Christ In The Home: God’s Plan For His Family


III. POSITIVE PURPOSES OF SEX IN A HEALTHY MARRIAGE



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III. POSITIVE PURPOSES OF SEX IN A HEALTHY MARRIAGE


  1. Reproduction

  2. Pleasure

  3. Unity

  4. Reaffirm one's identity


IV. SOURCES OF PROBLEMS

  1. Ignorance

  2. Guilt

  3. Fear

  4. Problems related to external factors: long working hours, heavy stress, lack of privacy, etc.

  5. Personal hostility, anger, resentment, bitterness, etc.



V. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE SEXES


From Marriage For Moderns, by Henry A. Bowman, 1960, 1965, 1970. Adapted and used by permission.

Male Female

Considerable interest in sex

Less interest in sex

Accumulation of seminal fluid to constitutes internal stimulus

Nothing equivalent accumulation of seminal fluid


Pleasurable sexual experience

a. extends through greater part of life


Pleasurable sexual experience

a. may be experienced during part of life; sometimes only once.


b. reaches peak of frequency and physical responsiveness in teens

b. may reach peak comparable to male, but may be several months or even years after wedding


c. Lesser orgasm capacity; can achieve orgasm and ejaculation less frequently in limited time

c. greater orgasm capacity; if responsive, can reach orgasm more frequently in span limited time span

4. Readily responds to being touched by opposite sex

4. May readily respond to by being touched by opposite sex

5. Much interest in visual experience


5. May also be interested in visual experience

6. More readily separates sex


6. More inclined to combine and love sex and love

VI. SOME GENERAL OBSERVATIONS

1. The goal of sex is intimacy!


2. Sexual intimacy cannot exist in isolation. It must grow in context of emotional intimacy!
3. The mind is the number one sex organ.
4. Sex is celebration! The key to sex is delightful companionship.
5. The sexual relationship should be the joyous celebration of another day of loving and sharing of life together which says to each other, "I love you ecstatically and enjoy immensely our shared life."
6. The sexual relationship is not strong enough, no matter how good, to support a bad relationship.
7. It is not technique that makes a person a good sex partner. The sex partner must feel valued and considered to be a person of worth.
8. In some marriages, sexual intercourse carries too much of the overall human need for closeness.
9. Sexual intercourse may even be the only form of sharing and closeness in some marriages.
10. The overloading of sex and lack of companionship tend to keep sex from finding a full meaning.
11. Marital intimacy is much broader than sex, although all facets are colored by the sexuality of the partners.
12. Sex takes place between persons, each with a network of values, feelings and conditionings, which influence everything he does, including sex.
13. Sexual relationships are essentially human relationships. Sexual "skills" are interpersonal "skills."
14. The total quality and value of the relationship affects the meaning and satisfaction derived from sexual intercourse.
15. To say by words and behavior, "You're terrific in bed," or "We'll make sweet music together," or "You made last night heavenly!" causes one to prize his or her sexuality, which makes it easier to be loving and giving next time.
16. Sex itself is a form of communication.
17. A man and woman cannot really love deeply unless they also honor each other.
18. Whatever both mates find relaxing, satisfying, and at least a little romantic will enhance their sex life.
19. Open communication about what gives each maximum pleasure is tremendously helpful in developing satisfying sexual relations.
20. Setting aside a time for regular "let's enjoy each other" nights or days is a practice that pays big dividends.
21. Super sex is the result of an atmosphere that has been carefully created.
22. You cannot respond sexually to a person you hate, to a person you fear, or to a person with whom you are angry.

VII. COMMUNICATING AFFECTION IN MARRIAGE


A. Verbal

  1. "I love you." (often, daily)

  2. "I need you."

  3. Compliments to spouse. "I can live a month on a good compliment." -Mark Twain

  4. Compliments about spouse.

B. Non-Verbal (Verbal is Meaningless, Hollow, Insulting Without the Non-Verbal.)



  1. Attitude and tone behind the words communicate.

  2. Thoughtful of other's feelings in every word.

  3. Listen adoringly. There is a way of listening that surpasses all compliments." - Joseph von Ligne.

  4. Study your man's special needs. (One basic neurosis of men is to be compared unfavorably with others.) ,

    1. To be sexually accepted.

    2. To be respected.

    3. To be admired.

    4. To feel that he is needed.

    5. To be appreciated.

    6. To feel that he is really worthwhile. ,

  5. Study your woman's special needs. (One basic neurosis of women is the fear of being "used" and "discarded.")

    1. Affection.

    2. Assurance that she is loved.

    3. Assurance that she is treasured. -- Love asks: "What does this person need?" and gives it! ..,

    4. Security (both emotional and physical)

    5. Her human dignity preserved. (Key: way husband feels about her).

C. Ways We Perceive Love.

1. Touch - kiss, embrace, sex

2. Sight - grooming, figure, cleanliness

3. Sound - music, voice, laughter


  1. Smell- perfume, cleanliness

  2. Taste - good meal

D. Ways We Express Love -,



  1. Giving pleasure – thoughtfulness

  2. Giving sense of security

  3. Giving protection

  4. Giving help

  5. Forgiveness

  6. Sacrifice

  7. Joy

  8. Togetherness

  9. Gentleness

VIII. THE CLIMATE OF LOVE

1. Genuine encounter (focused attention)

2. The safety of trust (free to be open without fear)

3. The safety of non-judgment (see person as separate from acts)

4. The safety of being cherished (loved "warts and all")

5. The safety of "owning" feelings (allow to be "human")

6. The safety of empathy (understand viewpoint without judgment, agreement or disagreement)

7. The safety of unique growing (free to develop in own direction and at own pace)
IX. CONDITIONS MOST IMPORTANT FOR SEXUAL RESPONSIVENESS IN WOMEN


  1. Good relationship between self and husband

  2. Privacy and freedom from intrusion

  3. Something "good" or "successful" occurred that day

  4. Not tense or depressed

  5. Not tired

  6. Modulation of light (semi-darkness)

  7. Not sick

  8. Be clean or smell good

  9. No time limit

X. SUGGESTIONS FOR HUSBANDS

1. Tell her you love her every day.

2. Never pass up an opportunity to give her sincere praise.

3. Always speak to others of her in a complimentary way.

4. Communicate but don't criticize.

5. Keep the spirit of courtship and romance alive in your marriage. Remember that a woman is aroused sexually by tenderness and thoughtfulness as well as by caressing and fondling.

6. Take plenty of time for sex. Too rapid sex often leaves the wife tense, angry and unsatisfied.

7. Discover the areas of her body which are particularly pleasurable.

8. Be careful of your cleanliness and personal hygiene.

9. Remember that your wife literally cannot respond as she and you would like if her feelings are hurt, if the bedroom is cluttered, or if the children are stirring in the next room.

10. Communicate to her that you need her.


NOTE: The wife's greatest love need is to feel that she is treasured, important, and special .
XI. SUGGESTIONS FOR WIVES

1. Keep personal attractiveness at its very best.

2. Be careful to be clean and to take care of personal hygiene.

3. Take extended time for lovemaking away from all distractions.

4. Read some good books.

5. Let go all inhibitions and participate fully, eagerly in the experience.

6. Welcome his advances.

7. Become actively involved in foreplay.

8. Let him know what pleases you.

9.Be creative in initiating lovemaking.

10. Reassure him of his manliness.
NOTE: The husband's greatest love need is to be sexual accepted.


"Christ In The Home: God’s Plan For His Family” Series

#12 Workaholism: Deadly Killer of Family Life
Workaholism is a deadly killer, and yet every day many people accept workaholism as a normal way of life. Tom Peters, co-author of In Search of Excellence, observed that he is in favor of one having balance in all areas of life. However, while he believes in balance, he is quick to confess his inability to achieve it in his own life. Excellence in work and excellence in family time are often far apart.

Can one become successful vocationally and avoid the high cost of workaholism? What drives a person to work sixty to ninety hours a week? What is causing the work time for most Americans to increase 20% more today (from 40 to 48 hours a week) than in 1973? What does the future hold for families when both mom and dad are spending inordinate time away from children and each other?

On January 4, 1990, The Wall Street Journal carried an article asking one additional question "Are We All Working Too Hard?" The subtitle declared: "No Time for God or Family." Mr. Hunnicutt, the author of the article, makes the insightful observation that "Americans now view work as an end in itself—the more of it the better." We find free time threatening, and so run back to the security of "finding new problems to solve, new and 'serious' tasks to perform, new frontiers to open and more work to do."

More serious than just working too many hours, Hunnicutt believes, is the tendency to answer traditional spiritual questions such as "Who am I?" and "Where am I going?" in terms of work rather than traditional religion. All of this seems to be leading toward a lifestyle that adds significant speed to the fast lane. Time for reflection and the evaluation of critical life issues are endlessly deferred.

Is this a problem just for top executives in their mid-fifties who find it difficult to go home, or rather, is this a problem for adults at every level of the life cycle? Lees take a look.

Entering Adulthood (Ages 22-27) — Just graduated from college, both Todd and Anne Marie, his wife of six months, have entry-level jobs. They have quickly discovered that to "get ahead" they must work fifty or more hours each week. They have decided that Anne Marie must get established in her career before starting a family. They arrive home each evening after 7:00 with little time for interaction. Both work most Saturdays; therefore, Sunday is their only day of rest. But they promise themselves it will not always be this way. Someday they will be "established" in the work world, and there will be more time for each other and a family. For the time being they wear "business" like a badge. It declares their importance and their busy ness. And the busier they are, the more important they are.

Todd and Anne Marie have fallen into the trap which promises "tomorrow life will be better," that says when they get established they will have more time. Unfortunately, it may take until midlife or beyond for them to realize that "today is all there is."

Recommendation: Young couples need to make themselves accountable to each other during the early years of marriage. They must establish spiritual priorities as well as vocational priorities; otherwise, they will find themselves substituting work and business for traditional religious values. As a "rule of thumb" young couples should spend at least thirty minutes a day talking, sharing, and reminding one another of what is really important in life and their marriage.

Thirty Transition (Ages 28-33) — These are the "Eager Beavers." At this stage, a foothold has been established in the world of work, but now it takes more time than ever to distinguish one's self from the rest of the pack. Surely Charles Swindoll had this group in mind when he wrote his book Living on the Ragged Edge.

Lee just turned thirty. Each day seems a lot like the day before. He gets up at five a.m. and is at the office by seven. Real estate has not been great in the past four years, so the average workday is twelve to fourteen hours long. Seventy-hour weeks are common. In fact it seems to Lee that all he does is work. His wife Mary stopped teaching a few years ago to have their three children, and Lee feels responsible to provide the equivalent of the two salaries they once earned.

It is not unusual for the children to be in bed already when Lee gets home from work. Seldom do they have a meal together, and because of exhaustion and financial pressure, Lee seldom initiates conversation with Mary. Mary feels neglected and trapped by the three children that she rears alone. When Lee and Mary do talk, they almost always dream of the future when the real estate market will be better and the children will be older and less demanding.

Recommendation: In Living on the Ragged Edge Swindoll challenges his readers to evaluate their values carefully. Values are clarified only when one disengages from the constant pressure of work and spends time wrestling with spiritual priorities and what really matters. In addition to "quiet times" couples need to be intimate enough to listen to the counsel and recommendations from each other. One's mate can and should make the other account able for long hours, insensitivity to children, and disregard for the body's need for rest and relaxation. It remains true today that "the most important thing a father can do for his children is to love their mother," and that takes time, lots of time.


Settling Down Period (Ages 33-40)

Don survived the turbulent thirties and now feels secure in his job and future. He is not required to work the unusually long hours characteristic of earlier years, but he finds himself working long hours because it is his choice. As a manager of a division, his day is filled with meetings, phone calls and interesting tasks. He enjoys the authority and his more than adequate salary.

Now that Don has many free weekends, he finds that the children have their own activities and often spend Friday nights with friends instead of with the family. Don feels guilty about being absent during his children's elementary years, but he tries to make up for those lost years by providing everything the children want. When Sally tries to talk to Don about working less, he becomes irritated and delivers the same speech over and over: "I work hard so you and the kids will have everything you want. It takes a lot of time to earn enough money to keep this family housed, clothed, and fed. It's going to cost a fortune to send all four children to college. Someday there will be more time, but not for several more years."

Recommendation: Possessions are expected to bring satisfaction, but they never do. "Contemporary culture is plagued by the passion to possess," begins Richard Foster in Freedom of Simplicity. He encourages all adults, especially workaholics, to reflect on how "more can be less." The important need is not more possessions, but rather authentic lives and deep relationships. Mates and children need our presence rather than so many presents.


Midlife Transition (Ages 40-50)

Aging parents and adolescent children sandwich midlife adults between two demanding issues: money for the children's college education and appropriate care for elderly parents. This transition often causes men to stop, and reassess the first half of life, and ask tough questions about their future. While his identity has been his work for the past twenty years, the man now often seeks a new identity in relationships and intimacy. He would like to work less, but the demands of life are weighty. He is the backbone of the family, the business, the community, and the church.

Alton is vice president of the company where he started as an accountant when he got out of college twenty-five years ago. When you ask him about work he says, "It's not fun any more. I have to make myself get up and go to work." You would expect Alton not to be a workaholic at this point in his life, but he is out of town twelve to fifteen of the working days each month. Offices in Houston and Chicago keep him on the go. Because of his wealth and power, Alton should have more than enough time for his family. However, after a week of serving as an elder in his church, president of the local Rotary club, and meeting with two of the five boards on which he serves, he has less time than ever.

Recommendation: Contrary to popular belief, adults at this age do not have to be "masters of the universe." While midlife adults are important to the community, they are not indispensable. They should relax. They have influence over what they do, how they spend their time, and what they will do with the rest of their lives. The present is always the best time—the only time—to celebrate with one's family.


Middle Age and Beyond (Ages 50-70)

By the time one gets to the last two decades of a career, workaholism is often less of a problem. Children are gone and the "empty nest" is a reality. One hopes that earlier issues of finances, work identity, guilt about family absences because of work, and other family issues have been resolved. If they are not, workaholism may continue to rob husbands and wives of the precious time that remains.



Managing Workaholism

Delores Curran surveyed 551 individuals before she wrote her excellent book Traits of a Healthy Family. She wanted to discover what traits were commonly found in emotionally healthy families. Of fifteen traits, one is: "Healthy families share time together." Healthy families schedule at least one meal a day when everyone is present. Dads with demanding jobs refuse to schedule breakfast and dinner appointments on the same day. At least one mealtime each day is reserved for the family. Time with one's family gives balance and helps to stave off the deadly killer of family life. Curran lists five hallmarks of the effective family's approach to "shared time."

First, the family keeps its collective leisure time in balance. Second, the family prioritizes its activities. Third, the family prizes opportunities to spend time alone with individual family members. Fourth, the family controls television watching. Finally, the family plans how to use its time.

Controlling workaholism is as difficult as controlling alcoholism, overeating, abuse of substances, and other addictions. However, with God's help one can manage workaholism. Hunnicutt said it well in his Wall Street Journal article: "Work and economic growth are not ends in themselves but are means to healthy living and superior earthly and heavenly values."



A busy husband and father, David Wray keeps wife Jeanne, daughter Wendy, and son Walt as #1 priorities.


"Christ In The Home: God’s Plan For His Family” Series

Curing the Critical Home

by Harold Hazelip

Everyone enters adolescence with lots of "I'm not OK" feelings. Self-doubt seems to be part of the growth process. We may think everyone around us has life together, but we lack confidence in ourselves. And many of us never overcome this negative view of oneself.

Jeremiah was God's man. During Old Testament times he was called clearly and convincingly by God to be a prophet. In spite of God's obvious faith in him, Jeremiah seemed very uncertain about himself. Not only in his words to the people, but through his dialogues with God he reveals his many moods. His emotions rise and fall like a roller coaster. He soars in ecstasy as he delights in God, but he also falls into depression and decides that God is unreliable. Jeremiah could be very tenderly compassionate with others, or he could be sharply hostile toward those who hurt him.

I think we feel closer to a person who is "up and down" than we do to a person who always seems in control of his life. We all have our moments of discouragement when our confidence hits new lows.

Dr. Haim Ginott says that the lack of self-confidence often originates in earliest childhood when our family often makes us feel incapable of doing any task successfully.1

Ginott suggests that nothing is more damaging to a child's self-image than sweeping statements made by parents or siblings: "You are lazy!" "You're sloppy!" "You're dumb!" "You're bad!" Such statements are a broadside to a person's self-image. The child concludes that he or she is worthless and cannot change.

Dr. Ginott urges parents to relate positively to the child at the level of being and confine their negative comments to the level of doing. This means that one can say to a child, "You are doing this in a sloppy way." "You are behaving in a lazy manner—this bothers me." This puts the criticism against the action of the child rather than against the personhood of the child. It implies that the child has the power to adapt his or her behavior. The child does not feel helpless.

Hypercritical parents bring the worst out in their children, while positive, reinforcing parents bring the best out in theirs. If we frequently suspect our children of the very worst, they decide, "If that is the kind of person you think I am, that is the kind of person I will be." On the other hand, if we trust our children, we build into them the integrity which can say in the face of temptation, "I can't do this wrong and disappoint the people who love me most."

How do we avoid having a critical home? Doesn't everyone find it necessary to criticize a spouse or a child at one time or another? Surely it is impossible to live with another person without being appraised by them and, in turn, appraising their actions. Jesus was sometimes critical of other people. If criticism seems necessary, how can we give positive criticism to others rather than destructive criticism?

First, criticism should always be for the other per son's good, not for our own satisfaction. Jesus never criticized any person except to improve that person's life. Can our criticism honestly pass this test? Do our words merely vent hostility? Are they building our pride, or are they words of love intended to build up the other person? If we pass the test of loving edification, we have a beginning toward giving criticism in a Christian manner.

Second, criticism should be built on complete honesty and fairness. We never know all of the facts about another person but we must be fair enough to get as many facts as possible before criticizing. When Ezekiel began his work as a prophet to the captives in Babylon, he said to the exiles: "And there where they were living, I sat among them for seven days—overwhelmed." He shared their experiences day and night for one week before offering criticism or suggestions to them. It helps if you learn the facts as thoroughly as possible before passing judgment.

Third, our criticism should never be final. Only God can make final judgments; our knowledge is too limited. We must always leave the door open for the criticized person to improve his or her actions. Helpful criticism challenges, perhaps even inspires, the other person to greater heights. Members of our families have a way of living up to or down to expectations.

Fourth, criticism must always be given in a spirit of humility. No matter what you find to criticize in another, you need help too - though perhaps in a different area of life. If we are to help one another, criticism must never be spoken by a superior to an inferior. Instead, one imperfect person always stands by another on level ground beneath a cross.

It is even more difficult to receive criticism with a Christian spirit than to give it. If criticism is to strengthen our families rather than to weaken them, we need help in learning to receive criticism gracefully.

First, when criticism comes, evaluate it and look for whatever is valid. Someone reported to Abraham Lincoln that Mr. Stanton had called him a fool. Lincoln replied, "Stanton is a wise man and if he called me a fool, I will look into the matter." Criticism may be the beginning of growth.

Second, realize that you may be able to help your critic. If you can be like a blotter and absorb unjust criticism, you may open the door for God to help your critic. But if you return anger for anger, you will only make your critic more defensive. You may recall the way the spiritual sums up Jesus' response to criticism: "He said not a mumbling word." The apostle Peter wrote, "live in harmony with one another; be sympathetic... compassionate and humble. Do not repay evil with evil or insult with insult, but with blessing ..."2



Third, be sure to keep your sense of humor. Take the criticism in humility but not to the point of being humiliated. Humor is the ability to stand back and look at yourself objectively and actually laugh at yourself. If we can cushion the shock of criticism by keeping our sense of humor, we may in time learn to be the wisest of all persons—critics of ourselves. Helen and Harold Hazelip complement each other in their marriage of 45 years.

"Christ In The Home: God’s Plan For His Family” Series

#13 ”Reasons for Marital Failure”
The story is told of an artist who wanted to paint the most beautiful picture in the world. He asked the preacher, "What is the most beautiful thing in the world?" The preacher answered, "Faith. You can feel it in every church, find it in every true heart."
The artist asked a young bride the same question. "Love," she replied. It builds poverty into riches, sweetens your tears, and makes much of little without love there can be no beauty."
A weary soldier answered the same question, "Peace is the most beautiful thing in the world. War is the ugliest. Wherever you find peace, you find beauty."
"Faith, love and peace! How can I paint them?' mused the artist. Then, entering his own home, he saw FAITH in the eyes of his children and LOVE in the eyes of his wife. And there in his home was PEACE that love and faith had built. So he painted the picture of the most beautiful thing in the world, and when he had finished it he called it "HOME."
This little story presents a view of the home in its ideal state. But we readily admit that all too few homes have achieved this degree of success and happiness.
One in every 3.5 marriages end in divorce and every indication is that many more homes which do not end in divorce are nonetheless unhappy. The latter homes are not successful, but in order to avoid the stigma of divorce or for the sake of the children in that home the husband and wife agree to continue living together.
God intends that our homes be successful. He has given us a divine pattern to follow in the establishment of our homes and, if we will only follow that plan, our homes will be happy.
The fact that so many marriages are failing is testimony to the fact that many people are ignoring God's pattern for the home. We must be careful not to neglect the study of God's will in this regard or we shall inevitably reap the bitter consequences.
If we want a simple formula that aids in the success of our marriage, be a faithful child of God. If your home is not what it ought to be, don't point the finger at the spouse...look at yourself in the mirror and take care of what you see there. And never lose hope for your partner.
If all the members of your family are Christians, you enjoy one of the greatest of all earthly happinesses. Thank God for that fact and give yourselves, as a family, to his faithful service. Live sober and godly lives and worship him regularly in the public services of the church.
Why do marriages fail? The purpose of this study will be to point out some of the more frequent causes of marital failures. The reason for this particular lesson is twofold: (1) to help young people avoid making these mistakes when they form their homes, and (2) to make married couples examine their own homes for signs of these factors at work to destroy their happiness.
1. MARRIED FOR THE WRONG REASON

Many marriages fail because the man and woman got married for the wrong reason to begin with.

For example, some marry to escape from their own unpleasant home environment. A girl may have been dominated by a harsh father who refused to understand her. Chances are that she will marry the first person who comes along -- not because she loves that person, but because he represents her chance to escape from her father. This kind of (marriage is doomed almost from the start).
Some marry as a result of physical attraction alone. This is usually the reason behind marriages where the two people have known each other only for a short time. A boy may "fall madly in love" with a beautiful girl and persuade her to marry him.
More likely than not, they will both soon learn that infatuation (generally based on physical attraction) is enough to get them married but is not enough to keep them married!
Still others get married because of pregnancy. A "forced" marriage hardly ever works out satisfactory, unless it involves two repentant people who can truly "start over," with God's help. The vast majority of marriages forced by pregnancy end up in divorce rather rapidly.
Two wrongs don't make a right! Generally speaking it is wiser for the girl to bear the illegitimate baby, give the baby to a reputable adoptive agency (for the baby's sake), forget the child's father, repent of her sin and receive the forgiveness of sin.
2. ENTERING MARRIAGE UNREALISTICALLY

Closely related to marrying for the wrong reason is the matter of It entering marriage unrealistically. There are many false ideas about Ii marriage. A great many marriages are resting on the Hollywood illusion of life and love. Most people take for granted that love is the only thing that really counts in marriage. The mass media have given the impression that love is a mysterious encounter of two "souls destined for each other," and that love's arrival and departure are quite beyond human control.


Two people may therefore be convinced that "they were meant for each other" and marry in confidence that they "will live happily ever. They will soon learn that life is not effortless esctacy and that marriage is an adult relationship which involves responsibilities for

which they have not prepared themselves.


A successful marriage is in great measure the result of the preparation that has been made for it...physically, morally, intellectually, vocationally, emotionally, and spiritually. "Love feelings" are not enough to sustain a lifetime together! Others have entered marriage unrealistically by expecting too much of each other. The girl may have considered her future husband the perfect man. After marriage she will have found that her "god" has feet of clay!
On the other hand, the boy who thought he was marrying an angel on earth may soon be disillusioned by the fact that she can't keep an earthly house as clean as he would like or bake an earthly apple pie!
When two people get married, they ought to have a realistic perspective about the future. They should want and expect happiness, but understand that happiness comes about as the result of hard work. They should expect the best of each other, but should not be surprised to find that each is human and has faults.
On the other hand, some people have married with the expectation of failure. Or, to say the least, they do not enter the marriage with a of determination to make it work. They get married with the idea that this is an experiment in happiness i.e., if it works, fine; if it doesn't, we can always get a divorce and "try again."
Needless to say, these people aren't going to work very hard at solving their problems. Instead, they will just take the easy way out by getting a divorce.
3. IMMATURITY

A third reason why so many marriages fail is immaturity on the part of the husband and/or wife. The average age for marriage is dropping consistently. And, in this same connection, it is interesting to note that the divorce rate for those who marry in their teens is six times higher than for any other age group! The obvious explanation for this high incidence of failure in early marriage is immaturity.


People who get married too young just don't have enough information about life and are lacking in life experiences to the degree that they can't cope with the many complex problems which face husbands and
It would be unthinkable to put an immature and untrained person into the cockpit of a jet and expect him/her to take off and fly to a destination. Yet every day teenagers attempt to take over the controls of a marriage for which they have had no training.
Someone has suggested the following reasons why teenagers are too young to marry:

a. Marriage is serious business and there is much more to being serious than simply the wish or desire. Teenagers cannot have I enough knowledge about marriage to be serious about it.


b. Teenagers have not yet really learned to live with themselves.
c. Too often boys do not realize they are trying to find a shortcut to manhood by assuming outward signs, one of which is marriage.
d. Teenagers cannot promise to be steadfast, true and constant to another human being because they are not really in a position to keep that promise. Their growth, development, and education are all incomplete. They are still in the midst of the transformation which changes a child into a man or woman.
e. Persons mature physically before they mature in character. One if not fully himself until he is past 20 years of age.
f. Ten years later, the teenager will not be at all the same kind of person he or she is now. This means that today's teenager is not in a position to pick a mate for the adult he or she will soon become.
Marriage is an adult relationship and simply cannot be negotiated by children! Emotional growth and maturity are imperative.
Theodore Adams, in his book Making Marriage Succeed, suggests the following indications or tests for genuine emotional maturity:

a. You should be able to carry a reasonable load of emotional tension without blowing up. When you face annoyances and disappointments, frustrations, or difficulties, you must be able to face them without going to pieces, or getting sulky, or refusing to speak, or resorting to other silly, childish ways so often seen in the immature.


b. You should have outgrown childish and foolish fears and anxieties, e.g. fear of the dark or of being alone. Young people are sometimes afraid of being different or of standing up for their own convictions.
c. Learn to expect to be treated as a responsible partner in marriage. "Some men want to be mothered and waited on all their lives instead of taking a man's place in the home as well as in society. Too often a woman expects just a delightful and continuing courtship and wants to be babied and cared for all the time, instead of getting down to the stern realities of making a home and rearing a family." Each must be ready to carry his/her share of the load and develop the skills that will make this possible.
d. "You should be emotionally independent of your parents and able to stand on your own feet and make your own decisions in life." In- cluded in this is the ability to look plainly at your own faults and limitations and seek to correct them. The ability to bear the responsibility of fatherhood and motherhood is also involved. If you marry, you may have a baby within a year, whether you plan for it or not."
A pretty, fragile, clinging vine may be charming as a sweetheart, but in a wife you want a woman able to face the realities of life without tears and wailing and nervous breakdowns.
A stormy, tempestuous lover may make your heart beat faster, but in a husband you want a man mature enough to face difficulties without flying into a rage. Child wives and spoiled boys belong at home with mother; they are not grown up enough to face marriage.
Running home to mother/father is the immature response to a problem. And wise parents will not encourage this type of immature behavior by their children! Mother, if your child "runs home" to you, close the door. Make him see that he is now a member of a family that is independent of yours. Push your child completely out of the nest when he\she gets married...don't give in to the temptation to become a meddler in other people's affairs.
Help your children establish an independent home. Encourage them to stand on their own feet. You will be doing them a great favor!

There are also some who marry hoping to reform and remake the one they think they love. They are actually in love with what their mate can become rather than in love with the mate as he is.


Some of these persons tend to feel that, after marriage, the mate will automatically become a perfect person. But human beings are human beings after marriage, just as before. The chances are that a person will be the same after the vows are read as he was before!



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