5 Things I Wish I Knew Before I Got Married

Today and tomorrow, we are going to do something at RefineUs we hope will be very helpful.  Each of us will be sharing 5 Things We Wish We Knew Before We Got Married. I’m sharing today, and Trisha will be sharing with you tomorrow.

(For the record, I have like 20 things I wish I would have known, but for the sake of time, I’m limiting it to 5. :) )

If you are single or engaged we hope this list saves you from learning these things the hard way like we did.

If you are married, you may have known some of the things on this list, but we’d love for you to add to it. Maybe together, we can compile a comprehensive list of things every person should know before they get married.

1. Marriage is More Spiritual Than Anything Else

There is no way that I can talk about this enough. My relationship with God is the fuel that drives our marriage and our family. When my relationship with God is running on fumes, our marriage suffers. Not only that, the relationship that Trisha and I have isn’t a civil contract…it is a spiritual relationship that has been ordained by God, set apart and designed to make two individuals one. There is also a spiritual battle that rages against our marriage. We have an Enemy that attacks our marriage every single day. It is so easy for me to focus on earthly things and forget about the forces that are trying to pull my wife and I apart.

2. I’m Bringing Baggage Into This Marriage

The way I was raised created baggage. The relationships I had in high school and college created baggage. The sexual abuse I experienced as a kid created baggage. The pornography I was exposed to and made a habit, created baggage. My insecurity and my fears created baggage. You can’t pretend baggage away. You can predend it isn’t there, but it doesn’t go anywhere…it just gets bigger. I wish I would have acknowledged it, shared it and gotten help for it before we got married. My wife would have married a much more healthy, whole man than she did.

3. Avoiding Conflict Isn’t the Same as Resolving Conflict

Some how, I equated no conflict with intimacy. So if I could get through a day, week, weekend without an argument, then our marriage must be doing well. I cheated our marriage for years of growing closer together by avoiding conflict rather than embracing it and resolving it. So often in our marriage, God uses conflict to expose problems, bring light into weak areas, and illuminate areas that we need to address. Avoiding those things for the sake of peace doesn’t help us…it dwarfs our ability to be known and loved. I wish I would have known this before we got married.

4. Marriage Counseling Isn’t A Sign of Weakness

I lost count of how many times Trisha asked me to go to marriage counseling. We would be arguing about the same thing over and over again, and she would say, “Let’s talk to Mark and Rhonda about this.” Mark was the pastor I worked for, and I wanted Mark to think I had it all together. I didn’t want him to know how sucky of a husband I was. I didn’t want him to think I needed help. Getting marriage help was a sign of weakness not strength. Man was I wrong. Seeking marriage counseling isn’t a sign of weakness, it is a sign of humility and teach-ability. My arrogance and pride put me on the path of infidelity.

5. Trisha Will Love Me Even When I’m Ugly

There were so many times that I felt prompted to share my struggles, my weaknesses, my temptations and sins with Trisha. But I would think to myself, “If she knew this about me, she will never love me.” So I did my best to hide the ugliness that resided in my heart. You can hide for a while, but eventually ugliness of heart always makes its way to the surface. I wish I would have believed the vows that Trisha made to me on our wedding day, “For better or for worse; for richer or for poorer…until death do us part.” When ugliness is confessed and confronted, God has a way of transforming it into something beautiful and redeeming.

These are my 5 Things that I wish I would have known. What would you add to the list?

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  • http://dixieugadawg.wordpress.com/ allyugadawg

    #4 & 5 spoke to me. @loswhit sent out a tweet several weeks ago that has not left my mind. I can’t remember his exact quote, but his message was that pre-marital counseling from the church, while purposeful & well-intended is insufficient. That the church/Christian community would serve Christian marriages better by focusing on continual counseling throughout marriage as opposed to just before the ceremony. Love this!

    I’m newly married so i don’t have any wisdom to share, but i’m so thankful for your ministry Justin & Trisha! Looking forward to learning from others’ comments & reading Trisha’s 5 tomorrow. Blessings!

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

      I totally agree with Carlos. We often give people five happy hops to a great marriage, but fail to talk about real struggles and issues. Trisha is up tomorrow…it is really good!

  • Rebekah

    Love #4 & #5. Those are definitely things my husband and I wish we had known!

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

      Thanks Rebekah!

  • Kerry Cox

    Gonna have to steal one from you, Justin, from a previous blog. I wish I had known that:
    It isn’t my job to change my spouse. That’s God’s job.
    Now, I do believe that one of the real strengths of marriages is that we are constantly holding up a mirror to each other, and offering correction when appropriate, guidance, and advice. But our spouses will change when they are ready to and when their heart is humble enough to hear God’s prompting. If we try to force the issue, even if it’s something we know that God would have them do, we can create resentment and hurt that will hinder the growth process.

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

      So true KC…thanks for the reminder of that one!

  • http://jennyrain.com JennyRain

    #3 is definitely a struggle for me – I hate conflict. bleck.

    #1 is super important to me

    I would add “don’t get married until you are a grown up” – meaning, I think a lot of folks get married before they are ready and it is hard work!

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

      So true Jenny!

  • http://www.jcwert.com Jason Wert

    As corny as this sounds…I’d say a rule going in is that you can’t expect your spouse to be there more than you will be for them. Does that make sense? If not, sorry…long day at work today. :)

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

      It does make sense! Thanks!

  • extra nos

    >>When ugliness is confessed and confronted, God has a way of transforming it into something beautiful and redeeming.<<

    Yes! I don't have to fear what any man or woman may think of me. At the Cross of Christ, God has spoken everything there is to be said about me. Everything. Nothing left to hide. Now I can be thoroughly open about my sin, my failures, my weaknesses. I don't need to fear any man. I am accepted in the Beloved and I am clothed in the righteousness of Christ. In spite of all of my sin and ugliness God chose to set His affections on me, because of His great love for me which I did nothing to deserve. (btw, I'm still working on all of this, by God's grace :) )

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

      So true…thanks for your comments!

  • http://life2getherblog.com Doug

    thanks. your words are refreshingly honest and humble … we need more of this in the church, especially from leaders like yourself. just a couple things i would add. one, the pathway to change in my marriage is not to try to change my spouse, it’s to look at how I need to change. and, second, from the outset of marriage, i need others in my life to speak truth to me in love — a safe place where i can share my brokenness with another believer(s) (of the same sex) i can trust.

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

      So good Doug! Thanks so much!

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