The link in an unhealthy
family?
1. As we
grow up, we undoubtedly receive both good and bad influences from our parents.
2. However, it seems that we are often unaware of
the negative influences we've received from our parents, or even if we do
recognize them, we don't fully understand them. As a result, we sometimes unconsciously speak
and act like our parents.
3. Then, through conflicts with our spouse, we may
come to recognize, albeit partially and amidst pain and struggle, the negative
influences we received from our parents by the grace of God.
4. Particularly in the case of a husband or wife
who is a people-pleaser, conflicts within the marriage can lead them to deeply
reflect and engage in self-examination. Through
this process, they may come to recognize the negative influences they received
from their parents. This is especially
true when their spouse is an avoider—someone who is excessively independent. Such a spouse may, without much thought or
consideration, make blunt and self-centered remarks. These direct words can cause the
people-pleasing husband or wife to ponder deeply. As a result, they begin to reflect on
themselves and come to acknowledge, even if only partially, the negative
influences they received from their parents.
5. A somewhat serious concern is that a
people-pleasing husband or wife, due to the negative influences they recognize
and acknowledge as coming from their parents, often feels excessively
apologetic toward their spouse. In their
desire to make their spouse exceedingly happy (perhaps because their own
happiness depends on it?), there seems to be a risk of placing their spouse on
the throne of their heart—or on the chair where the king sits. Before marriage, it was their mother and/or
father, who had a profoundly negative influence on them, sitting on that
throne. However, after marriage, they have replaced them with their spouse.
6. This is considered a serious issue in my view
because the throne of one’s heart is where the Lord, the King of kings, should
be seated. If someone else—whether it be
one’s mother, father, or spouse—is seated there instead of the Lord, it becomes
an act of idolatry.
7. Parents or spouses can easily become idols in
our hearts to that extent. However, this
idolatrous tendency does not end with replacing the idolatry of parents with
the idolatry of a spouse. There is also
a significant risk of idolizing one’s children and loving them excessively or
overly indulgently.
8. Then, by God’s great love and grace, even
through a major family crisis, we are led to reflect on ourselves. In the process of self-examination, we come to
recognize and repent of the sin of idolizing a family member we love
excessively. We cast away all idols from
our hearts and invite the Lord to sit on the throne of our hearts as the
rightful King.
9. After doing so, we humbly surrender to the Lord,
allowing Him to reign over us. In faith,
we entrust our marriage relationship to Him, letting Him take full control.
10. What we begin to glimpse with the eyes of faith
is how the Lord is wonderfully at work in our marriage—bringing together two
very different individuals (a people-pleasing husband/wife and an avoidant
wife/husband) to complement each other's weaknesses and shortcomings. Moreover, as we experience how deeply the
Lord loves us as a couple, we gradually find freedom from the negative
influences of our parents. Step by step,
we are built into a Christ-centered marriage.
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