“The
real cause of failure, ultimately, in marriage is always self, and the various
manifestations of self.” D.
Martyn Lloyd-Jones
A couple of months back, Gwyneth Paltrow and her
husband, Chris Martin, announced that after ten years of marriage they were
separating. But rather than a divorce, it was a “Conscious Uncoupling.”
Personally, I’ve never seen a painless divorce, yet I want to be sensitive to
the fact that Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin are, in fact, real people who
are in distress and working hard to be loving parents. There are also recent
signs that they may be resolving their marital difficulties. And whether you're
a millionaire actress married to a rock star, or the neighbor down the block, none
of us can begin to know what’s going on inside someone else’s marriage. So this
isn’t about trash talking “gp,” as she refers to herself on her website. It’s about
exploring what her now infamous “conscious uncoupling” message gets wrong about
marriage.
In her defense, Gwyneth Paltrow didn’t invent
the term “conscious uncoupling.” Therapist, Katherine Woodward Thomas first
came up with it. It’s not meant to be a synonym for “divorce.” Instead it’s
supposed to be a process by which divorcing couples can attempt to be as
peaceful and gentle with one another as possible in an impossibly tricky time.
Our culture is infamous for taking what is
horrible and seeking to somehow sanitize and soften brutal realities. For
example, it’s not the violent death of innocent victims; they’re collateral
damage. It’s not an addiction, it’s a disease. It’s not murder, it’s abortion.
And “conscious uncoupling” sounds so clinical, so clean cut, like somehow Gwyneth
Paltrow is above all of the brutal bloodiness of splitting up. In other words,
if you wear $20 Wal-mart tennis shoes, you get "divorced," but gp can
slip on $500 sneakers and is "uncoupled."
Personally, I’ve never been able to wrap my
brain around “no fault divorce.” It communicates something like someone walking
down a sidewalk, making a misstep, that results in a fall and a broken limb.
Divorce is always intentional. It’s messy, painful and often brutal. It’s the death
of a marriage that must be grieved, not only by the couple who once entered
into marriage together, but also by all who love them: their children, friends,
their extended families, communities and churches. Divorcees use words like shattered, broken, or devastated to describe
what they feel in the wake of a separation. Divorce is often a savage act.
Yet, a healthy marriage is messy, too. Not
only is divorce very difficult, at times, so is a healthy marriage. Marriage takes
lots and lots of hard work. Weddings are a cakewalk; a healthy marriage is one
of the most difficult responsibilities you’ll ever volunteer for. Even childrearing
is easier, in that it only lasts eighteen years. Marriage is for life. God
never intended marriage to have an expiration date.
Continually, I counsel young couples to
invest more time (and money) into their marriage, rather than their wedding.
Most of us love weddings. Brides dressed in white; Grooms in nice suits. A
wedding is like a wonderful vacation. Eventually though, you must come home and
go back to work, to the routine…mundane. You can choose to dread going to work,
grit your teeth every day, or you can choose to enjoy the job God has given
you, work hard as to Him and thank Him even for the irritants because you know
that He’s using even those in your life for His glory and your good. Enjoyment
and fulfillment in marriage always begins within our own attitude. It’s a personal
choice each of us must make.
Take for example another celebrity marriage. Perhaps
you remember all of the attention Ben Affleck's Oscar speech received in 2013
when he took home the golden statue for Best Picture for his film Argo. The father of three, addressing his
wife, Jennifer Garner, said, “I want to thank you for working on our marriage
for ten Christmases. It's good, it is work, but it's the best kind of work, and
there's no one I'd rather work with.” Yet, people were up in arms. How could a Hollywood icon acknowledge that he and his movie star
wife have to work at their marriage? How dare he? Yet, to thinking people, to those
realistic about marriage, it was a breath of authenticity that the
Affleck-Garners were making a real go of it. We were glad for them – and for
their children! May their tribe increase!
Recently, I was talking to a couple who will
have been married forty years this year. After I congratulated them, I asked
how they were going to celebrate. They weren’t sure they would. They have an
adult child currently going through a horrible divorce, and they didn’t want to
increase their child’s pain with their celebration. I urged them to celebrate,
not just for their adult child, but also for the many other young couples out
there. I encouraged them to communicate by their celebration that marriage is a
lifetime vow of commitment, and that if your marriage doesn’t quite fit or you’re
not happy, you can’t just return it to exchange it for another one.
On our wedding days, we blithely promise to
love our spouses "for better or worse, in sickness and in health…” It's
easy to speak these words when your biggest concern is that you received three crock
pots as wedding gifts. As the years wear on, real life and its challenges hit,
all marriages weather what we politely call “dry spells” or “rough patches.”
Jane and I have referred to it as “our tide being out or in.”
If your marriage has chronic issues – DO
SOMETHING! If you had a chronic cough for more than a few days, you’d see a
doctor. I’m constantly amazed at the foolishness of those who have chronic marital
issues in that they won’t go see someone or take proactive steps. Their naïve
denial often results in a terminal relational cancer destroying their marriage.
At the very least, without finger-pointing,
pray together about the condition of your marriage. Discipline yourself to read
Christian books together about marriage. Two that I’d suggest are: When Sinners Say "I Do" by
Dave Harvey or Sacred Marriage by
Gary L. Thomas. If your marriage doesn’t begin to improve, seek help. There are
godly couples in our church who will gladly come alongside of you. For more
serious situations, seek out a Christian counselor. Please don’t rationalize,
“we can’t afford that” – you can’t afford not to. Not to mention for the relational
cheapskates, the average divorce costs between $5,000 and $10,000. Marriage
counseling is very inexpensive in comparison.
No one can see into another couple's marriage.
There’s no point and no grace in judging someone else’s marital commitment or
choice to break it. The rich gifts though of doing the hard work that it takes
for a healthy marriage are immeasurable. I don’t know about you, as for me, I
plan to keep consciously coupling. Will you make that same commitment?
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