8 Things that Restored Our Marriage-Pt. 6

One of the things that was so frustrating to me in my walk with God until Trisha and I separated was the fact that I struggled with the same sins over and over and over. I made repeated promises to God that I wouldn’t commit a particular sin ever again. I asked for forgiveness and would do great for a while in not committing that sin…then even though I had the best intentions to move past that sin and find freedom…it seemed find me in my weakest moment. The question I continually asked myself was “How, after all these years,  can I struggle with the same thing? If I were a better Christian, I wouldn’t struggle with ________ anymore.”

The same pattern was true in our marriage. Maybe you can relate to this…Trisha and I didn’t argue about new issues. Our arguments were very uncreative…they were always about church, sex, or money…usually in that order. There were certain variations of these arguments, but when it came right down to it, we always argued about these things. The question that we asked ourselves as a married couple was “How can we, after all of these years, still argue and fight over the same things? If we had a stronger marriage, we wouldn’t argue about these things anymore.”

When we began to go to counseling, something in me changed. I no longer wanted to know “how” I could struggle with the same sins in my life, I wanted to know “why?” When you begin to ask the question “why” in your marriage, it unlocks this restoration principle we discovered that has helped us move from destruction to restoration:

Restoration Principle #6: Your willingness to deal with and understand the destruction of your past will determine the depth of restoration in your future.

This is how this played out in my life and how it completely transformed our marriage. It would have been easy for us to take a few months, go to counseling to deal with the breach of trust that the affair caused in our marriage. But so often we repeat sins and behavior patterns in our life and in our marriage because we fail to understand when the destruction began in our life. We spend so much time trying to pretend that we are not broken, not messed up and not hurting. We fail to grasp how our past decisions, our past sins and our past mistakes, if not understood, acknowledged, confessed and redeemed can affect every aspect of our life.

For me, this meant going way back in my life and identifying when sexuality was first broken. I was sexually abused as a child, when I was in first grade. I didn’t tell anyone about it because the person that did this told me that no one would believe me and I would get in trouble for lying if I told. Finally, when I was a freshmen in high school, the AIDS virus came on the scene and I became nervous that this encounter I had 8 years before would cause me to have AIDS…so I told someone. It wasn’t received with much seriousness and was dismissed. That was a defining moment for me. Yes, I had choices that I made from that point on…choices to have sex before I was married, choices to give into lustful thoughts, choices to indulge in pornography, and a choice to have an extramarital affair…but those choices were driven by a brokenness that I never identified and never dealt with or understood.

I have typed this and retyped this over and over trying to make sense-I hope I am making sense!!!

The truth is that both you and your spouse bring a past into your marriage. You bring sins and hurts and disappointments. Maybe you were raped in high school. Maybe you had a one night stand in college. Maybe you were physically or sexually abused as a kid. Maybe you started watching porno movies when you were in 8th grade. Maybe you cheated on a test when you were a freshmen. Maybe your dad left you when you were a kid. Maybe your mom never told you she loved you. What we have come to understand in our marriage is that the depth of restoration and intimacy we experience in our marriage today is in direct proportion to our willingness to understand our past and allow our past to be redeemed.

The truth about God is that he will never force Himself on any of us. If we are unwilling to bring part of our heart to Him, he will not redeem and heal that specific part of our heart. Somehow, we sentence ourselves to struggle with the same sin and the same temptations because we are not willing to go back to that dark place in our past and bring it into the light. We hope that by ignoring it or pretending that it didn’t happen that it will magically go away. The opposite is actually true. The longer we ignore hurts and brokenness from our past, the more it robs us of the person that God has created us to be.

This principle is painful…but it is powerful. I struggled with lying…so we went back and talked about when and why I first started lying. Trisha struggled with feeling validated and valued…so we talked about when she first felt devalued and taken advantage of.

Here is the cool part. When you get serious about this, you begin to identify the areas of your life that bring you the most pain and you deal with it…those pains, hurts and sins loosen their grip on your heart. When you are willing to go back to that dark place and figure out when you were first broken in that area, the stronghold that had in your life is crushed!

Life and marriage is “easier” if we don’t go this route. It will cost you something to choose this principle. But you begin to wake up to the person you always wanted to be and you begin to have the marriage that you always wanted to have. No longer do past hurts, mistakes and disappointments have a hold on your heart. If you want to take a giant step away from destruction and toward restoration, look back at your past. What areas of your past are still following you around today? What issues have you wished would just go away, but still creep back into your heart and soul? What arguments are you having today that you had five years ago? Ten years ago? Are you willing to go there and release the past from having control of your future?

  • http://www.graceandtruthrelationship.com/ jeff williams

    Jill and I took the gloves off about 5 years ago after learning some skills that helped us to talk about painful and emotional issues in a way that built rather than eroded our relationship. Our thought was, “We want God’s best and don’t want to settle for mediocre.” Brutal honesty with each other, confession, asking for forgiveness, and praying together have all been a part of cleaning out the closets and making a better place for Him to live in us and our marriage.

    Jeff

  • http://www.graceandtruthrelationship.com jeff williams

    Jill and I took the gloves off about 5 years ago after learning some skills that helped us to talk about painful and emotional issues in a way that built rather than eroded our relationship. Our thought was, “We want God’s best and don’t want to settle for mediocre.” Brutal honesty with each other, confession, asking for forgiveness, and praying together have all been a part of cleaning out the closets and making a better place for Him to live in us and our marriage.

    Jeff

  • Lauren

    Great post, thanks for sharing so honestly. This is one that my husband and I can relate to on many different levels. We came to a crisis point in our marriage where we had to decide whether to do what we’d always done (which was to avoid conflict at all costs) or take our marriage to a level of transparency that was extremely uncomfortable for both of us so that we could get past some hurts and allow God to start growing our relationship into what he intended. It was not fun and it took time to see the fruit of that labour. I can’t imagine going back to the way we were. Along with counseling, we found the book “Emotionally Healthy Spirituality” by Peter Scazzero to be extraordinarily helpful in that journey. I wish we’d run across a blog like your’s at that time as well. Would have been encouraging and affirming at a really tough time:)

  • Lauren

    Great post, thanks for sharing so honestly. This is one that my husband and I can relate to on many different levels. We came to a crisis point in our marriage where we had to decide whether to do what we’d always done (which was to avoid conflict at all costs) or take our marriage to a level of transparency that was extremely uncomfortable for both of us so that we could get past some hurts and allow God to start growing our relationship into what he intended. It was not fun and it took time to see the fruit of that labour. I can’t imagine going back to the way we were. Along with counseling, we found the book “Emotionally Healthy Spirituality” by Peter Scazzero to be extraordinarily helpful in that journey. I wish we’d run across a blog like your’s at that time as well. Would have been encouraging and affirming at a really tough time:)

  • http://twitter.com/trishadavis23/status/1336355628 trishadavis23

    In case you missed it late last night… 8 Things that Restored Our Marriage-Pt. 6 http://refineus.org/?p=137

  • Gary Keener

    Thanks so much for sharing your heart. I am continually amazed at how you say these things that I am thinking. It has helped Andrea and I process through some things that we buried and still deal with. We are so proud and of you guys and can’t wait to spend some face time together. Love you!

  • Gary Keener

    Thanks so much for sharing your heart. I am continually amazed at how you say these things that I am thinking. It has helped Andrea and I process through some things that we buried and still deal with. We are so proud and of you guys and can’t wait to spend some face time together. Love you!

  • http://www.refineus.org/ Justin and Trisha

    Lauren,

    Thank you for your response. What we have learned in this process is that most of the things that we have gone through, everyone goes through at some level…but no one is willing to talk about it. Our hope and prayer is that as we share our story, more and more people will be willing to open up and be transparent with one another and find healing and restoration. Thank you again for your heart-felt comment!

  • http://www.refineus.org/ Justin and Trisha

    Gary…I know that God has awesome things in store for you and Andrea. I know that He has saved you and set you apart and your story and your journey will change lives and set people free! I believe that for you guys! Looking forward to seeing you guys soon!

  • http://www.refineus.org Justin and Trisha

    Lauren,

    Thank you for your response. What we have learned in this process is that most of the things that we have gone through, everyone goes through at some level…but no one is willing to talk about it. Our hope and prayer is that as we share our story, more and more people will be willing to open up and be transparent with one another and find healing and restoration. Thank you again for your heart-felt comment!

  • http://www.refineus.org Justin and Trisha

    Gary…I know that God has awesome things in store for you and Andrea. I know that He has saved you and set you apart and your story and your journey will change lives and set people free! I believe that for you guys! Looking forward to seeing you guys soon!

  • Makeda

    I'm a little late to reading some of these posts but they have really been impactful for me. I am not married yet but I see God challenging me to make room for Him to redeem the brokenness of my past. Thank you for putting to words some of what I am experiencing. It applies whether married or not.

  • Makeda

    I'm a little late to reading some of these posts but they have really been impactful for me. I am not married yet but I see God challenging me to make room for Him to redeem the brokenness of my past. Thank you for putting to words some of what I am experiencing. It applies whether married or not.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/davisfamily05 Justin and Trisha

    Thank you so much Makeda! Your comment is an answer to our prayer! We hope that our journey is helpful, no matter your marital status!

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/davisfamily05 Justin and Trisha

    Thank you so much Makeda! Your comment is an answer to our prayer! We hope that our journey is helpful, no matter your marital status!

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