Mailbag

The Mailbag: Should I Risk Another Pregnancy?

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Mailbag

The Mailbag: My wife has been invited to a women’s conference featuring a false teacher

My wife Amy* has a very good friend, Faith*, who is a big fan of a particular female false teacher. Faith has excitedly invited Amy to attend a Christian women’s conference headlined by this false teacher. I’ve told my wife about how dangerous this false teacher is, but she’s refusing to tell Faith about it and feels obligated to go anyway. What should I do?
(*Names changed)

I’d like to preface the answer to this question by saying that I don’t normally take counseling-type questions from men. I try to refer them back to their pastors, elders, or other trusted godly men for help, and if that’s not possible, I have a few godly male friends I turn to who can sometimes offer them counsel via e-mail. I do this in order to protect myself and the man from any temptation or appearance of impropriety that might arise from an exchange of e-mails/private messages, and because I think men do a better job of discipling men than women do, just like women do a better job of discipling women than men do (see Titus 2:2-6)

This time, though, my husband happened to be handy when I received this gentleman’s question, so I enlisted his services and we collaborated on the answer which follows.

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Scott and Michelle Lesley

First, you need to decide a) what would be best for your wife, spiritually, and, secondarily, b) what might best help Faith understand the problems with the false teacher. For example:

Is Amy biblically knowledgeable enough and spiritually mature enough to attend the conference with Faith and then sit down with her when it’s over and point out where the false teacher strays from Scripture?

Is Amy biblically knowledgeable and spiritually mature enough that Faith respects and looks up to her, and it would make her stop and think (and be open to an explanation) if Amy refused to attend?

Is Amy a new believer or spiritually immature and might be in danger of being deceived if she attends?

You are the spiritual leader of your home. You’re responsible for the spiritual well being of your wife and children and the direction they go. Ultimately, the buck stops with you, so you will have to prayerfully decide what’s best, talk to Amy about it, and hope she sees things your way. If not, you’ll have to “gird up your loins” and have the spiritual fortitude to lovingly put your foot down. She may not like it or agree, but Scripture requires her to submit to your decision.

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If you have a question about: a well known Christian author/leader, a Bible passage, an aspect of theology, a current issue in Christianity, or how to biblically handle a family, life, or church situation, comment below (Iโ€™ll hold all questions in queue {unpublished} for a future edition of The Mailbag) or send me an e-mail or private message. If your question is chosen for publication, your anonymity will be protected.

Marriage, Throwback Thursday

Throwback Thursday ~ My Husband Brought Me Flowers Today

Originally published June 27, 2014

โ€œIโ€™m so tired of flowers,โ€ sighed the elderly woman in the TV commercial as my jaw hit the floor. She had just described how her husband of fifty years, seated next to her, brought her flowers on their first date, and every year since had given her the same bouquet on that day.

And she was tired of flowers.

It wasnโ€™t enough that she had a husband who stayed with her for fifty years. Or that he actually remembered the day of their first date every year. Or that he was caring enough to send her flowers on that date. Or that he was sentimental and romantic enough to send her the same flowers every year.

No. She was tired of flowers. She wanted the product the commercial was trying to sell.

I wanted a shoe to throw at the TV.

My husband brought me flowers today. I know, in the picture they look rather more like birthday candles than flowers. Thatโ€™s because, technically, my flowers were birthday candles.

I was getting ready for our youngest sonโ€™s birthday party. I had already made a trip to the store and thought I had everything I needed. Until I discovered I was nearly out of baking powder. My husband was out running errands, so I sent him a text asking if he could pick some up for me. He did. No problem. Until I remembered I didnโ€™t have any candles for the birthday cake. And he had already left the store. And it was raining.

โ€œAnd it was raining.โ€ I say that like itโ€™s just so pedestrian, like itโ€™s some normal, everyday thing, which, in south Louisiana in June, I assure you, it is not. Every day, yes. Normal, no. Remember that scene in one of those โ€™90โ€™s โ€œasteroid crashes into the earthโ€ movies where the asteroid has just hit and the man and his daughter are standing on the beach watching the huge resulting tidal wave roll in to engulf them? Well if, instead of the beach, you can imagine yourself trying to navigate a WalMart parking lot with a buggy full of groceries and four kids in tow in the middle of that tidal wave, youโ€™ll have some idea of what monsoon season is like down here.

And you know what my husband did when I asked him to go get birthday candles in that mess? He did it gladly. No complaints. No asking, โ€œWhy didnโ€™t you think about this sooner?โ€ He just walked in the house, soaked and smiling, and handed me the candles.

No bouquet could have been better.

Ladies, my husband has a lot of faults. Iโ€™ll bet yours does too. Because just like us, theyโ€™re sinful human beings. Often, like the lady in the commercial, we trample over a dozen roses to plant our feet in a briar patch. We overlook the ways our husbands are a blessing to us and focus only on our complaints.

Maybe he didnโ€™t get you exactly what you wanted for your birthday, but does he work hard every day to support your family? So, he didnโ€™t notice your new haircut right away. Does he give the kids their bath every night? Yes, his dirty socks are constantly on the floor in front of the hamper, but didnโ€™t he change the oil in the car yesterday?

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 says:

Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.

The next time youโ€™re tempted to complain about your husbandโ€™s shortcomings, why not praise God instead for a way that he has blessed you or done something admriable? And letโ€™s make sure to thank our husbands for those little โ€œflowersโ€ they bring us every day.


This article was originally published at Satisfaction Through Christ.
Marriage

Marriage: It’s My Pity Party and I’ll Cry if I Want To ~ 7 Ways to Take Your Focus Off Yourself and Put it Back on Christ

Letโ€™s face it, Ladies, there are days when even the best of marriages are just plain tough. Hubbyโ€™s in a bad mood and snaps at you.* Thereโ€™s no money in the budget for that thing you really want to buy. Youโ€™re feeling overworked, underappreciated, and beyond stressed. It can be all too easy to haul out the party hats and confetti, hunker down in the corner, and throw yourself one big โ€œwoe is meโ€ bash. Have you ever stopped to think about whether or not itโ€™s biblical to feel sorry for ourselves? Believe it or not, thereโ€™s not a single passage of Scripture that says itโ€™s OK. So what does the Bible say about how to handle those times in our marriages when we want to indulge in self pity? Letโ€™s find out.

*(This article pertains to normal, relatively healthy, Christian marriages. In other words, not abusive marriages. If you are being abused, get yourself and your children to a safe place, and call the police, your pastor, or a loved one for help.)

Have you ever stopped to think about whether or not itโ€™s biblical to feel sorry for ourselves? Believe it or not, thereโ€™s not a single passage of Scripture that says itโ€™s OK. So what does the Bible say?

1.
Have the mind of Christ

But we have the mind of Christ. 1 Corinthians 2:16

take every thought captive to obey Christ. 2 Corinthians 10:5

be conformed to the image of his Son, Romans 8:29

As Christians, Christ is to be the master of everything we are, not just our words and actions, but our thoughts and feelings as well. We are to act like Jesus, talk like Jesus, think like Jesus, and even feel like Jesus. Punished and executed for sins He did not commit, โ€œHe was despised and rejected by men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief.โ€(Isaiah 53:3) Jesus had much more reason than you or I to feel sorry for Himself, but did He? Then, should we?

As Christians, Christ is to be the master of everything we are, not just our words and actions, but our thoughts and feelings as well.

2.
Have the attitude of Christ

Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, Philippians 2:5-6

When we follow Christ, we adopt the same attitude towards others He had. Jesus was prepared for the fact that people He loved and served, even those closest to Him, would let Him down. Still, He loved them and forgave them. Your husband is a broken, sinful human being (just like you). Heโ€™s going to mess up. A lot (just like you). Being prepared for, and accepting that fact (along with a healthy understanding of how many times youโ€™re going to let him down) can help put things into perspective.

but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. Philippians 2:7

Jesus put aside all of His rights to be served and esteemed and, instead, focused on serving others – even those who didnโ€™t deserve it and were ungrateful. Instead of retreating into hurt the next time your husband blows it, what if you took a deep breath, put your rights aside, and did something to lovingly serve him?

Instead of retreating into hurt the next time your husband blows it, what if you took a deep breath, put your rights aside, and did something to lovingly serve him?

And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Philippians 2:8

Jesus humbled Himself. He was so focused on obedience to God that He gladly gave up His life for people who hated Him. Often, our obedience only takes us to the edge of where weโ€™re comfortable. What kind of impact would it have on your marriage if you had the same level of humility and obedience Christ had? How could that humility and obedience to Christ help ward off self pity?

Often, our obedience only takes us to the edge of where weโ€™re comfortable. What kind of impact would it have on your marriage if you had the same level of humility and obedience Christ had?

3.
Give thanks

give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you. 1 Thessalonians 5:18

It is not Godโ€™s will for you to feel sorry for yourself. It is Godโ€™s will for you to give thanks in all circumstances, including a lousy day in your marriage. If you canโ€™t think of anything to be thankful for, tell that to God, and ask Him to show you things about your husband that you can thank Him for. Even if you have to start with the small things (Does he have good breath? Tie his shoes neatly? Floss semi-weekly?), start somewhere. Youโ€™ll be amazed at the way your perspective shifts from the negative to the positive as you thank God for your husbandโ€™s good qualities.

Youโ€™ll be amazed at the way your perspective shifts from the negative to the positive as you thank God for your husbandโ€™s good qualities.

4.
Be content

Not that I am speaking of being in need, for I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content. Philippians 4:11

Whatever situation. Ever read about Paulโ€™s little โ€œwhatever situationsโ€? You can find some of them in 2 Corinthians 11:23-28. Iโ€™m guessing youโ€™ve never been shipwrecked or stoned, not to mention all the other things on his list, which, by the way, Paul wrote while he was in prison. Yet he said he had learned to be content. How? Paul found his contentment, not in his circumstances, but in Christ. Jerry McGuire not witstanding, your husband does not, will not, and cannot โ€œcomplete you.โ€ Only Christ can satisfy the deepest needs of your heart. When you lay hold of that, you will find true contentment. Your husband will let you down. Christ never will.

Your husband does not, will not, and cannot โ€œcomplete you.โ€ Only Christ can satisfy the deepest needs of your heart. Your husband will let you down. Christ never will.

5.
Rejoice in suffering

Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because Godโ€™s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us. Romans 5:2-4

God wants to do something greater in you than just make you feel better in the moment. He has long range plans to grow you in endurance, character, and hope. Thatโ€™s great news, and certainly cause for joy. So instead of directing your gaze inward, look down the road to where youโ€™re more mature in Christ, and rejoice. God is at work on your heart. (And P.S.- Rejoicing will make you feel better in the moment, too. Pitying yourself will only make you feel worse.)

God wants to do something greater in you than just make you feel better in the moment.

6.
Put yourself aside and put your husband first

Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others. Philippians 2:3-4

Thereโ€™s that H-word again. Humility. When I read this passage, I think back to the story of Jesus washing the disciplesโ€™ feet. The One to whom every knee will one day bow got down on His hands and knees and took on the disgusting task that normally fell to the lowest, least talented servant. If the God of the universe could put ahead of Himself these men whom He personally knit together in the womb, who would, in mere hours, deny and desert Him at the darkest time of His life, is He asking too much of us to put our husbands ahead of our hurt feelings?

7.
Change your husband by changing your behavior

Likewise, wives, be subject to your own husbands, so that even if some do not obey the word, they may be won without a word by the conduct of their wives, when they see your respectful and pure conduct. 1 Peter 3:1-2

It seems counterintuitive. โ€œIs your husband being an ungodly jerk? Donโ€™t nag him or pout about it; submit to him with respectful and pure conduct.โ€ The world would call this weakness and say youโ€™re being a doormat. Quite the contrary. If youโ€™ve ever tried putting this passage into practice, you know just how much strength it takes to do the godly thing when everything in you wants to strike back or retreat in self pity. To realize that, regardless of how your husband acts, you are responsible to God to do what is right in His eyes. But Godโ€™s word is full of paradoxes and counterintuitives. The question is, do we believe God when He says this is the way to win our husbands to godliness, and do we trust Him enough to obey His word?

Regardless of how your husband acts, you are responsible to God to do what is right in His eyes.

Being a Christian wife pursuing growth in godliness is tough. It can seem impossible to forge ahead in obedience to Christ on those difficult days in your marriage when all you really want to do is retreat into that corner and whimper. But you have a Savior who understands your weaknesses,  loves and cares for you deeply,  and promises to give you the strength you need to do anything He calls you to.

Even the strength to take off the hat, sweep up the confetti, and say, โ€œThe partyโ€™s over.”

Marriage

A No-Bull Marriage: Four Lessons from Mr. & Mrs. Samson

โ€œIf you had not plowed with my heifer,
you would not have found out my riddle.โ€

judges 14:18

I love this verse. Itโ€™s in the story of Samson, which Iโ€™m studying in depth right now, and it makes me giggle every time I come to it. Ripped from its context, it doesnโ€™t make much sense (most Bible verses donโ€™t), so go read Judges 14 really quickly. Itโ€™s only twenty verses. It shouldnโ€™t take you more than ten minutes to read. Iโ€™ll just wait right here.

Done? Ok. Now you know the context, and you know Samson wasnโ€™t talking about farming. He was talking about his wife. Now, ladies, before you get your bloomers in a ruffle, Samson wasnโ€™t calling his wife a heifer, he was using a metaphor. He could just as easily have said, โ€œIf you hadnโ€™t eaten sweet and sour shrimp with my chopsticksโ€ฆโ€ Well, if he were Chinese and if sweet and sour shrimp had been invented.

But anyway... it still wasnโ€™t the most flattering metaphor a man could choose when referencing his wife, which got me thinking about Samsonโ€™s wife and their marriage. They messed some things up, big time. Things that they could have avoided messing up by being obedient to Godโ€™s commands about marriage. Maybe we could learn a few “noble,” or “no-bull,” if you prefer, things for our own marriages from Mr. and Mrs. Samson in Judges 14:

Maybe we could learn a few “noble,” or “no-bull,” if you prefer, things for our own marriages from Mr. and Mrs. Samson in Judges 14…

1.
Donโ€™t be an unequally yoked heifer (v. 1-3)

Although the Philistines were not one of the nations God specifically forbade Israel to intermarryย with, Godโ€™s principle of not marrying foreigners would have been a good one for Samson to follow. Why? Because only Israel worshiped the one true God. All of the other nations were pagan. They will โ€œturn away your sons from following me, to serve other gods,โ€ God told them. โ€œBut Samson said to his father, โ€˜Get her for me, for she is right in my eyes.’โ€ (3) In my eyes. Not in Godโ€™s eyes. In Samsonโ€™s eyes. Samson wasnโ€™t interested in what God wanted for his marriage. Samson was only interested in what Samson wanted.

As Believers, our hearts should long to obey Christ and to want what He wants for our lives. In 2 Corinthians 6:14-15, God tells us we are not to seek to bind ourselves together in any close relationship with unbelievers. That includes (but is not limited to) marriage. As God told the Israelites, an unbeliever will lead you away from the Lord. Husbands and wives should push each other towards Christ. A lost husband canโ€™t lead you to greater godliness. If you are not yet married, do not marry someone who isnโ€™t saved, whose life does not display the spiritual fruit of someone who has been genuinely born again.

Donโ€™t be an unequally yoked heifer.

2.
Leave and cleave: plow with the bull youโ€™re yoked to (v. 16-20)

Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast [cleave] to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.

Genesis 2:24

This doesnโ€™t mean that we cut all ties with our parents when we get married. It means that we are now committed, first and foremost, to our spouses. We stand with them before, and sometimes against, everyone else.

Samson and his wife both had problems with this, as many newlyweds do. Samsonโ€™s wife, instead of standing with her husband by being honest with him about what his companions were up to and trusting him to protect her, ended up siding with โ€œher peopleโ€ (17) out of fear, by nagging Samson into telling her the answer to the riddle. Samson showed that he was loyal to his parents over his wife when he said in verse 16, โ€œBehold, I have not told my father nor my mother [the answer to the riddle], and shall I tell you?โ€ And when the whole fiasco was over, instead of going back and working things out with his wife, he abandoned her and went back home to live with his parents. (19-20)

Ladies, our husbands come first when it comes to loyalty, unity, bonding, and family decisions. Not our moms, our sisters, our best girlfriends, or even our children. And our husbands are to exhibit that same loyalty to us. Donโ€™t hook yourself up to another plow.

Leave and cleave. Plow with the bull youโ€™re yoked to.

3.
Donโ€™t moonipulate; commoonicate (v. 16-17)

Pack your bags, weโ€™re going on a guilt trip. And Samsonโ€™s wife had a saddlebag full of every vixenish wile she could squeeze in: emotional manipulation, shame, blame, nagging, and relentless pressure. Samsonโ€™s wife provides us with the perfect example of how not to communicate with our husbands.

Samsonโ€™s wife provides us with the perfect example of how *not*ย to communicate with our husbands.

We can all be tempted to use underhanded methods of getting what we want, but the God who tells us not to lie, to speak the truth, and not to act in selfish ambition but to put others first, is not a God who is pleased by such behavior. God is honored when we treat our husbands with kindness, respect, and honesty, and trust God enough to leave the outcome to Him.

Donโ€™t moonipulate, commoonicate.

4.
Do the no-bull thing: forgive. (14:19-15:1)

While Samson may have had understandable reasons for being angry at both his companions and his wife, and while God may have used a bad situation to take out some of the enemies of His people, God calls husbands and wives to forgive one another.

Again, Samson shows us what not to do. Consumed by his anger, he abandoned his wife and seems to have held a grudge against her for a good while. When he finally went back with a peace offering, it wasnโ€™t a pretty scene.

Be angry and do not sin; do not let the sun go down on your anger, and give no opportunity to the devil.

Ephesians 4:26-27

When weโ€™re angry, self control can go out the window, making it easier to give in to Satanโ€™s temptations to sin. Instead, it is Godโ€™s will for us to โ€œLet all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice. Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.โ€.

Forgive. Itโ€™s the noble thing to do.

Do the no-bull thing: forgive.