Dear daughter,
Remember that morning when I found you slipping quietly out of the bathroom into a corner of the house all alone?
I stopped that mad rush of cereal pouring, hair brushing, and shoe finding to smooth down your wild morning hair and ask if you were okay.
Those tears, the loud kind that burst uncontrollably out of your soul, they shook your whole body and I couldn’t understand what you were saying because those words stuck right in your throat.
A nightmare.
I rocked you just as if you were still my baby girl (even if your head touches my shoulders now).
What was it about?
I expect monsters, fire, death or even a bad grade on a test.
But you tell me one….slow….word….at a time: I dreamed you…..and……dad……got……divorced.
You stun me. We hadn’t fought. There was no tension in the home. No need to fear.
Hadn’t you watched us hug and kiss goodbye every morning? Hadn’t you seen me stop cooking that dinner and setting that table every evening to hug your dad and welcome him home for the night?
Why are you afraid?
But it wasn’t really about us at all. It’s about a scary world where marriages don’t often last and your friends split their time between dad’s house and mom’s house. It’s about a friend telling you, “My dad doesn’t love my mom anymore. He doesn’t love any of us.”
Even the safe place seems like shaky ground.
I tell you the truth.
How we are happily married and being together even now is joy.
I tell you how seriously we take that vow we made when we said, “I will love you forever” and slipped those rings onto our fingers.
Sure, we meant romance love and feeling love, but we also meant committed love, covenant love, I-will-make-our-marriage-a-priority love.
Divorce smashes the lives of good people, Christian people, godly women and honorable men. It’s real and ugly and I don’t want to sugarcoat the danger.
Sometimes even the best wife who has done everything right walks that hard road of aloneness and betrayal.
But I want you to know this, too. There were decisions I made as a teenage girl, as a single young woman, that made this marriage I have beautiful–not perfect perhaps, but lovely—from the start.
I want you to hear this wisdom: sometimes a good marriage starts when you’re 13 and that first boy asks you to the school dance. Remember this:
1. Do what God has called you to do—Don’t worry about boys, love, dating, or marriage. Focus on Jesus. Grow beautiful and strong in Him. Go to the college that’s right for you, not the one a boyfriend attends. Fulfill your calling and your potential. Don’t look for love; let God bring it to you.
2. Wait for God’s best—That first boy who asks you out isn’t necessarily “the one.” You are beautiful, smart, funny, strong, kind….Boys might swarm around you; don’t be swayed. I saved myself body, soul, and mind for the one man who was God’s best for me and your dad is totally worth it.
3. Make sure He’s in love with Jesus—Attending church twice a year, saying you love God but couldn’t be bothered with discipleship or Bible-reading or Christian service? That’s not loving Jesus. That’s calling yourself a Christian without the fruit. If you want to respect your husband as a spiritual leader, he needs to show that leadership before the wedding day.
4. Fall in love with your eyes wide open—You won’t find a perfect man. No person is perfect and no marriage is perfect either. Know what his flaws are in advance and be committed with a plan to love him, not change him.
5. Ask hard questions–Some couples marry without talking about kids, career plans, church, or money. Ask the hard questions before marriage. Don’t just shrug your shoulders and figure love will carry all. Love dies on battlefields like those all the time.
6. Give and Receive Respect–If he annoys you with stupid jokes, doesn’t understand or care about what you have to say, can’t hold a job, loses his temper easily, or embarrasses you in public now, he sure will later. Marry someone it’s easy to respect and be proud of. And, make sure he treats you as the precious gift from God that you are, valuing your opinion, not dominating you or devaluing you. Paul wrote to “Outdo one another in showing honor” (Romans 12:10 ESV). Make that your goal because kindness always matters. It matters when you’re dating, when you’re first married, and when you’ve been married 20 years. Give respect and kindness; expect respect and kindness
7. Build the friendship–That friendship you develop before marriage is what you should cultivate every year after “I do.” So when the kids are grown and gone, the freshness of young love fades, and your body ages and changes, you’ll still be best friends.
Marriage can be beautiful and holy, a sacred place where God transforms us to be more like Christ, where joy grows, selfless and sacrificial love blooms, and you help each other produce fruit as individuals and as one together.
This was my prayer for my own marriage on my wedding day. This is what I pray for you even now:
For because of our faith, he has brought us into this place of highest privilege where we now stand, and we confidently and joyfully look forward to actually becoming all that God has had in mind for us to be (Romans 5:2 The Living Bible).
Love,
Mom.
Heather King is a wife, mom, Bible Study teacher, writer and worship leader. Most importantly, she is a Christ follower with a desire to help others apply the Bible to everyday life with all its mess, noise, and busyness. Her book, Ask Me Anything, Lord: Opening Our Hearts to God’s Questions, is available now! To read more devotionals by Heather King, click here.
Copyright © 2014 Heather King
Reblogged this on Truth in Palmyra and commented:
Awesome wisdom here.
Thanks so much for sharing with others, Wally!
You are welcome Heather. It was very powerful.
Reblogged this on The love of God and commented:
This is very good counsel. Take that from someone who wishes there was once somebody there to give it when I was young! You’ll pay dearly if you don’t have, and keep God in control of everything you do, while you’re still young…
Thanks so much for sharing with others! I love that we can share with others what we learned from choices we made—good and bad!
My pleasure, and honour.
Loved reading this! Such powerful insight that I will remember with my 11 year old. I DID go through a divorce with a newborn baby in tow and it was HARD! Wish I’d had this wisdom before that time. But God is still good in how he heals and redeems our wounded hearts. God bless!
Absolutely, Lisa–God is so good to redeem us and heal us!! Thanks for sharing!