: âthey donât want to do that with their wife. When you help your wife with her household duties, with the kids and allâyouâre making a statement of value to your wife that she ultimately will hear.
Bob: I have to ask you about the wife, who would say, âThis is a priority for meâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: ââbut itâs less a priority for my husband.â
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Let me first of all, though, let our listeners know how they can get a copy of the book that youâve written, which is called Letters to My Daughters. Itâs a book that weâve got in our FamilyLife Today Resource Center. You address, not only this subject, but you address a variety of subjectsâletters that your daughters and daughters-in-law have written to you over the years, asking questions about being a godly wife and how youâve responded to those letters that theyâve written.
21:00
You can go to our website, FamilyLifeToday.com, to order a copy of the book; or you can call 1-800-FL-TODAY and order by phone. Again the website is FamilyLifeToday.com; and you can call 1-800-âFâ as in family, âLâ as in life, and then the word, âTODAY.â
Dennis: Bob, I just want to say a word to our listeners. When you buy a book from FamilyLife Today, youâre helping to keep this radio broadcast on the air. Iâve got to tell youâthe people who really float this ship right here, to keep FamilyLife Today broadcasting, are Legacy Partners. Theyâre people who give, every month, and who say: âI want to keep this kind of right-thinkingâa biblical approach to marriage, to sex, to intimacyâI want to keep this on the air in my community; because this is going to make a difference in a lot of peopleâs lives.â I just want to say, âThanks,â to Legacy Partners right now: âThank you for making this broadcast possible.â
Bob: If youâd like to join the Legacy Partner team, we could use more Legacy Partners.
22:00
You can go to FamilyLifeToday.com and click the link, where it says, âDonate.â Thereâs information available there about becoming a Legacy Partner. Again, our website is FamilyLifeToday.com.
Barbara Rainey has joined us today. Weâve been talking about Chapter 6 in her book, Letters to My Daughters. Barbara, we started the conversation with a letter that you got from one of your daughters, saying, âWhatâs the big deal?â There are some wives, who have been listening to us have this conversation, and they have said, âMy question is: âWhy isnât this a bigger dealâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âââfor my husband? Iâm ready. In fact, I feel robbed, or starved, or like thereâs something wrong with me! What do I do?â
Barbara: I interviewed a couple of young women when I wrote this particular portion of the chapter because I wanted to know what they thought, and what they felt, and what they were experiencing. Itâs interestingâI donât have statistics to back this upâbut I did do some research and talked to a number of different counselors and different people.
23:00
I think, oftentimes, there are issues in a young manâs life that are keeping him from wanting to have sex with his wife; and typically, itâs pornography.
In the women that I talked toâwhen I was preparing to write this chapterâthat was the issue with most of these young men. There was so much shame attached to them as men / as young men because they were exposed, when they were children or when they were teenagers, and they just didnât know how to handle itâthey still donât know how to handle it. That shame is keeping them from wanting to be one, sexually, with their wife.
Whether it is pornography or whether it is something else, the encouragement that I got from those that I talked to and that I would offer to you is that this is a concern that you need to carry with him. Dennis just mentioned, a minute ago, the verse, âBear one anotherâs burdens.â Once you become married, your burdens become one anotherâs. You need to carry those burdens together.
24:00
I would encourage a wife, who is in that situation, to say to her husband: âYou know, I know this is hard; and this is hard for me too. Letâs go find someone who can help us; because Iâm committed to you for a lifetime, and you agreed to be committed to me for a lifetime. Letâs figure out what we need to do. Letâs find what challenges we need to face. Letâs do the work together to make our marriage what God intended it to be.â
I knowâfrom talking to these womenâthat it can change / it can be redeemed. God can change those broken places in both of our lives and bring you to a place where marriage is what you wanted it to be and where sex, in particular, is as God designed it to be.
Bob: FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Help for today. Hope for tomorrow.
We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to produce them for our website. If youâve benefited from the broadcast transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs?
Copyright © 2017 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Surviving the Seasons of Intimacy
Guest: Barbara Rainey
From the series: Letters to My Daughters (Day 2 of 2)
Bob: Why does it seem like moms are often not that interested in marital intimacy? Barbara Rainey understands.
Barbara: Itâs hard to have a good, healthy, dynamic sexual relationship when youâre tired all of the time. Youâre being pulled in a hundred directions by jobs, and kids, and financial stresses, and everything else; and, yet, I would still say that itâs important to keep it a priority because, if you donât, youâre vulnerable to the enemy / youâre vulnerable to the temptation to find that excitement somewhere else.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Tuesday, February 7th. Our host is the President of FamilyLifeÂź, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. Barbara Rainey joins us today to talk about how she worked to make intimacy a priority in her marriage when there were six kids still living at home. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. With the season of romance and love in the airâand let me just remind some of the husbands who are listeningâValentineâs Day is coming up. You may want to put that on your calendar or on your reminder list so that you donât arrive at that day and find yourself empty-handed. Iâve had that experienceâitâs not a fun experience when that happens. [Laughter] Do you know what Iâm talking about?
Dennis: No. [Laughter]
Bob: Yes; you do!
Dennis: Forty-four years; and Iâm batting a thousand, Bob! [Laughter]
Bob: Are you?
Dennis: Ask her! Sheâs here with us!
Bob: We have an eye witness here. Barbara Rainey is joining us. Is that true? Has he never missed a Valentineâs Day? Has he always had a card, or a gift, or something?
Dennis: Iâve always shown up!
Bob: Showing up is something else! [Laughter]
Barbara: You have been present.
2:00
Although, I donât know that youâve always been present on Valentineâs because of travel.
Dennis: Oh, yes! Thatâs probably true.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: Well, we thought it would be helpful today to discuss the area of sex, and intimacy, and romance, especially since this is something, Barbaraâthat you wrote about in your book that is now almost a year oldâitâs called Letters to My Daughters. Chapter 6 was all about helping your daughters and other young wives understand whatâs going on with this aspect of a marriage relationship.
Dennis: And, at this point, I want to read a P.S. that Barbara puts at the end of one of these letters. Now, the book has nine chapters. Thereâs only one chapter on sex, but itâs a long chapter; and there are like half a dozen letters that pose a question to Barbara that she answers in the book. I just want to read this:
P.S. There are additional unseen benefits to regular sexual relations in marriage.
3:00
Three little facts I learned from one of our FamilyLife Today radio guests:
Number one:
The chemicals oxytocin and dopamine, when released in the brain, increase bonding; the reexpression of love and commitment strengthens mutual affection; and there is a sense of satisfaction in keeping intimacy alive, even if the actual experience isnât a great one. The last is my favorite, because in our marriageâŠ
Now, this is really interesting for me to read on air; because, Bob, you know, we have people come up to us and they say: âYou guys! All you do is present a perfect picture of marriage!â
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: Well, Iâm about to dispel that [Laughter] in what Iâm about to read that my wife wrote in this book!
The last one is my favorite, because in our marriage, sex hasnât always been accompanied by fireworks! Among a lot of good-to-great experiences, weâve also had some pretty lousy encountersâŠ
4:00
Did you really write that in this book?!
Barbara: I did. [Laughter] And I can tell you still donât like it very much.
Dennis: I donât; I donât. [Laughter] I complained about this when I edited it, but you didnât take it out.
âŠsome pretty lousy encountersâŠsome that left us both either disappointed or hurt. That makes the chemical facts all the more important, because even not-great sex still bonds us together. Nice to know, huh?
[Laughter]
Dennis: Honestly, I really appreciate Barbaraâs honesty about our marriage, because I think a lot of people out there are hurting. They think theyâre the only ones that ever had a lousy encounter around the sexual relationship.
Bob: When you and Dennis, together, wrote the book, Rekindling the Romance, you talked about seasons of a marriage.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: You talked about early love, and then you talked about, kind of, this middle seasonâ
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âwhere it just can kind of get routine.
5:00
A lot of husbands and wives, in the middle of raising kids and going through thingsâthey hit that season and they think to one another, âThis is it?â Theyâre frustrated and theyâre disappointed. They wonder, if they switch partners, if things would get better for them.
Dennis: Or, let me tell you thisâBarbara spoke to one group of women who talked about a no-sex marriage, where people just give up / toss in the towel and say, âWeâre done.â
Bob: And weâve talked to couples, who have said, âItâs been two yearsâ / ââŠthree years since weâve been intimate with one another. Weâre committed, and we still love each other; but weâve just kind of given up on that area of our marriage.â
You would say to a wife, who says, âWeâve given up and weâre content, and itâs working out for us,ââwhat would you say?
Barbara: I would say thatâs a dangerous assumption. I think that itâs a very real possibility in a lot of marriages, becauseâ
6:00
âyouâre rightâthere is a middle ground in marriage, where itâs just hard work; because you have so many demands on both of your lives. Thereâs not much energy left over; thereâs not much enthusiasm; thereâs not much rest. Itâs hard to have a good, healthy, dynamic sexual relationship when youâre tired all of the time. Youâre being pulled in a hundred directions by jobs, and kids, and financial stresses, and everything else.
Yet, I would still say that itâs important to keep it a priority; because if you donât, youâre vulnerable to the enemy / youâre vulnerable to the temptation to find that excitement somewhere else, which is why there are so many affairs. There are so many couples, who are splitting up and finding new partners, because it is exciting. Theyâre finding that excitement that they once had in the early days of their marriage.
7:00
But itâs not going to satisfy; itâs not going to replace; itâs not going to be better. Itâs actually going to be more complicated.
I really believe, and Iâve repeated it multiple times in my book, that God is big enough to change any marriage. I strongly believe that His Word is true when He said, âNothing is too hard for Me.â You may look at your marriage, and you may go: âThis is impossible! This is just too hard! I donât think thereâs any way out.â I want you to knowâIâve felt that way. I remember feeling that way at different times in those middle years of marriage, when we were swamped with kids and life. It felt too hard; but I knew that God meant what He said when He said, âNothing is impossible for Me.â
So, therefore, if I believe in Godâand I doâthen I have to take Him at His Word. I have to go to Him and say: âThis feels impossible. This feels too difficult, but I know that You can bring life back to our marriage.â
8:00
If you donât quit, then thereâs always the hope of the redemptionâthereâs the hope of God bringing new life back into your marriage. But when you quit, youâve basically slammed the door on the possibility of God working a miracle. I think thatâs a tragedy.
Dennis: And thereâs a biblical admonition that Paul gives us from 1 Corinthians, Chapter 7. He said, âThe husband should give to his wife her conjugal rights, and likewise, the wife to her husband.â It goes on to talk about the wife doesnât have authority over her own body, but the husband does; and the husband doesnât have authority over his body, but the wife does.
What I think Paul is exhorting us to here is that youâve got to pay attention to one of the strongest drives in humanity. I got to thinking about this, and there are really only a couple of drives, I think, such as the need for oxygen and the need for water and food that would supplant sexuality.
9:00
Bob: You think survival might be a little ahead?
Dennis: Well, those are both survival categories; but the point isâthe urge for two people to merge was put there by God. Iâve thought about this many times. Itâs a good thing, in most marriages, that one of the two of you has a stronger desire to be with the other in the area of sexuality. Why? Because if one of you didnât have a pursuit, what might happen? Youâd just have two people, spinning plates, off doing their own thing, and occasionally coming back, like roommates at a house to be able to maybe touch each other with eyesight, but never emotionallyânever in depth, with a true, real relationshipâthe way God designed it in marriage.
I think God, in His ingenuity, has made something powerful here that too often has been called âdirty.â
10:00
It really is a healthy desire for two people to become one.
Bob: So this brings up the issue, then, Barbara: âHow would you coach a wife? Is it ever appropriate for her to say, âNo, not now / not tonightâIâm not interested right now.â How should she say that? And what are the legitimate reasons for her to say, âI canât be with youâ? Is it because, âIâm too tired,â or because, âYou hurt me the other dayâ? What works here?â
Barbara: Well, first of all, I think she does have a responsibility to be honest with her husband. I think that faking itâfaking being together sexuallyâis not going to accomplish anything. If there is emotional distance between youâand youâre feeling hurt because of something he said or if you really are so exhausted that you just canât function anymore that dayâthose are real life issues that we all deal with and we all feel.
11:00
The purpose of sex and of coming together is for intimacyâitâs for transparency / itâs for sharing our lives together. I donât think thereâs anything wrong with delaying itâI donât think thereâs anything wrong with a woman expressing how she feels or what her needs areâbecause to not do that is being disingenuous / thatâs not transparency. If the goal is transparency / the goal is intimacy and oneness, you have to be real / you have to be honest. Now, the way you do that, I think, is whatâs most important. That is, you can say, âI just canât tonight,â or âI feel like weâve got to finish talking about this argument that we had two days ago,â or whatever it might be.
Itâs the way in which you communicate that that matters to your husband. It must be done with respect; it must be done with commitment; it must be done with love. You say something like: âI need you to know what Iâm feeling. Can we talk about this now, or should we talk about it later?â
12:00
âI need some resolution in this area of our relationship.â If you communicate that youâre committed to him and you say: âIâm committed to you, and Iâm going to work this out. I want to be with you, just not tonight,â or ââŠjust not right now.â I think thatâs perfectly acceptable as long as ânot right nowâ doesnât turn into two years. I think it needs to be an agreement between a husband and a wifeâthey talk about it, and they find a solution together that works for both of them. It has to be mutual.
Bob: Thatâs 1 Corinthians 7 again; isnât it?
Dennis: It is. Paul goes on to say: âDo not deprive one another, except perhaps by agreement, for a limited time, that you may devote yourselves to prayer. But then, come back together again so that Satan may not tempt you because of your lack of self-control.â I mean, we live in a highly-sexualized culture.
13:00
Weâve got to understand one another.
Hereâs where Barbaraâs book does an outstanding job of helping young wives, and for that matter, older wives understand their husbands in this areaâand how they are made by Godâand that itâs goodâitâs not bad / itâs not evil.. They should bless their husband and not ignore him. If you need to say, âNot tonight, Sweetheart,â donât ignore it tomorrow night, and the next night, and the next night, and the next night.
Bob: So the wife who is feeling, tonight: âI think he might be interested. I justâmaybe if I just go to bed earlyâI donât say anything / I just fallâ you know, he comes in and finds me asleep. Then, heâll leave me alone.â She gets a little passive-aggressive with how she handles this. She finds ways to dodge or avoid.
Dennis: Do you think a guy doesnât know this?
Barbara: Yes! He does.
Dennis: Yes; he does!
Bob: So, to that wifeâyouâd say: âItâs time to get this out in the open and have the conversationâ?
14:00
Barbara: Yes; I do. I think itâs much better to talk about it. I mean, I think itâs a temptation for all of us women to want to kind of just avoid it and hope it will go away when weâre too tired, or overwhelmed, or whatever. But making it go away isnât the solution. Itâs not the solution to any kind of a disagreement, or an impasse, or something thatâs between you, as husband and wife.
Itâs like the part that Dennis read earlier from my bookâeven not-so-great sex is bonding. Itâs remembering whatâs true / itâs remembering the value that God places on your marriage and on the sexual part of your marriage relationship. Itâs going to him and saying: âI am really exhausted, but I sense that you might be interested in making love tonight,â or ââŠhaving sex tonight. Can we talk about that? Can we talk about a solution? Can we figure out what we want to do together so that weâre mutually agreeing?â Sheâs not controlling by being passive, and going to sleep ahead of time, and hoping he wonât notice.
15:00
Does that make sense?
Bob: It does!
What do you say, then, to the wife who says, âYou know what? Thirty pounds ago, he was attractive. Today, Iâm just not attracted to him.â Or she says, âThirty pounds ago, I felt attractive.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: âAnd now, I donât feel desirable. Even though he says heâs interested, I think, âHow can you be? Because I look at myself in the mirror and I donât feel attractive.ââ What do you say about those issues?
Barbara: Well, I think those are just further reflections of our need for transparency and our need for oneness. We got married to be acceptable to one another. We got married to know one another in our strengths and in our weaknesses. So when we gain weight or when things change about us, are we still committed? Are we still called to love one another? Are we still committed to making our marriage all that God wants it to be for as long as we both shall live?
Well, we have to learn to love one another in our weaknesses.
16:00
We have to learn to love one another in our imperfections. Yes; it may have been easier when you were both in your 20s and you were bothâwhatever attracted you to each otherâbut marriage wasnât built for just when weâre in our 20s. Marriage was built for a lifetime. You are going to go through trials and difficulties, and both of you are going to change. Is God big enough to give you the kind of love that will last?âthe kind of intimacy that you got married for in those years when you are challenged with health issues, or weight issues, or whatever it is?
Dennis: And I know a dad who took his daughters asideâthey had several daughtersâand he just talked to them about the importance of your attractiveness to your husband: âYou need to do your job of being the bestâthe very bestâmagnet you can be to your man.â Now, we all know that there are these superstar models out there.
Bob: Right.
17:00
Dennis: Youâre never going to be able to compete at that level, but you know what? You can be a beautiful, attractive wife to your husband. One of the things I appreciate about Barbara isâeven when she says she doesnât feel pretty, sheâs still incredibly attractive to me. I just appreciated her for how sheâs paid attention to the process of aging. I mean, 44 yearsâthat means our listeners know weâre no longer teenagers in our 20s; okay? Forty-four years of marriageâI mean, youâve got a lot of gravity to fight by the time you get there. So the point is: âDo you care enough to love your husband in the way that speaks love to him?â
Barbara: And itâs not just about the exterior; because I think what weâre talking about right nowâpeople tend to think itâs the exterior. Itâs not! What makes a person beautifulâwhat makes a man or a woman beautifulâis our hearts.
18:00
If we pay attention to our hearts, we pay attention to learning to love well, and to do what God has called us to do as men and as women, then weâre going to be attractive to one another. Because when Dennis serves me, and denies himself for me, and when he does the kinds of things that I know cost him somethingâand heâs doing it because he loves meâthatâs attractive to me. I mean, I appreciate that / I respond to that. Any woman alive will do that; because, when she sees a man sacrificing for herâweâre just built to respond to thatâand vice-versaâwhen women serve their husbands and love their husbands, thatâs what makes us attractive.
Bob: Weâve been focusing on your counsel to young wives because, again, thatâs the subject of the book youâve written: Letters to My Daughters. I did want to, before weâre done, go back 22 years and let our listeners hear a clip of advice that you shared for husbands in this area of sex and romance, back when we recorded a series on FamilyLife Today, back in 1995â
19:00
Dennis: This is scary! [Laughter]
Barbara: It is!
Bob: âcalledâdo you remember 1995? Do you remember being 22 years younger than you are now?
Barbara: Yes, but that was a long time ago! [Laughter]
Bob: Well, weâre going to hear this clip in just a minute.
Let me, first, let our listeners know how they can get a copy of your book, Letters to My Daughters. Itâs a book that weâve got in our FamilyLife Today Resource Center. You can go online at our website, FamilyLifeToday.com, and order your copy of Barbara Raineyâs book, Letters to My Daughters: The Art of Being a Wife. Again, the website is FamilyLifeToday.com. You can also order a copy when you call 1-800-FL-TODAY. Again, the number is 1-800-358-6329; 1-800-âFâ as in family, âLâ as in life, and then the word, âTODAY.â
By the way, when youâre on the website at FamilyLifeToday.com, thereâs a banner there that says, âRomance Me.â
20:00
If you click that, thereâs a quiz you can take to talk about your romantic style and your spouseâs romantic style and to see where thereâs compatibility and where there might be areas for growth. Click on that when youâre on our website at FamilyLifeToday.com. You can share the romance quiz with friends on FacebookÂź or on TwitterÂź. We just thought this would be something fun for you to do and just see how you match up in the area of romance.
Let me also say a quick word of thanks to those folks who made todayâs program possibleâitâs those of you who support this ministry. Particularly, we want to thank those of you who are monthly Legacy Partners and who provide the financial stability / the backbone for this daily radio program. You really are partners with us in this outreach to marriages and families, all around the world, as we work to effectively develop godly marriages and families. We appreciate your partnership with us.
21:00
If youâre able to help with a donation today, weâd love to say, âThank you,â by sending you Dennis and Barbara Raineyâs devotional book called Moments with You. Itâs our thank-you gift if you make a one-time donation or if you make your first gift as a Legacy Partner. Again, go to FamilyLifeToday.com to find out more or to make a donation. Or
call 1-800-FL-TODAY, and you can donate over the phone. Or you can mail your donation to FamilyLife Today at PO Box 7111, Little Rock, AR; our zip code is 72223.
Now, we promised our listeners that they were going to get a chance to hear some advice that you shared to husbands. We were recording a series called âCreating a More Romantic Marriage.â We were just asking you to help husbands understand how women think on this issue of romance, and intimacy, and sex in marriage.
Dennis: Is this the story about Saran Wrap? [Laughter]
Barbara: No!! [Laughter]
Bob: Stop it!
22:00
Barbara: Itâs a story about âa + b = câ; right?
Bob: Ah, she knows where weâre headed! [Laughter] Listen to this clip from 22 years ago:
[Previous Interview]
Barbara: I donât think that a woman wants to feel pegged; I donât think she wants to feel figured out, button-holed, taken advantage ofâwhatever you want to call it. I think that that defeats the essence of love. Again, I think that a husband needs to live with her in an understanding way, and to love her as Christ loved the church, and then she will respond to that.
Bob: So it sounds to me like the message here to men is: âOnce youâve found what really communicates love to your wife,â
Dennis: ââdonât ever do that again!â [Laughter]
Bob: Thatâs right.
Barbara: Noooo!
Bob: â âshe will realize it, and she will change the rules.
Barbara: Thatâs not true.
Bob: âAnd tomorrow itâs going to be something completely different!â [Laughter]
Barbara: It makes us sound schizophrenic.
Bob: But thatâs what it feels like for men sometimes!
Barbara: I know!
Dennis: Well, it feels like it to a manâthat, here, he is doing his best to love his wifeâ
Barbara: I understand.
Dennis: âand she throws away the rule book.
Barbara: I do.
23:00
Dennis: And she says: âI donât want a rule book. I donât want to be figured out.â
Barbara: It sounds awful! [Laughter] It really does.
Bob: But itâs true; isnât it?
Barbara: Well, I really do think itâs true. I really do, and itâs not that she doesnât want those things done again. Itâs not that you bring her flowers two or three times and she loves it; and then, all of a sudden, she feels like sheâs been pegged and she doesnât ever want them again for the rest of her life. I think there needs to be variety / there needs to be creativity. She needs to feel like heâs thinking about her in different ways at different times and not just the same old, prescribed pattern.
[Studio]
Bob: So, 22 years later, it still canât be a formula. Is that what youâre saying?
Barbara: That is correct. It cannot be a formula. Women still want to be pursued / we still want to be figured out. I think itâs a very good thing.
Dennis: Iâm Dennis Rainey, and thatâs real family life! [Laughter]
Bob: I was waiting for you to say, âI approve this message,ââ
Barbara: Yes!
Bob: âbut you didnât say that; did you?
Barbara: No.
Dennis: That was back last fallâwe canât say that anymore. [Laughter]
24:00
No; itâs really important that men live with their wives in an understanding way and that a husband understands that his wife needs to be loved. Thatâs a lifetime assignment. What communicates love to your wife will be different than mine, and what communicates love to your wife today will be different in a decade. It will grow / it will mature.
Iâll tell you what you have, as you move into the twilight years of life, youâre going to have a great relationship that you wouldnât want to swap out with anybody, even though thereâve been some very, very difficult times.
Bob: FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Help for today. Hope for tomorrow.
We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to produce them for our website. If youâve benefited from the broadcast transcripts, would you consider donating today to help defray the costs?
Copyright © 2017 FamilyLife. All rights reserved.
www.FamilyLife.com