LIBERTY THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
DIVORCE IN THE CHRISTIAN SOCIETY AND A PRESCRIPTIVE MODEL TO
REKINDLE THE MARRIAGE BOND
A THESIS PROJECT SUBMITTED TO
Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary in Partial Fulfillment
Of the Requirements for the degree
DOCTOR OF MINISTRY
__________________
By
Frederick Douglas Styles
Lynchburg, Virginia
March 12, 2014
Copyright © 2013 Frederick D. Styles
All Rights Reserved
LIBERTY BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
THESIS PROJECT APPROVAL SHEET
______________________________
GRADE
______________________________
MENTOR
Dr. Charles N. Davidson
Director, Doctor of Ministry
______________________________
READER
Dr. Rodney Dempsey
Director, Master of Arts in Christian Ministry
v
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ABSTRACT…………………………………………….…………………………….…xi
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
The Statement of the Problem ……………………………………………………1
The Statement of the Limitation ………………………………………….………2
The Theoretical Basis for the Project……………………………………………..2
Old Testament Background……………………………………………………….2
New Testament Teaching ……………………………………………………...…3
A Statement of Methodology …………………………………………………......4
A Review of the Literature………………………… …………………………….6
CHAPTER TWO: INFIDELITY
Types of Affairs …………………………………………………………………..6
Divorce: The Five Models Their Advantage, Their Consequences…………….…7
The Christian Divorce Culture ……………………………………………………8
What God Has Joined …………………………………………………………….9
vi
How to Survive Infidelity in a Marriage………………………………………...10
Reason for Divorce ……………………………………………………………...11
A Christian Understanding of Divorce ……………………………………….…12
Divorce Elevates Risk for Depression, but Only for Some People……….……..12
Infidelity…………………………………………………………………………13
Sexual Intimacy ………………………………………………………………....16
The Other Women………………………………………………………….…....18
Terminal Marriage Shock…………………………………………………….….19
CHAPTER THREE: COMMUNICATION
Communication Style……………………………………………………………21
Three Conversion…………………………………………………………….….22
A Divorce that Work…………………………………………………………….23
Poor Communication ……………………………………………………………23
Communication is the Key to Marriage…………………………………………23
Make it safe to Communicate …………………………………………………...24
Listening the Forgotten Skill…………………………………………………….24
vii
Restored through Reconnecting………………………………………..………. .25
The “Secret” Hidden in Ephesian 5:33……………………………………...…...27
Communicating & Connecting in Relationship…………………………… ……28
Two Levels of Communication …………………………………………………28
CHAPTER FOUR: ABUSE (PHSYICAL AND EMOTIONALLY)
Emotional Abuse …………………………………………………………...........30
What is Abuse …………………………………………………………………...30
Stages of Grief…………………………………………………………….... …..32
Using Coercion and Threats …………………………………………………….33
Social Abuse………………………………………………………………..........34
Financial Abuse …………………………………………………………………34
Sexual Abuse ……………………………………………………………………34
Anger in Divorce ………………………………………………………………...35
The Emotionally Destructive Relationship ………….…………………………..37
The Emotionally Abused Women ……………………………………………….39
Types of Emotionally Abused Women ………………………………………….41
viii
Taking Steps toward Recovery ………………………………………….............42
Christian Women facing Abuse................................................................……….42
A 30 Year Abuser Speak Out…………………………………………………….44
CHAPTER FIVE: ENRICHING YOUR SEX LIFE
Narcissistic Lovers ………………………………………………………………47
Enriching Your Sex Life…………………………………………………………47
Disappointment about Sex ……………………………………………………...48
What do Husband and Wives really need? ...........................................................50
Sexual Problems …………………………………………………………...…....56
Causes of Sexual Dysfunctions………………………………………… ……….57
Sexual Dysfunctions……………………………………………………………..58
The Consequences of Sexual Sin: David Story………………………………….58
CHAPTER SIX: GUIDELINES TO HELP A MARRAIGE SUCCEED
Learning What Makes Marriage Successful …………………………………….61
His Needs are Not Her Needs……………………………………………………61
How to Express Heart felt Commitment to Your Mate …………………………62
ix
Creating Extraordinary Relationship ……………………………………………63
Dating…………………………………………………………………………….64
Biblical Counseling ……………………………………………………………...67
Strategic Pastoral Counseling Short Terms Structure Model……………………69
Effective Biblical Counseling; a Mode for helping caring Christian become Cable
Counselors……………………………….…………..…………………………..71
Solution -Focused Pastoral Counseling; A Short Term Structure Model ……….70
Guidelines to Rekindle and Strengthen the Marriage Bond……………………..72
The Proven 7-Step Program for Saving Your Marriage ………………………...73
How to Heal from Emotional Abuse, Deceit, Infidelity and Chronic resentment.76
How to Predict a Happy Marriage…..……………………………………….….80
Rekindle Romance through Affection, Warmth and Encouragement …………..82
Intervention for Strengthening Communication ………………………………...85
Loving Communication ……..…………………………………………………..85
Sexual Standards………………………………………………………………....86
When Both are Willing ………………………………………………………….87
The Seven Principle for Making Marriage Work ……………………………….88
x
Seven Conversation for a Life Time of Love………………..…………………..92
Result Twenty Question Survey for a Divorce ………………………………….97
Conclusion ……..…………………………………………………………….….99
APPENDIX
A. TOP TEN REASON FOR DIVORCE AND MARRIAGE
BREAKDOWNS…………………………………………………………….…113
B. APPROVAL TO CITE EMOTIONAL ABUSE, SILENT KILLER OF
MARRIAGE BY AUSTIN JAMES…………….………….…………….…….114
C. NATIONAL MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE RATE TRENDS ……..….…115
D. DIVORCE STATISTICS AROUND THE WORLD ……………….……..117
E. TWENTY GENERAL QUESTIONS DIVORCE SURVEY ……..……….118
F. SURVEY CHARTS: SEVENTY SURVEYS COMPLETED AND REASON
FOR DIVORCE……………..……………………………………………..…..120
xi
ABSTRACT
DIVORCE IN THE CHRISTIAN SOCIETY AND A PRESCRIPTIVE MODEL TO
REKINDLE THE MARRIAGE BOND
Frederick D. Styles
Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary, 2012
Mentor: Dr. Charles N. Davidson
The purpose of this project is to explore the history, consequences, and guidelines of
divorce in the Christian world. God’s plan for marriage is procreation of children and love
between husband and wife. According to a Christian study by Jack Wellman, the top three
reasons for Christians divorcing are adultery, communication, and abuse (physical and
emotional). This thesis will assist couples who are contemplating divorce and provide guidance
on the causes and effects of divorce. In addition, it will create a prescriptive model; guidelines
for those couples to follow for each of the reasons above that will rekindle and strengthen the
marriage bond.
Abstract length: 136
1
1
DIVORCE IN THE CHRISTIAN SOCIETY AND A PRESCRIPTIVE MODEL TO
REKINDLE THE MARRIAGE BOND
CHAPTER ONE:
INTRODUCTION
The Statement of the Problem
The Institution of Marriage was designed by God for man and woman to live in a lifetime
covenant. God gave marriage to Adam and Eve as a gift. Marriage is not just for convenience,
nor is it brought about by any culture. According to Genesis 2:18 KJV “And the Lord said It is
not good for the man to be alone; I will make a helper suitable for him.” For this reason a man
will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh. (Gen
2:24) “Marriage is honorable in all, and the bed undefiled: but whoremongers and adulterers God
will judge.” (Hebrews 13:4)
Marriage has three essential phases. (1) A man leaves his parents and in a public act,
promise himself to his wife; (2) the husband and wife are bound by taking responsibility for each
other’s success and by loving the mate above all others; (3) the two become one flesh in the
intimacy and resolution of sexual intercourse that is reserved for marriage.
“When a man hath taken a wife, and married her and it comes to pass that she find no
favor in his eyes because he hath found some uncleanness in her: then let him write her a bill of
divorcement, and give it in her hand, and send her out of his house.” (Deuteronomy 24:1)
But
from the beginning of the creation God made them male and female.
For this cause shall a man
leave his father and mother, and cleave to his wife; and they twain shall be one flesh: so then
they are no more twain, but one flesh.
What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put
2
asunder.” (Mark 10:5-9) “Whosoever putteth away his wife and marries another, committeth
adultery: and whosoever marrieth her that is put away from her husband committeth adultery.”
(Luke 16:18) Most church leaders of Jesus time permitted a man to divorce his wife for almost
any reason. Jesus’ teaching about divorce went beyond Moses (Deuteronomy 24:1-4). Stricter
than any of the current schools of thought, Jesus teaching shocked his hearers, just as they shake
present readers. Jesus says in no uncertain terms that marriage is a lifetime commitment. To
leave your spouse for another person may be permitted, but it is adultery in God’s eyes.
The Statement of Limitation
This thesis is limited to divorce couples that have been divorce. There is no age limited
because young and old Christian couples both have a hard time staying married. This thesis is on
the three top reasons for divorce is the Christian society. The three topics that this thesis covers
are Infidelity, Communication and Abuse (physical and emotional). There are other reasons that
Christian gets divorce however they will not be covered in this thesis.
The Theoretical Basis for the Project
Old Testament Background
According to the Old Testament Background D. J. Atkinson says, “On the assumption
that the people of Pre-exilic ancient Israel shared the attitudes and tradition of their current
neighbors, it would appear from the Eighteenth Century B.C. Mesopotamia the Laws of
Hammurabi and the Laws of Eshunna that marriage was often arranged by parents; that
financials reflection showed that marriage was intended to be life-long; that husband elected
loyalty from their wives and should expect the death penalty for adultery. Divorce although
possible was rare except to the very rich because of the cost was prohibitively high. The
Pentateuch laws governing sexual relationship appeared to be framed to preserve the view that in
3
marriage, a man and a woman are united together in what is intended to be a permanent, lifelong,
exclusive union. It is from this context that we must examine the central Old Testament
paragraph concerning divorce, Deuteronomy 24:1-4 which forms the backdrop to some of the
material in the Gospels”
1
.
New Testament Teaching
“Divorce is discussed in the New Testament in a context where both the Old Testament
law is held dear, (although it was variously interpreted by different school of Pharisees) and the
Greco -Romans customs were exercising some influences, thus (Mark 10:12) coincides with the
Romans permission for women to initiate divorce as well as men, but (Matthew 19:9), written for
a Jewish readership does not say this). In Jesus time there was a dispute between the Pharisaic
schools about the interpretation of Deuteronomy 24:1-4 and about what constituted permissible
grounds for divorce. (This lies behind the way Matthew frames the question 19:3); “Is it lawful
for a man to divorce his wife for any and every reason?” (Mark 10:2) The Shammaite Pharisees
interpreted the Deuteronomic Legislation in as strict way; Divorcee was permitted only for
serious sexual offense.”
2
“Jesus brings divorce and remarriage under the heading of adultery. (Matthew 19:9) the
Pharisees had trivialized divorce be reducing the level of grounds for divorce and to the need for
a certificate. Jesus says that in the light of God’s creation intention every unfaithfulness, every
breaking of the commandment of “one flesh,” every putting away of one partners sin. The
1
Walter Elwell A, Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Old & New Testament
Divorce (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 1984, 2001), 346.
2
Ibid, 347.
4
commandment “You shall not break the one flesh.” Divorce, therefore, is covenant
unfaithfulness; it breaks this command.”
3
A Statement of Methodology
All couples can learn how to restore and rekindle their marriage and honor the wedding
vows. Divorce should not be their first option when problems arise in the relationship. Jesus
says, “The Pharisees also came unto him, tempting him, and saying unto him, Is it lawful for a
man to put away his wife for every cause?
And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not
read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female,
And said, for this
cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be
one flesh?
Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined
together, let not man put asunder.
They say unto him, why did Moses then command to give a
writing of divorcement, and to put her away?
He saith unto them, Moses because of the hardness
of your hearts suffered you to put away your wives: but from the beginning it was not so.
And I
say unto you, whosoever shall put away his wife, except it be for fornication, and shall marry
another, committeth adultery: and whoso marrieth her who is put away doth commit
adultery.
His disciples say unto him, if the case of the man be so with his wife, it is not good to
marry.
But he said unto them, all men cannot receive this saying, save they to whom it is given.”
(Matthew 19:3-11 KJV)
Christian couples should not be afraid or ashamed incoming and receiving counseling
from their pastor or a marriage counselor. My experience has shown me that Christian couple
either goes outside their church or they refuse counseling all together. They should be willing to
3
Ibid, 347.
5
receive God counselling from Pastor.
Therefore judge nothing before the time, until the Lord
come, which both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the
counsels of the hearts: and then shall every man have praise of God. (1 Corinthians 4:5 KJV)
Children often blame themselves and their parents for the divorce. It is up to the pastor or
marriage counselor to help the children to deal with their feeling and the divorce.
Communications is the key to the marriage relationship. When couple stops communicating the
marriage is destine to for a divorce. Some of the causes of communications failure are mistrust,
bitterness, anger, jealousy and envy. Pastors can offer tips on communication and listening skills,
properly expressing feelings, and listening without being judgmental. Pastors can use the
following counseling methods; Effective Biblical Counseling, Strategic Pastoral Counselling and
Solution-Focused Pastoral Counseling to reach the Christian couple contemplating divorce.
6
6
CHAPTER TWO:
A Review of the Literature: Books and Internet
Infidelity-Types of Affairs
Emily M. Brown has a Master degree and is certified as a license clinical
Social worker. She is the director of the Key Bridge Therapy and Mediation Center in Arlington,
Virginia. According to Emily Brown, “Affairs are loaded with romanticism, morality,
mythology, and intense emotions. They are not actually about sex, but about pain, deception, fear
and the desire to feel alive. Most couples enter marriage believing that they would never have an
affair on their spouse, but the truth is that a great many of them have, at the minimum one or
more affairs.”
1
Emily Brown writes a book about five different types of affairs: Conflict avoidance affair,
Intimacy avoidance affair, Sexual addiction affair, Split self-affair and Exit affair.
“(1) Conflict Avoidance Affairs are subtle and they are terrified to be anything but pleasant,
for fear that conflict will lead to abandonment or losing control. They do not have a way to stand
up to each other when there is a problem, so they cannot resolve their dispute and the marriage
erodes. This is an "equal opportunity" affair.
(2) Intimacy Avoidance Affairs are frightened of getting too close, so they keep the barriers
high between them. Conflict is one obstacle and affairs are another. Their emotional connection
with each other is through frequent and emotional battle. Often, each partner becomes involved
in an affair. These couples are the mirror opposite of the Conflict Avoiders.
(3)Sexual Addiction Affair uses sex over and over again to freeze emotional pain and
emptiness, much like alcoholics use alcohol. Among married people, men are sex addicts more
often than women.
(4) Split Self Affairs has tried to make marriage right. Both spouses have sacrificed their
own feelings and needs to take care of others, and the denial has caught up with one of them. The
relationship is serious, long-term and passionate. The spouse who is having the affair focuses on
1
Emily Brown, Affairs is a Guide to working Through the Percussion of Infidelity
(San Francisco, CAL: Josey-Bass Inc., 1999), 7.
7
deciding between marriage and the affair partner and avoids looking at the inner split. Most often
this is a man's responsibility, but that may be changing.
(5) Exit Affairs are conflict avoiders at heart, but they take it further. One spouse has
already decided to leave the marriage, and the relationship provides the rationale. The other
partner usually blames the relationship rather than looking at how their marriage got to this point.
This is another equal opportunity affair.”
2
Divorce: The Five Models Their Advantage and Their Consequences
Today a couple can choose from among many method of getting from separation to the
divorce degree. Akeela Davis, CFP, Financial Divorce Specialist list the five types of divorce.
“Traditional Divorce: is that one or the other person involved goes out and hire a lawyer.
The lawyer files the divorce paperwork, the other party is served and the formalities begin.
Traditional divorce can become an arena, in which the parties’ battle for compensation for hurts,
or in some cases revenge. Once engaged, the lawyers become the gateway for communication. It
is viewed that the person with the better more aggressive lawyer wins.
Mediated Divorce: In the interest of reducing costs of the divorce and having a more
amicable divorce the mediation process was born. The mediated divorce most often involves
one mediator who, as a neutral third party act to help both members of the couple resolves the
matters in disrepute between them. The goal of mediation is to help the couple draft the outline
of an agreement settling the issues between them such as finance, child custody and property
division. Mediation works best when both of the couple truly wants the divorce.
Arbitrated Divorce: When a couple find themselves very far apart in their position but
nonetheless do not want to go to court, they may opt for an arbitrated divorce. By using
arbitration, the couple is allowing someone else to decide on a settlement for them after hearing
the facts of the case. The arbitrator is usually a retired judge or lawyer, and maybe used for the
2
Ibid, 220-221.
8
entire process or only to settle individual issues, such as child custody, support or property
division.
Collaborative Divorce: The collaborative divorce is the newest innovation in obtaining a
divorce. It is meant to be a supportive process designed to help both parties. The most
innovative part of the process is that both parties and their lawyers are committed, in writing, to
reaching a negotiated agreement out of court. The ultimate goal is to arrive at a solution with
which both members of the couple can live.
Do it Yourself Divorce: In legal circles, this kind of divorce is called a desk order
divorce. A person does not necessarily need a lawyer to get a divorce. In fact, a recent study
suggest that 78 percent of those going through a divorce are unrepresented. If both partied want
the divorce, if there are no children involved, there is not spousal supports issues, and it both
agree on the division of an property, the do it yourself divorce man be viable option.”
3
The Christian Divorce Culture
George Barna is the founder of the Barna Research Group which is now known as The
Barna Group. The firm analyzes America culture and creates resources and experiences designed
to facilitate moral and spiritual transformation. As a recent study by George Barna showed,
“The percentage of born-again Christians who have been divorced (27) actually beats the
national average by 2 points. While it may be alarming to discover that born-again Christians are
more likely than others to experience a divorce, says Barna that method has been in place for
quite some time.”
4
3
Akeela Davis, CFP, FDS, Divorce Dollars: Financial Planning Before During and
After Divorce (Canada: International Self Counsel Press, 2003, 2009), 35.
4
"The Christian Divorce Culture," Christian Today, Sept 04, 2000. 47,
Http://search.proquest.com, (accessed September 2, 2013)
9
Barbara Dafoe Whitehead argued in “The Divorce Culture that divorce is not just a
therapeutic problem but a moral one in which, to use biblical language, the commandment to
love is thwarted: Divorce has brought a steady weakening of the basic human relationships and
bonds, says Whitehead. Men's and women's relationships are becoming more ephemeral and
unpredictable. Children are losing ties to their fathers. Even a mother's love is not forever. This is
precisely why she concluded that if we are to dismantle the culture of divorce, we need to
consider divorce as a morally as well as socially memorable event."
5
Barber Dafoe Whitehead
says “When pastors and other Christian leaders in significant teaching or preaching positions
divorce, they should be held as accountable as they are for sure other sins, like adultery. At a
minimum, time out for spiritual guidance and healing, as well as a public service of repentance
and restoration, are necessary before civic function can be given again.”
6
Brette Sember gives the effects on divorce she says, “Divorce completely change every
aspect of your life, even those that you think should remain unchanged. The couple will likely
face financial repercussions, a change of lifestyles, a reworking of who you are, changes in how
you parent your children, and possibly change in your living arrangements.”
7
What God has Joined
Reverend Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite is a Senior Fellow at American Progress. She is also
Professor of Theology at Chicago Theological Seminary and its former president between 1998
5
The Christian Divorce Culture," Christian Today, Sept 04, 2000. 47,
Http://search.proquest.com, (accessed September 2, 2013
6
Ibid, 47b.
7
Brette Sember M. JD, The Complete Divorce Handbook (New York, NY: Sterling
Publishing Co, Inc., 2009), 17.
10
and 2008. An ordained minister of the United Church of Christ since 1974, she is the author
and/or editor of numerous books, and has worked on two different translations of the bible.
Reverend Thristethwaite says, “A couple of things seem clear, however. Marriage, in all
its manifestations, is going through tremendous change in our society, and marriage as a social
and political institution, and as a religious practice, needs strengthening. From a faith
perspective, when there is trust and commitment, and when God is in the connections, marriage
is strengthened. Yet we must recognize that patterns of sexism, racism, and homophobia, as well
as our declining economy and the prison-Industrial complex, are threats to marriage. These
negative forces undermine marriage in both visible and hidden ways. Marriage, from a faith
perspective, can be a practice of holiness in everyday life, but we will need to do a lot of work in
personal, social, political, and economic arenas for that to become the norm.”
8
“And the Pharisees also came unto him, tempting him, and saying unto him, is it lawful
for a man to put away his wife for every cause?
And he answered and said unto them, have ye
not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female,
And said, for
this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall
be one flesh?
Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined
together, let not man put asunder.
They say unto him, why did Moses then command to give a
writing of divorcement, and to put her away?
He saith unto them, Moses because of the hardness
of your hearts suffered you to put away your wives: but from the beginning it was not so.
And I
say unto you, whosoever shall put away his wife, except it be for fornication, and shall marry
another, committeth adultery: and whoso marrieth her, which is put away doth commit
adultery.
His disciples say unto him, if the case of the man be so with his wife, it is not good to
marry.
But he said unto them, all men cannot receive this saying, save they to whom it is given.”
(Matthew 19:3-11 King James Version)
How to Survive Infidelity in a Marriage
According to Scotty Ballard, “Unfaithfulness can rot away the foundation of marriage.
Once trust is broken, it is only a matter of time before everything else falls apart. In fact,
8
Susan Brook Thistelthwaite, "What God Has Joined," Sojourners Magazine, 16-20,
2013, Http://search.proquest.com, (accessed September 2, 2013)
11
infidelity is the nexus where legal, societal and religious dictums agree a person has grounds
for divorce. No marriage, no matter how rich, religious, political or powerful, is immune to the
threat of unfaithfulness, so say experts who give advice on how to survive infidelity.”
9
“The roots of the marriage have to be stronger than the branches that grow up, states Dr.
Atty. Paris M. Finner-Williams, founding chairperson of the Black African-American Christian
Counselors Division. She believes forgiveness is the cornerstone of marriage. To forgive is
nourishing. We really have to work very diligently as married people to learn how to forgive
each other’s indiscretions. We’ve got to get into the rhythm of forgiving spouses for things that
they do that offends so, be they right or wrong, we really have to learn how to forgive a person
and move on; and not to marry, someone who we can’t get into the rhythm of forgiving them on
regular basic. Surviving infidelity in marriage requires building a foundation of maturity by
reinforcing the groundwork of trust while building a stronghold of love.”
10
Reason for Divorce
Brette McWhorter Sember JD is a divorce legal expert, attorney and mediator. Brette
Sember says, “There are many reasons people consider divorce. One of the most common
situations is that the two people have grown apart. Adultery is usually considered a common
reason for divorce, but in most cases adultery happen when there is something wrong in the
marriage. Money is another big factor in divorce. Couples fight about money more than anything
9
Scotty Ballard, "How to Survive Infidelity in Marriage," JET, June 14, 2004, 16+
Academic Onefile.Web. (Accessed December 12, 2013)
10
Ibid, 16.
12
else. Substance abuse is a situation that can easily harm marriage. If one partner is not in control
of himself, it is nearly impossible to have a real and healthy relationship.”
11
A Christian Understanding of Divorce
Thomas Olshewasky is an Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Ph.D. from Emory University, Ma
from McCormick Theological Seminary and B.A. for Wabash College. Thomas Olshewsky says, “He
plan to explain a Christian understanding of responsible divorce. It can be responsibly Christian only if it
neither ignores nor avoids the words of Christ on this matter. To be responsible it must respond to the
confrontation of the Good News. It can be responsible, too, only if the understanding of divorce does not
take such action as absolutely prohibited, on the one hand, or as absolutely free from constraint on the
other. To be a Christian understanding, it must not only be in response to the confrontation of the Good
News, but be informed by it. The Gospel of Jesus Christ must stand under it.”
12
Divorce Elevates Risk for Depression, but Only for Some People
David Sbarra, Ph.D. is a relationships expert and an Associate Professor of Psychology
and the Director of Clinical Training at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona. As a
clinical psychologist, David’s scientific interests focus on close relationships and health, and he
has published many peer-reviewed papers on this topic. In particular, his main research efforts
center on understanding how adults cope with marital separation and divorce, as well as how
psychological responses to difficult life events are associated with health-relevant biological
responses.
11
Sember, The Complete Divorce Handbook, 6.
12
Thomas Olshewsky M, "A Christian Understanding of Divorce," Journal of
Religious Ethic 7, No. 1 (1979): Atlas Serial Religion Collection EBCCO Host. (accessed
September 3, 2013
13
According to a new study published in Clinical Psychological Science, a journal of the
Association for Psychological Science David Sbarra says, “Divorce is associated with an
increased risk of future depressive episodes but only for those who already have a history of
depression. Stressful life events like divorce are associated with a significant risk for prolonged
emotional distress, including clinically-significant depression. At the same time, we know from
considerable research that the experience of divorce is non-random. Some people are much
greater risk for experiencing a divorce than other people.”
13
Infidelity
Judith Treas is a Professor of Sociology and Director of the Center for Demographic and
Social Analysis at the University of California, Irvine
.
She is recognized for her research on
gender, family, inequality, and the life course
.
How men and women organize their relationships
is the focus of her work on the sociology of the family. Her many publications address the
division of household labor, sexual fidelity, expenditures on domestic help, time spent with
family members, and household management.
According to Judith Treas, “Infidelity is a breach of trust that signifies a lack of
faithfulness to a moral obligation to one's partner. Infidelity usually implies sexual infidelity,
although some people, particularly women, regard an intense emotional relationship as an
unfaithful extramarital involvement, even when there is no physical component. In short,
infidelity is feelings or behaviors that go against a partner's expectations for the exclusivity of the
relationship. Some couples are comfortable with having relationships outside their union. When
13
David Sbarra, "Divorce Elevates Risk of Depression but only for some People,"
Science Duty Web 3 (August 27, 2013): Http://www.sciencedaily.com (Accessed September 3,
2013)
14
a couple commits infidelity, it is not call infidelity unless they violate each other shared
understandings about discretion, partner choice, and sexual conduct.”
14
Cindy Beall is a writer, speaker, and mentor to women. Cindy and her husband Pastor
Christ Beall share openly about their journey of redemption through Chris’ infidelity and
pornography addiction. Cindy says, “When infidelity or unfaithfulness of any kind enters a
relationship between a man and a woman, it doesn’t take long before that wound extend to both
side of the family tree. It can become an intense, heated arena filled with opinions, advice and
more people to let down. Loyalties are torn and hearts are broken. But the alternative is to try
living out your healing in secret and that just doesn’t work.”
15
Richard Taylor has held professorships in philosophy at Brown and Columbia
Universities, and at the University of Rochester. This book Love Affairs explores affairs in depth
and their often painful consequences. Taylor crafts an understanding of why people become
involved in extramarital affairs, and offers ways to lessen the marital damage an affair can cause.
Taylor writes, “Sexual infidelity always inflicts a wound that is very slow to heal and may never
heal at all. When the impulse to blame is put aside, and the partner who has been wronged see
that the infidelity arose not from some deep character fault of the other, and almost certainly not
from any third party, but rather from something that was missing in the marriage, then it ought to
be possible to direct attention to what was missing in the marriage. The understanding they
commit to are designed to protect the couple’s relationship from disruption.
The first question a
14
Judith Treas, Infidelity, 2nd Ed. International Encyclopedia of Marriage and Family,
Ed James J. Ponzetti. Vol.2 (New York: Macmillan Reference USA, 2003), 895-901.
Http://go.galegroup.com.ezproxy.liberty.edu: (Accessed September 4, 2013).
15
Beall Cindy, Healing Your Marriage, When Trust is Broken; Finding Forgiveness
and Restoration (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publisher, 2011), 129.
15
couple asks is why did it happen? Some people are unfaithful for reason that lie deep in their
past, such as a history of infidelity in their parents’ marriage.”
16
Don-David Lusterman, Ph.D. is a licensed psychologist specializing in marital and family
therapy in private practice in Baldwin, New York. Dr. Lusterman writes, “That others are
unfaithful because of what they believe about the opposite gender. Men who believe the women
are prey to be caught and women who believe that they are nothing without a man are caught up
in a way of thinking about the other gender that often leads to unfaithful behavior the aspects of
infidelity are to reveal your feeling safely, to openly express needs, disappointment, longing and
pleasure. Knowing how to talk to with each other not only when times are good but even when
the going is rough.”
17
“If a couple has a communicative relationship, they can talk about anything. The means
the couples are able to say that they are bored in the marriage, discouraged, angry, or restless.
Secrecy and danger are part of the unrealistic excitement of an affair. However, secrecy in this
case will cause more harm than good, when a couple cannot express themselves. Burying small
hurt and angers, rather than communicating them out is damaging to a sound relationship.
Admission and remorse are crucial if a relationship is to survive an infidelity. Time and the
search for meaning are potent ingredients in surviving infidelity. Reestablishing trust can be a
long and difficult process.”
18
16
Richard Taylor, Love Affairs, Marriage & Infidelity (Amherst, NY: Prometheus
Books, 1997), 197.
17
Don-David Lusterman Ph.D., Infidelity: A Survival Guide, Oakland, CA: New
Harbinger Publications, 1998), 17.
18
Ibid, 41.
16
Scott Haltzman M.D. has a Doctor of Medicine degree and he is a distinguished fellow of
the American Psychiatric Association and former clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at
Brown University.
Scott Haltman, M.D. writes, “Infidelity is what he calls a flame addiction. “He is not
talking about sex addiction, because most affairs are about much more than sex. Affairs are
about an internal chemistry stirred up by being with or thinking about the other person. What
keeps people drawn toward each other is the intensity of the feeling. Once you get a taste of the
burning desire the called the flame you are hooked.”
19
“An affair takes place over time, it may be very emotionally intense and it may or may
not involve sexual intercourse. In contrast, a sexual involvement with a third party may be part of
an emotional attachment, but it may also be free of it, taking little more time than the sexual act
itself. People may have an affair without sex, and they may have sex without having the
emotional involvement of an affair. Once a committed relationship is established, if there is a
secret sexual and/or romantic involvement outside of the relationship, it is experienced as an
infidelity.”
20
Sexual Intimacy
Scott Haltsman says, “Sexual intimacy is an essential part of a healthy romantic
relationship. Couples become disconnected from each other emotionally if they do not engage
sexually. Couples are vulnerable and exposed during lovemaking, the act instills trust and
produces an aura of safety between you and your partner. Physical touch of your hands itself
19
Scott Haltzman M.D., The Secret of Surviving Infidelity (Baltimore, MD: The John
Hopkins University Press, 2013), 69.
20
Lusterman, Infidelity: A Survival Guide, 18.
17
reduces stress and lowers blood pressures. For the couples who are not able to verbalize their
feelings very well, sex is a powerful way of communicating your feeling of love. And when
couples engage in sex that includes orgasm, orgasm raised the level of oxytocin (the bonding
hormone). This can increase the intensity of the bonding between you and your spouse.”
21
Dr. E. Mavis Hetherington is without doubt the world’s preeminent researcher on the
family process that surrounds divorce.
She
has distilled the wisdom growing out of her many
studies of the short-term and long-term impact of divorce on family members. John Kelly is a
writer in New York. Dr. Hetherington says, “All marriage has good and bad periods and all
marriages encounter stress, and have problems to solve. It is not a one-time event, such as an
affair, quarrel, job loss, episode of physical violence, television program that generally lead to
divorce. Even conflict within a marriage is not a good predictor of divorce. Divorce is based on
cumulative grievances. Men and women not only marry for different reasons but also give up on
a marriage for different reasons”
22
Barton Goldsmith, Ph.D. is a psychotherapist relationship expert. Goldsmith says,
“Couples who have truly intimate relationships cannot wait to share their days and dreams with
each other. They want to connect and not just in the bedroom. Couples who choose to engage in
intimate relationship and it is a choice, do so because they want to closeness on all levels.
Dedicating some time to going deeper and sharing all you needs, hopes and fears will lead you
21
Haltzman, The Secret of Surviving Infidelity, 271.
22
Mavis Hetherington E. and John Kelly, For Better, Divorce Reconsidered or For
Worse (New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 2002), 32.
18
to feeling that there is at least one person on this planet who cares and who totally gets you, now
that is intimacy.”
23
Goldsmith reminds, “The readers, that True Love is a combination of emotions and
actions, including talking tenderness, and trust. These behaviors are an ample replacement for the
heart-pounding, sexual excitement of being in love. Your drive changes from needing to be with
the other person to wanting to care for him or her, and you can still have a hot and heavy
romantic relationship in the process.
24
The Other Woman
Victora Zackhelm teaches creative writing in the UCLA writers program. With twenty
one insightful essays from some of the country’s most respected and award winning female
authors. This collection explores collection explores the highly personal, sometimes anguished,
sometimes hilarious, but always compelling experiences of women on both sides of these highly
charged and emotional situation.”
25
“She’s the harpy, the Jezebel, the Lorelei, and the bitch. She seduces husband, breaks up
our marriages, and occasionally manages to win over children. Who is this creature who arrives
like a wrecking ball to devastate lives and families? She is the other woman.”
26
“The other woman has the power to throw a wrench into the relationship and bring the
entire relationship to a complete halt. Binnie Kirchenbaum writes that in some marriages the
23
Barton Goldsmith PH.D., Emotional Fitness for Intimacy (Oakland, CA: New
Harbinger Publications, Inc., 2009), 14.
24
Ibid, 5.
25
Victoria Zackheim, The Other Woman (New York, NY: Warner Books, 2007), 5.
26
Ibid, 5.
19
wife was selected for childbearing and the mistress was chosen for her passion and intellectual
companionship. Who is this other woman? She is a sister, friends, doctor, grocery clerk,
neighbor, coworker, and in most situation she is just a woman.”
27
Terminal Marriage Shock
Joseph Warren Kniskern is an attorney with more than thirty –two years of experience
who has based his approach to legal issues solidly on Scriptures throughout his career. Joseph
Warren Kniskern gives practical advice on caring or children, managing financing, resolving
legal issues and coping with anger, depression and loneliness. Kniskern says, “Divorce is as
close as you can get to death without actually dying. Only those who have experienced it can
truly understand its dark power to test emotions and intellect to the ultimate degree. Saying that
divorce is an ugly nightmare is an understatement. It cuts into hearts and souls deeper than most
any tragedy imaginable. It shatters precious memories as it strips us of family, roles, and identity.
Its saps our strength and breaks down the core of our spirits until emotional numbness and fog
set in. It reduces one of the most intimately personal relationships we can ever share with another
human being to sharp shards of broken dreams.”
28
Realizing that marriage cannot be salvaged and that the death of the relationship is
imminent can hit you suddenly or settle in over time. But it almost comes first as a total shock, at
least to one of the spouses when the other says, it’s over. The pain anxiety bitterness and grief of
the divorce process, especially one that is unexpected can overwhelm us. It does not matter
whether the divorce is amicable and uncontested or hostile, or who filed the legal papers.
27
Victoria Zackheim, The Other Woman (New York, NY: Warner Books, 2007), 175
28
Joseph W. Kniskern, When The Vow Breaks, A Survival and Recovery Guide for
Christian Facing Divorce (Nashville, TN: B &H Publishing Group, 1993), 7.
20
Divorce is an immediate, radical and painful change in our lives, welcome or not, with highly
charged emotional consequences.”
29
29
Ibid, 8.
21
21
CHAPTER THREE:
COMMUNICATION STYLE
One of the keys to happy marriage is to get to know you partners’ communication styles.
This communication involves not only understanding what he or she says, but also what goes
unspoken. Couples have to learn how to communicate effectively. “Communicate does not have
to mean talk. When people believe that the only worthwhile communication is an exchange of
words, they miss an opportunity to appreciate all the other ways communication takes place.
Being open too many different ways of communication makes our world much richer.”
1
“Women will form collaboration and communicate in an effort to build bridges. Men do
not like to build social bridges; however, they will use communication as a tool to solve their
problems directly. But because of the blame, shame, and guilt overtones, a couple doesn’t hear
each other real concerns, and as a result they fail to communicate what the other really needs to
hear. While you may have missed the opportunities in your marriage to establish real
communication, there is value in understanding where that little misstep occurred that ultimately
pushed you over the cliff.”
2
Diana Mercer is a family law mediator in Los Angeles and the co-author of Your Divorce
Advisor. Katie Jane Wennechuk is a certified divorce mediator and chief communication offer
for peace Talk Mediation Service. Mercer and Wennechuk say, “Once a relationship has started
to turn, four attitudes present themselves as common preludes to divorce: criticism,
defensiveness, contempt, and stonewalling. Dr. John Gottman, a psychologist at the University
1
Haltzman, The Secret of Surviving Infidelity, 252.
2
Diana Mercer, JD and Katie Wennechuk, J. MA, Making Divorce Work (New York,
NY: The Penguin Group, 2000), 14.
22
of Washington and author of 10 lessons to transform your marriage, calls these attitudes the
“Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.” In the cases where working parents discuss and agree as to
how they will share the responsibility of raising their children, there were few recriminations and
strife. The key is communication.”
3
Three Conversations
Barton Goldsmith Ph.D. is a Psychotherapist, relation expert and author of Emotional
Fitness for Couples. Dr. Goldsmith says, “When the two of you are talking, there are three
distinct dialogues going on at the same time; the one you think you are having, the one your
partner think you are having, and the one that is really occurring. We do not correctly hear what
someone else is saying to us because we have our own listening filters that cause us to put our
own interpretation on what the other person is saying rather than hearing what they are actually
saying.”
4
“All these things combined can create the perfect conversational storm; a place where
nobody feels heard and both parties end up floundering in a sea of misunderstanding. If you’d
like to still waters and have calm communication, start by realizing that you may not be as clear
as your partner need you to be. Yes, I knew that he or she has equal responsibility here, but
someone has to get things started, so why not seize the opportunity and open up the topic.”
5
“Begin the process by telling your partner about an issue you would like to discuss,
letting him or her know that you want the conversation to strengthen the relationship. Then speak
your feeling, stopping garter each point so you can both really hear what was said. Then as your
partner repeats back his or her interpretation of your words, be sure to gently clarify any
3
Ibid, 17.
4
Goldsmith Barton Ph.D. The Good Divorce; (New York, NY St Martin Press, 2009)
5
Ibid, 13.
23
misunderstanding. This kind of open communication will make for smooth sailing in your
relationship.”
6
A Divorce that Works
Mercer and Wennechuks say, “That Christian can get divorced without ruining their life.
The divorce rate among first marriages is 67 percent. That is two out of three couples get
divorce. Rather than see it as something that will destroy your family, your divorce can be away
to redefine and rebuild marriage and rebuild your family and improve your quality of life.
Divorce is one solution to living in unhappy, unfulfilling marriage. People have started to figure
out that divorce does not have to be bitter, nasty and punitive.”
7
Poor Communication
Mercer and Wennechuk provided a list of question to ask your spouse to make sure you
are not communicating poorly. “Did you talk to your spouse? Did you listen to your spouse? Did
you share things that she needed to know to function well in your family? Did you remind your
spouse of important dates and help keep his or her life running smoothly? Have you ever not told
your spouse something important as a punishment or because you did not think you had to?”
8
Communication is the Key to Your Marriage
Dr. H. Norman Wright is one of America's best known Christian counselors, served on
the faculty of Talbot School of Theology at Biola University and is the former director of their
Graduate Department of Marriage, Family and Child Counseling. Dr. Wright is the author of
6
Goldsmith Barton Ph.D. The Good Divorce; (New York, NY St Martin Press, 2009)
33.
7
Mercer and Wennechuk, Making Divorce Work, 2-3.
8
Mercer and Wennechuk, Making Divorce Work, 24.
24
more than 65 books. Dr. Wright says, “Many couples today lack the kind of communication
skills that produce the understanding necessary for a marriage to go strong or even exist.
Understanding in a marriage in doesn’t mean that there are no differences. It does mean that you
and your mate are able to talk about the differences and come to an understanding.”
9
“The companionship and completeness that God intended for marriage grow out
communication as two people share each day and the meaning of their lives. As Dwight Small
says, the heart of marriage is its communication system. But no couple begins marriage with
highly developed communication. It is not something that bring unto marriage ready-made but
something to be continually cultivated through all of the experiences of their share life.
Satisfying companionship and a sense of completeness develop as husband and wife learns to
communicate with openness and understanding.”
10
Make it Safe to Communicate
“Strive to establish and maintain a permissive atmosphere in your home, in a permissive
atmosphere both marriage partners are free to share openly and honestly what they feel, think,
and believe. Each family member is allowed to speak the truth in love. The husband or the wife
does not consciously erect barriers to communication with his or her mate. They look at the
positive aspect of open communication.”
11
Listening the Forgotten Skill
9
Norman H. Wright Dr., Communication Key to Your Marriage (Ventura, CA: Regal
Books, 1974), 1.
10
Ibid, 8-9.
11
Ibid, 160-161.
25
Madelyn Burley-Allen is the founder and president of Dynamics of Human Behavior.
She has conducted over 2000 seminars on listening and management for organization around the
world. According to Burley-Allen, “Listening is a taking in information from speaker, other
people or ourselves, while remaining nonjudgmental and empathetic; acknowledging the talker
in a way that invites the communication to continue; and providing limited, but encouraging,
input to the talker response, carrying the person’s idea one step forward. This definition stresses
the listen’s responsibility in the communications process. Although listening is one of the most
demanding aspects of communication, it is also the most rewarding.”
12
“Effective listening involves not only turning in to others, but tuning in to ourselves.
Listening carefully to what we and how we say it can teach us an immense about ourselves.
Active listening alleviate a problem by giving the person a chance to talk it through while
experiencing emotional release and at the same time providing limited and empathetic input
that conveys to the talker your concern and non-judgmental attitude.”
13
Restored through Reconnecting
Dr. Larry Crabb is a well-known psychologist, conference and seminar speaker, Bible
teacher, popular author, and founder/director of New Way Ministries. In addition to various other
speaking and teaching opportunities, Dr. Crabb offers a weekend conference throughout the
country entitled Life on the Narrow Road and a week-long School of Spiritual Direction held in
Colorado Springs, CO.
12
Madelyn Burley-Allen, Listening: The Forgotten Skill (United States: John Wiley &
Sons, Inc., 1995), 3.
13
Ibid, 6.
26
Dr. Crabb offers, “The definition of connecting as something that occurs when the life of
Christ in one person is poured into another and awakens in the emptiest recess of the other
person’s soul the experience of life. If connecting is at the center of healing then disconnecting
must be at the core of what needs healing. The deepest urge in every human heart is to be in
relationship with someone who absolutely delights in us, someone with resources we lack who
has no greater joy than giving to us, someone who respects us enough to require us to use
everything we receive for the good of others, and because he has given it to us, knows we have
something to give. The longing to connect defines our dignity as human beings and our destiny
as image bearers.”
14
“The power to meaningfully change lives depends not on advice, though counsel and
rebuke play a part; not on insight, tough self-awareness that disrupts complacency and points
toward new understanding is important; but on connecting, on bringing two people into an
experience of shared life.
15
“Relationships heal when they reflect the energy of Christ, we can impact other by:
1. Letting people know we delight in them as Christ does;
2. Eagerly looking for the goodness in someone’s heart and identifying the
passion that are prompting loving, strong choices;
3. Exposing the darkness in someone’s heart, their sin, and pain, in order to
engage them more convincingly with the Savior’s kindness; it is the kindness
of God that leads to repentance.
14
Larry Dr. Crabb, Connecting, Healing for Ourselves and Our Relationships
(Nashville, TN: W Publishing Group, 1997), 44-45.
15
Ibid, 31.
27
These three ingredients of powerfully healing relationship are available to every Christian
but practiced so little. However, when they are practiced, even when only the first ingredient is
in place, enormous good can result.”
16
The “Secret” Hidden in Ephesians 5:33
Dr. Emerson Eggerichs has a M.A. in communications from Wheaton College, a Master’s
of Divinity from Dubuque Seminary and a Ph.D., in child and family ecology from Michigan
State University. Dr. Eggerichs says, “This passage of scriptures Ephesian 5:33 has been there
for some two thousand years for all of us to see. In Ephesian 5:33, Paul writes, “Each of you also
must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband.” (NIV) The Love
and respect Connection is the key to any problem in a marriage.”
17
The Love and Respect
Connection is clearly within scripture, but so is the constant threat that the connection can be
strain or even broken. And then came what I call the “Aha” moment: this thing trigger itself.
Without love, she reacts without respect, without respect, he reacts without love-Ad nauseam.
Thus was born the crazy Cycle!”
18
“If husbands and wives are to understand the Love and
Respect Connection, they must realize that they communicate in code, and the problem is, they
don’t know how to decipher the message they send to one another.”
19
Communication in marriage has been described, discussed, and dissected in hundred, if
not thousands, of books and articles. Why is communication between husband and wives such a
16
Larry Dr. Crabb, Connecting, Healing for Ourselves and Our Relationships
(Nashville, TN: W Publishing Group, 1997), 21.
17
Emerson Eggerichs Dr., Love & Respect (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2004),
14-15.
18
Ibid, 16.
19
Ibid, 25.
28
problem? It goes back to the fact that, we send each other message in “code,” based on gender,
even though we don’t intend to. What I say is not what you hear and what you think you heard is
not what I meant at all. She says, I have nothing to wear, she means she has nothing new. He
says, I have nothing to wear, he means he has nothing clean.”
20
Communicating & Connecting in Relationship
“The word communication derives from the root to communicate. It has two levels
sharing information and connecting with others. The body language of tone, expression, and
engagement come into play at both levels. For the spiritual-minded overtones of to communicate
suggest that people connect with nature and God as well. For all of us, communication at its best
can mean applying love and acceptance in how we listen, talk, and value each other.”
21
Two Levels of Communication
Dr. Jim Petersen has a Doctor of Ministry and Master of Divinity from San Francisco
Theological Seminary in San Anselmo, California and he is a License Professional Counselor. In
addition to communication work, he teaches courses and workshops in personal growth,
informal, peer counseling, problem solving, motivation and decision making, conflict resolution,
life-planning, couples counseling, biblical reflection and discovering meaning through assessing
life experiences.
Dr. Petersen says, “Level one communication gives and receives information and
discusses points of view. At this level when we as where the copy machine is, who decides on
the vacation schedules, or how much fifteen percent of the dinner bill comes to, all we care about
20
Emerson Eggerichs Dr., Love & Respect (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2004), 31.
21
James C. Peterson, D.Min, L.P.C, Why Don't We Listen Better? Communication &
Connecting in Relationships (Tigard, OR: Peterson Publication, 2007), 18.
29
is getting the facts. Level two communications goes deep than words. It moves us toward more
satisfying relationships. We develop trust, intimacy, and more personal caring. Strangers become
friends. It connects us at a level of feeling and spirit.”
22
“Good communication is just as
important in business, family, and social life, but being able to work together effectively is. It
helps keep friendship vital and even makes a difference in casual relationship where you merely
want ease. I have learned the value of communication balancing; listen a while, talk until the
other person stop hearing and listen until the person calms enough to hear again. Real listens get
us inside each other and there seems to be something in such human connection that touches and
changes us.”
23
22
James C. Peterson, D.Min, L.P.C, Why Don't We Listen Better? Communication &
Connecting in Relationships (Tigard, OR: Peterson Publication, 2007), 18.
23
Ibid, 4-5.
30
CHAPTER FOUR:
ABUSE (PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONALLY)
Emotional Abuse
Raoul Felder is a nationally renowned divorce attorney. He is the author of eight books,
including Bare-Knuckle Negotiation, and has appeared on television, radio, and in print as an
expert in Divorce litigation. Barbara Victor has authored five novels and eight works of
nonfiction, and a study of domestic violence which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1995.
Felder and Victor says, “Emotional abuse or repeated attacks on your spouse intelligence,
looks character, dreams, desires or sexual prowess destroys their self-esteem. If the relationship
becomes a constant barrage of insults where any one of the above traits or characteristics is
dissatisfied with partners enough to provoke vicious slurs, the marriage is irreparable without
help. Regardless of which transgression listed above occurs, with the exception of physical or
emotional abuse, communication is the key.”
1
“Women or men who are in abusive relationship might blame themselves for provoking
their partners or they accept the abuse rather than admit to it or react to it proactively out of
embarrassment or fear of reprisal. Drug or alcohol abuse is often a matter of one partner
enabling the other or joining in. This too might go on for years until one or the other is arrested
or admits to the addiction and goes into therapy, leaving the other with no partner in the game of
self-abuse.”
2
What is Abuse?
1
Raoul Felder and Victor Barbara, The Good Divorce (New York, NY: St Martin's
Press 2011, 27.
2
Ibid, 28.
31
Barber Roberts is a survivor of domestic abuse, and she explains the scriptural dilemmas
of an abuse victims. She carefully examines the scriptures and scholarly research to show how
the Bible set victims of abuse free from bondage and guilt. According to Barber Roberts, “The
term domestic abuse is referred to a pattern of behavior where one adult abuses another adult and
the two are or have been partnered intimately. An abuser abuses power in a relationship at the
expense of the victim. Both men and women can be victims and perpetrators of abuse. In most
people minds, the term violence signifies only physical violence, but the domestic abuse can
include emotional, social, financial and other types of mistreatment, and may not even involve
physical violence.”
3
“Emotional Abuse is the most frequent form of relationships. It permeates all other areas
of a relationship and it is the core of the other forms of abuse listed. It may involve put downs,
criticism, cursing, yelling, ridiculing, or humiliation. The abuser may undermine the victims’
sense of identity, opinion, feeling, privacy, preferred ward robe, hair do or special possession.”
4
“Lundy Bancroft a former Co-director of Emerge, the first U.S. Program for abusive
men, and a fifteen year veteran of work with abusive men, reminds readers that each year in this
country, two to four million women are assaulted by their partners and that at least one out of
three American women will be victim of violence by a husband or boyfriend at some point in her
life. His valuable resource covers early warning signs, ten abusive personality types, the abusive
3
Barbara Roberts, Not Under Bondage, Biblical Divorce for Abuse, Adultery &
Desertion (USA: Maschil Press, 2008), 18.
4
Ibid, 22-23.
32
mentality, problems with getting help from the legal system and the long, complex process of
change.”
5
“We believe there are basic that all relationship needs to have, indispensable elements as:
1. Love, affection, and kindness
2. Mutual respect
3. Freedom of both partners to express their true opinion and feelings
4. Safe, loving physical intimacy
5. Equality
6. Making each other a high priority (though not necessary the only priority)
7. Accepting responsibility for one’s own actions
8. Each partner caring about how his or her actions affect the other person.
6
“Every relationship is unique, but most healthy relationship follows a fairly typical
pattern composed of three stages. There are no hard and fast rules for when a couple enters these
stages or how long each stage lasts, but we can make some generalization for the purpose of
enabling you to determine where your relationship may be. The three stages of a healthy
relationship are the romantic stage, the conflict stage, the evaluating the commitment stage.”
7
Stages of Grief
“The best way to survive this crisis is to let go of the emotional attachments invested in the
relationship. If saving the marriage is beyond your ability, it is time to detach so you can get on
5
Lundy Bancroft and Jac Patrissi., Should I Stay or Should I Go? A Guide to Knowing
If Your Relationship Can and Should Be Saved (New York, NY: The Berkley Publishing Group,
2011), I.
6
Ibid, 2.
7
Ibid, 11-13.
33
with your life. This is done by going through a grieving process, similar to mourning death. How
do people grieve? Although each of reacts different, research has shown that certain stages are
common to us all. These stages are:
1. Denial- the psychological defense of not accepting the obvious by telling ourselves, “It
is not true. He did not really mean it. This is not happening to me. He will come back to our
marriage.”
2. Anger-directed at the source of our pain, often expressed in demanding, “How could
you do this to me after all I’ve done for you?”
3. Guilt-turning our anger inward and berating ourselves by thinking, “It’s my entire
fault-I wasn’t good enough to keep this from happening.”
4. Bargaining-believing the unrealistic beliefs that circumstances will change if we
change or by our making concessions such as saying, “If she come back, I’ll do whatever she
wants.”
5. Depression-experienced as we face the reality that matters are beyond our control,
acknowledging, “It’s really true, our marriage is over.”
6. Acceptance-recognizing the finality involved and the freedom to leave the past behind
for a new life.”
8
Using Coercion and Treats
“This category comes under emotional abuse, but because coercion and threats are
powerful in maintaining control of the relationships, these strategies need special consideration.
An abuse may threaten to hurt you, the children, pets our extended family or your property if you
do not do what he or she wants. Others tools used by some abusers are stand over tactics, using
personal size to intimidate, driving dangerously, making threats of suicide and displaying
weapon.”
9
8
Kniskern 1993, 24.
9
Roberts, Not Under Bondage, Biblical Divorce for Abuse, Adultery & Desertion, 40.
34
Social Abuse
“Social abuse is when a victim is isolated from friends and family. The abuser may limit
access to work, study or social activities. The perpetrator may makes demands on personal time
by constantly checking upon her whereabouts, or prescribing rigid time limits for out of
household tasks. The victim’s phone call may be taped or monitored and mail may be opened.”
10
Financial Abuse
“Some perpetrators determine how the family finances are spent or managed without
their spouses’ consent or awareness. They may put the household on a budget that is
inappropriately tight, given the amount of money that comes into the family. They may spend
more frivolously on themselves, or make financial commitments which impair the growth,
safety, security or goals of other members of the family.”
11
Financial abuse can destroy a
marriage relationship.
Sexual Abuse
“To ignore when a partner says “No”, to attempt to force a partner to do something that
they feel morally obliged to avoid, or uncomfortable doing is Sexual abuse. This includes cases
where the partner is too afraid to say no or unable to give consent. Some abusers expect sexual
willingness immediately after an incident of abuse or violence. Some men are addicted to
pornography and masturbation but, as a result of it, either deprive their wives of sex or want to
play out pornographic scenarios on their wife. Some women treat sex as bartering tool to get
their way in something else. “If you this, I will reward you tonight”. An abuser who reads the
Bible may insist that a wife is only allowed to refuse sex unless the husband and wife are both
10
Roberts, Not Under Bondage, Biblical Divorce for Abuse, Adultery & Desertion, 22.
11
Ibid, 21.
35
praying and fasting, He may claim that since Hebrew 13:5 say the marriage bed is undefiled, he
is entitled to demand anal intercourse or other debasing or unnatural practices.”
12
“The Bible teaches that sexual relationship between married couple should be one of
mutual giving; there should be reciprocal generosity, each partner rendering the affection due to
the other partner. There should also be reciprocal authority, each partner having authority over
their spouses body (1 Corinthians 7:3-5) balancing these principles, we see that it is up to each
partner to give pleasure, not to take it.”
13
“Disciplinary divorce occurs when a divorce is used as a disciplinary tool. This situation
arises when a spouse has willfully repudiated the marriage covenant by adultery, abandonment,
abuse or harmful neglect, but not has commenced the legal process of divorce. 1 Corinthians
7:15 covers all kinds of disciplinary divorce, adultery, desertion, abandonment, and constructive
desertion (abuse, harmful neglect) are all occasion for disciplinary divorce.”
14
Anger in Divorce
Steve Grissom is the president of the Church Initiative, Inc. After having experienced the
pain of divorce himself Steve founded the Church Initiative Inc., a ministry that develops and
procures video and work book based programs for churches to minister to people in other life
crisis such as divorce, grief and addiction. Kathy Leonard is the editorial director for the Church
Initiative, Inc. and Steve discovered that, “Divorce brings an abrupt end to things that you
thought were good, right, and secure in your life. Now you are not sure which parts of your
12
Roberts, Not Under Bondage, Biblical Divorce for Abuse, Adultery & Desertion, 22.
13
Ibid, 22-23.
14
Ibid, 23.
36
married life were real and which parts were only illusions. You are not wrong to feel anger;
justified anger can be a good and necessary respond.”
15
“Anger can root deeply, grow quickly and choke out your emotional health. Unless you
cut away at your anger and learn to express it in a healthy manner, it can cause great harm to you
and to other around you. You may feel guilty about the extreme thoughts your anger is leading
you to have. Be assured that these thoughts are normal for a person who is going through a
divorce.”
16
Dr. Les Carter says, “That having anger means standing up for your own worth, needs
and convictions. You don’t get angry when folks are kind, pleasant or understanding. Anger
shows up when someone has rejected you or is being uncooperative, or when a person is being
critical, harsh, or difficult to get along with. When anger appears on the scene, it arouses your
sense of self-preservation. By identifying the causes of your anger, you will be better prepared to
handle your anger when it arises. Anger can stems from several sources. One source is an
overdependence on other people.”
17
“By identifying the causes of your anger, you will be better prepared to handle your anger
when it arises. Anger can stem from several sources. One source is an overdependence on other
people. You were born dependent on others for many things including affirmation and love. You
do not need to depend on your former spouse for your emotional wellbeing. Depend on God. He
15
Grissom Steve and Leonard Kathy, Divorce Care, Hope, Help and Healing during
and after your Divorce (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2005), 54.
16
Ibid, 57.
17
Ibid, 59.
37
knows that you need love, affirmation, and a human touch. He will make sure that you get it and
that it comes from the right sources.”
18
“But now ye also put off all these; anger, wrath, malice,
blasphemy, filthy communication out of your mouth.
Lay not one to another, seeing that ye have
put off the old man with his deeds”. (Colossian 3:8-9) “And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God,
whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption.
Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and
clamor, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice:
And be ye kind one to another,
tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you.”
(Ephesian 4:30-32)
The Emotionally Destructive Relationship
Leslie Vernick is a licensed clinical social worker with a private counseling practice; she
completed postgraduate work in biblical counseling and cognitive therapy. Leslie Vernick writes,
“That a destructive relationship injuries more than our emotion. It attacks every part of our lives.
It destroys our very souls. Most people typically think of relationship that includes some kind of
physical, verbal, or sexual abuse.”
All abuse behavior, whether physical, sexual or emotional is
always destructive to the person hood of the victim and lethal to the relationship. A relationship
is damaged when it is weakened, fractured or killed through the attitudes and action of one or
both people in the relationship.”
19
“Healthy relationships are at the heart of the biblical message because God created us to
live connected to one another. Many people suffer in relationship where offensive words and
18
Grissom Steve and Leonard Kathy, Divorce Care, Hope, Help and Healing during
and after your Divorce (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2005), 65.
19
Leslie Vernick. The Emotionally Destructive Relationship, Seeing It, Stopping It,
Surviving It (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2007), 12.
38
threatening gestures are the weapon of choice, used to manipulate, control, punish, and wound
without leaving any physical evidence.”
20
“When someone deeply betrays us and will not take responsibility for the deception, the
relationship itself may be beyond repair, at least until the Lord shows this other person his own
sin. But you can learn from the situation and move ahead into new relationship with more
wisdom. Becoming more aware and alert can help you in future relationship so that you are not
caught by surprise.”
21
“Not every destructive relationship involves abuse, but any relationship that entails any
kind of abuse is always destructive. When diagnosing the problem of relationship abuse, there
are important distinction between relationship in which one person continually seeks power over
the other and uses abusive tactics whether physical, verbal sexual or economic to control and
intimidates mutually abusive behavior where both partners verbally or physically assault each
other out of anger and frustration, and one-time abusive incidents.”
22
“Fear of being physically, sexually or emotionally harmed squashes all healthy
communication. Power seeking abusers don’t love their victims in a godly way. The abusers
focus only on their feeling, their wants, their need and their preferences. When an abuser fails to
attain these goals, rage, often results. The best way to recognize unhealthy or destructive
20
Leslie Vernick. The Emotionally Destructive Relationship, Seeing It, Stopping It,
Surviving It (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2007), 13.
21
Ibid, 24.
22
Ibid, 28.
39
relationship is to compare and contrast them with the characteristics that describe healthy
relationship.”
23
Healthy adult relationship exists where both people in the relationship give and both
receive. If you are in a relationship that lacks mutual caring, safety, honesty, or respect and you
regularly feel anxiety, fear shame, anger or despair, then your emotions are warning you that you
are in a destructive relationship. Even if you sometime experience positive feeling toward this
person and are able to have good times together, chronic dread, fear, anger, or stress quench
whatever positive feeling you have. Emotions are contagious.”
24
The Emotionally Abused Woman
Beverly Engel is a nationally recognized psychotherapist and sex therapist with twenty
years experiences, as well as a bestselling author. She is the founder of the Center for Adults
Survivors of Sexual Abuse in Redondo Beach, California. Engel Beverly says, “While emotional
abuse is probably the most common type of abuse, until now it has received the least attention.
Many women who are being emotionally abused do not even realize what is happening to them.
Many suffer from the effects of emotional abuse-depression, lack of motivation, confusion,
difficulty concentrating or making decision, low self-esteem, feeling of failure, worthlessness,
and hopelessness, self-blame, and self-destructiveness but do not understand what is causing
these symptoms.”
25
23
Leslie Vernick. The Emotionally Destructive Relationship, Seeing It, Stopping It,
Surviving It (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2007), 36.
24
Ibid, 50.
25
Beverly Engel M.F.C.C, The Emotionally Abused Woman: Overcoming Destructive
Patterns and Reclaiming Yourself (New York: Fawcett Ballantine Books, 1990).
40
“Abuse is any behavior that is designed to control and subjugate another human being
through the use of fear, humiliation, and verbal or physical assaults. Emotional abuse is any kind
of abuse that is emotional rather physical in nature. It can include anything from verbal abuse
and constant criticism to more subtle tactics such as intimidation, manipulation and refusal to
ever be pleased.”
26
“Emotional abuse is like brainwashing in that it systematically wears away at victim’s
self -confidence, sense of self-worth, trust in her perceptions, and self-concept. Whether it is
done by constant berating and belittling, by intimidation, or under the guise of guidance or
teaching the results are similar. With emotional abuse, the insults, the insinuations, the criticism,
and the accusations slowly eat away the victim’s self-esteem until she is incapable of judging the
situation realistically. She has become so beaten down emotionally that she blames herself for
the abuse.”
27
“Emotionally-abuse victims become so convinced that are worthless that they believe no
one else could possibly want them. Therefore, they stay in abusive situation because they believe
they have nowhere else to go. It is uncommon for a woman to be emotionally abused by more
than one person. This is because the pattern of abuse often started when she was a child, so she
has grown up with low self-esteem and the expectation of being abused. As a result she
continually attracts abusive people into her life.”
28
26
Beverly Engel M.F.C.C, The Emotionally Abused Woman: Overcoming Destructive
Patterns and Reclaiming Yourself (New York: Fawcett Ballantine Books, 1990) 10.
27
Ibid, 10-11.
28
Ibid, 11.
41
“Often, an emotionally abused woman feels a responsibility to stay in an abusive
relationship because she feels a responsibility to her children. Even though her husband is
emotionally abusive to her, she may continue to endure the abuse out of fear of not being able to
provide for her children adequately on her own. She may rationalize this decision by convincing
herself that since her husband is not abusing her physically, is not unfaithful, and bring home his
check very payday, he is a good husband.”
29
Types of Emotionally Abused Women
“The Selfless” Woman is one with a very shaky sense of identity. Because her mother was
with too smothering and controlling and didn’t allow her to separate from her or because her
mother was rejecting and abandoning and didn’t provide adequate nurturing, the selfless woman
did not develop a strong identity and sense of self.
The “Pleaser” woman are always trying to keep everyone happy, there motto is “Peace at
any Price,” and the price they pay is often damage to their self-esteem. They want to keep
everything smooth and on an even keel, and they often sacrifice their own happiness in the
process.
The “Sinner” women always feels responsible, always believes that “It is my fault.” The
sinner woman also suffers from intense feeling of guilt and shame, which play an important role
in her motivation to please. Often this tendency to blame herself comes from her having been
severely criticized as a child. Constantly apologizing, she obsesses about “If only”-if only she
had done something differently, if only she has said the right thing.
The “Codependent” woman is one who has let another person’s behavior affect him or her,
and who is obsessed with controlling that person behavior. A codependent has pattern of getting
involved with people whom she tries to rescue or take care of and she lives her life for others.
She anticipates other people needs, and she then wonders why they don’t do the same for her.
The “Drama Junkie” Woman were usually raised in dysfunctional, highly chaotic homes
where there was alcohol or drug abuse, frequent fighting between the parents, physical abuse, or
other forms of frequent disruption or upset. Also sometime referred to as “adrenaline junkies,”
29
Beverly Engel M.F.C.C, The Emotionally Abused Woman: Overcoming Destructive
Patterns and Reclaiming Yourself (New York: Fawcett Ballantine Books, 1990) 11.
42
drama junkies have become accustomed to a tremendous amount of change, violence, and crisis
and emergency situations.
The “Victim or Martyr” woman, many women have what is frequently called a victim
mentality. Some believe that life is one bad a thing after another, and that there is nothing they
can do to control their lives in any way. Other needs continuing adversity in order to keep
proving their worth. A martyr is one who voluntarily scarifies her own health, happiness, or well-
being for others. The most common cause of a victim mentality is having had one who
voluntarily sacrifices her own health, happiness, or well-being for others.”
30
Taking Steps toward Recovery
Engel says, “Because of the undermining nature of emotional abuse, because it tear down
your self-esteem and causes you to doubt yourself and your perceptions, you will undoubtedly
continue to question whether or not you are actually being emotionally abused. It is important for
you to understand that an emotionally abuser will blame his victim for his abusiveness and will
always have an excuse for his behavior. If you are being emotionally abused by someone, or if
you recognized that you have established a pattern of consistently being mistreated and
disrespected by others, help is available. The steps to recovery are; 1. Recognize the roots of
your problems. 2. Decide whether you should leave your relationship. 3. Raise your self-esteem
so that you will not continue to allow others to abuse you. 4. Change you negative patterns and
break the cycle of abuse once and for all.”
31
Christian Woman Facing Abuse
Marie M. Fortune is an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ and the director
of the Center for Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence in Seattle. Marie M. Fortune
writes that “When a woman is battered by a member of her family, she will likely bring to that
30
Beverly Engel M.F.C.C, The Emotionally Abused Woman: Overcoming Destructive
Patterns and Reclaiming Yourself (New York: Fawcett Ballantine Books, 1990), 31-44.
31
Ibid, 29-30.
43
experience of violence in her background and values as a Christian woman. In addition, her
expense of violence in her family will be not only physical and emotional crisis but a spiritual
crisis.”
32
“The person who has hurt you, the person whose violence you fear is someone very close
to you. It is not a stranger walking down the street. It is a person you loved and shared your life
with. This makes the hurt much deeper. You are a Christian woman, a woman of faith who has
been abused by a member of your family. Your family may be traditional or nontraditional.
Whatever form your family takes, you face all the problem of dealing with the abuse and it
impact on you and your children. But you also face the possibility that your church does not
understand or want to know about your experience as a battered woman. You may feel abandon
by your church; you may feel abandoned by God.”
33
“Many women say that their husbands force them to have sex immediately following a
beating. Frequently the husband says that this is because they love their wives and want to make
up after a fight. In fact this focused sexual activity is just another kind of battering. Sexual
sharing between two people is one of God’s greatest gifts to us. It is this gift that is celebrated in
Scripture in the Song of Solomon. But what is necessary for sexual sharing to be a blessing
between two people is that both people be fully consenting and that it takes place in a context of
respect, choice and regard for each other’s well-being.”
34
32
Marie M. Fortune, Keeping the Faith, Guidance for Christian Women Facing Abuse
(New York, NY., 1987), XII.
33
Ibid, 5.
34
Ibid, 18.
44
“The suffering that you experience in being battered physically and psychologically is a
suffering that is put upon you against your will. It is involuntary suffering, you never choose it,
and it is the same kind of suffer in as discovering that one has cancer because of exposure to a
chemical dump or as the suffering of being injured by a drunk driver. There is another kind of
suffering. It is voluntary suffering. We freely submit to this kind of suffering in order to
accomplish a greater good. We still do not like the pain that is involved but we are willing to do
it because we believe in something greater. For example, we are willing to undergo the pain of
child birth in order to bring a child into the world.”
35
A 30 Year Abuser Speaks Out
“Abuse plagued Austin F. James over two-third of his life, but through great sorrow, the
ability came to him to transform himself from the ashes of defeat to a type of cleansing and
healing that not only renew the spirit, but all it to soar to new heights. In his ground breaking
book, he explains the root of emotional abuse and how he broke free from it.”
36
Austin James says, “It is important to note that I am not a doctor, psychologist, or
counselor, nor have I played one on television. I hold no degree in the science of the mind. I
simply have thirty-plus year degree in life as an abusive man. My experiences, I talk about; the
way I went about my recovery and what I learned are experiences alone and it may not align up
with conventional wisdom amongst professional-so be it.”
37
35
Marie M. Fortune, Keeping the Faith, Guidance for Christian Women Facing Abuse
(New York, NY., 1987), 19.
36
Austin F. James, Emotional Abuse, Silent killer of Marriage (Columbus, OH:
CreatesSpace.Com, 2013), 5.
37
Ibid, 5.
45
“Austin James emotional abuse consists of the following forms of emotional abuse
toward his wife Teri and the children.
1. Lying
2. Controlling conversions
3. Being judgmental, disrespectful, or rude
4. Making condescending and patronizing statements
5. Withholding affection
6. Ignoring promise made
7. Betraying her trust in him
8. Anger
By using anger all through our dating phase and our entire marriage, I normally ended up
the victor of arguments and got just about anything I wanted.”
38
“Teri and I went to five different professional marriage counselors during our twenty-four
years marriage and spent a ton of money. Teri always brought up anger as the underlying issue in
our relationship, yet not a single counselor mentioned abuse during any of our session. It is not
that the counselors were bad counselors; they were not trained in emotional abuse and did not
know to probe for the signs of abuse when the anger issue surfaced between us. Something as
complex as emotional abuse cannot be treated with both parties present in counselling at the
same time. You must have individual and independent counselling before you can hope to do
38
Austin F. James, Emotional Abuse, Silent killer of Marriage (Columbus, OH:
CreatesSpace.Com, 2013), 20-23.
46
counseling as a couple. Emotional abuse affects the couple but it is an individual disorder, not a
couple one.”
39
39
Ibid, 208.
47
47
CHAPTER FIVE:
ENRICHING YOUR SEX LIFE
Narcissistic Lover
Cynthia Zayn and Keven Dibble M.S. says, “Many victims of injurious and emotionally
abusive relationship were unwittingly victimized by women with Narcissistic personality
disorder, an often misunderstood psychiatric condition that is characterized by, among other
things, deceit, manipulation and complete and utter self-absorption.”
1
“According to recent
studies, the causes of Narcissistic Personality disorder (NPD) are not known. However, it is
believed to have it origins in the early childhood years and to have been influenced by parents,
peers and caregivers of those afflicted. During a particular stage of personality development,
with too much or not enough attention is given to a child who then learns to love himself or
depend only on himself as a means of self-preservation.”
2
“Psychologists believe that the narcissistic spends her life trying to re-live whatever went
wrong at a particular time in her personality development. She fined more and more people with
who to reenact her life and each time she truly believes this time she will get it right. So at the
onset of your relationship, she really did believe you were the perfect fit, the best relationship or
her ideal love. She believe those thing because she want to believe them, she needed to believe
them, because the Narcissistic feels unloved and insecure, she spend her life trying to find ideal
love. She believes in a perfect love that will end her search and stop her pain. She goes from
1
Cynthia Zayn and Kevin Dibble M.S, Narcissistic Lovers, How To Cope Recover
and Move On (Far Hill, NJ: New Horizon Press, 2007), x.
2
Ibid, 4.
48
relationship to relationship, sometimes without pause for recovery. This is baffling to those she
leaves behind, how can she just move along like that, especially after things seem so intense?
3
Zayn and Dibble also says, “Whether you feel anger, disgust, pity or sorrow for your
narcissist. Eventually you may wonder if there is hope for his or her recovery from NPD. Most
experts in the field of psychology agree that there’s no cure for NPD, only treatments for its
symptoms. So it is understandable that the Narcissistic sometime realizes that something is not
quite right with him or her, but the narcissistic never really accepts responsibility for any of it.
Instead the narcissistic rationalizes that the negative in his or her personality are actual okay and
that fate or his or her poor choices for partners are the problems.”
4
Enriching Your Sex Life
Dr. Gary Rosberg earned his Education degree from Drake University, and he has been a
marriage and family counselor for more than twenty-five years. Barbara Rosberg earned her
B.F.A., from Drake University and has authored Connecting with Your Wife and Co-author many
more book with Dr. Rosberg.
Dr. Gary and Barbra Rosberg says, “There are certainly some good books out there about
sexual technique, but I am little concerned that by focusing on technique and the physical aspects
of sex, they may miss out on the deeper, more fulfilling aspects of a great marriage relationship.
3
Cynthia Zayn and Kevin Dibble M.S, Narcissistic Lovers, How To Cope Recover
and Move On (Far Hill, NJ: New Horizon Press, 2007), 5.
4
Ibid, 189.
49
Marriage is so much more than sex, and sex is so much more than physical pleasure and
technique.”
5
First, “Sex has the potential to be the most profoundly satisfying and rich part of a
marriage. Sex the way God intended it to be expressed with the context of a loving, serving
relationship between a husband and wife is a mysterious and sacred act that knit a couple
together in ways that are beyond description. We have learned that intimacy was the number two
need expressed by both husbands and wives. However, we learned that men spell intimacy as in
sex and women spell intimacy as in talk.”
6
Second, “Most of us come to our marriage with unrealistic expectations about sex,
expectation built on media images of sculpted bodies and steamy seduction. We measure our
own experiences against what we see on our television and movie screens or what we read about
in books and we feel disappointed and may be even cheated.”
7
Third, “Our sexual lives can cause hurt because we too often see sexual pleasure as
something we get rather than something we give; we are more focused on our own needs than
our spouses. A great sex life leaves no room for selfishness.
8
Disappointment about Sex
“In many households, couples are confused and disillusioned about sex. Many books
discuss specific techniques or other options relating to what takes place during intercourse. We
5
Rosberg, Gary Dr. and Rosberg Barbara Dr., The 5 Sex Needs of Men & Women.
Discover the Secret to Great Sex in a Godly Marriage (Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House
Publishers, Inc., 2006), 4-5.
6
Ibid, 6-7.
7
Ibid, 6-7.
8
Ibid, 7.
50
define sexual needs as what goes on both inside and outside of the bedroom. What is or is not
going on outside the bedroom has a profound impact on what goes on inside the bedroom”
9
“Most of us live with a Golden-Rule mentally in our sex lives; if I treat my spouse the way I
want to be treated, then we’ll be happy and have a fulfilling sex life. Understanding your
spouse’s uniqueness and committing yourself to meeting those unique needs should be the goal
of a satisfying sexual relationship.”
10
“We can never experience truly satisfying and fulfilling sex apart from relationship.
Redefining sex means we face our selfishness head on. You may not be physically cheating
through adultery or pornography, but you may be cheating your marriage out of the God-
honoring, God-designed sex life that was meant for you and your spouse. We cheat when we
withhold affection, when we give too much of our time and energy to our kids or others beside
our spouses. We cheat when we connect emotionally with opposite sex friends or colleagues. We
cheat when we do not fully give ourselves sexually to our spouses. We cheat when we become
selfish with our sexuality, when sex or lack of sex becomes more about me, me, and me than we,
we, and we.”
11
What do Husbands and Wives Really Need?
“Good sex is other-centered; it allows you to focus solely on your spouse. God called you
into a mysterious and unique relationship-a relationship in which you complete each other, in
which two people become one through the physical and emotional intimacy of sex. True service
9
Rosberg, Gary Dr. and Rosberg Barbara Dr., The 5 Sex Needs of Men & Women.
Discover the Secret to Great Sex in a Godly Marriage (Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House
Publishers, Inc., 2006), 10.
10
Ibid, 13-14.
11
Ibid, 20-21.
51
means persistently watching for ways we can love, assist, support, praise, appreciate, protect, and
please our souses-then taking action, without expecting something in return.”
12
“God intentionally made males and females to be different from each other. Even though
we recognize the difference, many of us never take the time to study, appreciate, and pursue
those differences as being good and worthy. When we give our spouses what they need-not what
we think they want or need-then we fulfill God’s design for sexual intimacy. The top five sex
needs of men and women according to Dr. Gary & Barbara Rosberg.
Men’s Sex Need:
1. Mutual satisfaction- More than 67 percent of the men who responded to our survey
listed mutual satisfaction as their top sex need. They indicated that they believe a good sexual
relationship is one in which both husband and wife experience satisfaction during lovemaking.
Sexual satisfaction is more than simply a physical release for a man. The purpose of mutual
satisfying sex is not just orgasm but satisfaction through an emotional and spiritual connection.
A man feels like a man when he can please his wife.
2. Connection –Nothing makes me feel closer to their wives than being physically and
emotionally connected. Connecting inside the bed room is pretty clear cut, its sexual intercourse.
Sex build connection for a husband in the same way that talking and helping around the house
build connection for a wife. Like women, men desire to be understood, listened, to accepted,
cared for, encouraged and given attention. This kind of connection occurs when a wife seek to
learn what’s important to her husbands; work, sports, his view, his often guarded emotions,
When a wife connects to her husband in these ways, she show not only the value she places on
the relationship but also the value she sees in him. Satisfaction in your ex-wife life is directly
12
Ibid, 22-28.
52
related to the frequency with which you initiate connection and respond to your spouse’s attempt
to connect with you.
3. Responsiveness of wife-When a wife rejects her husband’s advances, he often
interprets her lack of sexual responses as “I don’t care about you” or “Your need are not
important.” Responsiveness is so important to husbands that nearly 63 percent of the men survey
ranked it as a top sexual need. When a wife turns down her husband sexual advances, he feels
emotionally rejected. When a wife responds to her husband sexual need, he feels loved. Sex is
man’s way of feeling close. One of the greatest threats to husband’s sense of worth is his
sexuality. Although a wife typically needs tenderness before sex, a husband often needs a sexual
release to experience tenderness.
What happens when a husband sex need are not met?
1. He may withdraw sexually and emotionally.
2. He may become angry and resentful.
3. He may become vulnerable to sexual temptation.
How to meet your husband’s sex needs.
1. Realized sex play a major role in helping men process life.
2. Say yes as often as possible.
3. If you must say no, don’t say it right away.
4. Help your spouse knowhow to please you.
5. Get over shyness.
6. Realize your husband emotions may not work like yours.
7. Take the 10 percent challenge.
8. Create a game plan.
4. Initiation- Men enjoys spontaneity that statement is so important for wives to
understand that it requires repeating; Men enjoy spontaneity. A husband needs his wife to initiate
so he knows he’s not the only one who cares about their sex life. When she initiates, he realizes
that she care about his needs, live him, and thinks about him. Her initiation allows him to take a
53
break from initiating, and the fear of lack of response, and enjoy a spontaneous sexual encounter.
Wife initiation relieves him of the pressure of starting the process of sexual intimacy. Fulfill your
husband‘s fantasy to be desired and pursued by you.
5. Affirmation- If a wife wants her husband to be all God created him to be, she need to
affirm him in every way possible. A wife is the one person who gets close enough to her husband
to build or destroy him. Here are some ideas in meeting your husband needs for affirmation.
Affirm him for who he is. Affirm him for being a good lover. Understand that for men, body
image does matter. Practice the golden rule.
Women’s Sex Need:
1. Affirmation- affirming you waif means building her self-esteem. It is giving her
genuine compliments, actively listening to what he says, giving her the opportunity to slow down
from her busy pace of life, saying complimentary thing about her in front of others people, and
encouraging her when she is discouraged. Affirmation is pointing out what she does right,
overlooking her failures and reminding her how much you appreciate what she does. Affirmation
is especially important during sex. Women need to hear how beautiful they’re and how much
they satisfy their husband.
2. Connection- The life long, permanent commitment embodies in marriage itself tends to
make sex Better. There is no better strategy for achieving great sex than binding oneself to an
equally committed mate. More than fifty percent of the women ranked connection as a top sex
need. One key to a wife’s sexual excitement, responsiveness, and ability to initiate sex is a strong
connection to her heart. These women feel that their sex lives are a satisfying when both
partners receive first an emotional and/or spiritual connection and then a physical connection.in
other word when a husband emotionally connects to his wife, he prepares her for sexual
54
intimacy. Through sex, men draw women into a physical relationship. Through connection
women draw men into an emotional relationship.
3. Nonsexual touch- No sexual touch, affection, is intimacy in and of itself. It’s not the
mean to and. In many situations it is the end. More than eighty percent of a women’s need for
meaningful touch is nonsexual. Most psychologists will tell you a vast majority of woman
appreciate and love a hug, a touch, a kiss, holding hands, any physical sign that they are special.
Nonsexual touch is loving affection.it may have the tone of sexual arousal around it, but the goal
of nonsexual touch is not intercourse. Foreplay touch on the other hand leads to sexual intimacy
for a couple. The problem is to a man touch is touch is torch. It all feels the same. But that is not
the case for his wife.
Affirmation, connection and nonsexual touches are important to women for the following
reason;
1. They help build trust.
2. They help her want to please her husband.
3. They rev a woman’s sexual motor.
4. They melt tension and stress for both spouses.
5. They lead to positive chemistry in your relationship.
6. They keep her physically and emotionally healthy.
When a wife’s sex needs are not met?
1. She may feel disappointed or she may feel rejected.
2. She may begin to doubt and mistrust.
3. She may see her husband as selfish.
4. She may become irritable and resentful.
5. She may pull away sexually.
6. She may pull away emotionally.
7. She may try to punish her husband.
8. She may look elsewhere to have her needs met.
How to meet you wife‘s sex Needs.
55
1. Be consistent.
2. Affirm her just because.
3. Make her feel beautiful.
4. Learns what’s in her mind.
5. Include her in your life.
6. Make eye contact.
7. Verbally affirm her during sex.
8. Stay close afterward.
9. Learn from her.
10. Identify her need and preferences for touch.
11. Ask her how you are doing.
12. If you are confused, clarify.
13. Schedule time for connection.
4. Spiritual intimacy- husbands often will do all he can to take care of his wife by
providing for her, but sometimes he doesn’t tend to her soul, her spirit, her innermost beliefs and
passion. When a husband takes the lead spiritually, by praying, reading his Bible, or going to
church, I am drawn to him on a deep level. It makes me feel so secure that I am eager to give
myself fully to him. Women want men who can connect to the deepest part of them the spiritual
part. You wife needs you to be her inner soul protector. You will experience deep spiritual
intimacy when you have a mutual, heartfelt desire to be close to God, when you seek God’s
direction for your marriage and your sex life. Spiritual intimacy means that in the midst of
conflict you honor and respect each other. You don’t put each other down in an attempt to win,
you think about how God would want you to act in the situation. You become united together
through prayer. You unite under biblical principle for you lives and marriage. You actively
invite God into every aspect of your marriage including sex.
5. Romance- Romance is the bridge between love and sex so when a wife’s need for
romance is not met, she struggle to move toward sex. She views her husband more as
preoccupied and distant than as her lover. Will she agree to have sex? Probably, but it is not as
exciting or enjoyable for her as it could be. A wife feels romanced when her husband does
56
anything that show he cares for her and thinks about her; special phone calls or notes, surprises,
something out of the ordinary on an ordinary day. She feels romanced when her husband talks
wither without distractions, when he holds her hand and kisses her every morning. Love is
feeling; romance is love inaction.”
13
Sexual Problems
Paul D. Meier and Frank B. Minirth are vice-president and president respectively of the
Minirth-Meier Psychiatric Clinic, Richardson, Texas. Donald E. Ratcliff is the assistant professor
of psychology and sociology at Toccoa Falls College. Minirth, Meier and Ratcliff say, “Most
sexually active people have occasional problem. Many newly married men have some
difficulties with premature ejaculation and the new wife may have problems achieving orgasm
immediately. Such problems usually disappear in with patience, sensitivity, and practice. There
may be occasional times when one spouse may have less sexual desire that the other, or no desire
at all. Even chronic sexual difficulties arise in most marriage; time and discussion of any
personal problems usually facilitate resumption of normal sexual activity.”
14
“The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (p.291) lists four stages that
comprise the sexual cycle. (1) Appetitive, increased sexual fantasies and desire for sexual
activity; (2) Excitement, a sense of sexual pleasure and physiological changes (the male develops
an erection; muscle tenses in the woman’s pelvis and the vagina secretes a lubricating fluid). (3)
Orgasm, a peaking of sexual pleasure with release of sexual tension and rhythmic contractions of
13
Rosberg, Gary Dr. and Rosberg Barbara Dr., The 5 Sex Needs of Men & Women.
Discover the Secret to Great Sex in a Godly Marriage (Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House
Publishers, Inc., 2006), 36-40.
14
Frank, Minirth B., M.D. Meier, Paul D., M.D., and Ratcliff, Donald E, Bruised &
Broken, Understand and Healing Psychological Problems (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book
House, 1992). 134
57
the muscles, the penis emitting semen, and (4) Resolution, general muscular relaxation; males
(but not females) resist further sexual activity during this stage.”
15
“Hypoactive sexual desire or inhibited desire involves the persistent, pervasive lack of
sexual interest. Among possible organic reasons, a number of medications lower sexual desire.
Among psychological causes, Depression individual often lack all sexual desire.”
16
“Sexual
aversion actively dislikes or is disgusted by sexual behavior. The person does not lack desire; he
or she is repulsed by and therefore avoids all things sexual. Inhibited sexual excitement seen in
lack of erection for the male or lack of lubrication and excitement for the male is sometimes
referred to as frigidity in women or impotence in men.”
17
Causes of Sexual Dysfunctions
“Some develop sexual dysfunction because of well-meaning parents who so strongly
teach their children not to engage in premarital sex that the child only learns that any sexual
relationship must be avoided. The parent should teach a healthy view of sexuality, that physical
relationships are good and desirable when reserved for marriage. Anxiety also may cause
problems. Fear related to difficulties of life or anxiety about sex itself disturbs the normal sexual
response cycle.”
18
“Sexual dysfunctions result from feeling of being rejected by the spouse or because one
or both sexual partners have extremely high standards for their performance. Sin, such as lust,
15
Frank, Minirth B., M.D. Meier, Paul D., M.D., and Ratcliff, Donald E, Bruised &
Broken, Understand and Healing Psychological Problems (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book
House, 1992), 134.
16
Ibid, 134.
17
Ibid, 1992, 135.
18
Ibid, 1992, 137.
58
adultery, or premarital sex may results in many sexual problems. Sin produces certain
psychological and physical consequences. Many of these dysfunctions may also be related to
unhealthy learning, at any point in one’s lifetime. Sexual desire may decease simply because of
an unresponsive spouse. Rape may create sexual aversion because sex is associated with pain
and trauma.”
19
Sexual Dysfunctions
1. “Hypoactive sexual desire-Consistent lack of desire for a sexual relationship and absence
of sexual fantasies.
2. Sexual aversion-Persistent avoidance and aversion to sex.
3. Female sexual arousal disorder/Male erection disorder-Regular lack of pleasure or
inability to become physically excited during sexual intercourse.
4. Inhibited female orgasm/inhibited male orgasm –Consistent delay or absence of orgasm
during sexual intercourse.
5. Premature ejaculation-the male penis ejaculates after minimal stimulation, allowing little
or no control over orgasm.
6. Dyspareunia-recurrent pain in the genitals related to sexual intercourse
7. Vaginismus-muscle spasms in the vagina during sexual intercourse that impede sexual
relations.”
20
The Consequences of Sexual Sin: David’s Story
19
Frank, Minirth B., M.D. Meier, Paul D., M.D., and Ratcliff, Donald E, Bruised &
Broken, Understand and Healing Psychological Problems (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book
House, 1992), 137.
20
Ibid, 133-134.
59
Dani Miser after graduating college spent several years a school teacher. In 2007, she
began working with CARES, an apartment-based ministry. With this platform, Dani Miser
partnered with churches to organize community outreach projects and initiated a bible study. She
has shared her story with hundreds of people. Therefore Single Women Seeks Perfect Man,
Facing the Consequences of Unhealthy Relationship came into being.
Dani Miser writes, “That David walked through many times of success and failures over
the course of his life, just like each one of us, at times he chose to trust God and follow His
leading. And when he did, he had great success, because the Lord was with him. But on other
occasion, David made the decision to step outside of God’s will. Perhaps the most devastating of
these choices led to the turning point of his life and his sin with Bathsheba.”
21
“One evening, David left his bedchamber and went up to the roof top of the place to
enjoy the cool evening of air. He glimpses a woman bathing. At that instant, David had a choice
to make. He could turn his eyes away and avoid temptation. Or he could give in to his fleshy
desires and keep watching. The physical battles he had avoided opened up a much more
dangerous spiritual battle. David sent Bathsheba and she came at once too slept with David
branding them both as adulterers. Bathsheba was the wife of Uriah the Hittite.”
22
“But imagine Bathsheba’s distress that she discovered that she was pregnant. Her
husband was away, so her sin was about to be broadcast to the world. A cover-up begin, David
sought to make the child legitimate by ordering Uriah to come back from the battlefield hoping
that he would sleep with Bathsheba and think that the child was his own. After Uriah came home
21
Dani Miser, Singles Woman Seeks Perfect Man, Facing the Consequences of
Unhealthy Relationship (Sisters, OR: Deep River Books, 2010), 33.
22
Ibid, 34.
60
and refuse to sleep with his wife, David had Uriah put into the hottest battle and Uriah was
killed.”
23
“David adultery and murder demanded justice, David fell into a deep depression after
Nathan’s pronouncement, fasting and praying for his child. But God judgment came to pass and
their child died. David expressed his grief and sorrow in Psalms 51. Sexual sin holds greater
physical and emotional consequences that any other sin.”
24
“Flee from sexual immorality. All
other sins a person commits are outside the body, but whoever sins sexually, sins against their
own body.”(1 Corinthians 6:18 Niv)
“The first step in the process of healing from sexual sin is simple, recognize it admit that
the relationship has moved beyond the boundaries that God has set for our protection. And
choose to step away from sin. The second step is come before the Lord and asked for his
forgiveness. He will give it freely when we ask with repentant hearts, then commit to change.
The third step, Live in freedom of forgiveness, being pure and clean is a gift that should be
appreciated for the miracle it is. But be on guard; do not miss God best for your life because of
the temptation of the flesh or the bondage of sin.”
25
23
Dani Miser, Singles Woman Seeks Perfect Man, Facing the Consequences of
Unhealthy Relationship (Sisters, OR: Deep River Books, 2010), 36.
24
Ibid, 37.
25
Ibid, 37.
61
61
CHAPTER SIX:
GUIDELINES TO HELP MARRIAGE SUCCEED
Learning What Makes Marriages Successful
Willard F. Harley is a nationally acclaimed clinical psychologist, a marriage counselor, and
the bestselling authors of numerous books, including Five Steps to Romantic Love, Love Busters
and His Needs, Her Need for Parents. Willard Harley offers practical solutions to almost any
marital problem.
Willard Harley says, “In my effort to become a marriage expert, though, I made crucial
discovery, I wasn’t the only one failing to help couples. Almost everyone else working with me
in the clinic was failing as well! My supervisor was failing; the Director of the clinic was failing
and so were the other marriage counselors who worked with me. And then I made the most
astonishing discovery of all, Most of the marital experts in America were also failing. It was very
difficult to find anyone willing to admit his or her failure, but when I had access to actual cases, I
couldn’t find any therapist who could prove that the counseling provided was any better than no
counseling at all. Many of these experts did not even know how to make their own marriage
work; many had been divorced themselves several times. Marital therapy had the lowest success
rate of any form of therapy at that time. What a challenge! Marriages were breaking up at an
unprecedented rate, and no one knew how to help. So I stopped looking for answers from books,
clinic, and experts and started looking for them from those who came to me for answers-couples
about to divorce. I listened to spouses explain to me why they were ready to throw in the towel. I
asked them, what do you think it would take for you to be happily married again? The answer
that came back to me was almost too simple to believe. Most couldn’t imagine that ever
happening. But when I persisted and couples were able to reflect on my question, the answer I
heard repeated over and over was, for us to be in love Again.”
1
His Needs are Not Hers Needs
When a husband and wife come to me for counsel, my first goal is to help them identity
their most important emotional needs-what each of them can do for each other to make them
happiest and most content. I have been able to classify most of their responses into ten emotional
needs-admiration, affection, conversation, domestic support, family commitment, financial
1
Harley Willard F. Jr, His Needs, Her Needs: Building an Affair-Proof Marriage
(Grand Rapids, MI: Revell, a Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2011), 11.
62
support, honesty and openness, physical attractiveness, recreational companionship and sexual
fulfillment. Husbands and wives have so much difficulty meeting each other’s needs. They are
willing to do for each other what they appreciate the most, but it turns that their efforts are
misdirected because what they appreciate most, their spouses appreciate least. ”
2
How to Express Heartfelt Commitment to Your Mate
Dr. Gary Chapman is the author of the best-selling Five Love Languages Series and the
Director of Marriage and Family life Consultants, Inc. Dr. Gary Chapman says, “We must be
willing to learn our spouse’s primary love language if we are to be effective communicators of
love. My conclusion after thirty years of marriage counseling is that there are basically five
emotional love languages, five ways that people speak and understand emotional love.
3
The Five Love Languages are:
“1) Word of affirmation: You feel extremely loved when your partner compliments you on
the way you look or on the things you have done. You love their encouragement and verbal
support and save their cards and love notes as some of your most precious items. You are always
filled with such love when you receive a card they've written that expresses their heartfelt love
for you in their own little way, little poems they might write, or if they ring you spontaneously
during the day to say they love you.
2) Quality time: There's nothing that makes your feel more loved than spending quality one-
on-one time with the person you love with great conversation and eye contact, flowing
conversation, laughter and just being together. While fancy gifts and kindly spoken words are
nice, you'd trade them any day for uninterrupted "together" time. You love it when your partner's
mobile phone is turned off or they sacrifice other important activities to spend time with you.
Whether it's fancy restaurant or just cuddling up on the couch to watch a movie and laugh about
it together, you're happiest when you can share experiences together.
3) Receiving gifts: There's nothing better than receiving a thoughtful gift to make you feel
loved in a relationship. Whether it's a single flower or something much more expensive, you love
2
Harley Willard F. Jr, His Needs, Her Needs: Building an Affair-Proof Marriage
(Grand Rapids, MI: Revell, a Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2011), 16.
3
Gary Chapman Dr., The Five Love Languages: How to Express Heartfelt
Commitment to Your Mate (Chicago: Northfield Publishing, 2004), 15.
63
being fussed over, spoilt and thought of. The fact that your partner thought to give you
something then organized it is very meaningful to you.
4) Acts of service: You feel so loved when your partner does little things to help you. You
always notice when they are thoughtful and put themselves out to assist you, even if you could
do those things yourself. There is such a sense of love and thankfulness you feel when they do
this.
5) Physical touch. You feel especially loved when your partner touches you in loving
ways. Whether it's a spontaneous kiss, playful cuddle, or gentle, loving touch on the arm, you
feel that touch convey the love your partner feels. You don't understand why people would prefer
to sit far apart on different chairs or couches, when they could be touching or in each other's
arms. When walking together, you really enjoy your partner reaching out to hold your hand, and
you'd never say no to them giving you a massage.”
4
Creating Extraordinary Relationship through Intimacy
“Intimacy is sometime translated as “into me you see” or occasion as “into me I see.”
Because of our relationship with others are really extension of our relationship with ourselves,
“into me I see” is essential for “into me you see” to be possible. People who are willing to
genuinely see themselves and unconditionally accept what they see are capable of a higher level
of relationship. The more we know and accept ourselves from our fears and insecurities to our
motivation and talents the more open, honest and receptive we will be with other”
5
“Self-intimacy is liberating .as we really come to know who we are, we become
empowered, and we feel more comfortable, confident, and effective in the world. Opportunities
open up for us, opportunities that become apparent when we are no longer distracted by the
things we have been covering up or avoiding looking at. Despite all we have gain from increased
self-intimacy; many of us-motivated by fears of rejection, embarrassment, or criticism often
4
Ibid, 115.
5
Apple, Malie and Dunn, Joe, The Soul Mate Experience; A Practical Guide to
Creating Extraordinary Relationships (San Rafael, CA: Higher Possibility, 2011), 48-49.
64
devised endless ways to keep from seeing ourselves clearly. However, when you are comfortable
with yourself, you are likely to be comfortable sharing yourself. ”
6
Dating
Ronn Elmore, Dr., is a bestselling author and creator of Drronn.com, the popular
relationship advice website. A national speaker, he has frequently appeared on television, radio
and in the print of Essence, Gospel today. Dr. Ronn Elmore says, “One of the chief complaints, I
hear from married couples is that she let herself go or he sat in the recliner watched television
and grew a beer gut. Don’t be one of those people who keep it all together until you get your
spouse and then stop trying to look good. Saying I do means I’ll keep doing it.”
7
“Basically, the premise is that men and women have two different set of need. Both needs
are met only when a woman give her man the kind of loves he requires, and likewise, as he is
fulfilled, he give his woman the kind of love she requires, sometimes even unconsciously. The
wonderful part is that it is doesn’t matter who starts this process, but when it happen, inevitable
both partners get the kind of love that speaks directly to them. For men, the respect issue is very
simple. Yet for a lot of women, it may be difficult to grasp.”
8
In the Amplified Bible Ephesians
5:33 says, “However, let each man of you without exception love his wife as being in a sense
his very own self; and let the wife see that she respects and reverences her husband, that she
notices him, regards him, honors him, prefers him, venerates, and esteems him; and that she
defers to him, praises him, and loves and admires him exceedingly.” “The flip side of the
Apple, Malie and Dunn, Joe, The Soul Mate Experience; A Practical Guide to
Creating Extraordinary Relationships (San Rafael, CA: Higher Possibility, 2011), 48-49.
7
Elmore, Ronn Psy.D., No-Nonsense Dating; Maximize Your Confidence and
Recognize Your God-Given Soul Mate (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2008), 76.
8
Ibid, 54.
65
Ephesians command is that men are mandated to love their wives. Every woman wants a man
who truly loves woman. Woman wants man who is attentive to his mother needs, feeling and
wishes; a man who cherishes his mother and who is protective and loving with his sisters. A
man who respects his female business associates. Most of all, she wants a man who will always
be loyal and speak of her with respect, no matter where he is or whom he is with. A man like
this is a prized among women because they know he will be a good partners, and excellent
husband and a loving dad.”
9
“Giving mixed signals about what you want and expect will get you a mixed response.
The cycle of miscommunication will grow and mutate until neither of you understands what the
other is saying or meaning.”
10
Dave Meurer says, “A great marriage is not when the perfect
couple comes together. It is when an imperfect couple learns to enjoy their differences.”
11
Stephen W. Simpson Ph.D. says, “The discussions on dating in Christian circles tend to focus on
mate selection, sexual purity and maintaining a healthy relationship. A man approaches dating
differently. He has confidence and passion. He is a risk taker but not a foolish, reckless boy. He
doesn’t play games and he doesn’t hide his agenda. In addition, though he respects women
immensely, he doesn’t worship or fear them. The Woman is the one who makes the final
decision to honor you with the opportunity of getting to know her better.
12
9
Elmore, Ronn Psy.D., No-Nonsense Dating; Maximize Your Confidence and
Recognize Your God-Given Soul Mate (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2008), 57-58.
10
Ibid, 70.
11
Ibid, 208.
12
Simpson, Stephen W. PhD, What Women Wish You Knew About Dating: A Single
Guy's Guide to Romantic Relationships (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2008), 13.
66
“Second, I realize that are those who advocate not dating in favor of friendship until a
couple is engaged. I’m not in that camp. I agree with Henry Cloud and John Townsend, authors
of Boundaries in Dating, that dating gives people a place to grow and learn in the safety of
people who can help them develop. Dating improves your chances of finding the right person
and having a healthy relationship. It can be healthy path of self-understanding and relationship
growth, but whether we call it dating or friendship that leads to marriage. A lot of men feel
frustrated either way. Friendship is an indispensable part of dating, but the stakes aren’t as high
when a man and woman are just friends.
13
“If your best friend is male, he probably wants more than friendship. There are
exceptions to this, but not many. If you are spending most of your time with a guy, it is important
to have an open discussion about his intentions and yours. Otherwise, things might get a little
psycho when you start dating someone else.”
14
“Men are attracted to women who are not
looking for a man. They can smell desperation a mile away, and it is sure to make them run in
the other direction.”
15
“The relationship a man has with his mother and sister is the same type of
relationship he will have with you. A man knows he is supposed to do the pursuing. When that
process is thwarted by a woman’s aggressiveness, he will become passive, leaving her to carry
the relationship if it gets that far.”
16
“A man will step up the plate when he is ready to claim you,
13
Simpson, Stephen W. PhD, What Women Wish You Knew About Dating: A Single
Guy's Guide to Romantic Relationships (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2008), 14.
14
Ibid, 20.
15
Michelle M. Hammond, How to Be Found by the Man You’ve been Looking For
(Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2005), 61.
16
Ibid, 73-74
67
he will be intentional in the steps he takes to secure your hand in marriage.”
17
“We men want
and need to hear, I respect you. Submission has to do with function, not being. It does not signify
that a wife is inferior to her husband in terms of her worth before God. There are too many
women, even in the family of God, who are prisoners of their own rebellion and stubbornness
because they refuse to recognize or yield to the divine order of marriage.”
18
“Competency-based counseling is a brief interactional approach to human dilemmas that
focuses on people’s resourcefulness rather to human dilemmas that focuses on people
resourcefulness rather than their deficits. People have a wealth of resources that they bring to any
situation, most of which are neglected or forgotten when problem develop.”
19
Frank and Cockburn say, “Insight-oriented models have long been the stock in trade or
pastoral counseling. To us, insight-oriented approaches in counseling are often characterized by
belief in the following: 1. People have fixed psychological/emotional traits and disorders; 2.
Catharsis, or release of pent up emotions, is the healing even in psychotherapy; 3. There are
underlying psychological causes for symptoms and amelioration of these symptoms or
complaints without resolving these causes will lead to further symptoms and pathology; and 4.
Insight that is conscious awareness and understanding is necessary for lasting change.”
20
BIBLICAL COUNSELING
17
Michelle M. Hammond, How to Be Found by the Man You’ve been Looking For
(Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2005), 134.
18
Tony Evans Dr., For Married Women Only (Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 1995),
9-45.
19
Thomas Frank and Cockburn Jack, Competency-Based Counseling; Building on
Clients Strength (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1998), 4.
20
Ibid, 3.
68
Dr. Tim Clinton and Dr. Ron Hawkins say, “Divorce is a death in every sense of the word
the death of a marriage, a family and a dream. No one especially a Christian enters marriage
expecting the marriage to end in a divorce.”
21
Dr. Clinton and Dr. Hawkins give biblical
exception for divorce. “1). Sexual activity outside the marital covenant breaks the marriage vow,
in Matthew 19:9. Jesus said that if a souse has committed this type of sin, the other spouse is
free to divorce and remarry. This does not mean divorce is required in instances where sexual
sin has been committed but is permitted. 2). Some maintain that the abandonment of a believers
by a non-believing spouse leaves the believing spouse free to divorce the deserter (1 Corinthians
7:15).”
22
“Physical abuse is not addressed in the Bible as a reason for divorce, but nowhere does
Scripture command a woman to stay in a home where she or her children are being physically
abused. Separation (not divorce is necessary for physicals safety. Restoration should be
predicated on true repentance and by a significant change in the abusers behavior that last for an
extended period of time. The church can serve as a protector of the abused by providing them
with safe place to stay, counselling, economic assistance, and church discipline to hold the
abusive souse accountable.”
23
“For couples contemplating divorce, they should delay the divorce settlement and attend
marriage counseling if they have not done so. They should also begin to meet with a trained
marriage mentoring couple who can encourage and instruct them. Have on file the names of
21
Tim Clinton Dr. and Ron Hawkins Dr., Biblical Counseling Quick Reference Guide,
Personal and Emotional Issues Ron (United States: AACC Press, 2007), 76.
22
Ibid, 77.
23
Ibid, 78.
69
several good Christian marriage mentors and counselors. They can read book on Marriage and
Divorce.”
24
“For divorce couples give them counsel to attend a divorce recovery group. Start
individual counseling on a weekly basis. The person needs someone to whom he can be
accountable for taking steps toward healing. The couple should not make any major life decision
for at least a year without consulting his counselor or pastor. This caution guards against making
poor decisions while he is still emotionally vulnerable. The person should not rush into any new
dating relationships. The person should focus on letting God fill the emptiness inside him, the
person need to heal before entering another relationship. Encourage the person to get involved
in church and join a Sunday school class or bible study.”
25
Strategic Pastoral Counseling: A Short-Term Structure Model
According to David G. Beener Ph.D., “Pastoral and counseling are legitimate parts of
Christian ministry because they provide a unique opportunity for God’s Word to be spoken to
the specific life experience of the person seeking pastoral help. Pastoral counseling should never
be a matter of simply preaching to someone after hearing his or her story. Rather it involves
relating the Word to specific needs and life experiences and embodying it in what Aden has
called a living relationship of loving service.”
26
“Christian Soul Care has had varied expression but as always been a central part of the life
and mission of the church. Reviewing the history, Clebsch and Jackle 1964, not that such care
24
Tim Clinton Dr. and Ron Hawkins Dr., Biblical Counseling Quick Reference Guide,
Personal and Emotional Issues Ron (United States: AACC Press, 2007), 82.
25
Ibid, 82.
26
Benner, David G. Ph.D., Strategic Pastoral Counseling: A Short Term Structured
Model (Grand Rapid, MI: Baker Academic, 2003), 10.
70
has involved four primary elements; healing, sustaining, reconciling and guiding. Healing
involves efforts to help someone overcome impairment and move toward wholeness. These
curative efforts can involve physical healing as well as spiritual healing but the focus is always
the total person, whole and holy. Sustaining refers to acts of caring designed to help a hurting
person endure and transcend a circumstance in which in which restoration or recuperation is
either impossible or improbable. Reconciling refers to efforts to reestablish broken relationship.
The presence of this component of care demonstrates the communal, not simply individual,
nature of Christian soul care. Guiding refers to helping a person make wide choices and thereby
grow in spiritual maturity.”
27
“The Strategic Pastoral Counseling Model is a brief structured counseling approach
that is explicitly Christian and that appropriates the insights of contemporary counseling theory
without sacrificing the resources of Pastoral ministry. The term strategic emphasizes the fact that
this approach to counseling is highly focused and time limited. The term pastoral points to the
fact that it offered by a representative of the Christian church that is accountable to the church.
The term counseling means that the help offered is organized around the problems experienced
by those seeking pastoral assistance. Seven characteristic of this model are particularly
important. Strategic pastoral counseling is brief and time limited, holist, structured, involved
assigned work between sessions, and is church based, spiritually focused, and explicitly
Christian.”
28
27
Benner, David G. Ph.D., Strategic Pastoral Counseling: A Short Term Structured
Model (Grand Rapid, MI: Baker Academic, 2003), 15.
28
Ibid, 47.
71
Effective Biblical Counseling: A Model for Helping Caring Christian Become Capable
Counselors
Dr. Larry Crabb says, “His purpose for writing this volume is to think through a model
of counseling which can be gracefully integrated into the functioning of the local church. In my
view, any approach to counseling which is truly biblical will work most effectively when carried
out in the context of a local body of believers. We hear much these days about such concepts as
body life, Koinonia fellowship and agape love. The emphasis is not only biblical but also timely
for a Christian church which has become largely impersonal and superficial in its practices of
community.”
29
Dr. Crabb lists the stages of counseling for Effective Biblical Counseling: “Stage1.
Identify problem feelings, Stage 2. Identify problem behavior, Stage 3. Identify problem
thinking, Stage 4: Clarify biblical thinking, Stage 5: Secure commitment, Stage 6: Planed carry
out biblical behavior. Stage 7: Identify spirit-controlled feeling. Dr. Crabb also lists the Level of
Counseling: Level 1 Problem feeling-Encouragement –Biblical feeling, Level II Problem
Behaviors-Exhortation-Biblical Behavior, Level III Problem Thinking-Enlightenment-Biblical-
Thinking.”
30
Solution-Focused Pastoral Counseling: An Effective Short-Term Approach for Getting
People Back on Track
Charles Allen Kollar says, “This book is written for pastors and other Christian leaders
who counsel, or wish to counsel, with the local church. Many have expressed a desire to offer
29
Larry Crab Dr., Effective Biblical Counseling, A Model for Helping Caring
Christian Become Capable Counselors (Grand Rapid, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1977),
14.
30
Ibid, 160-165.
72
counseling that is effective and short-term. They are seeking an affirming and positive way to
help there congregation .Solution-Focused counseling (SFPC) offers an alternate to all problem-
focused counseling models. Its intention is to provide counselors with the how-to for staying on
track during the counseling interview-as well as helping individuals, couples, or families get
unstuck and back on track.”
31
“Solution-Focused Pastoral Counseling is about Imagineering with those who came to us
for counseling. It is about clear procedures for getting them unstuck and back on track in their
lives, marriages, and families. It is about busting paradigms regarding how counseling is done,
both in the mind of the counselor and of the counselee. Counseling should be fun and
spontaneous. The traditional paradigm that counseling must primary focus on the problem is an
unhelpful idea that has hindered counselors for years.”
32
“Solution-focused Pastoral Counseling shifts the emphasis from the problem to the
strengths, vision, and practical solutions. That lies with the individual. Stressing the God is
already active in the counselee. Dr. Kollar first laid the theological and theoretical groundwork
for short term counseling. Then he shows how to apply theory to practical, short term sessions
that help people get back on track in their marriage, family living, and other aspects of life.”
33
Guidelines to Rekindle and Strengthen the Marriage Bond
31
Kollar Charles Allen Dr., Solution-Focused Pastoral Counseling: An Effective
Short-Term Approach for Getting People Back on Track (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1997),
9.
32
Ibid, 17.
33
Ibid, 62.
73
Bancroft and Patrissi says, “Here are a few example of commonly accepted wisdom,
treated as virtual fact in the talk show world, which will actually feed an unhealthy future for the
kinds of relationship we are writing about:
1. Both partners have equal responsibility for making the relationship work.
2. Each relationship partners has to focus on evaluating his or her own faults,
and stay out judging the other person’s.
3. Issues from the past need to be left in the past.
4. Don’t shame your partners about what he or she has done; you will just make
him or her feel bad about themselves.”
34
The Proven 7-Step Program for Saving Your Marriage
Michele Weiner Davis provides a road map for finding your way back to a loving
marriage. Step Number 1: Start With a Beginner’s Mind
Michelle Davis writes “That Buddhist believes that people should endeavor to approach
their lives with a beginner’s mind there are many possibilities. While in an experts mind, there
are but a few. Although age and experience can bring wisdom in some area of our lives, it can
also bring narrow-mindedness and short sightedness. We get set in our ways and our creative
juices stop flowing.”
35
“Since many of the concepts, strategies and techniques upon which this seven step
program are base challenge mainstream thinking, it is essential that before you do anything else,
you empty out your expert mind. There are two primary areas in which people expertise clouds
34
Bancroft and Patrissi, 2011, 310-311.
35
Michele Weiner Davis, The Divorce Remedy: The Proven 7-Steps Program For
Saving Your Marriage (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2001), 49.
74
their thinking when they are having relationship problems. The first involves dearly held
fallacies about love and marriage. The second has more to do with faulty misconception about
how to bring about change in their relationship.”
36
Step Number 2: Know What You Want:
“Despite all of our reservation and doubts about our viability of relationship goal setting,
we spend much of our lives trying to get through tour partners, to get them to be more
understanding, compassionate, and loving. In other words we try to influence our mates without
the benefits of a compass to help us know when we are on track. Take times and write out your
relationship goals. Specific goals contain with them seeds for solutions. By writing things down,
you are taking an action. When you see your thoughts in black and white, it makes them more
real. Writing your goals down will offer you a baseline to which you can refer in days to come.
You will be able to chart your progress and identify areas needing more of your attention.”
37
Step Number 3: Ask For What You Want
“You may be pleasantly surprised to find that setting solution-oriented goals and then
asking for what you want in a more constructive ways are extremely productive. But even though
you’ve moved in a positive direction, you are only beginning to scratch the surface when it
comes to keeping your marriage on tract.”
38
Step Number 4: Going Down Cheeseless Tunnels
36
Michele Weiner Davis, The Divorce Remedy: The Proven 7-Steps Program For
Saving Your Marriage (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2001), 50.
37
Ibid, 80-81
38
Ibid, 92.
75
“People will go down cheese less tunnels forever because they are more intent on proving
to themselves that they are right than they are in finding and eating the cheese. When it comes to
pursing the cheese less tunnels in our lives, it isn’t very funny at all. It makes our lives miserable
and weakens our marriages. Why because when you do more of what has not been working, you
not only fail to eliminate the problems in your life, you actually make thing worse.”
39
Step Number 5: Experiment and Monitor Result
“The bottom line is that you need to become more systematic; better at noticing how you
approach to things creates subtle changes, both positive and negative, in your partner’s responses
and reaction. And this is considerably easier to do if you have a plan in hand and a concrete
method for evaluating how it’s working.”
40
Step Number 6: Take Stock
“Step number 6, is where you will sit down and really examine the progress you’ve made
since you’ve started this program. I know you‘ve had your good days and your bad days, and
that it’s hard to appreciate how far you’ve come because you have been so acutely aware of day
to day fluctuations. But it is important to see the bigger picture. The following questions will
help you clarify where you are: On a one-to- ten scales, with one being the pits and ten being
great. Where on the scale would you say your marriage was prior to starting the program? Where
on the scale would you say you are right now? Are you satisfied?”
41
Step Number 7: Keeping the Positive Changes Going
39
Michele Weiner Davis, The Divorce Remedy: The Proven 7-Steps Program For
Saving Your Marriage (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2001), 94-95.
40
Ibid, 100.
41
Ibid, 141-142.
76
“The bottom line is that you can’t sit back and take your changes for granted, if you want
to stay in love with your spouse, you have to continue to do loving things every day. You never
get to the point where you can stop being careful or thoughtful about how you treat your spouse
.every day is another opportunity to be solution-oriented and to keep your marriage on track.
42
How to Heal from Emotional Abuse, Deceit, Infidelity and Chronic Resentment
Steven Stosny, Ph.D. say, “The destructive force and lasting effects of intimate betrayal
come from its violation of the implicit promise that gives us the courage to love in the first place:
The promise that no matter what happens, the person you love and trust care about your well-
being and never intentionally hurt you. These two key elements classify the types of intimate
betrayal. Behaviors that intentionally hurt include mot emotional abuse, verbal aggression, and
domestic violence. Failure to care about your well-being; most deceit, infidelity, covert misuse of
communal resources, continual resentment, anger, criticism, stonewalling, and other isolating or
hurtful behaviors.”
43
“Determined focus on healing, growing, and creating a life that you deeply value is the
only reliable way to heal from the past and prevent betrayal in the future. Love relationships are
held together by deep emotional bonds that were crucial to the very survival of our species.”
44
“Two points about healing have become clear to me after thousands of hours of work
with people who have suffered both common and unimaginable emotional pain. The first is the
42
Michele Weiner Davis, The Divorce Remedy: The Proven 7-Steps Program For
Saving Your Marriage (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2001), 155.
43
Steven Stosny, Ph.D., Living & Loving after Betrayal; How to Heal from Emotional
Abuse, Deceit, Infidelity, and Chronic Resentment (Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publication,
Inc., 2013), 1-2.
44
Ibid, 8.
77
human beings have an extraordinary capacity for healing emotional wounds. The second truth is
this: the most important element in overcoming emotional pain is developing a healing identity.
With a healing identity you will identify with your strengths, resilience, and desire to improve
your life. Your decision to develop a healing identity will free you form debilitating thoughts of
damage, unfairness, and blame that inevitable occur after inmate betrayal.”
45
“Emotional healing is more complicated and less mechanistic, but otherwise follows a
similar path to restoration. It can be accomplished with as much efficiency and effectiveness as
the wondrous healing of our bodies. Emotional healing happens when the brain replaces painful
memories images of injury or damage with restorative images, which motivate behavior that
promotes safety, growth, and well-being, thereby restoring the normal function of the mind. This
process occurs naturally for most people, although it takes a long while.”
46
“You can forgive someone who has betrayed you without resuming a
relationship. Forgiveness does not mean condoning or excusing bad behavior. It does not relieve
the offender of responsibility or accountability for the offense. If you want to repair the
relationship, forgiveness does not relieve your partner if having to earn back your trust through
consistent reparative and trustworthy behavior. Forgiveness requires regulating the impulse to
punish, resent, or carry a grudge. Your decision to forgive should be base in the Word of
God.”
47
45
Steven Stosny, Ph.D., Living & Loving after Betrayal; How to Heal from Emotional
Abuse, Deceit, Infidelity, and Chronic Resentment (Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publication,
Inc., 2013), 30.
46
Ibid, 45-46.
47
Ibid, 238.
78
“The other primary function of forgiveness is relationship detachment. In the
psychological sense most relevant to intimate relationship, detachment for man emotional bond
occurs at the point where you become able think about your former lover without significant
positive or negative emotion. In other words, you are over it, that kind of forgiveness is
described as bringing peace, unfortunately detachment through forgiveness is rare.”
48
“The secret of forgiveness, regardless of whether you want to use it as a method of
detachment or as a way of fortify your relationship after repair, it so focus not on the offensive
behavior, but on freeing yourself of the emotional pain you experienced as a result of the
behavior. The most severe aspect of emotional pain is the sense of powerlessness it engenders.
Intentional forgiveness helps you take back power over your emotional life.
49
Dr. Larry Crabb restates these four upsetting trends that are infecting much of today’s
thinking about the marriage family. “1. Family problems are often regarded as simple, one-issue
difficulties that can be readily resolved with teeth-gritting effort by carefully applying step- by-
step formulas. 2. The appeal of many book titles is their promise of fulfillment, subtly eroding a
willingness to endure hardship, (especially the hardship of rejection from family members) for
the sake of obedience to Christ. 3. Gluing a marriage together in a way that satisfies the
participants and meets their relational needs has quietly assumed greater priority than simply
doing whatever God says in the belief that obedience to His Word will meet personal need. 4.
The available literature tends toward a piecemeal strategy for fitting together the marital jigsaw
48
Steven Stosny, Ph.D., Living & Loving after Betrayal; How to Heal from Emotional
Abuse, Deceit, Infidelity, and Chronic Resentment (Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publication,
Inc., 2013), 229.
49
Ibid, 230.
79
puzzle; the larger picture of God’s design is obscured by attending to various smaller parts of the
puzzle.”
50
“Spirit Oneness requires each partner to trust Christ for complete satisfaction of deep
personal needs and to regard marriage as a unique experience of sharing life in Christ. Soul
Oneness is the mutually satisfying relationship that develops when each partner recognizes the
opportunity that marriage provides. The route of Soul Oneness is helping our mated to
appreciate more their fundamental worth as people who bear the image of God and saints who
are truly secure and significant in Christ.”
51
“Soul Oneness is felt subjectively as a relationship so intimate that only sexual
intercourse can fully express it. This sort of oneness can develop only when both partners accept
an unconditional commitment to minister to the ended of the other, hoping for but never
demanding reciprocal ministry. Relationship built on manipulative effort’s to enhance our own
feeling of being loved or to protect ourselves against further hurt will never achieve the oneness.
God wants to enjoy. A shift from the principle of manipulation to the principle of ministry is the
only route to soul oneness.”
52
“Married couples who seek counseling because of sexual difficulties often ask for less
than what God wants to provide. Too often a man will want no more than to learn ejaculatory
control and woman will express a desire for more frequent orgasms. Perhaps the most typical
50
Larry Crabb Dr., The Marriage Builder: A Blue Print for Couples and Counselors
(Grand Rapid, MI: Zondervan, 1992), 13.
51
Ibid, 64.
52
Ibid, 64.
80
request is for help in reducing tension in the bedroom and in somehow finding a way for both
partners to warmly anticipate and enjoy the sexual experience.”
53
“Something has gone wrong with the sexual drive. The natural appetite for erotic pleasure
has become a mad tyrant, demanding fulfillment with no concern for either boundaries or
consequences. Ruined reputation, shattered relationships, or prematurely ended ministries; no
price seems too high to pay for the pleasure of sex. Why? Why has the biological desire for
sexual fun become a slave master, driving people to disregard God’s standards?”
54
“My point is this: Sex provides a physical solution for a personal problem. The evil
thing is that it seems to work so well. During those few magic moments of sexual climax, a
person experiences a consuming excitement in the body that counterfeits a sense of
wholeness in the soul. Satan’s most convincing imitation of the enduring and real personal
worth available in Christ is the temporary but intense bodily pleasure of sex. He seeks to
persuade us that when our bodies are tingling with sexual excitement-there is nothing
deeper to be enjoyed. And his argument is convincing to the degree that we regard
ourselves as mere bodies evolved from impersonal matter and not as real person made in
the image of a personal God. So Satan doe offer Fun Sex; sex that for a moment helps a
woman feel desirable, feminine, wanted, secure; sex that enable a man to feel attractive,
adequate, manly, significant, But Satan cannot offer meaningful relationship built on loving
commitment to one another. Fun sex is a charade; it satisfies the body but leaves the real
person empty and despairing. It offers pleasure for the body without meaning for the
person.”
55
How to Predict a Happy Marriage
Dr. Les Parrott III and Dr. Leslie Parrott give guidance on how to predict happy marriage.
Marriage specialists have researched the ingredients of a happy marriage. As a result, we know
more about building a successful marriage today than ever before. For example, happily married
couple will have:
53
Larry Crabb Dr., The Marriage Builder: A Blue Print for Couples and Counselors
(Grand Rapid, MI: Zondervan, 1992), 88.
54
Ibid, 89.
55
Ibid, 92.
81
1. Healthy expectation of marriage.
2. A realistic concept of love.
3. A positive attitude and outlook toward life.
4. The ability to communicate their feeling.
5. An understanding and acceptance of their gender differences.
6. The ability to make decisions and settle arguments.
7. A common spiritual foundation and goal.
In short, the things that forecast a healthy marriage form the basis of the seven questions
we pose in this book. Every couple should be aware of these issues before and after they marry.
Taking time to understand these issues is like investing in an insurance policy against divorce.”
56
“Manny couples wrongly blame in laws, money, and sex for breakups and marital
dissatisfaction. However, the hot points in marriage usually result from poor communication,
gender issues, and lack of spiritual health.”
57
“Every difficult marriage is plagued by a vast assortment of misconception about what
marriage should be. Most incongruous expectation falls into two major categories; unspoken
rules and unconscious roles. Bring both of them out into the open can save years of wear and tear
on a young marriage.”
58
“The motivational side of the triangle is passion, the spine-tingling sensation that moves
us toward romance. Passion is sensual and sexual, characterized by physiological arousal and an
56
Les Parrott III Dr. and Parrott, Leslie Dr., Saving Your Marriage Before it Starts,
Seven Question to Ask Before and After you Marry (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1995), 13-14.
57
Ibid, 14.
58
Ibid, 16-17.
82
intense desire for physical affection. The emotional side of Love triangles is intimacy; love
without intimacy is only a hormonal illusion. One cannot desire another person over the long
haul with really knowing that person. Intimacy has a best friends or soul mate quality about it.
Commitment is the cognitive and willful side of the love triangle. Commitment looks toward a
future that cannot be seen and promises to be there until death. With being bound to the
fulfillment of our promises, writes philosopher Hannah Arendt, we would be condemned to
wander helplessly in the darkness of each person’s lonely heart. Passion, intimacy and
commitment are the hot, warm, and cold ingredients in love’s recipe.”
59
Rekindle Romance through Affection, Warmth and Encouragement
According Dr. Tim Burns, Ph.D., “Too many marriages are over committed and under
connected. Far too many couple settles for mediocrity n their marriage when they would never
settle for second-best in other areas of their life. I want to encourage you to set a tone of
affection, warmth, and encouragement in your relationship that will result in rekindling the
romance in your marriage.”
60
“When it comes to marriage, the institution is in trouble. I call it
the lonely wife/lonely husband syndrome. They are busy at work, busy with the kids, even busy
with their church. Some of these fine couples are weary from well doing, but one day they look
up and realize that they have little relationship with each other. They don’t have the energy to
59
Les Parrott III Dr. and Parrott, Leslie Dr., Saving Your Marriage Before it Starts,
Seven Question to Ask Before and After you Marry (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1995), 33-
35.
60
Jim Burns Ph.D., Creating an Intimate Marriage, Rekindle Romance Through
Affection, Warmth and Encouragement (Bloomington, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 2006),
15-16.
83
invest in their marriage. So they keep on keeping on, living lonely, desperate lives or moving to
the arms of a lover, the bottle or some other unhealthy addiction.”
61
Many Marriage couple has misinterpreted the Ephesians 5:22-25 passage, the word
submission is a sticking point.
Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the
Lord.
For the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church: and he is
the savior of the body.
Therefore as the church is subject unto Christ, so let the wives are to their
own husbands in everything.
Husbands love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church,
and gave himself for it.” Ephesians 5:22-25 (KJV)
“The scripture is a call for mutual submission to each other, while acknowledging that
our main responsibility for submission is always directed to God. The wife is called to serve her
husband and the husband is called to serve his wife just as Christ served the church. If every
marriage has this passage as its foundation a lot of the selfishness in marriage relationship would
be dissolved”
62
Another great scripture for Marriage couple is the call for Love “Charity suffereth long,
and is kind; charity envieth not; charity vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up,
Doth not behave
itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil;
Rejoiceth not in
iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth;
Beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things,
endureth all things.” 1 Corinthians 13:4-7 (KJV)
Dr. Burns says, “You set the mood, tone, and atmosphere in your marriage. You can
change the atmosphere to your marriage almost immediately with A.W.E. (Affection, Warmth,
61
Jim Burns Ph.D., Creating an Intimate Marriage, Rekindle Romance Through
Affection, Warmth and Encouragement (Bloomington, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 2006),
26.
62
Ibid, 32.
84
and Encouragement). Far too many times we don’t intentionally set the thermostat of our
relationship to a more positive setting. Instead, we let the temperature fluctuate according to
what the other persona does or doesn’t do. We react to the stresses of life, and the atmosphere
can quickly turn negative. Marriage couples can have more affection, warmth, and
encouragement in any marriage, even in the most high maintenance ones, since they do have the
option to set the tone and atmosphere towards greater connection and intimacy.”
63
“A=Affection: Couples can often create an atmosphere of intimacy and closeness through
affection. It takes eight to ten meaningful touches a day for person to thrive. Couples, who hold
hands, kiss passionately and bring gifts like flowers and chocolate to one another are couples
who have a much better chance for a healthy relationship. Back rubs work: saying “I love you”
in hundred different ways works, showing tenderness and honoring your spouse also works
wonder for your relationship.”
64
“W=Warmth, “It really does take a lot of work, self-control and focus to keep a
relationship full of warmth. Couple can reset the thermostat from chilly to warm but they can’t
do it without an incredible amount of discipline and self-determination. Choose to create an
environment of love.”
65
E=Encouragement, “The only thing that a critical spirit, nagging and negativity bring to a
relationship is lack of intimacy. Make a study of your spouse to figure out the most effective
ways to encourage and affirm. All people are drawn to encouragement and flee from negativity.
63
Jim Burns Ph.D., Creating an Intimate Marriage, Rekindle Romance Through
Affection, Warmth and Encouragement (Bloomington, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 2006),
38-39.
64
Ibid, 45
65
Ibid, 46
85
Your presence in your spouse’s life makes a difference. It sometimes speaks louder than words.
Your availability, both physically and emotionally says to your spouse that he or she is in a safe
relationship.”
66
Interventions for Strengthening Communication
Everett L. Worthington Jr. Ph.D. says, “People communicate to meet their needs. High on
the list of needs is giving and receiving love. It is precisely that need in which trouble couples
are deficient. Listed below are principles for training the couple in an effective training method
for better communication.
1. Instruct especially how partners can communicate.
2. Demonstrate the communication or give an example.
3. Have the partners employ your suggestion, usually with an issue that is
involving but does not have high emotional significance.
4. Have the couple employ the suggestion on a hotter issue.
5. Assign the couple to try the behavior at home. Time homework carefully.
Don’t assign at home communication until the couple can avoid damage.
6. Over time, fade your feedback to the couple, making fewer direct suggestions
as the partners become more adapt to communications.”
67
Loving Communication
66
Jim Burns Ph.D., Creating an Intimate Marriage, Rekindle Romance Through
Affection, Warmth and Encouragement (Bloomington, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 2006),
38-39.
67
Everett Worthington L. Jr. Ph.D., Hope-Focused Marriage Counseling, A Guide to
Brief Therapy (Downers Grove, IL: Intervarsity Press, 1999), 148-149.
86
Dr. Worthington also “Believes that the root of all communication problems, whether
they are understood as misunderstanding, poor communication styles or attempts to gain power
within the marriage can be understood as a deficit of love. The desire to be understood but not
understand the other person is a lack of love. Poor styles of communication suggest my agenda is
more important than yours. Such communication does not show the valuing love to the partner
that the spouse might actually feel; the partner’s feels devalued, unimportant, unloved. When
partners feel insecure, threatened or without power they want to prove that they are adequate,
important, and powerful in short valued and loved. So they try to control their marriage.”
68
“Communication difficulties will not be dealt with unless the root cause of deficient love
is addressed. Partners must defeat pride and power and replace them with love through valuing
the spouse, even if it means laying sown one’s own expectation and rights. Love is being willing
to value and not to devalue the partners, this wiliness springs from another oriented heart. People
need to be reminded that in marriage they have a great opportunity to cultivate another oriented
heart.”
69
Sexual Standards
Dr. Myles Munroe says, “One of the biggest challenges couples face during engagement
is the temptation to go too far sexually. Many couples underestimate the power of the human sex
drive and how easy it is to slide onto the slippery slope of physical arousal. It usually starts very
subtly in the mind. The fact that a couple is getting married does not justify or excuse premature
and improper sexual behavior. This is why is so important for engaged couples to commit
68
Everett Worthington L. Jr. Ph.D., Hope-Focused Marriage Counseling, A Guide to
Brief Therapy (Downers Grove, IL: Intervarsity Press, 1999), 66.
69
Ibid, 66.
87
themselves to a standard of absolute sexual purity before marriage. Failure in this area affects not
just the body, but also the spirit. Paul’s words to the Corinthians believers are as fresh and timely
for us today as they were 2000 years ago.”
70
“Flee fornication. Every sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth
fornication sinneth against his own body.
What? Know ye not that your body is the temple of the
Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own?
For ye are bought
with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's.” 1
Corinthians 6:18-20 (KJV)
“Engagement is the period where a couples sexual standards either stand or falls because
it is during engagement that those standards face the greatest test. By successful handling sexual
temptation a couple proves their maturity, integrity, faithfulness and self-control.”
71
When Both are Willing
Dr. Gary Chapman says, “When you spouse responds affirmatively, he or she is as
willing as you are to work at restoring the dream you had when you were married. Should you
move back into the same apartment or house immediately? Probably not; remember your
objective is to give birth to your marriage. The conflicts, frustration, misunderstanding, and
unmet needs that led you to separate must be examined and resolved.
72
“For most couples the process of restoration will require the services of a pastor or
marriage counselor. You need to develop skills in expressing your feeling in a constructive way.
70
Myles Munroe Dr., Waiting and Dating, A Sensible Guide to a Fulfilling love
Relationship (Shippensburg, PA: Destiny Image, Publishers, Inc., 2004), 139.
71
Ibid, 138.
72
Gary Chapman Dr., Hope for the Separated; Wounded Marriages can be Healed
(Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 2005), 123.
88
You must come to understand and appreciate the thoughts and feelings or your spouse. You must
find ways to meet each other’s emotional and physical needs. Marriage counselors and many
pastors are trained in helping you develop such skills. As you meet with the pastor or counselor
and develop your communication skills. You will begin to feel freedom in your relationship. You
will begin to feel more understanding. You will begin to reach agreements on issues that have
been unresolved conflicts. You will give each other the freedom to disagree and on certain issues
and yet be kind and loving to each other.”
73
The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work
John M. Gottman Ph.D., and Nan Silver say, “What can make a marriage work is
surprisingly simple. Happily married couples aren’t smarter, richer, or more psychologically
astute than others. But in their day to day lives, they have hit upon a dynamic that keeps their
negative thoughts and feeling about each other (which all couples have) from overwhelming
their positive ones. They have what I call an emotionally intelligent marriage.”
74
Dr. Gottman says, “It took studying hundreds of couples until he finally uncovered the
secrets of these emotional intelligent marriages, no two marriages are the same, but the more
closely he looked at happy marriage the clearer it became that they were alike in seven telltale
ways. Happily married couples may not be aware that they follow these seven principle but they
all do. By mastering these seven principles you can ensures that your own marriage will thrive.
73
Gary Chapman Dr., Hope for the Separated; Wounded Marriages can be Healed
(Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 2005), 123.
74
Gottman John M. Ph.D. and Silver Nan, the Seven Principles for Making Marriage
Work (New York, NY: Three Rivers Press, 1999), 3.
89
You’ll learn to identify which of these components are weak spots, or potential weak spots, in
your marriages, and to focus your attention where your marriage most needs it.”
75
Principle 1: Enhance Your Love Maps
“Emotionally intelligent coupes are intimately familiar with each other’s world. I call this
have a richly detailed love map-my term for that part of your brain where you store all the
relevant information about your partner’s life. Another way of saying this is that these couples
have made plenty of cognitive room for their marriage. They remember the major events in each
other history, and hey keep updating their information as the facts and feeling of their spouses
word change. They know each other goals in life, each other worried and each other’s hopes.”
76
Principle 2: Nurture Your Fondness and Admiration
“People who are happily married like each other. If they didn’t, they wouldn’t be happily
married. But fondness and admiration can be fragile unless you remain aware of how crucial they
are to the friendship that is at the core of any good marriage. By simply reminding yourself of
your spouse’s positive qualities -even as you grapple with each other flaws-you can prevent a
happy marriage from deteriorating. The simple reason is that fondness and admiration are
antidotes for contempt. If you maintain a sense of respect for your spouse, you are less likely to
act disgusted with him or her when you disagree. So fondness and admiration prevent the couple
from being trounced by the four horsemen (criticism, contempt, defensiveness, or
stonewalling).”
77
75
Gottman John M. Ph.D. and Silver Nan, the Seven Principles for Making Marriage
Work (New York, NY: Three Rivers Press, 1999), 18.
76
Ibid, 48.
77
Ibid, 65.
90
Principle 3: Turn toward Each Other Instead of Away
“Real romance is fueled by a far more humdrums approach to staying connect. It is kept
alive each time you let your spouse know he or she is valued during the find of everyday life.
Romance actually grows when a spouse is having a bad day at work and you take sixty seconds
out of your work day to leave word of encouragements on his or hers voicemail. Turning toward
your spouse in the little ways is also the key to long-lasting romance. Many people think that the
secret to reconnecting with their partners is a candlelit dinner or by the sea vacation. But the real
secret is to turn toward each other in little ways every day. A romantic night out really turns ump
he heat only when a couple has kept the pilot light burning by staying in touch in the little
ways.”
78
Principle 4: Let Your Partner Influence You
“We have found that even in the first few month of marriage, men who allow their wives
to influence them have happier merges and are less likely to divorce than men who resist their
wives influence. Statically speaking, when a man is not will to share power with his partner,
there is a 91 percent chance that his marriage will self-destruct. We also found that the happiest,
most stable marriages in the long run were those where the husband treated his wife with respect
and did not resist power sharing and decision making with her. When the couple disagreed on
decision making, these husbands actively search for common ground rather than insisting on
getting their way.”
79
Principle 5: Solve Your Solvable Problem
78
Gottman John M. Ph.D. and Silver Nan, the Seven Principles for Making Marriage
Work (New York, NY: Three Rivers Press, 1999) 80-81.
79
Ibid, 100-101.
91
“The popular approach to conflict resolution, advocated by many marital therapists, is to
attempt to put yourself in your partner’s shoes while listening intently to what he or she says, and
to communicate empathetically that you see the dilemma from his or her perspective. It is not a
bad method, if you can do it. By studying intently what these couples did do, I have come up
with a new model for resolving conflict in a loving relationship. My fifth principles entail the
following steps:
1. Soften your startup
2. Learn to make and receive repair attempts
3. Soothe yourself and each other
4. Compromise
5. Be tolerant of each other’s faults.
To a certain degree, my fifth principle comes down to have good manners. It means
treating your spouse with the same respect you offer to company.”
80
Principle 6: Overcome Gridlock
“The Goal in ending gridlock is not to solve the problem, but rather to move from
gridlock to dialogue. The gridlocked conflict will probably always be a perpetual issue in your
marriage, but one day you will be able to talk about it without hurting each other. You will learn
to live with the problem. To navigate your way out of gridlock, you have to first understand its
cause. Grid lock is a sign that you have dreams for your life that aren’t being addressed or
80
Gottman John M. Ph.D. and Silver Nan, the Seven Principles for Making Marriage
Work (New York, NY: Three Rivers Press, 1999), 158.
92
respected by each other. By dreams I mean the hopes, aspirations, and wishes that are part of
your identity and give purpose and meaning to your life.”
81
Principle 7: Create Shared Meaning
“If you marriage adhere to my first six principle, there is a good chance that that your
relationship is stable and happy. What may be missing is a deeper sense of shared meaning.
Marriage is not just about raising kids, splitting chores, and making love. It can also have a
spiritual dimension that has to do with creating an inner life together- a culture rich with symbols
and rituals, and an appreciations for your role and goals that link you, that lead you to understand
what it means to be a part of the family you have become. A crucial goal of any marriage
therefore is to create an atmosphere that encourages each person to talk honestly about his or her
conviction. The more you speak candidly and respectfully with each other, the more likely there
is to be a blending of your sense of meaning.”
82
Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Love
According to Dr. Sue Johnson, “We are never more emotional than when our primary
love relationship is threatened. The material that I found mostly said that love was irrelevant or
impossible to understand and also that the strong emotion were obviously dangerous and best left
alone. My attempts to get couples to practice communication skills sparked comment’s about
how these exercises didn’t really get to the heart of the matter. They missed the point. Emotion
comes from a Latin word emovere, to move. We talk of being moved by our emotion, and we are
81
Gottman John M. Ph.D. and Silver Nan, the Seven Principles for Making Marriage
Work (New York, NY: Three Rivers Press, 1999), 217-218.
82
Ibid, 244-245.
93
moved when those we love show their deeper feeling to us. If partners were to reconnect, they
indeed had to let their emotion move them into new ways of responding to each other.”
83
Conversation1: Recognizing the Demon Dialogues
“Demon Dialogue 1-Find the Bad Guy, the purpose of finds the bad guy is self-
protection, but the main move is mutual attack, accusation, or blame. Demon Dialogue 2-The
Protest Polka, the Main move of the Protest Polka create a stable loop, each move calling forth
and reinforcing the next. One partner reaches out, albeit in a negative way, and the other steps
back, and the pattern repeats. The dance goes on forever because the emotions and need behind
the dance are the most powerful on this planet. Polka is more subtle, one partner is demanding,
actively protesting the disconnection: the other is withdrawing, quietly protesting the implied
criticism, dissatisfied partners missing each other signals often complain of a fuzzy
communications problem or constant tension.”
84
Demon Dialogue 3-Freeze and Flee is, “What I see is that both partners are shut down
into frozen defense and denial. Each is in self-protection mode, trying to act as if he or she does
not feel and does not need. This is what happens when the pursuing, critical partner gives up
trying to get the spouses attention and goes silent. If this cycle runs it courses, the aggressive
partner will grieve the relationship and then will detach and leave. The extreme distancing of
Freeze and Flee is a response to the loss of connection and the sense of helplessness concerning
how to restore it.”
85
83
Sue Johnson, Dr., Hold Me Tight, Seven Conversation for a Life Time of Love (New
York, NY: Little, Brown and Company, 2008), 42-44.
84
Ibid, 68-74.
85
Ibid, 90-91.
94
Conversation 2: Finding the Raw Spot
“What is exactly a raw spot? I define it as a hypersensitivity formed by moments in a
person’s past or current relationship when an attachment need has been repeatedly neglected,
ignored, or dismissed, resulting in a person’s feeling what I call the “2Ds” emotionally deprived
and deserted. The 2 Ds are universal potential raw spots for lovers. These sensitivities frequently
arise from wounding relationships with significant people in our past, especially parents, who
give us our basic template for loving relationships; sibling and other members of our family and
of course past and present lovers.”
86
Conversation 3: Revisiting a Rocky Moment
“In this conversation, you’ll see how to take charge of moments of emotional
disconnection or miss-attunements, as attachment theorist calls them, and tip them away from
dangerous escalation and toward safety and security.”
87
Conservation 4: Hold Me Tight-Engaging and Connecting
“In this conversation, you’ll take the first step toward by deliberately creating moments
of engagement and connection. The Hold Me Tight conversation builds on the sense of safety
you and your partner have started to produce as a result of conservation 1, 2, and 3, which taught
you how to halt or contain negative patterns of interacting with your partner as well as to mark
and name at least one of the deeper feeling that come up in native cycles and moment of
disconnection. Effectively seeking connection ad responding supportively is hard without a basic
platform of safety. In this conversation, you’ll learn how to generate positive patterns of reaching
86
Sue Johnson, Dr., Hold Me Tight, Seven Conversation for a Life Time of Love (New
York, NY: Little, Brown and Company, 2008), 98-99.
87
Ibid, 122-123.
95
for and responding to your love one in effect, you will be learning how to speak the language of
attachment.”
88
Conversation 5: Forgiving Injuries
“The hurt partner needs to speak to his or her pain as openly and simply as possible. The
inuring partner stays emotionally present and acknowledges the wounded partners pain and his
or her part in it. Partner’s starts reversing the Never Again dictum. The injuring partners now
take ownership of how they inflicted this injury on their lover and express regret and remorse.
This cannot take the form of an impersonal or defensive apology. A Hold Me Tight conversation
can now take place, centering on the attachment injury. The couple now can create a new story
that captures the injuring event, how it happened, eroded trust and connection, and shaped the
Demon Dialogues.”
89
Conversation 6: Bonding trough Sex and Touch
“How important is satisfying sexing sustaining a love relationship? Good sex, it turns out,
is integral though not paramount to happy relationships. Satisfied partners see sex as just one of
many sources of pleasure and intimacy, while despondent partner’s homes in on sex and often
view it as the chief source of trouble. The safety of our emotional connection defines our
relationship in bed as well as out. Depending on how comfortable we are with closeness and how
safe we feel about needing our loved one, we will have different goals in bed. I call these three
kinds of sex; Sealed off Sex, Solace Sex and Synchrony Sex.”
90
88
Sue Johnson, Dr., Hold Me Tight, Seven Conversation for a Life Time of Love (New
York, NY: Little, Brown and Company, 2008), 142.
89
Ibid, 173-178.
90
Ibid, 186-187.
96
“Seal-off Sex, the goal is to reduce sexual tension, achieve orgasm, and feel good about
our sexual prowess. Solace Sex occurs when we are seeking reassurance that we are valued and
desired, the sex act is just a tag long. The goal is to alleviate our attachment fears. Synchrony
sex is when emotional openness and responsiveness, tender touch, and erotic exploration all
come together. This it the way sex is supposed to be. This is the sex that fulfills, satisfies, and
connects.”
91
Conversation 7: Keeping You Love Alive
“Conversation 7 is a road map for taking your love into the future. Conversation 7 is built
on the understanding that love is a continual process of seeking and losing emotional connection
and reaching out to find it again. The step entails:
1. Recapping and reflecting on the danger points in your relationship where you
slide into security and get stuck in Demon Dialogues.
2. Calibrating the positive moments, big and small.
3. Planning rituals around the moments of separation and reunion to your daily
lives to mark recognition of your bond, support and responsiveness.
4. Helping each other identify the attachment issues in recurring differences and
arguments and deciding to together how to defuse the issues up front to
deliberately create emotional safety and trust.
5. Creating a resilient Relationship story, this story describes how the two of you
have built and are continuing to build loving bond.
91
Sue Johnson, Dr., Hold Me Tight, Seven Conversation for a Life Time of Love (New
York, NY: Little, Brown and Company, 2008), 193.
97
6. Create a future Love story. This story outlines what you want you bond to look
like five or ten years down the road and how you would like your partner’s
help in making the vision a reality.”
92
Results Twenty Questions Survey for a Divorce
There were seventy personnel who completed the divorce survey. Thirty- three divorcées
took the survey; twenty-five married personnel, five remarried personnel, and seven personnel
were in the widow and separated status. The top three causes of divorce from the information
collected in the divorce survey are 1. Infidelity, 2. Money/finances, 3. Communication. The other
of causes of divorce from the survey are abuse, counseling attendance , trust issues, unequally
yoke, sex, following Biblical instruction and unforgiveness.
Counseling Question: Who did you go to for help for counseling? Were they helpful?
Twenty-two personnel went to counseling with their pastor, marriage counselor. The
counseling was effective and it was very helpful for the couple who attended counseling. Ten
personnel received counseling from their immediate friends. 8 personnel went for help by talking
to their parents; three personnel went to God for advice through prayer. Twenty-seven personnel
refuse counseling.
Name a way that you can rekindle the fire in your marriage?
1. Have the same hobbies
2. Spend time doing thing you both enjoy
3. Learn what made you love each other
4. Pastoral and Marriage counseling
5 Movie and Date night
92
Johnson 2008, 205-206.
98
6. Time alone
7. Couple time, dinner, movies weekend trips
8. Remember the things you did before you got married
9. Date, communicate, date night, role playing
10. Forgiving one another
11. Pay more attention and listen to each other
12. Need a miracle
13. God & candle light
14. Get the attraction out of your life
15. Forgive and forget
16. Take a cruise
17. Sex, communication, going fun thing together
18. Help
19. Try new ideas, be more flexible
20. Dating, fun times talking
.
99
Conclusion:
Divorce in the Christian Society and a Prescriptive Model to Rekindle the Marriage.
John M. Gottman Ph.D. and Julie S. Gottman Ph.D. are the founder and directors of
Gottman Institute and the Relationship Research Instituted in Seattle, they have been developing
tools to help couples identify problems that a proven to destroy relationships and to turns those
problem around. Through their workshops, therapy sessions, and books couple are gaining the
tools they need to build stronger friendships and manage their conflicts. Dr. John M Gottman
and Nan Silver have written a book that gives Seven Principle for Making Marriage Work.
Effective communication also makes a marriage work.
Dr. Sue Johnson has written a book on Seven Conversation for a lifetime of love. Some
other guidelines that Dr. Sue Johnson shared some additional information in her book to rekindle
the fire in your marriage are: Regularly and deliberately hold hands, hugging and kissing while
walking, going to sleep and leaving home and returning. Writing letter and leaving short notes
for each other. Leaving sexy message on their voice mail and tell them how much you love them
daily.
Dr. Willard F. Harley Jr. wrote a power book on His Need and Her Need, Building an
Affair Proof Marriage. Inside of Dr. Willard Books Appendix B, there is an Emotional Needs
Questionnaire that will truly be a blessing to marriage couple and couple thinking about
marriage. This questionnaire will assist them understanding each other emotional need.
Dr. Gary Chapman present his book name The Five Love Languages, How to Express
Heartfelt Commitment to Your Mate. Dr. Gary Chapman includes The Five Love Languages
personal assessment tool in his book. This tool will help single and married couples understand
their love language and gives guidance on how to meet each other need. David Olsen Ph.D. and
100
Doug Stephen Ph.D., say, “Spiritual Intimacy is very important to making your marriage work.
Spiritual intimacy might be defined as the deep feeling of sharing of religious beliefs and the
practice of those beliefs between to partners. This form of intimacy is imbued with the mutual
sharing of transcendent meaning. This gives the two partners a connection both verbal and
nonverbal. The partners have a strong conviction and a deep commitment to their belief that is
spiritual rewarding to each one.”
1
“Recreational Intimacy is a unique form of closeness, often found in dual career
marriages, the demand on time and energy of managing two careers and family sometimes
requires partners to work almost as a tag team with home responsibilities. But in the midst of
juggling tasks and dealing with exhaustion, some couples find a way to share a hobby or another
form of recreation together on a regular basis. Hobbies, causes, or mutual sports can provide an
opportunity for self-expression and shared satisfaction.
2
“Of all the forms intimacy can take emotional intimacy the most difficult to describe.
Many of the forms discussed previously were built on a common experience or focus that
initially connects the partners in a common concern. With emotional intimacy, the depth of the
sharing of the self is the connection, rather than the sharing of an event, object or person. Many
marriages are strong with multiple forms of intimacy; other may have only one or two forms.
Partners who share in emotional intimacy with watch other may have very little in the way of
1
Olsen, David Ph.D. and Stephens, Douglas Ed.D, The Couples Survival Workbook:
What You Can Do to Reconnect with Your Partners and Make Your Marriage Work
(Williamsville, VT: Echo Pont Books and Media, 2011), 136.
2
Ibid, 136.
101
shared interests, and they may not have weathered crises together, yet they find a special passion
connecting with one another about each other daily experiences.”
3
“Understanding your interaction patterns, belief systems, and family of origin message is
an important start. However intimacy is contingent on more than changing pattern, examining
your belief, expanding your definition of intimacy, or examines your origin message. These are
very important steps and will help you take further steps toward a more satisfying level of
intimacy, but in themselves thee step do not go far enough. Intimacy is utterly dependent on
there being two separate psychological selves in the relationship.”
4
“For deep intimacy to take place there must be two separate people. Too often, couples
subscribes to the biblical notion that “the two shall become one.” In the misguided attempt to
become as one, some couples forget to continue to define themselves. When people are not self-
defined, they tend to become overly reactive and easily influenced by the people around them,
they either lose their sense of self and become the self whether a partner wants or reactively they
become the opposite of what their partner desires.”
5
“So what really makes marriages work? Books about intrinsic gender differences arise, in
turns out that men and women want very similar experiences within their couples relationship.
They want sex and romance, passion and companionship all of which are to be found in marriage
if there is an underlying deep friendship of good quality. Believing that one’s partner wants the
best for us, as well as for themselves, somehow can give us the hope to move beyond the
3
Olsen, David Ph.D. and Stephens, Douglas Ed.D, The Couples Survival Workbook:
What You Can Do to Reconnect with Your Partners and Make Your Marriage Work
(Williamsville, VT: Echo Pont Books and Media, 2011), 138.
4
Ibid, 143.
5
Ibid, 144.
102
difficulties of the moment. Another key to a strong marital relationship is having a transcendent
value system, a belief in something greater than self. Believing that there are large themes at
work in our lives can provide a depth of meaning and purpose to marriage that can help us
pursue connection with our partner even through many frustration.”
6
“Healthy marriages certainly do have conflicts, often in several areas, for example
housecleaning, sex, in-laws. Gottman found that despite significant differences in personality,
avid interests, and even value, couple in happy marriages still report high satisfactions with their
relationship. What sustained them was deep friendship. Friendship with marriages requires many
skills, but here are two that are essential for a healthy marriage. The first according to Gottman
(2000) is that there must be a generally positive atmosphere in the marriage in both non-conflict
and conflict situation. The second is that healthy couples who are deep friends can reduce
negative affect, that is they can reduced the emotional fallout from their conflicts by accepting
each other’s emotion and refraining from evaluating or judging them”
7
According to Willard F. Harley, Jr., “The first step in in building romantic love is to
make commitment to do just that. Goals are not achieved by chance; leaving things to chance
creates problems. So if you want to keep romantic love in your marriage; you must commit your
selves to that purpose. The second step is to identify habits that destroy romantic love. Romantic
6
Olsen, David Ph.D. and Stephens, Douglas Ed.D, The Couples Survival Workbook:
What You Can Do to Reconnect with Your Partners and Make Your Marriage Work
(Williamsville, VT: Echo Pont Books and Media, 2011),, 4.
7
Ibid, 4.
103
love is the feeling incredible attraction toward another person, and people rarely marry without.
But romantic love is very fragile and requires special care to continue through life.”
8
Jim Burns says, “The trait that is most closely linked to the success or failure of your
marriage is your ability to communicate. When you combine a lifetime of unhealthy
commination habits and poor communication resolution skills you hurt your chance of
experiencing true intimacy.
Add to that the many different styles of communication, and it is no
wonder people regularly struggle in this area. If you want to intimately connect with your
spouse, you will need to roll up your sleeves and work at bettering your communication. We all
want a marriage where there is warmth and connectivity, but most people aren’t willing to work
at the relationship enough to bring the marriage to a more positive place.”
9
“Communication is at the top of the chart when it comes to developing more intimacy in
your marriage. Couples have the same needs. They both need connection and emotional intimacy
that comes from healthy communication. Communications is less about talking than it is about
the health of the relationship. A couple who emotional need are not being met rarely
communicate well.
Apple and Dunn say, “When we are in a new relationship, we may feel we have finally
found the perfect person to share our life with. In an effort to preserve our new found happiness,
we begin to form expectation to try to ensure that our partner continues to bring us everything we
want or think we need. This usually is not a conscious process; it is simply part of what we have
learned about how relationship works. Expectation, we are told are unavoidable. We are not only
8
Harley, Willard F. Jr., Five Steps to Romantic Love (Grand Rapids, MI: Revell, A
Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2009), 13.
9
Burns, Creating an Intimate Marriage, 71-72.
104
conditioned to have them of our partners, we are conditioned to expect our partner to have them
for us. Expectations are far more prevalent in our lives than we realize. We bring an extensive
collection to every new relationship, acquired from our families and friends, the media and
previous relationships. Expectations are beliefs about what someone should or should not do or
how they should or should not behave. We have them about everyone in our lives including
ourselves.”
10
Steven Stosny, Ph.D. writes that, “In attempting to repair a betray relationship, it is
helpful to distinguished among behaviors that belong in the past (blame, dishonesty, disrespect),
the present (compassion, responsibility, safety respect, honesty) and a future of increased
intimacy and trust. The natural relationship cycles of routine, distance, and closeness drag out
the repair process, as a distressed central nervous system cannot tell if present behavioral
improvement are merely products of an interval before the danger stage of the cycle. Roughly
three of your typical cycles have to go by without any of the behaviors of the “past” for intimacy
and trust to return. Compassion is the key. The Compassion Repair Process consists of a serious
of solemn agreements to the betrayer makes to the betrayed partner.”
11
Bancroft and Patrissi give some principle of fighting fair when you are in a confrontation.
“1. No name calling and no reducing of the others person’s statements or opinion during
the argument.
2. No telling the hot person the real reason behind what they are saying or doing in the
argument, no discrediting.
10
Apple and Dunn, The Soul Mate Experience, 146.
11
Stosny, Living & Loving After Betrayal, 209.
105
3. No scary body language, including no getting so loud that it intimidates the other
person.
4. Each person gets to talk for roughly the same amount of time in the argument.
5. No interrupting, even when you are really mad (unless the other person is taking up
way more than their share of the argument).
6. Try seriously to understand the other person’s thought and feeling, even when you are
angry and even when you feel sure that your partner is wrong.
7. Look for solutions that would work for both of you, instead of just single-mindedly
insisting on getting your way.
8. Neither partner gets to insist that their way is the only right ways to talk about the
conflicts or ere solve it (except for following the faith fight rule).
9. Be prepared to sometimes let go of some parts of what you were hoping for.”
12
Michele Davis says, “No book on divorce prevention would be complete without a
chapter devoted to having a loving and satisfying intimate relationship. Without physical
closeness, it is difficult for spouses to feel connected emotionally and spiritually. A nonexistent
or unsatisfying sexual relationship triggers low-grade ill will that permeates your life and colors
cost of your interaction. At first you fool yourself into thinking that sex is not that important and
that as long as the rest of your marriage is working ,everything will be okay, but slowly ,almost
imperceptibly, thing start falling apart. You find your selves arguing more often. Every small
annoyance becomes magnified. You feel like your opponent rather than teammates. You feel
12
Bancroft and Patrissi, Should I Stay or Should I Go, 371-372.
106
hurt and misunderstood; you practice self –protection rather than cooperation and compromise.
You stop caring about each other feeling and needs. You stop being kind.”
13
13
Davis, The Divorce Remedy, 265.
“Appendixes A: List three of the Top 10 reason from
Http://www.top10stop.com/lifestyle/top-10-reasons-for-divorce-and-marriage-breakdowns-stats-
from-the-US.”
1
Appendixes B: List the approval to use Emotional Abuse, Silent Killer of Marriage by
Austin James.
“Appendixes C: List the latest National Marriage and Divorce Rate Trends Provisional
Number of Marriages and Marriage rate: United States, 2000-2011.
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/marriage_divorce_tables.htm.”
2
“Appendixes D: List the Divorce Rate with the percentage of varies according to
anything from ethnicity and religion to political stances. It’s also important to note Christian
divorce rates as well as Non-Christian divorce rates. As for Non-Christians, 38% of this group
will face divorce at least once within the United States. The divorce rate for atheists and
agnostics is only at 30%, however, this percentage is often considered flawed. People of these
1
Unknown, "Top 10 Reason for Divorce and Marriage Break Downs: American
Stats," Top 10 Stop, May 11, 2011, 2011, http://www.top10stop.com// (accessed March12,
2014).
2
Office of Information Services, "National Marriage and Divorce Rate Trends,"
Cdc/Nchs National Vital Statistics System, February 19, 2013, 2013,
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/marriage_divorce_tables.htm. (Accessed March 12, 2014).
107
religions often have higher rates of cohabitation and lower rates of actual marriage. Christian
divorce rates are lower than the national average, and some Christian sects have dramatically
lower rates than the national average. The Appendix D chart describes Christian divorce rates for
different types of Christianity”
3
3
Unknown, "Christian Divorce Rate," Laws.com, March 13, 2012,
http://divorce.laws.com/christian-divorce-rate/ (accessed March 12, 2014).
108
108
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113
APPENDIX A
http://www.top10stop.com/lifestyle/top-10-reasons-for-divorce-and-marriage-
breakdowns-stats-from-the-US.
1. “First Top Three Reasons for Divorce: Marriage Infidelity:
Infidelity or more commonly known as “cheating” is on top of the list of reasons for
divorce in the US. Most people know what infidelity or cheating is but in more formal terms
infidelity is a violation of mutually agreed rules or boundaries that a couple assume in a
relationship. In most marriages these terms are not mentioned since they are only assumed to be
kept and honored by each person. Ironically, it is holds the number one reason for divorce in the
US and many other countries.
2. Second Top Reason: Communication Breakdown in Relationship
In a lot of cases when a marriage is breaking down one or both partners often say “we
just cannot communicate” or “we just don’t understand each other.” Some people may think that
“communication” in a marriage always means agreeing with each other. So when they are not
able to agree then the couple refers to the problem as “communication problem.” This is not true.
Good communication is not always about agreement but when you are in disagreement it most
likely means that you are communicating well and clearly stating your position. Couples who
have communication problems, which usually lead to divorce and breakdown are not able to find
the between the two points of medium. And once again it is all compromising and finding a
balance in between.
3. Third Top Reason: Physical, Psychological or Emotional abuse
Marriage abuses – from either the husband or the wife – are a big area of concern for
many couples. Physical, psychological or emotional abuses come in different forms, which vary
from couple to couple and family to family. However, in a short list they include things like
telling a spouse that they are unwanted, physical abuse in form of beating, name-calling,
ignoring the spouse, restricting the person to a room, emotional or physical terrorizing,
monitoring phone calls, forcing spouse to do something they are not comfortable with. Abuse is
one of the most common reasons for divorce. It is important for any person who is facing any
form of an abuse to seek immediate professional help.”
228
228
Unknown, "Top Ten Reason for Divorce and Marriage Breakdown: American
Stats," Top 10 Stop, May 11, 2011, http://www.top10stop.com/lifestyle/top-10-reasons-for-
divorce-and-marriage-breakdowns-stats-from-the-US/ (accessed March 12, 2014).
114
APPENDIX B
Approval to Cite a Purchase Book
Subject: Approval to use Emotional Abuse, Silent Killer of Marriage by Austin James
Hi Frederick,
Yes, you have permission to use anything you would like from my book. God bless you
for getting the word out into the Body of Christ - It is sorely needed.
It is self-published via createspace.com and written/published in Columbus Ohio so not
sure how to answer the publishing question. Sorry. I'm just a sinner with a testimony. ;o)
If I can be of any further assistance, please don't hesitate to contact me.
Would you be so kind as to send me an electronic version of your work when completed?
Thank you,
Austin James
On Mon, Dec 16, 2013 at 9:45 AM, Fred Styles <bishopfst[email protected]> wrote:
To Mr. Austin James,
I am writing a dissertation on Divorce in the Christian Church and the three topics are
Infidelity, Communication and Abuse (Emotional and Physical). I am asking for your permission
to use your book as a reference to cite information from your book that I purchases for the
dissertation project. Please respond and send me your approval and publication city, publisher
and state.
Thanks in Advance,
Frederick Styles
115
APPENDIX C
“National Marriage and Divorce Rate Trends
1 Excludes data for Louisiana
Provisional number of marriages and marriage rate: United States, 2000-2011.
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/marriage_divorce_tables.htm.
ear
M
arriages
P
opulation
Rate per 1,000 total
population
011
2
,118,000
31
1,591,917
6.8
010
2
,096,000
30
8,745,538
6.8
009
2
,080,000
30
6,771,529
6.8
008
2
,157,000
30
4,093,966
7.1
007
2
,197,000
30
1,231,207
7.3
006
1
2
,193,000
29
4,077,247
7.5
005
2
,249,000
29
5,516,599
7.6
004
2
,279,000
29
2,805,298
7.8
003
2
,245,000
29
0,107,933
7.7
002
2
,290,000
28
7,625,193
8.0
001
2
,326,000
28
4,968,955
8.2
000
2
,315,000
28
1,421,906
8.2
2
1
Excludes data for Louisiana.
3 Note: Rates for 2001-2009 have been revised and are based on inter-censual population estimates from the 2000 and
2010 censuses. Populations for 2010 rates are based on the 2010 census.
4 Source: CDC/NCHS National Vital Statistics System.
5 Excludes data for California, Indiana, Louisiana, and Oklahoma.
Provisional number of divorces and annulments and rate: United States, 2000-2011
ear
Divorces &
Annulments
P
opulation
Rate per 1,000 total
population
116
ear
Divorces &
Annulments
P
opulation
Rate per 1,000 total
population
011
1
877,000 24
6,273,366
3.6
010
1
872,000 24
4,122,529
3.6
009
1
840,000 24
2,610,561
3.5
008
1
844,000 24
0,545,163
3.5
007
1
856,000 23
8,352,850
3.6
006
1
872,000 23
6,094,277
3.7
005
1
847,000 23
3,495,163
3.6
004
2
879,000 23
6,402,656
3.7
003
3
927,000 24
3,902,090
3.8
002
4
955,000 24
3,108,303
3.9
001
5
940,000 23
6,416,762
4.0
000
5
944,000 23
3,550,143
4.0
6
1
Excludes data for California, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Louisiana, and Minnesota.
7
2
Excludes data for California, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, and Louisiana.
8
3
Excludes data for California, Hawaii, Indiana, and Oklahoma.
9
4
Excludes data for California, Indiana, and Oklahoma.
10
5
Excludes data for California, Indiana, Louisiana, and Oklahoma.
11 Note: Rates for 2001-2009 have been revised and are based on intercostal population estimates from the 2000 and 2010
censuses. Populations for 2010 rates are based on the 2010 census.
12 Source: CDC/NCHS National Vital Statistics System.”
229
229
Office of Information Services, "National Vital Statistics System," Center for
Disease Control and Prevention, February 19, 2013,
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/marriage_divorce_tables.htm. (Accessed March 12, 2014).
117
APPENDIX D
Christian Divorce Rate Chart:
http://divorce.laws.com/christian-divorce-rate
“As always, the percentage of divorce rates varies according to anything from ethnicity
and religion to political stances. For example, some of the following statistics apply to different
types of people:
1). Downscale Adults- 39% percent of this group has undergone a divorce at least once
2). Baby Boomers- 38% of this generation have faced at least one divorce
3). African Americans- 36% of African Americans have faced at least one divorce
4). Caucasian Americans- 32% will face divorce at least once
5). Hispanic Americans- 31% of this ethnic group will face divorce at least once
6). Asian Americans- Only 20% of these ethnic groups have been faced with divorce in the
United States
7). Liberals- Of those who consider themselves liberal on the political scale, 37% have faced
divorce at least once in their lifetime
8). Conservatives- Of those who consider themselves conservative, only 28% have undergone
divorce in the United States
Christian Divorce Rate
1) Evangelical Christians- 26% of these Christians will face divorce at least once in their lifetime
2) Non-Evangelical Born Again Christians- 33% of these Christians will face divorce at least
once
3) Notional Christians- 33% will face divorce at least once
4) All Born Again Christians- 32% will face divorce at least once
5) All Non-Born Again Christians- 33% will face divorce at least once
6) Protestant Christians- 34% of these Christians will face at least one divorce in their lifetime
7) Catholics- 28% will face divorce at least once”
230
230
Unknown, "Statistics on Christian Divorce Rates," Christian Divorce Rate, 2013,
http://divorce.laws.com/christian-divorce-rate/ (accessed March12, 2014).
118
APPENDIX E
Twenty General Questions Divorce Survey
1. What do you think is the top three reasons for divorce in the Christian society are?
2. Are you married or divorce?
3. How long have you been married?
4. What first attracted you to each other?
5. How did you know that this was the person you wanted to marry?
6. When did you first realize there were problems? What have you tried already to solve
these problems?
7. What is your primary reason for this divorce?
8. What would you need from your spouse to reconcile?
9. What do you think divorce will accomplish for you?
10. How do you think the divorce will affect your children?
11. What do the bible says about divorce?
12. What do you hope the outcome of counseling will be?
13. Did your feeling change during the marriage? How?
14. How did your spouse tell you he or she wanted to end the marriage? What were your
feelings at this time?
15. Who did you go to for help? Were they helpful?
16. What could you have done better to prevent your marriage from going through a
divorce?
119
17. Name a way that you can rekindle the fire in your marriage?
18. Do you both want a divorce? Why or why not?
19. What are your plans for getting on with your life?
20. How has this experience made you stronger?
Figure 1:
Seventy Surveys
Figure 2: Reason for Divorce
Seventy Surveys Completed
APPENDIX F
Seventy Surveys
Completed Chart
Figure 2: Reason for Divorce
Seventy Surveys Completed
120
Seventy Surveys Completed
Divorce 33
Married 25
Remarried 5
Widow &
Separted 7