Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

From $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Just Us: Finding Intimacy With God and With Each Other
Just Us: Finding Intimacy With God and With Each Other
Just Us: Finding Intimacy With God and With Each Other
Ebook238 pages3 hours

Just Us: Finding Intimacy With God and With Each Other

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Marriages have a better opportunity of thriving when couples spend time together with God. In Just Us, David and Jan Stoop provide just what couples need to make the most of the precious time they spend together seeking God. Each week's devotions revolve around a specific theme. In just a few minutes each day, couples will focus on God's view of marriage, how God blesses marriage, how to grow in love and intimacy, faithfulness, improving communication, resolving conflicts, the roles of husband and wife, building trust, forgiveness, the importance of prayer, and how to have an intentional marriage. At the end of each devotion, couples will enjoy the "Talking Together" section with thought-provoking questions for the couple to discuss and further develop the theme or strengthen it in their marriage. By setting aside short daily times together each week, every couple has the opportunity to plant these themes deeper into their lives. What a gift for couples!
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 29, 2011
ISBN9781441225887
Just Us: Finding Intimacy With God and With Each Other

Read more from David Stoop

Related to Just Us

Related ebooks

Christianity For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Just Us

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Just Us - David Stoop

    Marriage

    WEEK 1

    WHAT IS MARRIAGE?

    DAY 1

    Marriage Is a Covenant

    And when I passed by and saw you again, you were old enough to be married. So I wrapped my cloak around you to cover your nakedness and declared my marriage vows. I made a covenant with you, says the Sovereign Lord, and you became mine.

    EZEKIEL 16:8

    Is marriage a contract or a covenant? When we look at how these two words are defined in the dictionary, the first definition for each word is the same: an agreement between two or more persons to do or not do something specified. The other definitions offered by the dictionary don’t give us much help in seeing how they differ.

    Yet if we look back to Genesis 15, when God made his covenant with Abram, we can get a better picture of what constitutes a covenant. God’s covenant with Abram seems very one-sided. God makes all the promises: to give Abram a multitude of descendents and to give him the land. Nothing is expected of Abram in return except that he be faithful.

    On the other hand, a contract typically is a this-for-that kind of arrangement. The language of a contract states that if you do this, then I will do that—it is conditional. Furthermore, the two things exchanged are assumed to be somewhat equal in value.

    Marriage is typically seen in our culture as a contractual arrangement—a this-for-that. If one person doesn’t keep his or her part of the bargain, then there is a problem and the contract can be broken. For many, the marriage as contract has become very conditional. In other words, I as a spouse will do this for you, but in return you as my partner have to do that for me.

    In our country, some states are trying to lower their divorce rate by offering two types of marriages: contract and covenant. If you choose the marriage as contract option, it can be broken, but the covenant marriage is for life and is taken much more seriously. That’s the way God intended marriage to be—for life. His idea for marriage has always been that it is a covenant, where promises are made and kept unconditionally. Furthermore, if one side breaks a promise, God intends for us to be like Him and renew the covenant.

    In Jeremiah, God expands on the meaning of covenant when we are told, ‘the day will come,’ says the Lord, ‘when I will make a new covenant with the people of Israel and Judah. This covenant will not be like the one I made with their ancestors . . . But this is the new covenant . . . I will put my laws in their minds, and I will write them on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people’ (Jer. 31:31,33). A covenant marriage is a matter of the mind and the heart, not just a matter of the law.

    Talking Together

    Many couples haven’t thought about whether their marriage is a contract or a covenant. Talk about your thoughts concerning this. If you do consider your marriage to be a covenant, how has that impacted your marriage?

    Praying Together

    Loving God, thank You for the covenant You have made with us as Your adopted children. We pray that You will enrich our relationship as we meet with You each day. Help us to give to each other unconditionally as You have given Yourself to us. Write deeply within our minds and our hearts the commitment we have made to each other.

    Amen.

    DAY 2

    Marriage Is Blessed by God

    The next day Jesus’ mother was a guest at a wedding celebration in the village of Cana in Galilee. Jesus and his disciples were also invited to the celebration.

    JOHN 2:1 - 2

    Isn’t it interesting that the first miracle of Jesus took place at a wedding? After Jesus turned the water into wine, the apostle John tells us, this miraculous sign at Cana in Galilee was Jesus’ first display of his glory (John 2:11). We all love a wedding, probably because it is a celebration of the love between two people and it is an event where everyone can enjoy themselves. Yet, many times the bride and groom are too exhausted to enjoy the celebration. They may enjoy their wedding more later as they relive the celebration through photographs or a videotape.

    Jan and I were married before the days when videotaping was common, so we relied on a good still photographer to give us a record of that beautiful day. However, we found we had hired a photographer who was not as experienced as he claimed to be. Halfway through the photos, he dropped his camera. He quickly checked it, but obviously didn’t check it carefully enough, because none of the pictures came out. We were devastated, to say the least. So our wedding album is made up of snapshots that friends and family took. We are thankful that we have something we can look at to remind us of that day. Today, when we look at those pictures, we realize it isn’t the quality of the pictures that is important; it is the memories those pictures stir up within us.

    I know some couples who look at their wedding video or pictures every year on their anniversary. I think that’s a good practice. It would help us remember a number of things. We may hear our vows again. We may see the friends who stood with us—maybe a large number or maybe just the two witnesses who stood up for us.

    If you were married by a minister, you may remember the words spoken in the ceremony. You might recall the familiar reminder that "we are gathered here to unite this man and this woman in holy matrimony. Generally the minister then in some way describes how marriage was instituted by God in the Garden, that it was adorned and beautified with his holy presence and first miracle." Sometimes the minister also refers to how Paul honors marriage by referring to Christ as the bridegroom and the church as the bride. What an important event a marriage must be in God’s eyes!

    One thing we can be certain of: God loves a wedding, and what He loves, He blesses!

    Talking Together

    Regardless of how big or how small your wedding was, it was a celebration. Maybe at your wedding something went wrong that seemingly ruined the celebration. Every wedding seems to have a story. What do you remember about your wedding? What were some of the things that went wrong? What were some of the joyful highlights?

    Praying Together

    Lord Jesus, we love it that You went to a wedding and that the miracle You performed there marked the beginning of Your ministry. Our wedding was important to us, and we know it was also important to You. Thank You for being there whether we invited You or not, because we understand marriage is so important to You. Thank You for caring about our marriage and wanting to bless us as a couple.

    Amen.

    DAY 3

    Marriage Is a Holy Symbol

    A man leaves his father and mother and is joined to his wife, and the two are united into one. This is a great mystery, but it is an illustration of the way Christ and the church are one.

    EPHESIANS 5:3 1 - 32

    The apostle Paul describes marriage as a great mystery. How do two people become one, and yet remain themselves? It is a mystery! Webster defines a mystery as anything that is kept secret or remains unexplained or unknown. Perhaps one of the reasons there are so many books written to help us with our marriages is that marriage remains a mystery. Who can explain what draws a man to a particular woman, or a woman to a particular man?

    Whether I am a guest at a wedding or the minister marrying a couple, I always watch carefully to see what the bride and groom will do with the unity candle. I think the unity candle can be a beautiful expression of the mystery about which Paul is talking.

    You probably know how the ceremony with the unity candle works. Just before the minister pronounces the couple husband and wife, they approach the unity candle. Each takes one of the individual candles, and then together they light the large central candle—the unity candle. This is a visual representation of the mystery of two being united into one.

    Yet that’s not the part with which I’m concerned. I always want to see what they do with their individual candles after the unity candle is lit. More and more couples are leaving the individual candles burning along with the unity candle. When they do that, I almost want to cheer, for I think they have gotten it right. They are now united into one, but they are also still themselves.

    I remember a wedding where, at the beginning of the ceremony, the mother of the bride and the mother of the groom each went up and lit one of the two candles at the side of the large unity candle. How appropriate—the ones who gave life to the bride and the groom brought to life their individual candles.

    How can we be joined together in marriage, yet still be ourselves? That’s a lifelong challenge that all married couples face. It’s better than just becoming one, for then the question would be, which one of us will we be? Marriage doesn’t dismiss our individuality—it’s meant to enhance and develop it. That’s part of the mystery of marriage—it is a holy symbol!

    Talking Together

    In what ways do you think that struggles with oneness could affect a marriage relationship? Can you think of incidences in your own relationship that might have been connected to the core issue of oneness versus your individuality?

    Praying Together

    Loving Father, Paul says our marriage is like Your relationship with the church and with us. How awesome that is! Help us to better understand that oneness with You. As we better understand how our marriage is a holy symbol, may we become increasingly aware of who You want us to be in our marriage.

    Amen.

    DAY 4

    Marriage Is to Be Honored

    Give honor to marriage, and remain faithful to one another in marriage.

    HEBREWS 1 3:4

    The writer to the Hebrews links together honoring our marriage and being faithful to one another. He doesn’t say we are to honor our spouse—instead we are to give honor to marriage. Yet it seems that they do go together.

    We watched Jan’s mother deteriorate with Alzheimer’s disease for almost ten years. For much of that time, she was completely unable to communicate. She became totally helpless and completely dependent on Jan’s dad.

    He put her in a nursing home at the beginning of the long ordeal, but he found that he was spending all of his time at the nursing home, and he was concerned about the quality of care she was receiving. So he brought her home, and for the last seven years of her life, he took care of her, along with a hired helper (who often wasn’t much help). During those years, his life consisted of expressing his love for his wife by taking care of her even though she could not respond to his love.

    Jan’s dad showed his love for her and honored her as a person by doing this, but I think much of his motivation was that he was honoring their marriage. Over fifty years earlier he had made a solemn marital vow to her and to God that, no matter what, he would be there. He honored that vow. I think often of him and how he gave honor not only to the wife of his youth, but also to his marriage.

    Sometimes as couples, we hit a snag in the road, and we may then find we don’t even like our spouses. Some couples, in their anger with each other during those times, do foolish and hurtful things to each other and to their marriage. They forget the injunction that we are to give honor to marriage itself.

    We are to take the very idea of marriage and place great value upon it. One of the definitions of the word honor is to give weight to what is weighty. When we consider the importance God places on marriage, we know that any marriage is a very weighty subject—one worthy of honor. The blessing that comes from honoring our marriage is that we will remain faithful to each other.

    Talking Together

    What do you think might change in a couple’s relationship if they put an emphasis on making the marriage itself the object to be honored as opposed to honoring each other? Of course, it is equally important that we honor our spouse as a valuable gift from God. Talk about what you might do or change in your own relationship that would show you are honoring your marriage.

    Praying Together

    Heavenly Father, thank You for the gift of my spouse. Thank You that You brought us together. As we see more and more how important marriage is to You, we know that You honor it and we want to understand more fully what it means for us not only to honor each other, but also to honor our marriage. May we see that in doing this, we also then honor You.

    Amen.

    DAY 5

    Marriage Is the Foundation of Society

    Build homes, and plan to stay. Plant gardens, and eat the food you produce. Marry and have children. Then find spouses for them, and have many grandchildren.

    JEREMIAH 29:5 - 6

    It was Cicero who said, Marriage is the foundation of society. We can take from that thought the idea that when a society honors marriage, its foundation is secure. However, when a society stops honoring marriage, its foundation will begin to erode.

    Since 1960, the rate of divorce has accelerated to the point that approximately 43 percent of marriages now end in divorce.¹ In our culture there is also increasing pressure to broaden the definition of marriage to include same-sex relationships. Others seek to redefine the family unit, going way beyond the biblical image of a husband and a wife and their children. It seems that marriage and the family are under attack today, and it doesn’t take any great leap of intellect to understand the truth of what Cicero said over two thousand years ago. Without marriage, culture

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1