• Sorry if any of your content got deleted

    We had to back the site up to before the problems occurred

    Hopefuly we'll have the rest of the kinks out soon - Staff

  • Love God, and love one another!

    Share your heart for Christ and others in Godly Love

    https://christianforums.net/forums/god_love/

  • Wake up and smell the coffee!

    Join us for a little humor in Joy of the Lord

    https://christianforums.net/forums/humor_and_jokes/

  • Need prayer and encouragement?

    Come share your heart's concerns in the Prayer Forum

    https://christianforums.net/forums/prayer/

  • Desire to be a vessel of honor unto the Lord Jesus Christ?

    Join Hidden in Him and For His Glory for discussions on how

    https://christianforums.net/threads/become-a-vessel-of-honor-part-2.112306/

  • Have questions about the Christian faith?

    Come ask us what's on your mind in Questions and Answers

    https://christianforums.net/forums/questions-and-answers/

  • Want to discuss private matters, or make a few friends?

    Ask for membership to the Men's or Lady's Locker Rooms

    For access, please contact a member of staff and they can add you in!

  • CFN has a new look and a new theme

    "I bore you on eagle's wings, and brought you to Myself" (Exodus 19:4)

    More new themes coming in the future!

  • Read the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ?

    Read through this brief blog, and receive eternal salvation as the free gift of God

    /blog/the-gospel

  • Focus on the Family

    Strengthening families through biblical principles.

    Focus on the Family addresses the use of biblical principles in parenting and marriage to strengthen the family.

3 Tips for Intentionally Connecting with Your Spouse

Focus on the Family

Focus on the Family
RSS Feed
Joined
Dec 20, 2019
Messages
3,606
Reaction score
108
During the Christmas season, so many things clamor for our attention. Chances are, we spend more time baking treats and untangling string lights than paying attention to the person we promised to have and to hold. But our significant other is an adult and will understand, right? We might think, We’ll reconnect sometime in June when we finally take that vacation we promised each other three summers ago.

So, how can husbands and wives stay connected amid activity overload during Christmastime? Here are some tips my wife and I have found helpful in our marriage.

1: Pay attention, intentionally​


A transaction takes place every time we focus our attention on something. It’s built into the phrase pay attention. Similar to compound interest, the more attention we pay to our spouse, the more the connection grows.

In what areas of your marriage are you investing your attention wisely, and in what areas are you careening further into a relationship deficit? Don’t let your relationship go bankrupt because your attention is directed elsewhere. Make intentional “attention deposits” by giving your spouse your presence well before the presents are set under the tree.

One of the relationship travesties of the Christmas commotion is that we can circle around our spouse for an entire day, week or month during the season without actually looking in each other’s eyes. Eye contact is the pathway to attention.

Make the choice together to stop multitasking while talking. To combat this tendency, my wife, Naomi, and I make time to sit next to each other on the couch and talk at least once a day. And we make sure to leave our phones somewhere else before we settle in for our chat. We’ve found that by pausing and directing our eyes and shoulders toward each other, we’re already showing love before either of us says a word.

It’s hard to love your spouse well if you’re not paying attention. Intentionality doesn’t have to be profound or overly complex. It simply means building new habits on small choices.

Christmas is the perfect time to develop a new habit of pausing intentionally and paying attention to your spouse with your eyes and posture.

2: Start asking good questions again​


Do you remember spending hours asking each other questions when you and your spouse were dating? Now, after years of marriage, your questions may be more pragmatic, like, “Did you buy the milk?” or “Can you pick up Billy at 5 o’clock?”

Marriage, however, isn’t purely transactional. It’s a discovery. It should be about learning and growing with each other. New seasons bring forth new ways to know one another more fully.

My wife and I strive to focus on serving each other in our conversations. When I feel like I’m losing connection with her, I take the initiative to ask questions about things she cares about. In response, Naomi becomes animated as she shares what she’s excited or nervous about. Just taking the time to ask her questions about the important parts of her day rekindles our connection and helps the conversation flow.

All humans have a profound need to know and be known. Give that gift to your spouse this Christmas. It will mean far more than a new pair of slippers or a pack of underwear.


Breathe new life into your marriage with The Healthy Marriage Devotional

3: Write an “I see you” note or text​


During the holidays, do you tend to focus a little too much on the things your spouse is doing that annoy you, or how you’re doing way more holiday preparation than your spouse?

If so, start choosing to notice all the things you appreciate and cherish about your husband or wife. We see what we choose to look for. I’ve chosen to pay attention to who my wife really is and notice things about her that I often take for granted. As I pay attention to these things, I start to see her again. Paying attention opens my eyes to nuanced blessings that have gone unnoticed.

To remind myself of the things I appreciate about her, I make notes to myself throughout the day. And I often write an “I see you” note to her about the beautiful things I’ve observed. I’ll tape the note on the bathroom mirror in the morning before she gets up or tuck it under the coffee maker for her to find.

In the hectic pace of holiday activities, make daily choices to stay connected in your marriage by paying attention to your relationship and pausing to notice the things you love about your spouse. It’s the lifeblood of a Christlike love for each other and the beating heart of your family. Give your life partner the gift of being seen and appreciated!

The post 3 Tips for Intentionally Connecting with Your Spouse appeared first on Focus on the Family.

Continue reading...
 
You know, when a husband is under the control of the Holy Spirit, his life filling the husband up and flowing out of him, and the Spirit is transforming the husband into a godly, Christ-centered man, none of these tips are necessary. The husband controlled, filled with, and changed by the Spirit will interact with his wife in the best possible manner, the life of Christ manifesting to her through her husband and strengthening and deepening their marriage in the way God intends. And when the man's wife is in the same condition, controlled and filled with the Spirit, too, their marriage will be the awesome, excellent thing it was made to be - no "tips for intentionally connecting with your spouse" at all necessary. But what would become of an organization that trades on such advice to Christian couples if the answer to a great marriage was actually the simple, Spirit-controlled and transformed one offered freely in God's word?
 
You know, when a husband is under the control of the Holy Spirit, his life filling the husband up and flowing out of him, and the Spirit is transforming the husband into a godly, Christ-centered man, none of these tips are necessary. The husband controlled, filled with, and changed by the Spirit will interact with his wife in the best possible manner, the life of Christ manifesting to her through her husband and strengthening and deepening their marriage in the way God intends. And when the man's wife is in the same condition, controlled and filled with the Spirit, too, their marriage will be the awesome, excellent thing it was made to be - no "tips for intentionally connecting with your spouse" at all necessary. But what would become of an organization that trades on such advice to Christian couples if the answer to a great marriage was actually the simple, Spirit-controlled and transformed one offered freely in God's word?
I think that it depends. Some people need more coaching or teaching at times, even reminders, in order to re-center themselves on Christ. But I am with you that surrendering to the control of the Holy Spirit does indeed help answer these questions. However, I love to hear experiences and practices that work best in marriages so we can emulate at times. Though the Holy Spirit is our guide, it's not ungodly to enjoy hearing from others too, so our creativity continues to grow as well.
 
I think that it depends. Some people need more coaching or teaching at times, even reminders, in order to re-center themselves on Christ. But I am with you that surrendering to the control of the Holy Spirit does indeed help answer these questions. However, I love to hear experiences and practices that work best in marriages so we can emulate at times. Though the Holy Spirit is our guide, it's not ungodly to enjoy hearing from others too, so our creativity continues to grow as well.

I don't mind couples sharing the concrete ways in which they express love to one another. But, often, these ways overtake the spiritual essence of marriage, luring married couples toward worldly psychological and relational strategies, steps and tactics for a good marriage rather being Spirit-filled-and-controlled. As we hear so often these days, Christian marriages are collapsing at nearly the same rate as in secular society though there is a super-abundance of books, video series, podcasts, and conferences on marriage offered (for a price) in a near-constant stream to the Church. Why is this?

Well, I believe it has almost entirely to do with most Christians having no idea, really, what "life in the Spirit" is. They imagine it is the craziness of the hyper-charismatics - foaming at the mouth in a spiritual fit, or babbling maniacally in an unknown "tongue," or weeping/laughing hysterically for a half-hour straight - and rightly want nothing to do with such blasphemous nonsense. But, then, they sideline the life and work of the Holy Spirit entirely, setting about to replace his life and work with their own fleshly Self-effort, aided and abetted by secular, godless psychology, and various worldly "movements" (e.g. Self-esteem, Post-modernism, Woke progressivism, Feminism, etc.). Doing this produces only the corruption that God promises in His word it will (Galatians 6:7-8; Romans 8:5-8, Galatians 5:17, etc.)
 
Back
Top