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My husband, Michael, and I have been married for thirty-six years; we are happy and still in love. Surprisingly, we have become one in reality, deeply in tune with each other’s spirits even though we are still opposites in personality. Our tangible joy is inexplicable through secular eyes, because from all outward appearances our life together has been a tough journey including poverty, nine kids, overwhelming chores on a small family farm and long-term, clinical depression.
The grace available in the sacrament of marriage is not some esoteric theology; it is real and it is powerful. The power available in the sacrament is what kept my husband and me together through the rough years. We both understood, beyond a doubt, that God brought us together. We never questioned this basic call from God, our vocation together, even during the dark years.
I have always managed to keep our difficulties in perspective through humor. One of my jokes is on the typical marriage vow about for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health. I say, “Well, we’ve seen worse, poorer and sickness and we are more than ready for better, richer and healthier.” Then I dissolve into gales of laughter. I must admit Michael never fails to simply raise one eyebrow in my direction and smile apologetically at our visitors. However, the truth is that humor works. It has been proven that when people laugh at their foibles and do not take themselves too seriously. Their problems suddenly shrink and they, in turn, gain perspective. Over dramatizing conflict is deadly. This is simply an example of cognitive therapy in action: taking a step away from each conflict and looking at the big picture, through the eyes of God.
Surprisingly, one of the keys to the longevity of our marriage is suffering. Suffering was a gift which unified us because it stripped away false pride and forced us to our knees in prayer. Honest prayer led us to self-knowledge, humility and compassion for each other. When I asked a priest what my life would have been like if I had not suffered, if I had married a well-off dentist, had 1.25 kids and lived in an efficient, modern house, he put on a phony, pious face, put his hands together in prayer and said in a high, mocking voice,” Oh, you would be a nice Christian lady, praising the Lord.” What he meant by that amusing bit of acting was I would be shallow, without depth and strength. When I see the results of a bit of suffering in our marriage, I say bring it on.
The only reason my husband and I got married and stayed married is our faith. We are a brother and sister in Christ, fellow children of God who seek His will together. We have always been on the same page, sensing the next level of growth in our spiritual walk and changing at the same pace. This has been a pure gift from God. It was growth in maturity and in my faith that healed our marriage. When I quit demanding love from my husband, quit trying to control him, he was set free to love me in freedom and in truth, in the power of the Spirit of God. When I let go and surrendered to God, He blessed me with more than I ever could have asked for in our marriage.
Many young women secretly wait for their knight in shining armor to whisk them off their feet so they can live happily ever after or for a wonderful woman to lift off a sense of aimlessness. Although we laugh at such ridiculous fantasies as the stuff of naive, lovesick teenagers, we all must face the deep temptation within ourselves to seek out a future partner to fulfill all of our needs. We have been brainwashed by Hollywood’s romantic movies. The truth is, counter to what secular society would lead us to believe, only God can meet our core need for love. Countless marriages end up in divorce because people have embraced the crazy notion that the man or woman of their dreams will completely satisfy and fulfill them. This is a lie.
If you want to get married, seek the face of God, trust Him and He will drop someone in your path, because marriage is just as much a vocation and a calling as Holy Orders. My husband once asked God to find him a wife and then forgot all about it as he dedicated a year to Madonna House in Combermere, Ontario, Canada. He then spent another year at his local parish where he lived in the residence with an ill priest and helped him run the parish. The next year, while travelling across Canada, he stopped in to see a friend who was a parish worker but a note on the door explained Steve had taken his youth group on a picnic. Michael came over to my house to wait because I lived with Steve’s fiancé. As soon as Michael saw me, he knew I was the one for him. Michael still swears prayer is the best method for finding a bride.
Society does not prepare people for a Christian marriage. Couples have to actively seek out help and advice. I suggest a multitude of tools from reading insightful books, attending conferences, retreats and confession, practicing prayer, seeking spiritual direction and counseling, which help couples mature and grow together as one in Christ. As a newlywed, I wish someone had explained to me that in marriage partners irritate each other by pulling out each other’s darkness, bringing their wounds to the surface. Once I understood this spiritual dynamic, I quit blaming Michael and pointing out his faults and instead centered on my own need for repentance and growth.
I spent years as a pitiful, innocent victim, crying my eyes out over my plight of being married to an insensitive man, when all along my own sins blocked Christ’s love from flowing to both of us. Once I focused on my own need for growth, rather than on Michael’s issues, the Spirit of God could finally deal with my own sinfulness and need for healing. If I had thrown up my hands and divorced Michael, chances are the second fellow would have turned out exactly the same. My sinfulness triggered my husband’s sinfulness. Period. I had to stop blaming and pointing out Michael’s failings if I wanted a great marriage. Instead of pointing out the grain of sand in his eye, I had to allow God to show me the log of faults in my own eye. God designed us so only His love will fill the desperate desires of our hearts. Once I understood this truth, I could allow real love, respectful love, to grow between Michael and me. I no longer made crushing demands on the poor guy to fulfill the role of God in my life.
We read a homily by Saint John Paul II wherein the main premise was that letting go of control and trusting in God was not some abstract principle, but a day-today practical call. That included the surrender of our fertility by not using contraception. Although we could not imagine how large our family would become, his words continued to resonate within both of us. Guilt lifted off and a sense of purpose took its place. Many small experiences kept reinforcing the truth: God calls each of our children into being with our cooperation. We stumbled blindly at times, but then a burst of clarity would shine light on our purpose as we lived out our pro-life mission.
Looking back over thirty-six years of marriage, I am filled with the joy of the Lord, grateful my husband is a patient man.
Melanie Jean Juneau is the administrator of ACWB, the editor in chief at Catholic Stand, and author of “Echoes of the Divine.” Her writing is humorous and heart-warming, thoughtful and thought-provoking. Part of her call and her witness is to write the truth about children, family, marriage and the sacredness of life. Juneau is a mother of nine children and blogs at joy of nine9.
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