This post is written by contributing writer, Mary Beth from New Life Steward.
“Stop Focusing on Your Marriage.”
The first time I heard that statement, I was sitting in a relatively new small group in a friend’s living room. We just started a new study on marriage and during the video segment, the speaker told us to stop focusing on our marriage. Immediately I was defensive.
I am a marriage and family counselor. I spend the majority of my working hours helping couples focus and work on their marriages. One of the first questions I ask couples is this: Are you committed to your marriage? Here this guy was telling people not to focus on their marriage. He definitely had my attention.
What is wrong with “marriage”?
I’ve heard it many times, “I’m 100% committed to my marriage”. On the surface, this sounds like a great statement. People that say it, mean it and have fantastic, whole-hearted intentions. However, I believe there are dangers that can arise when the “marriage” becomes our focus:
- The Danger of Legalism: When we begin to “work” on our marriages, we tend to have a vision of what the process and final product will look like. We read books about how to have the perfect marriage, we study what scripture says, and then we form a checklist of tasks to accomplish in order to maintain a “perfect” marriage.
*monthly date night–check
*attend church together–check
*pick up my dirty laundry–check
While there is nothing wrong with doing these things, our focus tends to shift to maintaining our checklist rather than knowing our spouse. We can easily slip into this mentality in our relationship with God as well. - The Danger of Contract Thinking: Once we succumb to a checklist mindset, we easily notice the items our spouses are not getting checked off.
*He forgot to plan a date night.
*She left her shoes in the living room again!
When we have a heightened awareness of where our spouse is failing, we not only tend to miss their successes, but we also give ourselves an excuse to slip. - The Danger of Selfish Thinking: Legalistically keeping check-lists (real or implied) and contract thinking are rooted in selfishness. Our focus becomes ourselves. We see the long list of tasks we’ve accomplished in an effort to strengthen our marriage and compare it to the long list of failures we’ve noticed in our spouse.
A Better Way: Focus on God and Your Spouse
In the Sermon on the Mount (found in Matthew 5 and following), Christ challenges his followers by raising the standard of the law to apply not only to outward actions but also to the inward life of the heart. In our marriages, we make a commitment to God and our spouse. We do not say vows to a marriage–the vows create a marriage. {Tweet This}
Often we get caught up in keeping the letter of the law, we stay married because “God hates divorce” (Mal. 2:16). However, if we are missing God’s original intent when He created marriage–the intimate union of two people as a symbol of Christ and the church–then we are still missing the mark (Gen 2:24; Eph 5:32). We may be legally married on paper, but in reality we are room-mates working hard to check items off a list and totally missing the relationship in the process. We need to shift our focus.
- Focus on Your Relationship with the Lord (Matt. 6:23) The reality is that both parties in a marriage are sinners. Both need to be plugged in with the Lord and allowing His Holy Spirit to fill and work in their life. As stated previously, the goal is not to create a check-list for “building my relationship with God” but to genuinely seek the Lord as He leads you and accept His grace when you don’t get it right.
- Focus on Your Relationship with your Spouse. Interestingly, most of the passages in Scripture that use the word “marriage” are talking about a wedding feast or celebration. The passages addressed to husbands and wives instruct them in how to act toward their spouse (Eph. 5:22-33). You know your spouse better than I do and better than any book on marriage you will read. You know how best to connect with him or her. Find ways to do those things. Also, seek ways to serve your spouse. How can you ease their burden?
I realize this post really deals with semantics, but I truly believe that the way we choose to think about concepts affects our actions, beliefs, and feelings. By choosing to focus our thinking on strengthening our relationships with God and our spouses, our marriages will naturally grow and flourish.
What was your initial reaction to the title of this post? What is your response now having read the explanation?
Photo Source: C. P. Storm
This post is linked to Making Your Home Sing, Miscellany Monday, Marital Oneness, Modest Monday, Welcome Home, Time Warp Wife, On Your Heart, Teach Me Tuesdays, Wifey Wednesday, Women Living Well, Works for Me, WIP Wednesday, Thrive at Home, Fellowship Fridays, Faith Filled Fridays.















Wow, Mary Beth! This is great. It really got me thinking and gave me a fresh way of looking at things. Thank you!
Mandy recently posted..It’s a Party! {GIVEAWAYS!}
Thank you Mandy! It really got me thinking too…as you can tell!

Mary Beth recently posted..Should We Focus on Our Marriages?
My husband and I just celebrated our 19 year wedding anniversary this week so this is timely for me.
He is a “believer” but he no longer serves in our church, actually, and more truthfully, he doesn’t go to church with me anymore. I don’t use that an excuse to treat him any differently than I know I’m supposed to. In fact, my prayer is that the Lord would help me to be a blessing to him and that he would see me as his crown.
Thank you for these encouraging words.
Diana Denis recently posted..WHY I CAN’T PRAY FOR MY MOM
Wonderful advice, friend!
Jenni Mullinix recently posted..Why My House Isn’t Always Clean + Thrive @ Home Link-Up
I like these thoughts Mary Beth. Thank you!!
Thank you, Mary Beth! Very encouraging!
Martha recently posted..Day 5 – Hope For My Home
Yes and Amen! I have a great marriage now but I worked on it for years and in those times, I kept checklists and made plans and committed to doing more but I always felt like I was getting the short end of the deal. When I finally stopped and worked on pleasing God and doing all things as unto Him, our marriage turned around. I was able to just love my husband without all the expectations and grace and forgiveness came. Marriage is so important but unless we have that strong relationship with the Lord, it can easily become an idol.
Alia Joy recently posted..Concepts to Concrete:Thoughts on Church and Link Up
I am a check-list maker myself. But for some reason (ahem) I always seemed to find what my hubby wasn’t doing rather than looking at myself. Things really are different when you change that perspective!
Mary Beth recently posted..When Colic Teaches Patience {A Guest Post}
What a great post! This is so true about marriages. There is a danger in checking off things on your married life checklist and also having too high expectations. I think after a year and half of marriage I’m finally understanding how important it is for my husband and I to deeply invest in eternal things together, not just temporary pleasures. We’re striving this month to glorify God by spending more time talking about things of God in our daily communication.
Hannah Williams recently posted..Do I Delight in Evil? Day 8
Wow! That is awesome. My husband and I have been married 5 years, and we still struggle to talk about God together consistently. You are absolutely right, too. Investing in things of eternal significance is vitally important!
Mary Beth recently posted..When Colic Teaches Patience {A Guest Post}
We’ve started praying over the Psalms together in the morning and we’ve decided to stop watching TV at least two hours before bed just to devote our hearts to rest, fellowship, relaxation, prayer, and hearing God’s voice instead in order that we’d sleep better. Last night I actually did sleep a little better. Praise God! Maybe you can’t devote 2 hours to relaxing, fellowship, and praying, but I highly encourage you to give God some time before bed and He will give you abundant rest – spiritual, emotional, mental, and physical!
Hannah Williams recently posted..Beloved, Let Us Love One Another, Day 13