Excellent thoughst, Jamie:
"
It seems zealous, religious-minded folks sometimes have a hard time even with St. Paul and his practical advice (albeit broad). As a Christian, with a Christian, growing up with this concept of sin can cause you to focus far more on your spouse's wrongs than rights. Because all your Christian walk, you're more preoccupied with avoiding this, and avoiding that, and so living with someone, a stumble is probably what's going to catch your attention more than kindness and affection. "
A perfect wedding?
(Just trying to get these ideas on the thread)
A perfect marriage is one where BOTH mates are focused on their spouse´s rights
and needs. (Good! I like your thought).
"We" often tend to see the wrongs instead of their possitive side of these human beings "we" married.
When I was a child I watche a TV program where the man giving a couple some councelling, asked: "Why do you want to be dicorced". The man said: "She´s used to squeeze the tooth paste the wrong way" and "I´m upset of correcting such a mistake"
I was shoked at that and I thought: "Is that a reason to be divorced?" (I was a teen, those days)
When I got married, and lived that part out (as if I was that actor on the movie I watched) I personnaly learned what a perfect marriage (not
a wedding) could be.
She was used to leave the tooth paste this way... I decided to have mine (which I bought and put away) but she insisted on
doing the same each time she had the chance (invading what I thought it was my privacy or space).
Ha! Ha!
What a lesson I learned on that tiny thing!
Ha! Ha!
For me, a perfect wedding (and marriage) is that we BOTH partners
give themselves room enough, an space where both can live and
enjoy THE PREVELIGE of living toguether as ONE, not in separated rooms or split beds.
(If that be needed, I hope it be enjoyed this way)
and not this way: