Preparing for Marriage
178 pages
English

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178 pages
English

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Description

You're in love, and it's the real thing. You have made a joyous decision together--a decision destined to change your lives forever: You're getting married! Now, as you plan your wedding celebration, it is time to lay the foundation for a lifetime of love and romance. Today you can begin the important, lifelong task of building a strong Christian marriage.Created by FamilyLife, one of America's leading marriage and family ministries, Preparing for Marriage is a dynamic, comprehensive program designed to help you prepare for life together after the cake is cut and the guests head home. That is when the real adventure begins--the adventure of creating an intimate, lasting, and biblical marriage!Inside you'll find eight sessions of fun, romantic study that will help you target areas for growth in your relationship. You can work through Preparing for Marriage as a couple, with a pastor or premarital counselor, or with a small group. Don't just plan your wedding . . . prepare for your marriage!

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Publié par
Date de parution 09 décembre 2010
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781441266866
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0461€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

1998, 2010 FamilyLife
Published by Bethany House Publishers 11400 Hampshire Avenue South Bloomington, Minnesota 55438 www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan. www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
Bethany House Publishers edition published 2014
ISBN 978-1-4412-6686-6
Previously published by Regal Books
Ebook edition originally created 2011
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means-for example, electronic, photocopy, recording-without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the New American Standard Bible , © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.
Other versions used are:
ASV —The American Standard Version , Thomas Nelson and Sons, first published in 1901.
ESV —Scripture taken from the English Standard Version , Copyright © 2001. The ESV and English Standard Version are trademarks of Good News Publishers.
NIV —Scripture taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version ®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House. All rights reserved.
TLB —Scripture quotations marked ( TLB ) are taken from The Living Bible , copyright © 1971. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, IL 60189.
Contents
part one: preparing the groundwork

Introduction by Dennis Rainey
How to Use This Workbook
Worksheet 1: Understanding Your Personal History
Worksheet 2: Great Expectations
part two: laying the foundation

Chapter 1: Why Marriage?
Chapter 2: God’s Equation for Marriage: When One Plus One Equals One
part three: making the decision

Chapter 3: Evaluating Your Relationship
Chapter 4: A Decision-Making Guide
part four: building oneness

Chapter 5: Authentic Communication
Chapter 6: Roles and Responsibilities
Chapter 7: Money, Money, Money
Chapter 8: Intimacy: Sexual Communication in Marriage
Where Do We Go from Here?
Appendix A: Bonus: Parental Wisdom Questionnaire
Appendix B: Bonus: Couple Interview
Appendix C: Our Problems, God’s Answers
About the Writers
part one

preparing the groundwork
Introduction
by Dennis Rainey
Not long after I graduated from the University of Arkansas, one of my good friends came to me for counsel. She was dating a young man who happened to be my best friend, and I knew what was happening in that relationship. She wanted to marry him, but he was hot and cold, uncertain of whether he was willing to commit himself to her.
For some reason, I had doubts about whether they should marry. So when she asked me for advice, I told her a parable I had recently heard:
A little boy named Johnny was playing marbles in his front yard. His uncle drove up and decided to play with the boy for a few minutes. Then the uncle reached into his pocket and pulled out a dime and a dollar. “Johnny,” he asked, “would you like a dime today or a dollar next week?”
Johnny’s boyish eyes bounced back and forth between the shiny dime and the crisp greenback. He thought, I could buy a bag of potato chips today, or I could wait until next week and buy a rubber ball . He felt some hunger pangs, so he grabbed the dime, bought some chips and wolfed them down. They were delicious.
A week passed, and when Johnny went out to play one afternoon, he noticed that every other boy in his neighborhood had a rubber ball. He wanted one real bad, so he rode his bicycle over to his uncle’s house. “Hey, Uncle, how about that dollar you promised me?” Johnny asked. But his uncle looked down and said, “Johnny, last week I promised you a dime today or a dollar next week, and you made your choice. You can’t have the dollar now.”
When I finished that story, I asked the young lady, “Do you believe that God is big enough to give you someone else later on that you could love more that this guy?” She thought for a moment and nodded her head yes.
“Perhaps,” I said, “God in His sovereignty knows that this young man you are dating is a dime, and He has a dollar for you later on.”
Well, perhaps you’ve guessed the end of my story. That young lady, Barbara Petersen, decided not to marry my best friend. In fact, just over a year later, she became my wife. To this day, people find it hard to believe that I really had no mixed motives when she and I talked that day!
Once in a while, Barbara and I pull out our old wedding pictures and gaze in wonder at those youthful faces. There we are, posing with our families. Reciting our vows. Cutting the cake.
I remember the sense of relief I felt. We did it! Finally it was over! Physically, mentally and emotionally, we felt like we had completed something, and we had—a six-week engagement filled with so much activity that we hardly had time to rest.
Did we truly realize what we had just done? Did we have any idea what type of commitment we had just made and what it would mean?
In reality, our wedding was not the completion of engagement but the beginning of a new life . Yet we scarcely knew what that life would involve. There’s so much we didn’t know about this thing called marriage.
We started our life together with the same youthful idealism and ignorance typical of so many other couples. I suppose we believed we really wouldn’t face many problems. We learned the hard way that building a solid marriage requires commitment, sacrifice and work .
A Late-Night Discussion
During our first year of marriage, for example, we lived in Boulder, Colorado, where the winters are cold and electric blankets are standard equipment for survival. I can recall how both of us enjoyed sliding into those toasty-warm sheets after the electric blanket had done its duty. For some strange reason, however, neither of us could remember to turn out all the lights. We would snuggle in, and Barbara would say, “Sweetheart, did you remember to turn out all the lights?”
So I would hop out of our comfy bed and run barefoot through the 55-degree apartment, turning off light after light (that Barbara had turned on). It didn’t happen that often, so I didn’t mind—until one night when I dropped into bed totally exhausted. Just as I slipped into the third stage of anesthesia, Barbara gave me a little poke and said, “Sweetheart, aren’t you going to turn out the lights?”
I groaned, “Honey, why don’t you turn out the lights tonight?”
Barbara replied, “I thought you would, because my dad always turned out the lights.”
Suddenly, I was wide awake. It dawned on me why I had been suffering occasional minor frostbite for the past few months. And I shot back, “But I’m not your dad!”
Well, we stayed up a long time that night discussing expectations—what Barbara expected me to do (because her father had always done it), and what I expected her to do (no matter who had always done it!).
That was a relatively simple conflict to resolve. But I remember a more serious problem that arose during that same year as the starry-eyed excitement of our honeymoon slowly wore off and we began to awaken to the reality of our lifetime commitment.
Barbara was not quiet when we spent time together; in fact, she talked more than I did. But when we went to any type of party or large group function, I was the “life of the party” while she followed me around the room and hardly said a thing.
I remember feeling trapped. She seemed like an appendage attached to my side. One of the reasons I was originally attracted to Barbara was because she seemed strong in areas where I was weak, and vice versa. We made a good team. But somehow those things that once attracted me didn’t feel the same anymore. We were just so different .
Meanwhile, Barbara was feeling trapped as well. But we weren’t single anymore. We both lived in the same home. At one point, Barbara went into the bathroom and locked herself in, thinking, What in the world am I going to do? I can’t get away from this .
This was an important fork in the road for our marriage. Each of us had to decide before God if we would accept each other in spite of our differences and imperfections.
We had made that commitment standing before a pastor on September 2, 1972, but now the implications of that commitment were staring us in the face.
Fortunately, we made the right decision—to accept each other by faith, knowing that God had called us together. For though we were not well prepared for marriage, one all-important truth governed our relationship from the beginning: We were both committed to walking with God and knowing His will for our lives. And that has made all the difference for us.
Preparing for a Marriage, Not a Wedding
Now you are thinking of beginning that same journey. You are either engaged or seriously contemplating marriage, and you’re excited about the possibility of spending the rest of your life with this special person. Yet, if you’re honest with yourself, you probably feel a tinge of apprehension as well.
No other human relationship can approach the potential for intimacy and oneness than that which can be found within the context of the marriage commitment. And no other relationship can bring with it as many adjustments, difficulties and even hurts.
There’s no way you can avoid these difficulties; each couple’s journey is unique. But there is much you can do to prepare for that journey.
In simple terms, the goal of Preparing for Marriage is to help you make the most thorough, comprehensive and in-depth preparations possible. In fact, it includes the type of material that Barbara and I wish we had known before our wedding.
Like any journey with the potential for great reward, there are difficulties

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