Marriage is
a two-for.
You know
what a two-for is, don’t you? You buy one, get one for free. When you marry
your sweetheart, you actually get more than just
one free. You get an entire additional family. What a bargain!
April is
National Math Awareness Month. Apparently, some of us weren’t paying attention
when that celebration rolled our way. Mama told me, “Marry the man, marry the
family.”
But the
marriage math doesn’t end there. “And the two shall become one flesh. Since
they are no longer two, but one” (Mark 10:8 NIV). Do the Math Awareness people
have that one figured out? I doubt it.
God planned this unique mathematical equation: 1+1=1. If it sounds
impossible, it’s not. But it’s not simple, either. I’ve been married 37 years.
When people ask how we’ve managed to stay together, happy all these years, I
reply, “I travel a lot.” We joke that after all these years, Ron’s concluded
it’s “cheaper to keep her.” A sense of humor probably doesn’t hurt either.
We’ve agreed to take marriage seriously, and ourselves less so. It’s hard to
stay mad when you’re laughing.
God knew it wouldn’t be easy for us to set aside
our “me first” human nature and put things in biblical order. God expects to be
first, and wants our spouse to be next in priority. Romans 12 reminds us, “in
honor give preference to one another.” That puts me in spot number three in my
life, running contrary to my selfish nature. But if I prefer my husband and he
prefers me, we are each well cared for and the relationship is in order as
together we submit to God. But if I get just one item out of order—my job, or
friends, even my kids—the math equation begins to come apart.
The good news is that God is there when we forget
how to add it up. And since He created marriage, He has provided the manual on
how to care for it and how to repair it when needed.
So go to the author of the instruction manual on
marriage. The one who believed it possible, if not easy, to create one from
two. “Since they are no longer two but one, let no one split apart what God has
joined together” (Matthew 19:6). Although this sounds like a warning against
outside influences, it’s also a reminder to couples that even we do not have God’s
approval to blow up our marriages when things get tough.
Marriage. Crazy math. Questions? Go to the great mathematician. He’s
got it
Deb DeArmond Bio:
2 comments:
Andrea - thanks so much for publishing this article. I'd love to have you review my book in November when it is released by Kregel.
Sounds good to me, Deb! Congrats on your first published book!
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