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Marriage: A Path to God
Catholic Exchange.com ^
| 06-30-05
| Paula Huston
Posted on 06/30/2005 7:04:07 PM PDT by Salvation
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Marriage: A Path to God
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06/30/05
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My friend Larry has a term for it: spiritual divorcées. They often crop up in small, intimate Christian groups, particularly those that focus on deepening spirituality. Spiritual divorcees are married people who have heeded the call to greater solitude, silence, and prayer in their lives, and now find themselves in a marital crisis.
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The more seriously they practice these disciplines, the greater the gulf grows between them and a once-beloved husband or wife, who either cannot understand, does not approve, or perhaps does not believe in God at all.
Part of this problem stems from the fact that people who seek out solitude, silence, and prayer have traditionally been celibates: monks or nuns. This is because it is very hard to focus ones full attention and energies on God while at the same time tending to a marriage. St. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 7:32-34 I should like you to be free of anxieties. An unmarried man is anxious about the things of the Lord, how he may please the Lord. But a married man is anxious about the things of the world, how he may please his wife, and he is divided. An unmarried woman or a virgin is anxious about the things of the Lord, so that she may be holy in both body and spirit. A married woman, on the other hand, is anxious about the things of the world, how she may please her husband. Another wrinkle is that married people can be extra-sensitive to the feelings of isolation and loneliness that often come during the early stages on the contemplative path, especially if their marriage has, up to this point, been a warm and intimate one, focused on the other. At first they are frightened by the new distance, but then, impatient with the partners apparent stubbornness, they become angry. And suddenly a spiritual divorcée is born, a person now particularly vulnerable to fantasy and temptation. Affairs of the heart ensue, not necessarily sexual, but often very intense, with like-minded pilgrims. The door has been opened to grave sin.
What is the answer? St. Paul offers good advice: If any brother has a wife who is an unbeliever, and she is willing to go on living with him, he should not divorce her; and if any woman has a husband who is an unbeliever, and he is willing to go on living with her, she should not divorce her husband. For the unbelieving husband is made holy through his wife, and the unbelieving wife is made holy through the brother (1 Cor 7:12-14). In other words, regardless of how painful and lonely a marriage can become when the partners are not on the same page in regard to spiritual practices, God has His own plans for the covenant they have made with one another. They cannot safely detach themselves from the context in which they live; their hunger for God must somehow be addressed through the marriage and not outside it.
When Mike and I went through this struggle, what helped the most was to consciously try to see our household of two as a small monastic community, a school for the Lords Service, as St. Benedict put it in his Rule. This took our marriage out of the secular realm, with all its notions about romantic fulfillment and personal growth, and put it on the same footing as any other spiritual enterprise. Suddenly, it was no longer about us and our relationship but about what God might be trying to do through and with the two of us. Amazingly, within a few years, we were no longer spiritual divorcés, struggling to communicate, but had formed a genuine union, far deeper than the purely romantic one wed so painfully lost in the early stages of this path.
And when we did, Christs peculiar analogy for His relationship to the Church finally began to make sense to me. The celibate St. Paul builds on this analogy when he says, a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one. This is a great mystery, and I mean in reference to Christ and the Church (Eph 5:25-26, 31-32). If we can once again take the Sacrament of Matrimony seriously, if we can learn to see a marriage no matter how troubled or dissatisfying for the individual people involved as holy and worthy of protection, we can not only avoid a dangerous spiritual pitfall but come to a richer understanding of the nature of Christs love for us.
Paula Huston was an editor and contributing essayist for Signatures of Grace: Catholic Writers on the Sacraments (Dutton, 2000), and is the author of The Holy Way: Practices for a Simple Life (Loyola, 2003) and the forthcoming Holy Work: Practices for a Contemplative Life (Loyola, 2006). For more information about these books and others, visit her website at www.paulahuston.com.
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KEYWORDS: marriage; sexuality; spirtuality
Discussion for all -- married and unmarried.
1
posted on
06/30/2005 7:04:07 PM PDT
by
Salvation
To: All
** what helped the most was to consciously try to see our household of two as a small monastic community, a school for the Lords Service, as St. Benedict put it in his Rule. This took our marriage out of the secular realm, with all its notions about romantic fulfillment and personal growth, and put it on the same footing as any other spiritual enterprise. Suddenly, it was no longer about us and our relationship but about what God might be trying to do through and with the two of us. Amazingly, within a few years, we were no longer spiritual divorcés, struggling to communicate, but had formed a genuine union, far deeper than the purely romantic one wed so painfully lost in the early stages of this path.**
Actually very good advice!
2
posted on
06/30/2005 7:04:45 PM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
To: Salvation
their hunger for God must somehow be addressed through the marriage and not outside it.Amen to this.
3
posted on
06/30/2005 7:09:41 PM PDT
by
apackof2
(In my simple way, I guess you could say I'm living in the BIG TIME)
To: Salvation
Married life can even bring salvation:
"she will be saved in childbearing if they continue in faith, love, and holiness, with self-control." 1 Tim 2:15.
Regards
4
posted on
06/30/2005 8:00:26 PM PDT
by
jo kus
To: Salvation
The celibate St. Paul....Paul was probably married at some point before he wrote 1 Corinthians 7. I think that most Bible scholars believe that he had been married but his wife died prior to him writing this wonderful description of marriage.
To: apackof2
6
posted on
06/30/2005 9:23:34 PM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
To: jo kus
Thanks for that quote.
What about a couple where the wife is incapacitated due to a hip injury and her husband goes out chasing skirts?
Obviously outside fidelity. But it would seem that a couple could hold their marriage together despite a temporary loss of sexual pleasures.
Fidelity and constant prayer as far as I am concerned is the rule of the marriage -- and sprinkle in multitudes of perseverance.
7
posted on
06/30/2005 9:26:24 PM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
To: Asfarastheeastisfromthewest...
But after his call to discipleship I have always thought that he lead a single life.
8
posted on
06/30/2005 9:27:26 PM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
To: Asfarastheeastisfromthewest...
But after his call to discipleship I have always thought that he lead a single life.
9
posted on
06/30/2005 9:27:47 PM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
Sorry about the double post.
10
posted on
06/30/2005 9:28:22 PM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
To: Salvation
"What about a couple where the wife is incapacitated due to a hip injury and her husband goes out chasing skirts?
Obviously outside fidelity. But it would seem that a couple could hold their marriage together despite a temporary loss of sexual pleasures."
That's an understatement! If a man/woman can so quickly "chase" the opposite sex during such a temporary problem, I would say there is a major problem in the marriage BEFORE the accident.
"Fidelity and constant prayer as far as I am concerned is the rule of the marriage -- and sprinkle in multitudes of perseverance"
Yes, but really, communication is key in marriage. I am (with my wife) a FOCCUS couple. Couples about to married in the Catholic Church take a "test" to see where the couple agrees or disagrees on many elements. Then, we get them to talk about the differences. According to the FOCCUS statistics and info, the failure to communicate when there is a conflict (for example, don't want to start trouble, so I shut up) is the leading cause of marriage disruption. Lack of communication inevitably leads to infidelity, I believe.
Another thing is the idea of sacrifice. In a Catholic marriage, we are supposed to be imitating Christ/the Church, as in Ephesians 5. We all know that Christ sacrificed for the sake of His bride, the Church, and we are called to do the same. If we are selfish, we are not loving. Think about it. The opposite of love is not hate, but selfishness. How is a marriage going to work when one or both are selfishly following their own agendas?
Regards
11
posted on
06/30/2005 11:27:33 PM PDT
by
jo kus
To: Salvation
what helped the most was to consciously try to see our household of two as a small monastic communityI don't think this sort of thing would even come up if they were a household of ten. Solitude? Silence? Contemplation? When I'm in my 80's, maybe.
12
posted on
07/01/2005 4:05:04 AM PDT
by
Tax-chick
("I am saying that the government's complicity is dishonest and disingenuous." ~NCSteve)
To: jo kus
13
posted on
07/01/2005 8:18:22 AM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
To: All
14
posted on
07/01/2005 8:19:13 AM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
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