Friday, September 6, 2019

Day 202 - Marriage and Oneness


Thoughts on Michael Wells’ teachings in My Weakness for His Strength (Vol. 1) - # 354
         
Michael’s book is available through:

ABIDING LIFE MINISTRIES INTERNATIONAL
Littleton, Colorado
(303) 972-0859       www.abidinglife.com

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Today’s writing is one of the reasons I consider Michael to be one of the best confidants and disciplers I have ever known. His knowledge extends to all areas of life…

(His book: Heavenly Discipleship, I like to refer to it as his textbook. This book MWfHS I like to refer to it as his workbook.)



DAY 202
Marriage And Oneness

Stop depriving one another, except by agreement for a time that you may devote yourselves to prayer, and come together again lest Satan tempt you because of your lack of self-control. --I Corinthians 7:5

I was listening to a woman who had a rather spectacular testimony. She had been a gang member and into drugs and a lesbian lifestyle. Several other sisters in Christ were discussing sex and marriage when she blurted out, "There are a lot of times that I do not want to have sex with my husband, but I do! I do because I want to proclaim to Satan, 'You will not come between my husband and me!' I want to proclaim, 'We are one,' no matter what the enemy says, and I want God to know I believe Him, that what He has brought together no one will separate." My spirit leapt within. I leaned over and gave her a hug, announcing to the group, "I believe her." Sex in marriage is a proclamation that we are one no matter what. As I have mentioned before, there are several issues in marriage, but every issue is separate. We lock ourselves out from ever finding an answer to an issue when all issues are lumped together. There are many more issues in marriage than sex, but that is the issue this article addresses. 

I like traveling, but I have had some horrific experiences. Some involved the tiny airplane seat. Some had to do with the need for luggage, for I despise having to carry so much from one country to the next. I remember traveling in the Amazon, being poisoned by the local water, and thinking I would die. In Northern India it was a bad chicken meal that I thought was killing me. If I am invited to speak elsewhere in the world, must I decline the invitation because I have discomfort on the plane, I loathe lifting luggage, and I sometimes get sick traveling? How much would I miss out on? I could take any one negative experience and just quit, but instead I have allowed the bad experiences to make me a better traveler. Each trip is an individual event linked to previous trips only by what I learned from past experiences that can enhance my present journey. After many years of travel I have learned things that work and things that do not. Some international trips were just barely tolerable, but I so loved the people I went to see; they ministered to me and I to them. Some international trips were just average; let us just say I got there. But I so enjoyed the brothers and sisters at the end of the trip and those with whom I traveled. Some trips have been spectacular. I have been bumped into first class, where seats recline and people call me "Sir." I totally relaxed, but still what I remember the most were those brothers and sisters waiting for me after the travel. Any journey is tolerable because for me, the goal is not the travel but arriving to be with those at the end of the trip.

Sex in marriage is like a journey in the following three areas. First, couples will find that sex is most enjoyable with a minimal amount of baggage. So much baggage from the past is taken into the bedroom by some couples that there is barely room for them. Second, each experience must build upon the last experience. Third, the person is more important that the journey. 

First, entering in without a heavy load. Many bedrooms are crowded from sex-based hurts of the past. Sex, which is intended to be associated with pleasure, has become synonymous with the pain of an impressionable earlier experience, such as abuse, date rape, performance-based acceptance, innuendo, pornography, comparison, or just being made to feel unattractive. All of these emotions and experiences from the past can become a heavy load. It is unfortunate that these things happen, but tragic if they continue to control a person’s life today. Any issue that has to do with the senses or natural desires takes special care, since it is impossible to walk away and never have to deal with it again. I remember a fellow who had an obsession with water. He had to go all day, even on the hottest days, without drinking water, or else he would drink too much and even possibly drown himself. Next question: where could he go to escape the temptation to take a drink of water? As you can see, problems that deal with the natural pose unique problems. The sex desire is part of the natural; sexuality is built into mankind, so if one attempts to run from it, he runs from himself. To tell one to forget all bad experiences associated with sex and then tell him to go have sex will, more often than not, throw him right back into the emotions he is trying to avoid. The question is how to participate without dragging up all the past emotions. First, it must be realized that the world has done a good job of selling sex as the center of life. The sexual experience as described by the world is just as unreal as an airbrushed, enhanced photo of models. Second, the fear of poor performance will cause anxiety and poor performance. Fear is invited in and must be invited out. The fear of sex cannot be dealt with by obsessively thinking, "I must not think of sex," for by so doing, sex is exactly what is thought about. It must be handled with every thought of sex being taken captive to Christ. How? When the thought of fear comes, the direction of the mind must be changed completely by telling the mind, "I am not going there; I refuse to think that." By turning to the Lord for enabling with this, it really is possible to have life centered in something other than sex. It is possible to lower expectations of sex while maintaining expectations for the spouse. Third, recognize that the life that was hurt has been buried with Christ. It is impossible to change the past, but it can be buried by an act of faith. Throughout the day as the doubts about performance ability come, speak out loud, "I believe that I have been crucified with Christ."

This brings us to the second aspect of the sex journey. Each new experience builds on past learning experiences. The bad experiences are not to turn a couple away from intimacy, but rather they give the couple something to build from. There is no need for a couple to obsess on what went wrong at the beginning of the marriage. They are no longer at the beginning of the marriage; they are in the now. They can learn from what was unpleasant and not repeat the mistake. All of life is instructing the believer in what is the Way and what is not.
           
Finally, the most important goal of the sex journey is not physical stimulation; rather, it is the person. For the woman mentioned above who would have sex with her husband so that Satan would not come between them, sex was not the issue, but keeping her faith and her husband was the goal. Sex is meant for oneness and the acceptance that comes from that oneness in marriage. To make sex the goal is self-defeating and will correspondingly bring less satisfaction, because the mate senses he is less and less the goal and more and more the object, rejection sets in, and no one is satisfied. When the person is the goal, the times between sexual activities are much more fulfilling, much as when an obese man said to a very skinny man, "I enjoy my meals too much to live as you do." To which the skinny man replied, "But I enjoy the time in between meals much more than you!" He made a good point, for when food is the goal of life, how are we to enjoy the majority of our time we are not indulged in eating? The person who finds satisfaction in living in the between times is happy much more of the time. When the in between has the goal of affection, then not only is the sex life enjoyed, but also there is joy where we spend the majority of the time of our relationship. Sex cannot be the goal. The woman who wanted to proclaim to Satan that she was one with her husband had made oneness the goal, and if sex helps proclaim it, then so be it. For her the journey brought her to a wonderful place!

Yellow – VIP, Very Important Point      Green – IT, Incredible Truth        
Red – GP, Greatest Promises
Turquoise – UR, Unfathomable Riches           Pink – PV, Priceless Victory

I think it is important for each to pick out your own “points” to highlight in this one.

Michael gives us a great truth that we must never forget: persons are more important than events or other things. Listening to conversations, it is interesting to see whether the talk is of persons or otherwise…



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NOTICE: another blog on Michael Wells’ book, Sidetracked In The Wilderness, called Getting Out of the Wilderness.  You can access by logging onto www.leemcchristianministries.blogspot.com


Lee McDowell Christian Ministries
P.O. Box 633244   Nacogdoches, TX 75963              936-559-5696

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