Help! I'm Married to a PhariseeLegalists are joy-robbers.We waste so much of our happiness arguing over petty differences. Like Jesus told the Pharisees, we strain at gnats and swallow camels. It's a funny picture, isn't it? In those days a man would pour his wine through a fine cloth (like the tea strainer used in Asian coffee shops) to remove the smallest foreign particle. Yet, Jesus said, that same man was swallowing a camel, something many times bigger. The point was clear. They argued over petty matters, but neglected the issues that mattered most. I have seen the same attitude in troubled marriages. One or both partners forget what is most important. They become obsessed with details, using their partner's small failures or oversights to shift the attention from their own major problems. I know a man (we'll call him Simon) who is married to a difficult woman. Simon's wife, Felicia, continually punishes him for small failures. Does he forget a request or overlook a task? He will surely hear about it. His wife excels at faultfinding, and she doesn't do it quietly. Felicia, when irritated, has a voice like the sound of car brakes squealing. "S-i-i-i-mon! How many times do I have to tell you? Don't leave your cup on the table!" I believe Simon sometimes forgets on purpose. He thinks it's the only way to preserve some sense of dignity. No man wants a wife who scolds him like a nagging auntie scolds a child. When both members of a marriage humble themselves,
positive change begins immediately.
Simon wants a good marriage. He wants to take some steps that would improve their marriage, but his wife's attitude makes it difficult. Felicia refuses to admit her need for change. Instead she repeatedly shifts all the blame to Simon. That is a pharisee's tactic. Point the finger at everyone else, give them impossible standards to live up to, and never admit that you have even greater problems than they do. Pride makes people act like that. Rather than admitting our need for change, we become expert faultfinders. Principle-Centered Leadership, by Stephen Covey, is a book aimed directly at business leaders. Although I would not agree with the author's religious beliefs, much of his material is simply excellent. How surprising, in a book written for business leaders, to find the following thoughts:
While teaching marriage seminars in Asia I came to the same conclusion. I have taught principles of marriage and family to thousands of people and my wife and I have counseled many couples. We have found that one principle, only one, marks the difference between healed marriages and broken marriages. That essential is humility. When both members of a marriage humble themselves, positive change begins immediately Some years ago I had to rush my wife to the hospital. Extreme pain from an internal problem caused symptoms of shock. Immediately on our arrival the medical staff wheeled her into a treatment room. They punctured the vein in her arm to start an intravenous drip. Almost instantly Diane felt better and the symptoms of shock lessened. Humbling ourselves to God and one another has the same effect. It hurts, but it begins the healing process. Pride is the real enemy of marital harmony. It makes us irritable people, easily offended by the simplest, most insignificant things. Does it really matter if your husband squeezes the toothpaste differently than you do? Does your wife always have to wake up before you do? Do you absolutely have to have everything done your way? Pride and self-centeredness make us rigid, inflexible people. How can we adjust to someone else if we can't flex a little? Is your mate married to a pharisee? Is your pride causing you to strain at gnats and swallow camels? To find out, let's examine some characteristics of a pharisee's mentality:
Without question, pharisees are hard to please, hard to enjoy, and hard to live with. They themselves are seldom happy, but they are too proud to admit it. At this point in an article I usually give my readers some helpful hints, but I don't think I can do that this time. There's just one cure for the illness I have described: husbands and wives must humble themselves. Did you know that no one else can humble you, and that you cannot humble another person? You can humiliate them, but you cannot force them to become humble. So here is my advice to you. It's taken right James, chapter 4, verse 6:
Notice the promise for those who humble themselves: God gives grace! In human relationships, what does grace do? It makes us tolerant of failures. It keeps us from being self-centered and self-righteous. It removes the pressure that comes when two proud, unyielding people try to control one another. True humility (and the grace it brings) activates love in our lives. We cannot love without grace and we cannot love when pride controls us. So grace makes love possible. If a husband and wife both humble themselves what results will they see? Positive change will be easier, and quicker. Tension will decrease and joy will increase. They will see themselves more accurately and will become far less irritable. Wouldn't you love to have a marriage like that? If so, let's pray this prayer: You will find some more excellent help for your marriage in the series Growing A Great Marriage. It begins with How Healthy Is Your Marriage? |
Copyright Information