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Is
your marriage struggling with multiple conflicts that seem to never
get resolved? Are you sick and tired of arguing about the same things
over and over again? Are you wondering if there is a way to ever
solve these problems? If you are, then this publication is exactly
what you are looking for.
There
is a way to resolve conflicts with your spouse. If there is anyone
who knows how to solve marital problems it's the One who created
marriage. The One who created you has revealed this plan in His
Word. How do you do it? What is needed to resolve the conflicts
in your marriage?
First,
you must be willing to resolve the conflicts. The willingness to
actually do something about the conflicts between you and your mate
is the most important place to start. In marriage counseling, this
is the first question I usually ask a couple: "Are you willing
to do whatever the Bible requires to resolve this conflict?"
The answer to this question reveals very quickly whether anything
will be accomplished in our time together. Before you read this
article, you must determine the same thing. Are you willing to resolve
the conflicts between you and your spouse? Are you willing to take
the Biblical steps that God requires of you?
With
two willing hearts there is no problem that can't be solved. God
promises in His Word that all He is looking for is a willing heart
to obey Him, and His blessings will flow out to you. He promised
His people, "If you are willing and obedient, you shall
eat of the good of the land"(Is. 1:19). Then He warned
them, "But if you refuse and rebel, you shall be devoured
by the sword; for the mouth of the Lord has spoken"(Is. 1:20).
Notice the importance God has placed on this one attitude of
the heart. Start here brothers and sisters. Ask God to give you
a willing heart to resolve the conflicts. You may even have to start
with asking God to give you a willingness to be made willing. He
can do this too!
Second,
you must be willing to ask God for help. Jesus said to His disciples,
"Watch and pray, lest you enter into temptation. The spirit
indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak" (Matt. 26:41).
Even though Jesus knew that His disciples had a willingness to follow
Him, He also knew the weakness of their flesh. This is why He encouraged
them to pray. He knew that only the power of the Holy Spirit could
rule over the weakness of the flesh.
Do
you realize how weak and insufficient you are in your own strength
to do what God requires? If you do, ask Him now to empower you with
His Spirit to help you to lovingly seek reconciliation with your
mate. Where you are weak, He will make you strong (2 Cor. 12:9,10)!
If
you are not a Christian or you have not been walking with Him, He
still loves you and wants to help you turn your marriage around.
Yet, you must have a personal relationship with Him to enlist His
aid. You can't ask for His benefits and resources and have nothing
to do with Him. You wouldn't want mere acquaintances to come and
ask you for money and help if they weren't your friends, and the
same is true of God. If you want God's help you have to be more
than His acquaintance; you need a love relationship with Him. Then,
He will give you His life inside your soul to enable you to do what
He commands.
This
change of relationship with Jesus also entails willingness. Jesus
said of many in His day, "But you are not willing to come
to Me that you may have life" (John 5:40). Are you willing
to come to Him, to turn from your life of independence to one of
trusting Him? Are you willing to turn from your sin and rebellion
to follow Him? He died to forgive you and longs to pardon you right
now. Ask Him to come in and take over your heart and life. As you
reconcile with Him, you will be able to reconcile with your spouse.
Third,
you must be willing to please God. This is essential before you
begin to try to take any practical action in the process of reconciliation.
The desire to please God will instantly motivate you to action that
you would never ordinarily take. When Paul the Apostle wrote to
the Thessalonian church he urged them regarding how they "ought
to walk and to please God" (1 Thess. 4:1). Notice, he associated
their correct walk with the desire to please God.
This
attitude is so important because the basic problem in every marriage
is that desire to please self. Many conflicts are simply the result
of selfishness, self-will, or self-righteousness. According to James,
self is the root of every conflict and evil that occurs in any relationship,
"Where envy and self-seeking exist, confusion and every
evil thing will be there" (James 3:16). Therefore, to deal
with your selfish desires you need a higher motivation, that of
pleasing the Father.
When
you choose to please God, you strike at the root of your problems.
If you obey God's Word, you can't help but please Him in every way.
With this attitude, a willing heart, and the power of the Holy Spirit,
you are now ready to take these practical steps:
1.
You must restrain your anger. This is a choice you must
make with every conflict that occurs because explosive anger is
the primary reason that nothing gets resolved. Many have said to
me, "Steve, I just can't control my temper." Yet, this
statement is in direct contradiction to what Scripture declares.
When Paul was in prison for false charges made against him, he could
have been very angry and depressed; but instead, he said, "I
can do all things through Christ who strengthens me"
(Phil. 4:13). Controlling his emotions and his anger were undoubtedly
some of the "all things" he refers to in this text. You
can control your anger too, if you will ask God for His help. He
has the strength you need to do what you find impossible. Solomon
said, "It is honorable for a man to stop striving, since
any fool can start a quarrel" (Prov. 20:3). Also, "He
who is slow to anger is better than the mighty, and he who rules
his spirit than he who takes a city" (Prov. 16:32). Restraining
your anger is one way to stop a quarrel from ever starting in the
first place. Likewise, once an argument has started, you still have
the choice to stop it. You must rule your own spirit instead of
letting your spirit rule you. This takes greater spiritual might
and strength than it does to take a city in war.
But
how can you restrain your anger? Where do you get this greater
might to control your spirit? By a choice to ask God for
help and by your personal surrender to the power of the Holy
Spirit. You make the choice to please God by stopping the escalation
of your anger. Take a five minute time out for prayer so you can
calm down. Remember, it's not by your might or by your power, but
by His Spirit (Zech. 4:6). Your anger is a powerful force, but His
Spirit is even more powerful. Have you experienced His greater power?
It's there for you.
2.
You must listen instead of trying to only prove your point.
This skill is only possible when your anger is under the control
of the Holy Spirit.
When
your mate tells you something he or she is upset about, do you interrupt?
Do you try to answer your loved one's concerns before he or she
has even finished talking? Are you really listening, or merely thinking
about how to answer? These are all signs that you aren't listening.
If you aren't a good listener, you won't be a very good communicator
because you haven't really understood what your spouse has said.
If you constantly hear your mate declare, "No, that's not what
I mean," or, "You don't understand what I'm saying,"
you probably don't! If you don't understand what your spouse is
saying, how can you resolve anything?
The
Scripture commands you to be "swift to hear, slow to speak,
slow to wrath" (James 1:19). The more you listen, the slower
you will speak. The slower you speak, the easier it will be to restrain
your wrath and anger. Try it! The next argument you have, try listening
and waiting until your spouse is completely finished, then respond.
You'll be amazed at how your anger will be controlled.
3.
You must confess your faults instead of blameshifting.
When there is a conflict between you and your mate, first determine
your part in the disagreement. Is it your attitude, your tone of
voice, your actions, or your choice of words that started the conflict?
You should confess these things sincerely before you ever discuss
your mate's faults. Jesus said, "Why do you look at the
speck in your brother's eye, but do not consider the plank in your
own eye?...Hypocrite! First remove the plank from your own eye,
and then you will see clearly to remove the speck out of your brothers
eye" (Matt. 7:3,5).
Honesty
is the fastest way to resolve any conflict. Why? Because when you
first humbly acknowledge your faults, your spouse doesn't have to
spend all that time trying to convince you what you've done wrong.
Plus, it's hypocritical of you to blame your spouse for the whole
problem when you can't even see your own faults. Notice the hypocrisy
of Adam and Eve when they shifted the blame for their own sin. "The
woman you gave to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I ate."
Eve also shifted the blame when she declared, "The serpent
deceived me, and I ate" (Gen. 3:12,13). We can see blameshifting
easily in others, why is it we can't see our own?
Ask
God to search your heart, right now, that you may first see your
own faults. Then, as James says, "Confess your trespasses
to one another and pray one for another..." (James 5:16),
and you will be amazed at how easily you can resolve your marital
conflicts.
4.
Take action quickly. Jesus said, "Agree with
your adversary quickly..." (Matt. 5:25). There are many
reasons why this is an essential aspect in conflict resolution.
First,
as time passes the facts get distorted. It isn't long before you
can't remember who did or said what. Then the argument may shift
to fighting over distorted facts. This solves nothing. The best
time to solve a conflict is today!
Also,
the longer you wait to resolve a conflict, the harder your heart
can get. This is why the author of Hebrews said with urgency, "Today
if you will hear His voice, do not harden your hearts as in the
rebellion..." (Heb. 3:7,8). Paul also knew this tendency
of man's heart to harden over time and commanded, "Do not
let the sun go down on your wrath..." (Eph. 4:26). In other
words, don't let even one day pass when anger is in your heart.
Don't go to bed that way! Resentment and anger in your heart will
only harden you more and more, and ultimately will hinder you from
solving even the simplest problems.
Don't
be the person who allows weeks, months, or even years to go by without
resolving conflicts. You will always be the loser.
5.
Ask forgiveness for your sin. To forgive is not an option;
it is a command. Jesus said, "Whenever you stand praying,
if you have anything against anyone, forgive him, that your Father
in heaven may also forgive you your trespasses. But if you do not
forgive, neither will your Father in heaven forgive your trespasses"
(Mark 11:25,26). This statement is all-inclusive; "anything
against anyone" would include all that is happening with you
and your spouse right now.
Forgiveness
is a choice, not a feeling; a choice to please and obey God. You
will never feel like forgiving anyone. The feeling of forgiveness
only comes after you choose to forgive. No one deserves to be forgiven
anymore than you do. Therefore, "be kind to one another,
tenderhearted, forgiving one another, just as God in Christ also
forgave you" (Eph. 4:32).
Make
the choice right now! Choose to show mercy and forgive. Then ask
God to forgive you for holding resentment against your mate. This
will enable you to find the solutions you are looking for in your
marriage.
6.
Tell your partner with the proper attitude and motive what action
or attitude has offended you. After you have taken the above
steps, you may now state your case if your spouse has not already
confessed his or her own faults. This must be done with gentle words
as opposed to harsh words. "A soft answer turns away wrath,
but a harsh word stirs up anger" (Prov. 15:1).
The
last thing you want to do at this point is to stir up more anger.
Come with soft words of reconciliation as you discuss how your mate
has offended you. There are always two sides to a conflict. Both
sides must be dealt with completely.
When
Jesus taught His disciples about resolving conflicts, He gave them
a goal. He said, "If your brother sins against you, go and
tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he hears you,
you have gained your brother" (Matt. 18:15). The
goal is to gain your brother, and this means you must come with
that attitude and desire. If you come with yelling, finger-pointing,
and accusations, merely venting your own frustrations, the results
will be far from profitable, and you won't gain a right relationship
with your spouse.
7.
Find agreement through compromise. The goal on the vertical
plane is to please God; the goal on the horizontal plane is to find
an agreement. Remember the command of Jesus we looked at earlier
to "agree with your adversary" (Matt. 5:25)? Agreement
is found as you choose to give in and compromise in areas in which
you have been stubbornly selfish. This will please God and demonstrate
love toward your mate.
The
Prophet Amos asked the question, "Can two walk together,
unless they are agreed?" (Amos 3:3). Amos was reproving
God's people for their disobedience and unwillingness to agree with
God about their sin. The Apostle John believed the same. He said,
"If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive
us our sins..." (1 John 1:9) The word "confess"
means to "agree with." When you confess your sins, you
are agreeing with God, and this enables you to walk with Him. God
will never force His will upon you. He waits for you to come into
agreement with Him.
The
same thing is true with your spouse. When you both confess your
faults, you find immediate agreement together. This agreement is
what enables you to find a lasting compromise where you have previously
demanded your own way. Compromise is loving agreement to give, not
demand. Forcing and imposing your will, is nothing but pride and
selfishness on your part. This will reconcile nothing between you!
8.
Take action even if your spouse will not. This is what
God did with you. He demonstrated "His own love toward us,
in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us"(Rom.
5:8) Christ took the action of love even when we were still in rebellion
against Him. If we are to love others as He has loved us, then we
must do the same (John 13:34).
When
you take action to love and change what you're doing wrong, this
brings powerful encouragement to provoke your spouse to love you
and to change too (Heb. 10:24). Jesus said, "Whatever you
want men to do to you, do also to them..." (Matt. 7:12).
Apply this principle to your marriage. How do you want your spouse
to act toward you? Take this action toward him or her. Take this
action today!
9.
What should you do if your spouse doesn't respond? Be
patient, pray, and don't give up! Some people take longer to respond
than others. This, again, is the posture that God has taken toward
you. He is "longsuffering toward us, not willing that any
should perish but that all should come to repentance" (2
Peter 3:9). So also, "you have need of endurance, so that
after you have done the will of God, you may receive the promise"
(Heb. 10:36).
You
must be patient because most heated arguments are not resolved by
just one conversation. If you wait and pray and there is still no
response after a short time, go again and ask your mate to consider
the issues you have previously discussed. Continue to pray that
God would cause your loved one to yield to the truth and take action.
If your partner brings other issues to you in which you have been
offending, follow the above steps again.
Remember
God's love continually seeks reconciliation with man. His love in
you will do the same! Seek reconciliation!
If
you need further help in resolving any of these issues, don't wait;
see your pastor as soon as possible.
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