I once saw a
football game where the home team was losing and there were
less than 15 seconds left in the game. They needed a touchdown
to win, but everything was against them making a score in that
amount of time. The game appeared to be over, and the opposing
team and fans were already celebrating. Some people were even
leaving the stadium. But the losing team and coach didn't give
up or let their morale fail. Instead they pulled an unlikely
play out of their book, and through the most astonishing
sequence of events, the home team made a winning touchdown in
the last few seconds of the game. It was so amazing that news
reports of it even referred to it as a miracle.
Your marriage is like that football game. You and your wife
are a team. And she wants the security of knowing that when
things are tough and down to the wire -- even when the enemy
is already celebrating your demise and all appears to be lost
-- you have the faith to believe that up to the very last
second everything can turn around. She needs the assurance you
have a play in your pocket that can take you down the field
with the ball for a possible winning score. She wants you to
trust that with God nothing is impossible, and because of that
you will never give up hoping for the impossible to happen.
When your wife knows you are praying, she is confident of
all of these things. In my survey of wives, 85 percent of them
said the most important prayer their husband could pray was
that he would become the man, husband, and head of the home
God wanted him to be. This is the most important place for a
man to begin praying.
"That Your Prayers May Not Be Hindered"
The good thing about prayer - or the problem with prayer,
depending on your perspective - is that we have to go to God
to do it. This means we can't get away with anything. It means
that any negative thoughts, bad attitudes, hardness of heart,
or selfish motives are going to be revealed by the Lord.
Fervent and honest prayer causes the depths of our hearts to
be exposed. That can be uncomfortable. Even downright
miserable.
If there is one thing I have learned about prayer, it's
that if we have any unforgiveness, bitterness, selfishness,
pride, anger, irritation, or resentment in our hearts, our
prayers will not be answered. "If I regard iniquity in my
heart, the Lord will not hear" (Psalm 66:18). Our hearts have
to be right when we pray. We all - men and women alike -
jeopardize our own prayers when we don't pray them from a
right heart.
What is in our hearts when we pray has more effect on
whether our prayers are answered than the actual prayer
itself. That's why, when we come before Him to pray, God asks
us to first confess anything in our hearts that shouldn't be
there. He does that so nothing will separate us from Him.
The Bible says, "Husbands, likewise, dwell with them with
understanding, giving honor to the wife, as to the weaker
vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of life, that
your prayers may not be hindered" (1 Peter 3:7).
Part of dwelling with your wife with understanding means
recognizing that your wife is in need of your covering,
protection, and love. And because you are heirs together of
God's grace, you need to honor her in your thoughts, words,
and actions. When you don't, your prayers are hindered. This
means all of your prayers, not just those for your wife. Many
men have not seen answers to their prayers because they have
not learned this key step. One of the best ways to honor your
wife is to pray for her from a heart that is clean before God.
Ask God to show you whatever you need to see about the
condition of your heart. You may have the perfect marriage and
be sublimely happy, and still be less than what God wants in
your attitude toward your wife. Whatever He reveals, confess
it to Him. Once we confess our less-than-perfect attitudes to
the Lord, He helps us get beyond them. You'll find that the
most difficult part about being a praying husband will not be
the amount of time it takes to pray for your wife -- rather,
it will be praying with a heart that's right before God.
That's why praying for your wife must begin with praying for
yourself.
Don't worry, God taught this same principle to the praying
wives. Many women told me that it was at this point in the
chapter they threw the book across the room and said, "Forget
it! I'm not doing that!" Of course the Holy Spirit wouldn't
let them get away with that for long, and so they eventually
picked the book back up and kept reading. So if you would like
to throw this book across the room and say, "Forget it! I'm
not doing that!" this would be a good time to do it. I know
you'll pick it back up again, because you're going to get
awfully tired of your prayers not being answered.
It Takes Two to Make One
When God created Adam, in spite of all the greatness that
was in him God knew he still needed a companion, a helpmate
who would fit with him, be a complement to him, and complete
him (Genesis 2:18). So He created Eve. In spite of all the
greatness that is in you, dear brother, God made your wife to
be a complement to you and make you complete. You do the same
for her.
God says that when you and your wife were married you
became one flesh (Genesis 2:24). Isn't it amazing that we were
created to be one with our mates? That feels possible when we
start out. There is the anticipation of oneness in that first
moment when you sense you were destined to be more than
friends. There is the sense of oneness in the courtship. The
promise of oneness in the engagement period. The declaration
of oneness in the wedding vows. The thrill of oneness on the
honeymoon. The excitement of oneness as a home is established.
Then somewhere along the way, the oneness gets eroded by a
subtle separateness. How does that happen? The answer is the
world, the flesh, and the devil. The world creeps in, along
with raising children, pursuing careers, and dealing with the
busyness of life. We begin to find more fascination or
distraction in it than we do in our mates. Our flesh takes
over when we decide to be self-centered instead of
self-sacrificing. Then there is Satan.
God created marriage at the beginning. Satan has been
trying to destroy it ever since. You and your wife are created
in God's image (Genesis 1:27). Satan wants to make you over
into his. Satan doesn't want your marriage to succeed and has
in fact set up a plan for its destruction. He is even now
making plans to destroy your marriage. But you, my precious
brother, have been given the power and authority to put a stop
to this through your prayers. When you pray for your wife, it
keeps the world at bay, it transforms selfish hearts, and it
derails the devil's plans. If God has asked you to pray for
your enemies, how much more does He want you to pray for the
person you are supposed to love and with whom you have become
one? But first you have to pray for yourself.
Five Ways to Be the Husband God Wants You to Be
In the Bible, God commands, "All of you be of one mind,
having compassion for one another; love as brothers, be
tenderhearted, be courteous" (1 Peter 3:8). Paying heed to
these five directives can change your life and your marriage
and make you the man and husband God wants you to be. It's
definitely something well worth praying about.
1. Be of One Mind
It's horrible to have strife in a marriage. It makes us
miserable. It affects every area of our lives. And it's
probably the closest thing to hell we'll ever know on earth.
If it goes on long enough, it can destroy everything. Jesus
said, "Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to
desolation, and every city or house divided against itself
will not stand" (Matthew 12:25). Those are frightening
predictions. But prayer is the key by which unity in the
marriage relationship can be maintained.
A man and wife cannot live entirely independently of one
another without paying a steep price for it. It makes them
incomplete. "Neither is a man independent of woman, nor woman
independent of man, in the Lord" (1 Corinthians 11:11). But
because men and women are different, it's quite easy for them
to get off onto completely separate paths. Even in the closest
of marriages, the two partners are still not joined at the
hip. You and your wife may have separate work, interests, and
activities, but if you are praying with and for one another
regularly, it will keep you in tune and on the same path.
Without this unity of mind and spirit that prayer provides,
it's too easy to get used to the other one not being there.
And if resentment about that creeps into the heart of either
one of you, you can begin to hold yourself apart from one
another mentally, physically, or emotionally, without even
realizing it.
It is especially important to be of the same faith and
beliefs. In fact, this is a good place to begin praying. Your
entire relationship is compromised if you are not on the same
page in this area. For example, going to separate churches, or
going to a church where one of you is not happy, or one of you
going to church while the other one consistently does not, all
promote a lack of unity.
If you can think of other issues such as this that have
caused division between you and your wife, pray specifically
about them. Ask God to change your heart where necessary to
bring you into unity with your wife. Where your wife's
attitude and perspective need to change, pray for her to be
able to change them. Your marriage will be a strong force for
good if the two of you are of one mind.
2. Be Compassionate
Have you ever seen your wife suffering, but you don't know
what to do about it? Some men become impatient with that.
Others feel so at a loss or overwhelmed by it that it causes
them to withdraw. If you recognize that happening to you, ask
God to give you a heart of compassion. To be compassionate
toward your wife is to have a deep sympathy for any area in
which she suffers and to have a strong desire to alleviate
that suffering.
Part of being compassionate has to do with simply
listening. That means being able to listen without having that
faraway look in your eyes that says, "I have more important
things to do. Let's get this over with quickly." Your wife is
not expecting you to fix everything. She just needs to know
that you hear her heart and care about how she feels.
In the past my husband would stand still and listen to me
for no more than three seconds (I timed this) before he would
walk out of the room. If I wanted him to hear a complete
sentence, I either had to run after him or finish the sentence
the next time I saw him. Even when I did get him to actually
sit down and look at me while I was speaking, I still had to
ask him to give me some indication that he comprehended what I
was saying. Usually I said something like "Blink if you can
hear me." When he blinked, it meant so much to know he had
heard my voice. Now he has a heart for my struggles, and he
listens with care. Those moments of listening and indicating
compassion have been healing to our relationship.
Pray that God will give you a heart of compassion toward
your wife and the patience to listen to her when she needs you
to do so. It's a fine art worth cultivating. It can get you
places with her where you've dreamed of being.
3. Be Loving
Jesus loves us with fidelity, purity, constancy, and
passion no matter how imperfect we are. If a man doesn't love
his wife in that same way, he will abuse his authority and his
headship and as a result will abuse her. Because you are one
with your wife, you must treat her the way you would your own
body. You wouldn't do anything to deliberately hurt or destroy
it. You love it and care for it. "Let each one of you in
particular so love his own wife as himself" (Ephesians 5:33).
Jack Hayford, our pastor for 23 years, always said he could
tell when a woman was truly loved by her husband, because she
grew more beautiful as the years went on. He recognized an
inner beauty that doesn't fade, but rather increases with time
when a woman is loved. You have no idea how much your love
means to your wife. Don't withhold it from her, or one way or
another you will lose her. The Bible says, "Do not withhold
good from those to whom it is due, when it is in the power of
your hand to do so" (Proverbs 3:27). Ask God to increase your
love for your wife and enable you to show it in a way that
makes her beautiful.
4. Be Tenderhearted
Is there anything about your wife that bothers you? Is
there something that she does or says, or doesn't do or say,
that irritates you? Do you find yourself wanting to change
something about her? What happens when you try to make those
changes occur? How does she respond when you show your
irritation? Have you ever just given up and said, "It's no
use. She's never going to be any different"?
The truth is, we all have a hard time changing. Try as we
may, we can't change ourselves in any significant way. Only
God can make changes in us that last. Only His power can
transform us. That's why prayer is a more tender and more
certain way to see changes happen in your wife.
For example, does your wife always run late, while you like
to be on time? She's probably not doing it on purpose. She may
either be a poor judge of time or else she is trying to do too
much. Pray that God will help her to organize things better or
not take on more than she can handle, or that she will gain a
clearer concept of time. Above all, don't let anger,
harshness, or demeaning attitudes creep in. Criticism intended
to make your wife change doesn't work. It will never give you
the results you want. The only thing that works is prayer.
So rather than be impatient with your wife's weaknesses,
ask God to give you a tender heart so you can pray for her
about them. Ask Him to show you how they are a complement to
your strengths. And remember that, though the ways you and
your wife are the same can unite you, the ways you are
different can keep things interesting.
5. Be Courteous
Do you ever talk to your wife in a way that would be
considered rude if you were speaking to a friend or business
associate? Are you kind to everyone all day at work, but then
you take out your frustration, exhaustion, and anger on your
wife when you get home? Do you ever allow criticism of your
wife to come out of your mouth in front of other people? If
so, as a sister in the Lord who deeply cares about both you
and your wife, allow me to give you your first serious
assignment in this book:
STOP THAT!
Marriage is hard enough without one of the parties being
rude, cruel, or inconsiderate. Nothing makes a marriage feel
more like hell on earth. Nothing is more upsetting, defeating,
tormenting, suffocating, or emotion provoking, nothing does
more to bring out the worst in us, than a marriage where one
of the partners is lacking in common courtesy. I have heard of
more marriages dissolving because the wife had been treated
rudely for so long that she felt herself becoming resentful,
angry, bitter, and hopeless. In other words, she was turning
into the kind of person she never wanted to be. We have to
care enough about our mates to stop doing things that hurt or
upset them.
There is nothing more wonderful than the male voice. It is
strong and deep and rich. And the sound of male voices singing
together is one of the most beautiful sounds on earth. But the
male voice can also be terrifying, especially to women and
children. Most men have no idea about the power of their
voice. When a man speaks, his words have the power to create
and the power to destroy. His words can be like a sharp knife
that wounds and kills, or a soothing balm that heals and
brings life.
I'm not saying that you shouldn't talk honestly and openly
with your wife about the issues in your lives. By all means,
put your thoughts and feelings on the table. But don't let
your words turn into weapons of criticism that destroy what
you want to preserve. Even when we don't mean to, our
impatience or exhaustion can make our words seem less than
courteous. Remember that "the kingdom of God is not in word
but in power" (1 Corinthians 4:20). It's not the words you
speak, it's the power of God behind them that will make the
difference. Praying first, before you talk about a sensitive
subject, will give your words power and ensure that you speak
them from a right heart.
Your wife was created as a gift from God to complete you.
"Nor was man created for the woman, but woman for the man" (1
Corinthians 11:9). But she must be treated as the gift from
God that she is, in order for that complete blessing to happen
in your life. Your wife will prove to be your greatest asset
if you value and honor her. The Bible tells us that "whatever
we ask we receive from Him, because we keep His commandments
and do those things that are pleasing in His sight" (1 John
3:22). Pray for God to help you speak to your wife in a
courteous way that is pleasing in His sight, and to convict
your heart when you do not.
Praying about these five simple biblical directives will
transform your life and your marriage. And no matter how great
your marriage is, God wants it to be better. Since God tells
us to "be transformed," that must mean there is always room
for improvement (Romans 12:2). Therefore it stands to reason
that, as we improve individually, our marriages will also
improve. Next to your love for her, the greatest gift you can
give your wife is your own wholeness. Her most fervent desire
for you is that you become the man God created you to be. It
must be your desire also. God has given you strength,
brilliance, power, authority, and the wonderful and admirable
traits that come with being a man. Ask God to help you use
them well and to His glory. Ask God to make you everything He
created you to be so you and your wife will always be a
winning team.
She Says...
Please pray for yourself that:
1. You will be the husband God wants you to be. 2. You
will know how to really love your wife. 3. You will be led
by the Holy Spirit in all decisions. 4. You will be
delivered from negative behavior. 5. You will speak words
that build and not destroy. 6. You will have the desire to
pray for your wife. 7. You will grow spiritually,
emotionally, and mentally.
He Says... by Michael Omartian
Michael is a record producer and songwriter. He and Stormie
have been married for 28 years, and they have three grown
children.
I just heard the sad story of yet another woman who lived
in a marriage where she had to endure the overbearing actions
and declarations of her husband. It has ended in a divorce. It
was a marriage in which her opinions were not valued or
needed, and she was made to feel disrespected, unloved,
powerless, and useless. The worst part is that such things are
happening alarmingly often even in Christian marriages. The
reality is that many men have been taught strange
interpretations of portions of the Bible. These
misinterpretations have been spread through ignorance and
because of some men's need to feel powerful as the "priest" of
the home. No wonder the feminists have had a field day.
Although some women have been hurt and damaged through the
extremism of the women's liberation movement, I can certainly
see how it got started. We men can do a much better job of
loving our wives as Christ loved the church. I know I can, and
I pray that I will. I believe that through prayer God will
give us men the tools we need so we can regard our wives with
great respect and affection and become the instruments of
support that they need.
Christ died for the church. We need to ask God to help us
rise to the standard He has for us so that we will consider
our wives before ourselves. That way our marriages can be a
very different story.
Prayer Power
Lord, create in me a clean heart and renew a right spirit
within me (Psalm 51:10). Show me where my attitude and
thoughts are not what You would have them to be, especially
toward my wife. Convict me when I am being unforgiving. Help
me to let go of any anger, so that confusion will not have a
place in my mind. If there is behavior in me that needs to
change, enable me to make changes that last.
Whatever You reveal to me, I will confess to You as sin.
Make me a man after Your own heart. Enable me to be the head
of my home and family that You created me to be.
Lord, show me how to really cover (wife's name) in prayer.
Enable me to dwell with her with understanding and give honor
to her so that my prayers will not be hindered (1 Peter 3:7).
Renew our love for one another. Heal any wounds that have
caused a rift between us. Give me patience, understanding, and
compassion. Help me to be loving, tenderhearted, and courteous
to her just as You ask me in Your Word (1 Peter 3:8). Enable
me to love her the way that You do.
Lord, I pray that You would bring (wife's name) and me to a
new place of unity with one another. Make us be of the same
mind. Show me what I need to do in order to make that come
about. Give me words that heal, not wound. Fill my heart with
Your love so that what overflows through my speech will be
words that build up, not tear down. Convict my heart when I
don't live Your way. Help me to be the man and husband that
You want me to be.
Power Tools
"A man shall leave his father and mother and be joined
to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh ... let each
one of you in particular so love his own wife as himself, and
let the wife see that she respects her husband." EPHESIANS
5:31,33
"One who turns away his ear from hearing the law, even
his prayer is an abomination." PROVERBS 28:9
"Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved
the church and gave Himself for her. " EPHESIANS 5:25
"Confess your trespasses to one another, and pray for
one another, that you may be healed. The effective, fervent
prayer of a righteous man avails much." JAMES 5:16
"Husbands ought to love their own wives as their own
bodies; he who loves his wife loves himself. For no one ever
hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as
the Lord does the church. " EPHESIANS 5:28,29
Taken from: The Power of a Praying Husband/Copyright 2001
by Stormie Omartian. Published by Harvest House Publishers,
Eugene, OR. 97402. Used by permission.