Deuteronomy Introduction & Overview

Series:  Deuteronomy (A Call to Faithfulness)

 Description:   We are all called to be faithful to God. This is easier said than done, life presents various challenges and distractions that pull us away from our purpose to love God and love others. Our three-week series deals with the overview of the book of Deuteronomy, examining its relevance to our lives today. Through understanding the context and audience, we can understand the importance of trusting God, remembering his relationship to us, and loving him with our full being.

Dates           Titles            Scriptures              Events

Mar. 13 – A Call to Love (Deuteronomy 6)         Spring Break (Jarrell, Leander & Liberty Hill) *DST

Mar. 20 – A Call to Remember (Deuteronomy 8)

Mar. 27 – A Call to Life (Deuteronomy 30)

Deuteronomy Introduction and Overview

Class reunions, photo albums, familiar songs, and old neighborhoods—like longtime friends they awaken our memories and stir our emotions. The past is a kaleidoscope of promises, failures, victories, and embarrassments. Sometimes we want to forget memories that are too painful. As the years pass, however, remembrances of unpleasant events usually fade into our subconscious. But there is a time to remember: Mistakes should not be repeated; commitments made must be fulfilled; and the memory of special events can encourage us and move us to action.

The book of Deuteronomy calls Israel to remember who God is and what he has done. Lacking faith, the old generation had wandered for 40 years and had died in the wilderness. They left Egypt behind, but never knew the Promised Land. Then on the east bank of the Jordan River, Moses prepared the sons and daughters of that faithless generation to possess the land. After a brief history lesson emphasizing God’s great acts on behalf of his people, Moses reviewed the law. Then he restated the covenant—God’s contract with his people.

The lessons are clear. Because of what God has done, Israel should have hope and follow him; because of what he expects, they should listen and obey; because of who he is, they should love him completely. Learning these lessons will prepare them to possess the Promised Land. As you hear the message of Deuteronomy, remember how God has expressed his kindness in your life, and then commit yourself anew to trust, love, and obey him.

Vital Statistics

Purpose: To remind the people of what God had done and encourage them to rededicate their lives to him

Author: Moses (except for the final summary, which was probably written by Joshua after Moses’ death)

Original Audience: Israel (the new generation entering the Promised Land)

Date Written: About 1407/6 B.C.

Setting: The east side of the Jordan River, in view of Canaan

Key Verse: “Understand, therefore, that the Lord your God is indeed God. He is the faithful God who keeps his covenant for a thousand generations and lavishes his unfailing love on those who love him and obey his commands” (7:9).

Key People:  Moses, Joshua

Key Place: The Arabah in Moab

The Blueprint

  1. WHAT GOD HAS DONE FOR US: MOSES’ FIRST ADDRESS (1:1-4:43)
    Moses reviewed the mighty acts of God for the nation of Israel. Remembering God’s special involvement in our lives gives us hope and encouragement for the future.
  2. PRINCIPLES FOR GODLY LIVING: MOSES’ SECOND ADDRESS (4:44-29:1)
    1. The Ten Commandments
    2. Love the Lord your God
    3. Laws for proper worship
    4. Laws for ruling the nation
    5. Laws for human relationships
    6. Consequences of obedience and disobedience

Obeying God’s laws brought blessings to the Israelites and disobeying brought misfortune. This was part of the written agreement God made with his people. Although we are not part of this covenant, the principle holds true: Obedience and disobedience carry inevitable consequences in this life and the next.

  1. A CALL FOR COMMITMENT TO GOD: MOSES’ THIRD ADDRESS (29:2-30:20)
    Moses called the people to commitment. God still calls us to be committed to love him with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength.
  2. THE CHANGE IN LEADERSHIP: MOSES’ LAST DAYS (31:1-34:12)
    Although Moses made some serious mistakes, he had lived uprightly and carried out God’s commands. Moses died with integrity. We too may make some serious mistakes, but that should not stop us from living with integrity and godly commitment.
MEGATHEMES
THEME EXPLANATION IMPORTANCE
History Moses reviewed the mighty acts of God whereby he liberated Israel from slavery in Egypt. He recounted how God had helped them and how the people had disobeyed. By reviewing God’s promises and mighty acts in history, we can learn about his character. We come to know God more intimately through understanding how he has acted in the past. We can also avoid mistakes in our own lives through learning from Israel’s past failures.
Laws God reviewed his laws for the people. The legal contract between God and his people had to be renewed by the new generation about to enter the Promised Land. Commitment to God and his truth cannot be taken for granted. Each generation and each person must respond afresh to God’s call for obedience.
Love God’s faithful and patient love is portrayed more often than his punishment. God shows his love by being faithful to his people and his promises. In response, God desires love from the heart, not merely a legalistic keeping of his law. God’s love forms the foundation for our trust in him. We trust him because he loves us. Because God loves us, we should maintain justice and respect.
Choices God reminded his people that in order to ratify his covenant, they must choose the path of obedience. A personal decision to obey would bring benefits to their lives; rebellion would bring severe calamity. Our choices make a difference. Choosing to follow God benefits us and improves our relationships with others. Choosing to abandon God’s ways brings harm to ourselves and others.
Teaching God commanded the Israelites to teach their children his ways. They were to use ritual, instruction, and memorization to make sure their children understood God’s principles and passed them on to the next generation. Quality teaching for our children must be a priority. It is important to pass on God’s truth to future generations in our traditions. But God desires that his truth be in our hearts and minds and not merely in our traditions.

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Source: Life Application Study Bible, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1988), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, 262-263.

 

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Lasting Love – Song of Solomon Ch. 8

We’re wrapping up our study in the Song of Solomon.  It was written three thousand years ago.  In chapters one and two we’ve seen the couple attract, date and court. There was an emphasis on character, communication and romance. In chapter three we saw Solomon’s wife describe their wedding day. Chapter four dealt with the honeymoon phase, intimacy in a relationship and we learned some great things about serving one another in every area of our relationship.  Chapter five and six we looked at last week that dealt with conflict in a relationship.  We learned how we could work through conflict.  In chapter 7 they make up and make love again.  There is more romance and more passion.

Now we come to Chapter eight.  It is about life time commitment and lasting love.

Lasting Love is…

 ·       Powered By God

5 Who is this coming up from the desert leaning on her lover?  Song Songs 8:5a

When I read that it reminded me of the section we looked at several weeks ago in chapter three where she talks about her bridal procession and seeing Solomon come out of the desert.  It reminds me of the exodus in the book of Exodus where the Israelites are being led by God, by a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night.  Again, I think it’s implied here that here’s this couple, they’ve come through two whole chapters of difficulty, conflict and pain in their relationship.  Now God is leading them and bringing them to a place of safety.  He’s bringing them through it. Your relationship can go the distance but you have to get God right in the middle of it.  Focus on who He is.   If you want to love.  God has to lead you.

God is in the miracle of resurrecting relationships business.   Everything in our society today is trying to destroy the family.  Everything says Split! If you don’t like it, split!  Talk to 95% of secular counselors and they say, “What’s best for you?”  Everything in society is saying Walk away.

I’m saying it doesn’t have to be that way.  Even marriages that are DEAD can be restored because of God’s power.  Human love is not strong enough to weather the storms in life.  It runs out. It goes dry.  But God’s love never gives up.  I realize that we’ve got all kinds of marriages represented here. We’ve got newlyweds, some people celebrating their fiftieth anniversary.  Jesus Christ is willing to help you at whatever stage of the relationship you are.

Lasting Love is

·       Planned By God      

Beloved Under the apple tree I roused you; there your mother conceived you, there she who was in labor gave you birth. Song Songs 8:5b

What this is essentially saying is that, they were born for each other.  Do you feel that your spouse was made for you?  That is how I feel about Niki.  Do you remember when you first met your spouse?  I want to tell you how Niki and I met.  When I was a Jr. at A&M there were forty thousand students so at least 20,000 girls and I had no prospects.  I was a little nervous. I had been in the Frat scene and met many Sorority girls, I had been to Christian groups, Campus Crusade, Intervarsity, BSM.  Dating seemed so fake to me. Finally I said forget it.  It’s in God’s hands. So I began praying for my wife and that God would take care of it if he wanted me married.  That was the end of 1989. Five years later 1994, I was in a place of no prospects:  I taught drivers ed. (15 year olds), I was a youth minister (more 15 year olds) I was in Seminary (no Women there) I was hanging out with some of my high school buddies.  They began teasing me.  Saying, “Your never going to meet anyone!  You better not at driver’s ed or youth ministry! 15 will get you 20!  You need to start going to clubs, or single groups.”  “No I believe God will take care of this.”  I said.  Sure enough a few months later July 4th, 1994, we were having a fourth of July Party at church for the youth, I went home to get some matches and there was a college buddy with two girls on my front porch.  He was considering moving in with me.  He was in Med. School and had met two girls from the Health Science Center at a Christian bible study there.  One he liked, and was trying to put some moves on, one was just tagging along.  That was Niki.  So there we met and the rest is history.  God literally brought her to my doorstep. That’s what I believe.   That is what this passage is referring to.

Also lasting love is…

  • Permanent
    6 Place me like a seal over your heart, like a seal on your arm; for love is as strong as death, its jealousy unyielding as the grave. It burns like blazing fire, like a mighty flame. Song of Songs 8:6

She’s saying to place her like a seal over his heart.  A seal would mark something as being possessed by another.  In their relationship they had free possession of one another’s lives.  They belonged to one another.  In fact, one translation translates chapter eight, verse six this way: “Wear me as a signet ring on your heart; as a ring on your hand.”  That’s what we do when we exchange rings when we enter into a relationship.  The relationships of commitment that will go the distance.

It burns like blazing fire, like a mighty flame.  As we look through the Song of Solomon we are reminded again and again how much this couple passionately loved one another and invested in one another.  They kept the romance burning.  You see it on every page.  It’s like the elderly couple that was lying in bed one night.  The wife said to her husband, “Do you remember back when we first got married and laid in bed?  You used to hold my hand back then.  Why don’t you do that anymore?”  There is this long pause.  He didn’t really want to but he reached over and held her hand.  She said, “Back before, when we first got married you used to snuggle up next to me at night and lay close to me.”  There’s a long pause then he sort of creeps his body over there next to her.  She said, “Remember back when we first got married you used to nibble on my ear at night.”  He immediately threw the covers off and got out of bed.  She was hurt.  She said, “What happened?  Where are you going?”  He said, “I have to get my teeth.”

Marriage is hard work.  It’s easy to drift away, to just go through the motion.  Every year, takes effort.  Couples that have been married a long time have our respect.   Don’t you love to hear when a couple has been married 50 years? We have several in our church that have been married 50 years.  I’ve also been blessed to celebrate as my grandparents and now my parents have been married 50 years.

This brings us to our last point, lasting love is also…

  • Priceless
    7 Many waters cannot quench love; rivers cannot wash it away. If one were to give all the wealth of his house for love, it would be utterly scorned. Song of Songs 8:7

Any relationship that lasts will have to face those many waters that he talks about.  Love is not just about feeling.  Love is action, commitment and faithfulness.  With God first and that commitment sealed with one another, with a willingness to persevere in tough times, God can do amazing things in our relationships.

It says,  If one were to give all the wealth of his house for love, it would be utterly scorned. This clearly tells us, like the Beatles sang, “Can’t buy me love! Can’t buy me love!”  Lasting love cannot be bought.  It is built on commitment not cash.  You can throw cash at it but unless your heart is in it will be utterly scorned.  It priceless.  What is a good marriage relationship worth?  Priceless.

We’ll move on from this relationship series but don’t move on from your relationship. Guys the way we won her heart is the way we will keep her heart by pursuing her and loving her.  Ladies, continue to pour into the guy in your life.  Meet his needs and invest in that relationship so it can become all that God desires it to be.

Our next series will be in the book of Deuteronomy. I hope that you can join us.

Darrell

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 (All Verses are from the New International Version of the Bible)

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Song of Song Commentary – Ch 7-8

They express their mutual love (7:1-8:4).

Most of the similes in 7:1-9 have been used before in the book, but a few are new. He describes her beauty from foot (v. 1) to head (vv. 5 and 9). Both food and drink are referenced in 7:2, describing the intimate area of her body, and this suggests that the husband is nourished by the love of his wife. Oriental “fish pools” were beautiful and peaceful, even though filled with life, and so were her eyes (v. 4). Previously, Solomon had been so smitten by her look that he was overcome (6:5), but now he can watch her eyes and find beauty and excitement. If today you compared a woman’s neck or nose to a tower, you would offend her, but not so in that day. The reference isn’t to size or prominence but to proportion and fitness. Like a tower on the city wall, or even standing alone in the land, it was in the right setting and had its own beauty. Hair “like purple” isn’t referring to dyed hair but to royal curtains or tapestries. Whereas the king had been transfixed by her eyes (6:5), now it’s her hair that captures him.

In verses 6-9, he introduces a fascinating new metaphor. He sees his lovely wife as a palm tree, beautiful and fruitful, and their intimate love as his climbing the tree and eating its fruits. (“Grapes” in v. 7, kjv should be “fruit,” referring to dates.) Kissing her was like drinking wine, and he told her so. Her reply was that she hoped the wine would flow gently over his lips and teeth and please him. Again she assures him of their mutual love and devotion (v. 10; see 2:16 and 6:3). “His desire is toward me” reminds us of Genesis 3:16, where the Lord said that Eve’s desire would be for her husband. Sexual attraction in marriage must be a mutual experience, and the husband and wife must work at making themselves desirable.

7:10-13 As a marriage matures, love and freedom between marriage partners should increase. Here the girl takes the initiative in lovemaking. Many cultures have stereotypes of the roles men and women play in lovemaking, but the security of true love gives both marriage partners the freedom to initiate acts of love and express their true feelings.

Now the bride wants to make a visit to the country, something Solomon had wanted to do before and she had refused (2:8-17). Sometimes visiting another place gives a freshness to marriage relationships, and she promised to give him her love (7:12). A husband and wife have conjugal obligations to each other (1 Cor. 7:1-7), but they shouldn’t look upon married love as a dutiful responsibility. It is also a gift they share with each other, as they shared the feast and the joys of visiting the garden. Mandrakes have long been associated with sexual passion (Gen. 30:14), although there’s no evidence that they work as a sexual stimulant. The Shulamite enjoys fruit that is both new and old, suggesting that they’re brave enough to try something new but wise enough not to abandon what they know really works.

As she closes her monologue, she expresses regret that she can’t show her love to him spontaneously, as a sister can do to a brother (8:1-4). In that society at that time, for a wife to kiss her husband in public would be considered uncouth, so they had to wait until they were alone. She wanted to be a “big sister” to him and kiss him, take him home to her mother, and learn from her mother how to treat him. Once again, the image of food and drink is used to describe their love: he would embrace her and she would provide the wine and pomegranate juice. The seeds of the pomegranate are found in sacs that contain a tasty juice.

They pledge unending love and faithfulness (8:5-14).

The daughters of Jerusalem see the couple returning home from their honeymoon trip to the villages, and they note that in the royal carriage she is leaning on her husband in love. (See 3:6 for a parallel picture.) As they come to her native village, they see a prominent apple tree, and the king reminds her that she had been sleeping under that tree, weary from work, when first he saw her. Then he pointed to her girlhood home and reminded her that there she had been conceived and delivered.

But those days were ended. Now they belonged to each other and needed to be true to each other. He asked her to make him the seal on her heart and arm, for a seal speaks of ownership and protection. Their love brought them together and their love would keep them together. The grip of death and the grave can’t be broken, and neither can the hold of love. A husband and wife aren’t envious of each other but they are jealous over one another, and that jealousy is powerful, like the very fire of God. The bride picks up this image of the fire and says that such love can’t be put out by water, and it’s not for sale! Any man who offered to buy love would be scorned and rejected. By speaking in this way, the king and his wife affirm their unending love for each other.

8:6, 7 In this final description of their love, the girl includes some of its significant characteristics (see also 1 Corinthians 13). Love is as strong as death; it cannot be killed by time or disaster and cannot be bought for any price because it is freely given. Love is priceless, and even the richest king cannot buy it. Love must be accepted as a gift from God and then shared within the guidelines God provides. Accept the love of your spouse as God’s gift, and strive to make your love a reflection of the perfect love that comes from God himself.

Verses 8-14 form an appendix to the story. As the Shulamite returns to her girlhood home with her husband, she remembers what her brothers said about her when she was younger. They didn’t think she was ready for marriage because she hadn’t yet matured. The images of the wall and the door have to do with the girl’s virginity. If she was a door, a woman of easy access, then she would not be fit to be a bride, but if she kept herself pure, behind a wall, as it were, then they could give her away to the man who asked for her. The Shulamite boldly stated that she was a wall and entered the marriage bed a pure virgin. But in spite of her brothers’ sneers, she developed physically and had breasts that her husband admired (4:5-6; 7:3, 7-8).

Now that she is married, her brothers will not be able to enlist her help in caring for the vineyard. But Solomon owns the vineyard and, as his wife, she has a share in it! Verses 11-12 seem to speak about a new “work contract” she negotiated between her husband and her brothers, providing them with more money for their labors. They might be able to hire extra help to replace their sister.

The book closes with the Shulamite in her garden, chatting with some friends, and her husband calls to her because he wants to hear her voice. Where there is love, the husband and wife want to be together and share their ideas and feelings. Yes, there’s a place for other companions, but nobody must replace the mate God gives to us. How does the beloved respond to his call? She tells him to hurry up and leave with her, because the “mountains of spices” (her breasts, 4:5-6) are awaiting his touch. Of course, her companions in the garden don’t understand this code word, so she doesn’t embarrass anybody. Husbands and wives frequently have a secret language of love that others don’t understand.

8:14 The love between Solomon and his bride did not diminish in intensity after their wedding night. The lovers relied on each other and kept no secrets from each other. Devotion and commitment were the keys to their relationship, just as they are in our relationships to our spouses and to God. The faithfulness of our marital love should reflect God’s perfect faithfulness to us.

Paul shows how marriage represents Christ’s relationship to his church (Ephesians 5:22-33), and John pictures the Second Coming as a great marriage feast for Christ and his bride, his faithful followers (Revelation 19:7, 8; 21:1, 2). Many theologians have thought that Song of Songs is an allegory showing Christ’s love for his church. It might be even better to say that it is a love poem about a real human love relationship, and that all loving, committed marriages are reflections of God’s love.

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Sources: Warren W. Wiersbe, The Bible Exposition Commentary – Wisdom and Poetry, (Colorado Springs, CO: Victor, 2004), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, 546-550.

Life Application Study Bible, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1988), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, 1085.

 

 

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Handling Conflict – Song of Solomon Ch 5-6

I read about fifteen couples in Tampa, Florida that were married on a roller coaster.  The guys wore tuxedos, the girls wore wedding dresses.  They were all mic’d up so on the midst of the coaster they could hear the vows through their headsets and they could legally respond to the vows through the mic.  They were legally married on a roller coaster.  While that may be an interesting way to get married, it is a pretty good description of what relationships can be like.  Little did they know that when that roller coaster stopped, it really didn’t.   In relationships, there are times of great peace and joy and there are times of conflict and tension.  The important thing is that we begin to learn how to deal with those times of conflict and tension.

We’ve been looking at the Song of Solomon in the Old Testament.  It’s a book written three thousand years ago. It was written by Solomon as a love song to his wife, the Shulammite.  We’ve seen them in some great highs in their relationships.  We saw them attract, date, court, get married and have a honeymoon. Last week we looked at a great night in the bedroom.  Then you turn the page going from chapter four in the Song of Solomon to chapter five and they go from a great night in the bedroom to a bad night the bedroom.  Chapter five and six in the Song of Solomon are dedicated to a conflict that erupts in their relationship.  We’ve seen the roller coaster be up and now we are about to see the roller coaster go down.  We’re about to see some struggle and tension.

Let’s pick it up in the Song of Solomon 5:2.  She’s speaking and says these words, “I slept but my heart was awake.  Have you ever been in that situation where there’s tension in a relationship?  You are lying in bed and the world is between you.  You are sleeping but your heart is awake.  “Listen!  My lover is knocking” Here’s what Solomon says, “Open to me, my sister, my darling, my dove, my flawless one.”  That just sounds like a guy who’s in trouble, doesn’t it? “My head is drenched with dew, my hair with dampness of the night.”  It’s probably midnight or one in the morning.  He’s coming to her room.  It wasn’t uncommon in that culture for kings and queens to sleep in different chambers.  He’s knocking on her door.  Maybe he’s coming in from work.  Maybe they got in a big argument before and he walked out.  Maybe she shot him the look and he didn’t deal with that so well.  They’ve obviously had some tension.  He comes to the door, knocking at the door.  Let me in, he wants some comfort.  He wants love and affection from the love of his life.  Here’s what she says.  Remember we looked at 4:16 just a few verses back. She’s saying, “Awake North wind, awake South wind blow upon my garden.  Come in and be intimate with me.”  Now here we are a few verses later.

She says, “I have taken off my robe, must I put it on again?  I have washed my feet, must I soil them again?”  In other words, she’s not getting up and coming to the door.  We’ve got tension and drama.  We have a conflict in the relationship that has escalated.  In all of our relationships conflict will happen.  It’s a myth to think that a good relationship is one without conflict.  All relationships have conflict.  The issue is how we deal with that conflict.

  1. Learn To Attack The Problem Not The Person

So often when we get into an argument we want to go after each other rather than realizing that we are on the same team. We make them the problem and attack the person while avoiding really trying to find a solution to the problem. “Let’s fix the problem together rather than fixing blame.”

We get into conflict and people get hurt.  Sometimes our tendency is to bury it.  Sometimes our tendency is to pretend it never happened.  But the faster way to healing is to acknowledge what has actually occurred in our lives.  We see it in the Song of Solomon.  Chapter 5:5, she’s laying there and won’t get out of bed.  Then she has a change of heart.  She says, “I arose to open for my lover, and my hands dripped with myrrh, and my fingers with flowing myrrh, on the handles of the lock.  I opened for my lover but my lover had left; he was gone.  My heart sank at his departure.  I looked for him but did not find him.  I called him but he did not answer.”  She has a change of heart, goes to the door and now he has left.  Most of you have had the experience or heard of the experience of a couple getting in such a rift that he leaves.  He just leaves and she can’t find him.  She goes out in the streets and looks for him.  She doesn’t know where he’s gone.  Maybe you get in an argument and you are somewhere else.  You know the conflict and the tension that can occur in those moments.  She said, “My heart sank at his departure.”  It’s the same construction in the original language as a phrase used to describe how people’s hearts felt when Rachel died in Genesis thirty-eight.  In other words, this is heartbreak.  This is a devastated person that he has left now.  He’s gone away and she doesn’t know where.  That’s the problem.

It’s like the story that Tommy Nelson writes about in one of his books about couple who had been in a conflict but they had to go to a banquet that night. She had a special dress that had just been laundered but needed help with the zipper in the back.   As he was doing it, he grabbed the zipper with too much force zipping up and down saying, “zip zip, zip zip, zip zip.”  And he broke the zipper on her dress.  She’s enraged now and has to wear something different. The next day, still simmering she goes shopping.  As she gets home she sees her husband lying underneath the car.  Half of his body is sticking out, he’s obviously working underneath it.  She walks up and grabs his zipper on his pants and goes, “zip, zip, zip, zip.”  Deal with that!  Then she walks in the kitchen only to see her husband standing in the kitchen.  She says, “What are you doing here?”  He says, “This is my kitchen.”  She said, “Yeah, but you were just under the car.”  He said, “I haven’t been under the car all day!”  She said, “Then who is under the car?”  He says, “Oh, that’s our neighbor.  He came over to help fix the muffler.”  She explains what she’s done, her face obviously white in that moment.  They go outside to apologize to the neighbor for this whole thing.  He’s still lying just like he was, half his body sticking out from under the car.  He hadn’t moved a muscle.  He hadn’t moved because he had knocked himself out cold.  When she grabbed his zipper, he did what any guy would do and sat up as fast as he could, hit his head on the muffler and knocked himself out.   The moral of the story: any time we attack the person not the problem we make more problems!

  1. Listen To Each Other’s Feelings.

When conflict happens we have to acknowledge that we are hurt.  We have to be willing to talk about it and put it on the table.  Avoid burying it. Also, try and understand before trying to be understood.  When we are in an argument or a conflict our tendency is to want to lash out at the other person.  We want them to experience the pain, the anger or the hurt that we are experiencing.  We want them to feel it a little bit so they know how upset we are.  The wiser decision is to try to understand first.  Then try to be understood.

One of the ways we can try to understand is use reflective listening. When Niki says something I’ll repeat back to her what I think I heard her say.  Did you say this?  And I’ll say it back to her.  She’ll say, “No, not necessarily that but this.”   It’s amazing what people hear. At meetings, someone will say something and three people hear it differently.

Three simple words that can go a long way in a relationship:  “I am sorry.”  Guys see the words, I am sorry, as an admission of guilt.  Women see the words, “I’m sorry.” entirely differently.  To them, the words, I am sorry, it’s a statement of sympathy. It’s a statement of concern, of understanding their feelings. Guys we can use those words a lot more and realize you are not acknowledging guilt, we are showing that we care.  Even if we are only 10% wrong, we can say sorry for that. When we were laying in bed that night on opposite sides, that was one of the first phrases that opened the door for conversation.  “Okay, I’m sorry!” “ I’m sorry too.”  Then here we go for an hour.  It opens the door to bring resolution.

Ladies, one of the things you can do for us guys when it comes to validating feelings is help us understand your feelings by sharing your feelings in the most black and white language that you can.  Guys hear literally.  Ladies tend to talk in symbols or extremes. “We never, we always and you never.”  Do you know what a guy is thinking?  He’s thinking, “Never?  But we did then and we did then.”  That puzzled look on his face is him recounting back.  “But we did this.”  He hears you literally.  We’re not the smartest chip off the block anyway.  When she’s talking in extremes, she doesn’t mean it literally.  What she’s saying is she doesn’t feel like she is being valued in a relationship.  “We never go out.”  “We went out three weeks ago!”  I took you to McDonald’s.”  What she means is, “I’m not feeling connected in our relationship right now.  I’m not feeling like we are spending enough time together.”  Then we can play by the rules.

When an argument is beginning to ratchet up, here are some real simple principles to keep in mind that can help it not escalate a conflict.

Avoid degrading each other.  Firing those verbal missiles of name calling back and forth won’t help solve the argument, they just escalate things.  It’s very painful.  Watch the tone and voice level. A high percentage of communication is how we say something not what we say.  We get into arguments and inevitably we push these little comparison buttons that take it to a whole new level.  “You are just like your mother.”  BOOM!  You just pushed the “I want a war” button.  It goes to a whole new level.

Avoid leveraging divorce, finances or sex.  You are not dealing with the problem in that moment, just trying to win the battle.  You may win that skirmish but long term, if you fight that way, you will lose the war.

Avoid running to parents or in-laws.  She runs and picks the phone up.  She calls Mom.  She tells Mom what happens and gives the whole blow by blow. When you do that again and again and again over a period of years, what does Mom think about your husband?  Not very highly probably because all she hears is the negative stuff.  Maybe that’s all good because Mom lives a thousand miles away but maybe they are flying in for Thanksgiving next week.  Now you are all going to sit around the table.  Is it any wonder that there are all these new levels now?  Mom is being short because Mom has issues.  Dad has issues on this side.  We’ve brought all this drama into the family.  Find a trusted friend.  Someone you can go to and talk to those issues about.

Seek sideline input.  That’s exactly what the Shulammite does in the Song of Solomon.  She goes and looks for Solomon and doesn’t know where he is.  She sits down with her friends, the daughters of Jerusalem, and she shares with them her predicament.  Her friends give her great counsel.  Let’s pick it up in chapter 5:9.  They say to her, “How is your beloved better than others, most beautiful of women?  How is your beloved better than others, that you charge us so?”  Here’s what’s great about this.  They are asking her a question.  They are getting her to reflect.  That’s good counsel.  Too often we will at some point be on the side of the table where we are giving counsel to someone.  When we are, make sure you are giving good counsel.  Ask them questions to reflect on what their struggle is and what they need.  Too often we give bad counsel.  Someone comes in and she’s talking with her girlfriends, “He did this to me.”  “I can’t believe he did that to you!  Now she’s getting more and more wound up.  “Yeah, that’s right.  That really was bad wasn’t it?”  That was horrible sister!  Now we are just winding things up.  Sometimes that’s the counsel we give.

He goes to his buddies…“She did that to you?  I can’t believe she did that to you.”  Good sidelined input are people in our lives who will ask us questions.  How do you feel about this?  What do you think about that?”  They’re getting her to reflect and she comes to this conclusion in verse ten, “My lover is radiant and ruddy, outstanding among ten thousand.  His head is purest gold; his hair is wavy and black as a raven.  His eyes are like doves by the water streams, washed in milk, mounted like jewels… this is my lover, this my friend, O daughters of Jerusalem.”  She comes to her own realization that she loves this guy.  He is one in a million for me.  That’s great counsel.

For some of us we may need to seek counsel in an older couple, or a more seasoned person.  Maybe in your Connect group or people that we respect at church that we can go to once a month, once a quarter, whatever, and sit down.  Buy them breakfast or lunch and ask them how they get through things.  How do they navigate things?

There are also times in a relationship where we need to seek professional help.  The roller coaster in your relationship may be on a big down turn.  You may need to call a Christian counselor and get plugged in with somebody to really give you guidance.  People say, “Well it costs too much and I can’t afford it.”  We can’t afford to lose this person that we love so much.  We can’t afford to see our family devastated by a break up.  We have no problem buying this or that on a credit card or buying a plane ticket and going on a vacation but then we balk when we spend money on the most important relationship in our life.  Don’t be afraid to pay for good counsel to help you salvage a relationship.  Help it grow.  Say three simple words.  “I need help.”  It’s all you have to do.  You can call our church number on the back of the bulletin and say, “We’re struggling.  We need some help.”  We’ll refer you to some counselors and some people who can walk with you and help you.

  1. Let Go Of Grudges

 We tend to hold onto grudges.  It’s like the classified ad that read this…”For sale:  Wedding dress never worn.  Will trade for a .38 special.”  We tend to hold onto stuff in our relationships.  The Shulammite eventually finds Solomon and goes back to him.  How is Solomon going to respond?  Is he going to rub it in her face?  Is he going to say, “I can’t believe you wouldn’t open the door for me!”?  Is he going to really bring it out and throw punches or is he going to be quick to release the grudge?  Here’s what he says in Chapter 6:4, “You are beautiful, my darling, as Tirzah, lovely as Jerusalem, majestic as troops with banners.  Turn your eyes from me; they overwhelm me.  Your hair is like a flock of goats descending from Gilead.”  He goes through the exact same rundown that he told his wife in the honeymoon phase of their relationship.  “Your eyes are like doves, your neck like the tower of David.”  He goes on down her body.  He’s reaffirming his love.  He’s quick to let go of the grudge.  Let’s move forward in the relationship.

Conflict is going to happen.  The question is how are we going to deal with it?

Darrell

www.Upwards.Church

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