Skip to main content

(Single Ladies) BEEN SELFLESS - Preparation to your Future Marriage Life


http://www.todayschristianwoman.com/images/49750.jpg?w=140 

Both secular and Christian research suggests that one of the most important traits in a good marriage is humility—actually the opposite of being consumed with yourself. A good husband or wife demonstrates empathy, compassion, forgiveness, and a desire to grow and learn.

If qualities like humility and kindness make for stronger relationships, why do we gravitate toward the advice that tells us to “look out for number one”? Why do marriage counselors encourage people to abandon a marriage if it doesn’t help them “become the best you”?

A focus on loving yourself never prepares you to love someone else. In fact, it actually sabotages your capacity to love.
 
We have always been susceptible to Satan’s appeal to our prideful and sinful nature. In the Garden of Eden, he convinced Eve that her way was better than God’s. He fed her pride and her desire to be the god of her own world. His lies haven’t changed that much, yet we still sink our teeth into the apple, exchanging the truth for a self-affirming lie.

All-Sufficient Love

I understand that many women struggle with insecurity; you may be one of them. You may need encouragement to find your voice, to set healthy boundaries, or to ask others to treat you with respect. However, true confidence never comes from believing self-affirmations.

The apostle Paul wrote a prayer for the Christians in Ephesus that expresses where true confidence and the ability to love comes from. I believe his prayer applies as much to us today as it did to these Christians who lived 2,000 years ago:
For this reason I kneel before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth derives its name. I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell richly in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. (Ephesians 3:14–19, NIV)
Only when we build on a foundation of God’s deep love and the power of the Holy Spirit in our lives can we grow in love and authentic intimacy. Self-love will never equip you to love another person. Instead, God asks you to trust in his great love for you. Our problem is not that we love ourselves too little, but that we don’t trust God’s love to be sufficient.

Have you ever thought about what it must have been like to be married a hundred years ago? There were hardly any books on how to have a better marriage and no marriage getaway weekends to rekindle your love. How did our great-grandparents manage?

While I’m a fan of resources that help us grow in relationships, I’m also convinced that many of the books and seminars that aim to help can actually end up harming. Why? Because the vast majority of books and relationship seminars focus on the big ME—what I want, what I need, what I deserve, and how I can fix my marriage.

“Well, you can’t really love others until you learn to love yourself.” I’ve heard this common sentiment hundreds of times in songs, poems, on bumper stickers, and even in the church. Some Christians cite Jesus’ commandment to “love your neighbor as yourself” (Matthew 22:39) as a biblical mandate that we should focus on loving ourselves.

I believe this modern-day rendition of Jesus’ teaching has done more to destroy marriage than Internet porn.
Instead of actually helping us in relationships, I believe this modern-day rendition of Jesus’ teaching has done more to destroy marriage than Internet porn. Yes, that’s a strong statement. But consider this: the use of porn and other destructive habits in marriage are fed by a humanistic belief that says, "I will only be fulfilled when I put my own needs first." A focus on loving yourself never prepares you to love someone else. In fact, it actually sabotages your capacity to love.

The truth about love is closer to these teachings from Jesus:
  • “There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends” (John 15:13).
  • “Whoever tries to keep their life will lose it” (Luke 17:33, NIV).
Throughout the Bible we are reminded that selfishness, even under the pretense of “finding myself,” is a lonely road to nowhere. I’ve met many women desperate to fix their marriages through the pursuit of self-love and self-actualization. They don’t have to look too far to find a relationship “expert” who will encourage selfishness as the way to healthy intimacy.

Self-love has many different expressions. While some women are obsessed with their looks and achievements, others are self-absorbed in their insecurity. In both of these situations, our hearts are preoccupied with self, unable to extend unselfish love or live a life to the glory of God alone.


May the Holy Spirit help you to become THE WOMAN HE HAS CREATED YOU TO BE IN JESUS NAME.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Be Single But Don't Be Stupid

Relationship is a tool and platform for maintaining, sustaining and deploying of dreams or purpose. Relationship is a tool and platform for learning, discovering and development your capacity, potentials, ideas and dream. Relationship is a tool and platform for participating in adding value to others and in receiving value from others. Being single is not a curse but an opportunity to discover your self and explore your dream. Being single is a season. There is a time to be single and there is a time for dating. Don't pursue your dream to the extreme and abandon the need for dating. Dating is a necessity and a pleasure. If you can't cultivate a healthy life as a single, dating will frustrate you. Be single and be productive. Be single and be result oriented. Be single and develop your capacity. Be single and understand your direction in life. Be single and Specific about your reason for existence. You are unique and you must dare to be different. Learn to stay where God has ord

Un-masking the past - Part 2

Why do you need to unmask the past? If you are not ready to unmask the past, you will remain a slave to your past. You won't be able to identify why you failed the way you fail. You won't be able to maintain the pattern of success you had in the past. It because difficult for you to trace the source of any present issue, conflict, and negative experience. Unmasking the past is the best gift you can ever offer yourself. You need to unmask the past, understanding your past is what dictates what to stop doing, what to start doing, what to change, and what to improve. It rescues you from blaming everybody while making excuses for your faults. Unmasking the past helps you not to repeat the same mistakes all over again. It reveals how you failed in other to know how to sit up in the present. It reveals how you succeeded and how to maintain that success. Nobody in life, including me, has a smooth past. During a counseling session, a lady once told me. I have a past that I will never t

Love Transaction - Part 1

Relationship is and will always be a transaction of values, priority and needs. Your success is being able to sell what you enjoy selling and what this person will enjoy buying from you. What are you selling is all about, your input or contribution to your present friendship, relationship or courtship. What's the quality of your attitude, mindset and manner of approach, you are investing in the lives of the people around you? Will you enjoy this lady or man treating you the same way you are treating him or her? Will you enjoy this person talking to you in the same manner you are talking to him or her? Its not about how committed you are this person, but as a man, is this what you promised her while asking her out? As a lady, is this what you promised him before you accepted him? Ever since you stepped into this persons life, has things gone worst or best? In what way have you being helping and supportive to this person? Do your jokes respect this person or it abuses him