Before you say ‘I do’…

Tomi Toluhi

Many years ago I read a book by Jack and Carole Mayhall titled, ‘Marriage Takes More Than Love’. This was so long ago that I cannot remember any details from the book but the title stuck with me.  If you are thinking about spending your life with someone, what is the most likely question you would be asking yourself? If you are like most people, ‘Do I love him or her?’ would be the top thing on your mind. That’s a great place to start but I want to share with you five less-thought-about questions which you ought to ask yourself if you are contemplating spending your life with someone.

Do we respect each other?

Respect is one of the essentials which no marriage can survive without. Respect on both sides is crucial to a healthy relationship. No woman should ever place herself in a position where she marries a man she cannot respect. Marry a man who inspires you and whose judgement and wisdom you can trust. In the same vein, it is a mistake for a man to marry a woman whose opinions he does not genuinely value and whose uniqueness he cannot respect. His lack of respect for her will hinder her from being everything that God designed her to be in his life. Examine your relationship and ask yourself whether genuine respect is an underlying characteristic of your conversations and conduct on both sides. Love cannot thrive for very long in an atmosphere of indifference and disrespect.

Do we trust each other?

Trust is the bedrock of a stable marriage. In order to open up and truly love and be loved by someone, you must believe that your heart is safe in their keeping. Trust cannot be demanded; it is a gift that is earned. Before you bestow your trust upon someone, they must demonstrate that they are worthy of it. You should be able to trust that your partner’s word is their bond; that what they say and what they do are congruent. Trust is built on truth. When deception enters a relationship, regardless of how small, it tampers with the very foundations of that relationship. If your partner gives you cause to doubt their integrity when you are in a courtship, marriage will only magnify the problem. Whatever you do, do not compromise on this element of your relationship.

Are we committed to each other?

Are you prepared to say ‘Yes!’ to this person and close your eyes to all other possibilities for the rest of your life? And are they willing to offer the same level of commitment? Until you are both prepared to go all out for your relationship, the chances of survival in marriage are very slim. Every marriage needs a level of commitment which goes beyond a mere commitment not to divorce but rather draws out of us the willingness to do whatever it takes to make that marriage work; anything less than that will make marriage a wasted opportunity. If either of you is unprepared to make a red hot commitment to each other, you are better off walking away now than enduring the dissatisfaction of a lukewarm marriage.

Can I live happily with you if you never change?

Albert Einstein famously said, ‘Men marry women with the hope they will never change. Women marry men with the hope they will change. Invariably they are both disappointed.’ One of the most common mistakes that people make when choosing a partner is settling for someone they are not fully satisfied with in the hopes that said person will change sometime in the future to become more like what they want in a spouse. In making such a decision, they ignore the fundamental fact that human beings are notoriously resistant to change, especially when it is imposed. The baseline for a successful marriage is contentment. When you begin from that footing, it becomes easy to enjoy your partner’s strengths, of which there will be many, and accept whatever faults show up as they inevitably will. Your spouse is not a makeover project.

Am I ignoring any warning signals?

The previous point intersects with this question which borders on what is acceptable and unacceptable behaviour in a relationship. It is dangerous to overlook warning signals in a relationship in the interest of acceptance. There are certain behavioural patterns which are definite red flags in a relationship – verbal and physical abuse, addictions, infidelity, chronic irresponsibility, deception, deep-seated unforgiveness, vengefulness, violent tendencies, self-centredness, compulsive jealousy, uncontrollable rage – the list goes on and on but you get the picture. Any one of these character traits would render a marriage intolerable in a very short space of time. It would be simply perilous to ignore them. Get away as fast as you can from a relationship marred by dangerous flaws; ignoring warning signals is simply storing up trouble for the future.

PS. What do you think about these five questions? Read more in my book, Get Real , and share your comments on Facebook or Twitter.

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Sharon was a God-loving, go-getting, hard-driving, ambitious woman with grand dreams of conquering the world. She had all her plans carefully laid out. She would own her own business by 35, hit her first million by 37, exponentially grow her business and by 40 she would branch out into real estate acquisition. Her ultimate goal was to make millions, not for herself, but to provide a better life for orphaned children in her community. She had felt the pain of being parent-less and passed from relative to relative with no real stability growing up. She knew what it felt like to go to bed hungry and cold. No child should ever have to go through what she went through growing up. She was determined to do everything in her power to rescue, nurture and care for as many orphans as she could. Mark was a stable, godly, focused man with the ministry on his mind. For as long as he could remember, he had always felt a divine call to be a missionary. Reaching unreached people-groups was his consuming passion. He knew without a shadow of a doubt that he wanted to spend his life preaching, teaching and pastoring in an island community where no Christian church existed. He was committed to living among these forgotten people and reflecting the light and love of Jesus to them. Then Mark met Sharon. They fell in love, had a whirlwind courtship, got married…and reality struck. You can already tell where their story is heading. Wondering what became of Mark and Sharon? We will never find out because they are entirely fictional but their story illustrates a point which I have observed graphically playing out in some marriages. It is entirely possible to fall in love with someone who shares your Christian values but whose life values are wildly different from yours. Your values manifest in two different ways; what is right and what is wrong in your view, and what matters to you most. The dictionary supports this distinction in our understanding of values. Values could refer to the principles or standards of behaviour which you subscribe to, including your commitment to live by Biblical standards, but on the other hand values could equally refer to your judgement of what is important in life. Sometimes Christian singles are encouraged to pursue a relationship with someone because they are both Christians and want to please God with their lives, ignoring the fact that pleasing God means different things to different people. Your desire to please God will play out differently in your life compared to the person who sits next to you in Church on Sunday, based on your values. Your assignment is to find someone whose life values align closely to yours so that you can both stay true to your values in marriage. To some people, pleasing God simply means living a quiet life raising their families in a godly manner. Others want to go out in the marketplace, business, politics or academia and make a big difference as leaders. Yet others want to dedicate their lives fully to God’s work in some form of ministry, caring spiritually for a lost and dying world. None of these approaches is more noble than the next; they’re just different. What is right for one person may not be right for the other. It’s all a question of what matters to you and how God wired you internally. Amos 3:3 makes a succinct statement in this regard. “Do two people walk hand in hand if they aren’t going to the same place?” In other words, before you hitch your wagon to someone else’s vehicle, ask yourself “Are we heading in the same direction?” If someone is heading for Australia and the other person is heading for Austria, the destinations sound similar but the direction of travel for those two countries is completely different. The destination you intend to arrive will determine the route you choose to travel in life. If you get in the same vehicle with someone going in a different direction, one of three things will happen; you will arrive at your desired destination and they won’t, they will arrive at their desired destination and you won’t, or neither of you will arrive at your preferred destination. When people fall in love and emotions are running high, it’s easy to think that these things don’t matter, or that they will sort themselves out with time. Twenty years of counselling married couples suggests otherwise to me. When the music stops and the stars fall out of their eyes, reality collides with fantasy as they slowly come to terms with the fact that one or both of them will need to compromise on their values for the survival of their marriage, and compromise you must. If you are already married to someone whose values are diametrically opposed to yours, compromise is your only option because in God’s eyes the survival of your marriage has to take precedence over your closely held dreams. When I think about my life and the things that drive me daily, I realise how blessed I am to be married to a man who is driven by a similar impetus. He encourages me to fulfil God’s call for my life because it aligns with God’s call on His life. Our values are congruent. I shudder to think what my life would have been like if I had married a man who dances to the beat of a different drum. I would have had to lay aside all the possibilities before me to embrace a different future. It would have been a painful but inescapable compromise. Values are critical because they influence how you choose to spend your energy, where you invest your time and how you allocate your money. Consequently, if your values are fundamentally different from your spouse’s, you may love each other but you will not be able to enjoy living with each other until you have made deep and necessary compromises. 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It is a well-known statistic that money consistently features as one of the top three triggers for a breakdown in marriages. It is therefore no surprise to me that my most-vi ewed video on Facebook so far relates to money. Money is not just notes and coins; it is such a powerful force that even Jesus acknowledged that the strongest competitor with God for human hearts and allegiance is money. Matthew 6:24 highlights this: ‘No one can serve two masters. For you will hate one and love the other; you will be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.’ Money means different things to different people and usually it is what money represents that couples fight over, rather than the money itself. To some, money signifies the opportunity to make a contribution to the lives of others; to others it represents status, the opportunity to gain control, respect, power, fame; to others it represents a world of options. 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The premise on which biblical marriage is based is covenant. Covenant means that you pool resources and liabilities; your strengths compensate for each other’s weaknesses. As long as there are walls of division between your finances, it is impossible to achieve true unity; you are not truly one until your money is one. This demands going beyond paying lip service to unity and actually seeing each other as financial partners. Marriage is not supposed to be run like two separate corporations under the same roof. This does not necessarily mean having joint accounts, but it means that both parties are aware of what is coming in and what is going out of the family. It also means that through continuous practice you have learnt to communicate effectively about money which leads to my second point. Stop keeping secrets Keeping financial secrets is never a good idea in marriage. The minute couples begin to hide pay rises, bank accounts, expenditure and debts from each other, disunity, division and distrust sets in. Every marriage needs a healthy balance between financial autonomy and financial accountability and you need to agree as a couple where that balance lies. As adults we all need a certain amount of discretionary spending money such that we don’t have to justify every little expense to our spouse. Depending on what your family income is, you need to agree as a couple how much you can spend without consulting each other. As a rule of thumb, major purchases should be a product of joint decision making, although what constitutes major in one family can be a minor expense in another. This is why dialogue is so crucial. In the words of Larry Burkett, the noted Christian author on finances, ‘Money is either the best or worst area of communication in a marriage’ . If you can’t trust each other financially, this is an issue that needs to be worked through with a counsellor or it will eat at the heart of your marriage and rob you of your sense of unity and oneness. Agree a budget and stick to it Where there is no budget, a business will perish and the same can be said for marriage. The downfall of many couples is the unwillingness to take an honest look from time to time at where their money is being spent and whether that represents good financial stewardship. Many Christians mistakenly believe that budgeting is a faithless exercise. Yet Jesus Himself taught the exact opposite. In Luke 14: 28-29 He states, ‘Suppose one of you wants to build a tower. Won’t you first sit down and estimate the cost to see if you have enough money to complete it? For if you lay the foundation and are not able to finish it, everyone who sees it will ridicule you.’ I find it instructive that Jesus assumes the wisdom of budgeting our resources should be obvious. Similarly, financial planning is a theme that runs through the entire book of Proverbs written by King Solomon, one of the wealthiest men who ever lived. The absence of a financial plan is evidence of the absence of a financial vision for your family. When you agree as a couple how you want to manage your finances from month to month, and what your long term goals are, a lot of stress and conflict can be eliminated from your marriage. Understand temperament differences The way we choose to spend our money is a reflection of our money-values. We spend on what we cherish. Usually couples have different money languages and this can be the start of many conflicts if not properly handled. In my article, ‘Why couples really fight over money’ , I explore in detail the four basic money languages and how they influence our spending patterns. Once you identify you and your partner’s money languages, that knowledge forms a basis for coming to a better of understanding of how to harmonise the two for the benefit of your family. There is often strength in diversity and your differences, when harnessed appropriately, can cease to be flash points and become foundational in building a stable financial future.
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By Tomi Toluhi December 6, 2024
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