[Editor’s note: For those who knew my grandmother Rosemary, she was passionate about teaching on healthy marriage. She was not shy about discussing sex, and encouraging both women and men to bring more joy and love into their marriage relationship. This entry, “A Fresh Look At Love” is separated into two parts.]
There is an old song called “Love and Marriage” and part of the words say, “you can’t have one without the other.” But I am afraid there are many marriages where the love has died or is dying, and the partners have become more roommates than lovers. I don’t want that to happen to you and neither does the Lord. Today we will be looking at some things that might add a little spark to your marriage.
What is a romantic marriage?
Is yours romantic?
Do you wish it were?
Were you? Or are you? Disillusioned?
Romance is just one aspect of marriage, but it is the important oil that lubricates the rest.
Are you more in love with your husband that when you married him – or have you become roommates and just politely tolerate each other and sometimes not so politely.
We are going to read Revelations 2:3-5. This was written to the leader of the church of Ephesus telling of the church’s love of Christ growing cold. But the same words can be true of a marriage. And we will look at it in that light right now.
“I know you are enduring patiently and bearing up for my name’s sake, and you have not grown weary. But I have this against you, that you have abandoned the love you had at first. Remember then from what you have fallen, repent and do the works you did at first.”
To a wife – these words could be taken as thus: Oh, yes you are working so hard, and enduring patiently all the trials of trying to be a good wife, and a good mother and you try to smile and not grow weary. But oh, my is it hard. This is all good, but have you abandoned the love and joy and excitement you had when you first got married? Do you remember those days? The little things you used to do or say to your husband? Why don’t you think about how far you have fallen away from the joy of being in love. Why don’t you again do some of those sweet, loving things you did at first.
I am going to share a few thoughts with you to help you revive a dying marriage, or put some life in a stale one, or add some spice to an already good one.
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You need time alone. You need dates. You need weekends together, just the two of you. A friend told me she needed these times to remember why she married her husband. This is sooooo important to a marriage. Afford it! Make the effort! Even if it is one night and not the whole weekend it will seem like a long time once you are away.
We would try to do this once or twice a year and now really try to tell couples how important it is. The preparation of getting 5 children ready to go in three different directions was hard. Later on, we hired someone to come to the house and that was much easier, although a little costlier, but well worth it. While in the midst of arrangements to go I always felt, “Is it worth it?” “Why am I doing this?” But once away, YES it was worth all the preparation. Getting away from the daily problems. Getting away from being a mommy and a daddy, concentrating on being lovers.
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You need to find times of romance within the busy hectic life at home. Yes it takes effort, but it is possible.
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Our children had regular bedtimes and we allowed some time for “just us” after they went to bed.
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What about playing old music that brings back memories and moods?
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How long has it been since you have done the following:
Bathed together?
Kissed in the shower?
Held hands under the table?
Held hands in public?
Gave him a love pat when you walked by?
Special time together at a dinner out?
A special walk?
Laughed together?
Make time for romance right now – in the midst of your busyness – or you’ll be 50 – children leaving – and you are left with a stranger instead of a lover.
Love Him Now
Tell Him Now
I love the poems by Ruth Bell Graham in her book Sitting by My Laughing Fire. I shall read you the one on page 215, “I Met You Years Ago”. [Editors Note: Poem not included in notes] This is so true of me and my sweetheart Richard. We met when we were 14 and 16. Began going steady when we were 15 and 17, and married when we were 19 and 21. He is my dear lover and I love him more each year. We both love the saying of Robert Browning, “Grow Old Along with Me, the Best is Yet to Be.” We believe that with all our hearts. Our life and our love only gets better each year.
I am also going to read another poem from this favorite book. Page 116 “You Look At Me” [Editors Note: Poem not included in notes]
It has been said, that men give love to get sex, and women give sex to get love. We could also change love to romance. Women seem to need it more than men.
If your husband isn’t satisfied sexually you might as well forget about romance. When that area is cared for, he can be trained to be romantic. But he has to know what you like and want in this area and each of us is different.
The Lord wants your marriage to be more romantic than anything the movies ever dreamed up.
Proverbs 5:18-20 “Let your fountain be blessed, and rejoice in the wife of your youth, a lovely hind, a graceful doe. Let her affection fill you at all times with delight, be infatuated always with her love.”
Ecc 9:9a “Enjoy life with the wife whom you love…”
Song of Solomon 5:16 “His speech is most sweet, and he is altogether desirable. This is my beloved and this is my friend.”
The Bible also tells us many ways not to kill love. These are two:
Eph 4:15 “Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is head, into Christ.”
Pro 25:24 “It is better to live in a corner of the housetop than in a house shared with a contentious woman.”
God’s planned for a better romance “after” marriage than you ever dreamed of. The world has it in reverse. An exciting courtship, then settle down to a dull marriage. Perhaps that is why so many live together and not marry, they are afraid of this.
In Bible times romance began “after” marriage. The marriage was arranged by the parents, leaning heavily on God’s choice.
Many of the woman in the Bible were described as beautiful. In Gen 21:16 we read about Rebekah, “she was very fair to look upon.”
And this about Esther in Esther 2:7 “The maiden was beautiful and lovely.” But even so she was given 12 months of ‘beauty treatments’ before being presented to the king. We read in Esther 2:12 “Now when the turn came for each maiden to go in to King Ahasuerus, after being twelve months under the regulations for the women, since this was the regular period of their beautifying, six months with oil and myrrh and six months with spices and ointments for women.” Wow, this was some kind of a beauty spa.
We aren’t able to do something like that, but we shouldn’t either, jump out of bed, facing the world and our husbands, without taking a little effort in caring for ourselves. It is hard for a man to feel romantic about a wife who is a slob. He’ll put up with us, understand being busy with children, etc., but can he feel romantic about it.
If you are like most women you don’t feel romantic all the time. Perhaps more so during certain cycles of the month. When you so – make the most of it.
If you are embarrassed to speak your feelings, write them. Give him little notes.
Read Song of Solomon in its entirety. Beautiful picture of a loving with abandon.