What Exactly Are We Doing Here Anyway? Putting the “Christian” Back into Christian Marriage.

By: Dr. Gregory Popcak

tying the knot

Why are you married?

“Why didn’t anybody ever tell us this stuff before?”  The dumbstruck couple sat before me in my counseling office. Practicing Catholics married for eleven years, they had been struggling through some difficult times in their relationship and had been referred to me by their pastor. Though they had been through the marriage prep program offered by their parish, attended Mass at least weekly, and had generally tried to live faithful lives, they had never heard the one concept that defines the heart of Christian marriage. Not only were they shocked to discover it, they were deeply saddened that no one had ever told them before. Now, let me ask you….Why are you married?

There are a million answers to that question. Some people marry for security, or escape, others for affection, or passion, or a feeling they believe defines “love.” Still others marry because they have similar career or social goals. And many marry for a different reason altogether. While all of these reasons have their advantages or disadvantages, and many of these couples will marry in a Catholic church near you, there is only one reason to wed that justifies a Christian marriage, one reason that separates it from all other unions: the belief that “God is joining us because we are each other’s best hope for becoming the people he created us to be.” To enjoy the fullness of Christian marriage, a couple must believe that God has chosen each to play a role in the other’s sanctification (becoming holy) and actualization (becoming fully the person one was made to be); a role second in importance only to the saving work of Jesus Christ and his or her spouse’s free will.

Marriage, Divorce, and Annulments

Understanding this concept is the key to understanding everything else the Church teaches about marriage, including her teachings on divorce and annulments. Think about it. Assuming that a marriage is valid (i.e. that God has truly joined this couple to play an essential role in each other’s perfection and sanctification) to divorce is, in essence, to say to both God and to the world, “I know that God chose me to play a critical role in preparing my mate for Eternal Life, but I will not do it. I renounce this mission. As far as I am concerned, my spouse can go to hell. Literally.”  What could be a more serious scandal? What could be a more tragic default?

Of course, this is also the reason that the Church finds some marriages to be invalid. Recognizing that not all couples marry to be each other’s best hope for arriving properly attired at the Heavenly Wedding Feast, the Church acknowledges that some unions are so diametrically opposed to God’s will from the outset that if that couple were to stay together, they would actually participate in each other’s spiritual destruction. When the Church issues a declaration of nullity (i.e. “annuls a marriage”) she is not saying that the couple didn’t mean well, or feel sincere affection toward each other when they got married, she is simply asserting that the couple was either too immature, too ignorant, or too impaired from the very beginning of the marriage to be able to understand or assume the awesome responsibility of helping each other become the man and woman God created them to be.

Resources

It is our firm belief that God has amazing plans for you and your marriage. To find out how you can have a marriage that makes the angels smile (and the neighbors sick with jealousy), check out For Better…FOREVER! A Catholic Guide to Lifelong Marriage. Are you struggling with some deep issue in your marriage? Don’t panic, there is always hope. Call your PaxCare Tele-Coach today and get the skills you need to succeed!

“Marriage Isn’t Easy, But It’s Beautiful,” Says Pope Francis

By: Dr. Gregory Popcak

happy family

Pope Francis had some truly inspiring words for married couples in his  address given to the Pontifical Council on the Family just a few months ago.  

The Catholic Church must help young people understand that marriage isn’t always easy, “but it is so beautiful,” Pope Francis said.  “There are problems in marriage: different points of view, jealousies, arguments, but tell young couples to never let the day end without making peace. The sacrament of matrimony is renewed in this act of peace,” the pope said Oct. 25 during a meeting with members of the Pontifical Council for the Family.  “This path is not easy, but it is so beautiful,” the pope said. “It’s beautiful. Tell them that.”  For the Catholic Church, he said, a family isn’t simply a group of individuals, but it is a community where people learn to love one another, share with and make sacrifices for each other and “defend life, especially of those who are more fragile and weak.”  The family as a special community must “be recognized as such, especially today when so much emphasis is placed on the safeguarding of individual rights,” he said. “We must defend the rights of this community that is the family.”  Defending the family also means defending the basic fact that it is a community founded on the marriage of a man and a woman, he said.  “Spousal and familial love clearly reveal that the vocation of the human person is to love one other person forever and that the trials, sacrifices and crises in the life of the couple or the family are stages for growth in goodness, truth and beauty,” he said.

I have to say that this is exactly why Lisa and I wrote  Just Married:   A Catholic Guide to Surviving and Thriving in the First 5 Years of Marriage.    Our oldest kids are in college and we host a lot of their friends for dinners and other things and we’ve been blessed to have so many conversations with them about their concerns about relationships and marriage.   There is so much fear out there and so little confidence among young people that they have what it takes to form healthy marriages that can last a lifetime.   Lisa and I are so glad that Pope Francis has offered these words of encouragement for married couples. We hope  Just Married  will help get the word out about the beauty of marriage and what it takes to make love last.

 

Role Confusion: Celebrating the Truth about Men and Women

By: Dr. Gregory Popcak

rings

Marlene and Steve were married for six years and had three children together. By all accounts, they were a loving family, who tried hard to live sincere lives of faith, and yet, Marlene was struggling with feelings of depression and a sense of real dissatisfaction with her life and marriage. What was wrong?  “Marriage just isn’t what I thought it would be. I get so frustrated with Steve. He won’t take any initiative with the house or the children. He gets completely lost in his work. I can’t even give him a hug without him wanting to jump into bed with me. I know he needs me, but I want to know that he loves me. I want a man who will be a partner with me, who isn’t afraid to take the lead in our home and spiritual life. But he won’t do any of that.  “When I complain to my friends about this, they just laugh at me and say, ‘That’s what you get for marrying a man, honey.’ They say their husbands are exactly like Steve, and I just have unrealistic expectations. They think I’m naive because I’ve only been married for six years, and that I’ll learn to accept it in time, but I don’t want to accept it. I want a partner. I don’t want to be married to some guy. I want to be married to a real man.”

When Marlene was finished, I asked Steve to respond.  “Its not like I’m trying to be obtuse. I just never had to do any of this stuff growing up. My mom took care of the house and my dad earned the money. And they seemed happy enough. I’m much more involved than he ever was. I try to help, but I don’t really know what she wants me to do. I always thought that God ordained women to be better at those kinds of things than men, and that I should just try to stay out of her way unless she specifically said she needed me.  Steve continued, “As far as the physical thing goes. What can I say?  Men just need sex to feel loved. I don’t think that’s abnormal. All the guys I know agree with me. The thing that bugs me the most is that Maureen wants me to be more present to the kids and help more with the house and stuff, but she would rather be pecked to death by chickens than ever even look at the check book, and when I try to talk to her about my work and the junk that goes on at the office, her eyes totally glaze over. I don’t see her exactly killin’ herself to be there for me.     Sometimes I feel like she wants me to be Superman so that she can play the little ‘kept woman,’ and it ticks me off, because there is only so much of me to go around, you know? This ‘partnership’ thing she’s always hounding me about cuts both ways. ”

It would be very easy to oversimplify their problems as just another dispute over the division of labor. But there is so much more going on. Ultimately, their concerns touch on issues that are key to John Paul II’s Theology of the Body; issues such as what can one properly expect out of marriage, understanding the true versus the false differences between men and women, and the true meaning of sexuality.

Too High Expectations?

Both Steve and Maureens’ friends accused her of having set her expectations too high, but even though her thoughts on the subject were not entirely on target, she had good instincts, and the fact is, as high as Maureen’s expectations of her marriage were, the Church’s expectations for marriage are even higher.  Both Cannon Law and the important Church document Gaudium et Spes (Joy and Hope), define marriage as, “an initmate partnership,” but to understand what that really means, we have to do what John Paul II  does in his Theology of the Body, and that is to go back to the beginning, all the way back to the Creation of man and woman.  In the beginning, when God gave Eve to Adam, Genesis tells us that Adam cried out, “At last! This is flesh of my flesh and bone of my bone!” The Holy Father makes a huge point of saying that with these words, Adam was acknowledging that in Eve, Adam discovered someone who could understand him completely, who was essentially made of the same physiological, psychological, emotional, stuff as himself and who could be a perfect helpmate to him, to the degree that even their differences made them better and more intimate partners than if they had been made exactly the same. And Eve felt the same about Adam. In this sentence, Genesis shows us that the two were one; a relationship the pope refers to as “the Original Unity of man and woman.”

And then came the Fall. Tragically, the Regrettable Apple Incident was to man and woman what the Tower of Babel (account found in Genesis: men attempting  to build a building in  honor of themselves; God then confused their languages so they could not communicate with one another resulting in their scattering to every corner of the earth) was to the world. When sin entered the world, the two were no longer one, but two. In effect, Man drew a line in the sand, declaring that though he had been gifted by God to do so, he would no longer serve Woman in certain ways, or exhibit certain traits, or display certain virtues for the sake of Woman, and he decided that from henceforth, that this Withheld Self is what it would mean to be a Man (albeit an incomplete one). The woman, for her part, did the same. Man and woman created separate domains for themselves, and generation after generation passed until their domains became separate worlds–Mars and Venus if you like.     Eventually, Man and Woman came to view each other not as helpmates, “flesh of each other’s flesh and bone of each other’s bone,” but as beings from a different planet altogether who had been commanded–or condemned–to somehow make it work. Martians and Venusians who had to find some way to hook up at the Interplanetary High School dance.  But there is good news, the resurrection that comes after the Fall. The Church teaches us that marriage is a sacrament, and sacraments are ultimately all about restoring the original order of the world as God intended it to be from the beginning. No, we will never again live in Eden, we will never again experience that perfect unity in our lifetimes, but we are empowered by the grace of marriage to strive to rebuild the Original Unity of Man and Woman, to become, in effect, New Adams and New Eves on our block.

Practically speaking, we do this by refusing to hide out in our comfort zones, by refusing to give in to the strong temptation to avoid certain acts of service our mate asks of us because we deem them to be “unmanly” or “unwomanly.”     We often justify such refusals by saying, “My friends don’t do that for their wives.” Or, “My parents didn’t treat each other that way. But the Holy Father tells us that we are not to take our parents, or our friends as models, but the pre-fallen Adam and Eve. By cooperating with the grace of marriage, we are able to transcend the imperfect languages that contemporary men and women speak, and create a new, shared language whose vocabulary is generous service and whose grammar is self-donating love.  Steve and Maureen were a little surprised and confused  by what I was saying. I could see the wheels turning, but it was so much to take in. Steve was the first with a question.  “But it sounds like you’re saying that there aren’t natural differences between men and women. That goes against everything I’ve ever been taught.     I’m not willing to accept that.”  “Good,” I told him. “You shouldn’t, but you need to make sure you understand what constitute true differences between men and women versus the false ones.

Differences Between the Sexes

“Think about it,” I said. “If God created men and women differently from the beginning, but they were still able to relate to each other as perfect partners and helpmates, what does that tell us about those differences.”  God love ‘em, Steve and Maureen just looked at me a little blankly.  “Let me help you out.” I offered.  I explained that “true differences,“ between men and women are the differences created by God at the beginning of time that allow us to a) relate to each other more intimately because of those differences and b) perform a task more completely and fully because of the unique gifts men and women bring to the table.  On the other hand, “false differences,“ the differences that are the result of Original Sin, are those differences that cause men and women to stare at each other in frustration and say, “I don’t know what the heck you want from me.” Or, “You could never understand me. You’re a man/woman.”

I asked Steve and Maureen, “Could you ever imagine the pre-fallen Adam and Eve making such a statement to each other?”  They agreed that they could not, but Maureen said, “I get what you are calling ‘false differences,’ Steve and I say that kind of thing to each other all the time. But could you give me an example of what you mean by true differences?”  “Sure,” I said. “Let me try an obvious one. God, is fully nurturing to us, His children, and in turn, he created both men and women to be fully nurturing. That’s just one of the qualities that he gave to men and women as part of our shared humanity. But even though God asks both men and women to be fully nurturing, he created our bodies to express that quality differently. For example, one unique way a woman can express nurturance through her body is to nurse her children; that’s something that is uniquely feminine. Something a man will never be able to do. In the same way, a man can use his body to express that same quality of nurturance in a uniquely masculine way; tickling his children’s belly with his beard, using his strength to wrestle and toss his children in the air, and carrying them on his shoulders in a way that most women find difficult.”

I added that another good example of true and false differences was one of the issues that brought them to counseling.  “Whether they care to do it or not, God gave men the physical and mental ability to do housework, just as he created women with all the physical and mental abilities necessary to manage finances. (Likewise, on Holy Thursday, Jesus bathed his children, and the Proverbs 31 woman makes productd  to sell in the marketplace). God calls both men and women to fully live out all the qualities which make them human (e.g., empathy, reason, intimacy, generosity, creativity, etc.) but men and women will exhibit these qualities both fully and differently through the bodies God gave them. This way, when men and women approach various tasks together, generously and willingly bringing the unique gifts that accompany their masculinity and femininity to the table, they are able to complete any task more perfectly–in a more fully human manner–than either could if left entirely on his or her own. And that, says the pope, is what allowed Adam and Eve to use what I am calling their “true differences” to be even more intimate partners to one another.”  Steve jumped in at this point. “You’re talking about intimacy. But Isn’t initimacy about sex? What does this have to do with our sexual differences?”

The True Meaning of Sexuality.

“Well, it is,” I answered, “but for the Catholic, sex isn’t just about what you do in the bedroom. For the Catholic, what you do in the bedroom is supposed to be a celebration and sign of how well you use your bodies to work for each other’s good all day long.”  The Church makes an important distinction between genitality and sexuality. Genitality refers to what a couple does in the bedroom, but sexuality is what one does all day long, just by being human. Any time we work to build unity between ourselves and another, any time we use our bodies to work for the good of another, any time we work generously and faithfully with another to build intimacy or create something new, we are being sexual. That’s why Peter Kreeft once commented  that you could easily talk about “the sex life of priests and nuns” without being scandalous. They literally use their whole selves to love and work for the good of the entire Body of Christ.

In my books, For Better…FOREVER! A Catholic Guide to Lifelong Marriage and The Exceptional Seven Percent: Nine Secrets of the World’s Happiest Couples, I note that couples who have incredibly satisfying romantic lives know how to celebrate the same passion painting a room together as they do when they are in each other’s arms.  That isn’t to say that exceptional couples’ sex lives are as exciting as watching paint dry. Rather, those couples don’t save romance for date night. They know how to use the simple acts of dusting the house, or paying the bills, or working on projects, or raising the kids, or any of the other mundane tasks of everyday life to build intimacy. In other words, by applying the graces of marriage to the simplest tasks, they are sanctifying their everyday lives and rebuilding the Original Unity Adam and Eve experienced when they first gazed upon each other in the Garden.”  We had covered a lot of ground to get to this point, and I wanted to give Steve and Marlene some practical, even simple ways to begin applying this very profound teaching to their marriage.

I wanted them to learn how to use the simple tasks of everyday life as spiritual exercises that in spite of–or perhaps because of–their simplicity would empower Steve and Marlene to get on the road to becoming the New Adam and New Eve God was calling them to be. Over the next few weeks, I asked them to reflect on those household tasks that they were physically capable of doing, the tasks that each had asked the other to help with in the past, but both had avoided, either because they didn’t feel like doing them, or because they were simply beyond what they were used to doing. While I assured Steve and Marlene that I did not mean they both had to be equally competent and equally involved in every task, I challenged them to think of pursuing greater competence and openness to these activities as the main way a couple increases both self-donation and the intimacy that results from this kind of heroic generosity.

Living the Complementarity of the Sexes

A few sessions later, Steve and Marlene began discussing the ways that they had been holding back from one another.  Steve’s list concentrated primarily on housework and parenting, while Marlene found that she had been excusing herself from the financial aspects of their marriage.  “First of all,” says Marlene, “I saw that even though we had different styles and different perspectives on money and the house, when we worked together, we could get things done much more efficiently and completely. It was like Steve and I both brought different pieces of the puzzle together to make one whole–his gifts as a man and mine as a woman–and together we were able to complete these tasks better and more intimately than either of us could have on our own”  Steve added, “As far as the finances go, like a lot of men, I have a tendency to think about the money for money’s sake. Saving for retirement, investment, that kind of thing. I guess it has to do with trying to save for the future and being a provider for the family. Marlene’s approach was much more people-oriented. She wanted to make sure that the money was serving the people in the family and not the other way around.”

He continued. “The same thing was true about the housework. I was all about making a plan and being efficient and getting it all done as quickly as possible. She was much more focused on making sure that things were comfortable for everyone and that the environment was warm and hospitable. But together, we could make sure that all of these needs were being attended to without either one or the other of us going overboard on our own focus.”  Marlene interjected. “For instance, I know Steve likes taking family vacations, but if it were up to him, he would rather see as much money as possible going into our retirement account, even if that means doing without the occasional weekend away or our yearly, family vacation. Me? I think that it’s good to have money saved for the future, but it doesn’t do any good to have all this money socked away but not like each other anymore because we haven’t taken time to stay in touch with each other.”  She added, “The same thing is true about the house. I tend to get so caught up in the little details of making our house a home that I am not as efficient as I would like to be and things pile up. Steve, on the other hand, helped keep things on some kind of a schedule.  “The funny thing was,” Marlene continued, “we both used to hate doing all these jobs, and we resented each other if we were asked to do more than we already were. But now, when we look at all these jobs from the perspective you are teaching us, we’re learning to stop thinking about it as ‘cleaning the house,’ ‘watching the kids,’ or ‘paying the bills.’     We tried to ask ourselves, ‘How can we do this in a way that will make us feel closer to each other? How can we use these jobs to make a spiritual connection with each other?’”

It was at this point in the session that Steve raised a very important insight he’d had over the week. “I had always heard that men were supposed to be servant-leaders, but I wasn’t really sure what that meant, practically speaking. Most of the men I’ve known were like my father, kind-of aloof, leading from a distance, maybe even a little timid when it came to the home and kids either because they didn’t want to do it or weren’t sure how. But it dawned on me this week that by becoming more involved in Marlene’s work, I could know what she really needed and lead more effectively. I think being a servant leader is like being the kind of company president who worked his way up from the factory lines, knows every job in the plant, and is willing to step in to help anywhere and anytime he is needed–without waiting to be asked to do it. For that kind of leader, it’s not about power and being aloof. It’s not even about what seems “fair.” It’s about knowing what needs to be done and being willing to roll up your sleeves and do it for the good of the company. I realized that I had been acting more like the kid who inherited the business from his dad but had never really worked a day in his life. That’s not the kind of husband I want to be.”

A Partnership of Love

Over the course of our sessions together, Steve and Marlene discovered what it really means to live out the complimentary roles the Church talks about instead of the merely compensatory roles they had been living. While they maintained the traditional structure of their marriage–Steve was still the point man on finances and Marlene was still the homemaker–each was more attuned to and active in each other’s domains. They shared their lives with each other more easily, helped each other more readily, and cooperated more effectively in every aspect of their marriage and family life.  In our last meeting, I asked Marlene if she ever still felt depressed about her marriage.  “No.” she replied. “All I ever really wanted was to know I could count on Steve and to really feel like partners, but I didn’t know how to make that happen. I don’t know of too many people who are talking about the kind of things you taught us. I had no idea that the Pope’s teachings on marriage were both so profound and practical! We’re working harder to really attend to each other more than we ever have and I’ve never felt better about us.”  Steve agreed. “It’s nice to not have to be afraid of stepping up to the plate in my home or with my kids anymore. Once I got over the initial strange feelings that came with leaving my comfort zone, I really started enjoying how well Marlene and I worked together. And I love seeing how much more she respects me.”  When a couple takes the time to really understand complimentarity, they begin to respond to what the Holy Father calls families to in his teachings. They allow the graces of the sacrament to lead them to experience generosity, respect, servant-leadership, intimacy, and all the qualities that enable them to live life as a gift.

Praying Your Marriage

By: Dr. Gregory Popcak

praying dude

Monica complained to me in session. “I don’t have the kind of time for prayer that I used to. With the kids, my husband, and everything else, there just isn’t enough time in the day to say the rosary as often as I like, or get to Mass a few extra times a week like I used to. I feel like God is getting short shrift.”  Sound familiar?  It doesn’t have to be that way. I want to say up front though, that this article is not about how to improve your formal prayer life. Don’t get me wrong, I encouraged Monica, and I encourage you, to be conscientious about looking for opportunities to participate more fully in the sacraments and more regularly in formal devotions. There is a great treasure of grace to be found in these things. When we take time for these familiar prayers of the family of God, we unite ourselves to a Tradition that is ancient and true, and the words and the forms speak profoundly to our souls. That’s why they’ve stood the test of time. That’s why we long for more of them.

Becoming a Prayer

But most of us miss out on what I believe is the meat and potatoes of our prayer life and that an exercise I call “praying our family” or “praying our marriage.”     You see, most people think of getting the kids through homework, paying the bills, doing the dishes, extracting the banana from the DVD player (don’t ask), and the quadrillion or so other household activities, domestic chores, and relational tasks as the things we have to get through so that we can get to prayer time. If this is your attitude, boy, are you missing out.  I used to spend almost every lunch break from second grade through college sneaking into the Church so that I could spend a little time with the Lord. I would just sit and be with him and take in his presence. I loved those intimate, quiet times with God. But as a married man with a family and a business–though I still try to get there as often as I can–I just don’t have the opportunity to do prayer that way anymore.

I used to feel badly about this, until I realized that in this season of my walk with Him, God was calling me to a new kind of prayer. God was telling me that it was time to stop thinking of prayer as something I did, and start thinking of it as something I am.  St. Francis de Sales wrote that of all the great examples of holiness that St. Catherine of Siena (a 14th-century Saint who experienced extraordinary mystical occurances in her life) displayed, the visions, the locutions, the wisdom; nothing touched him more than that of the sight of her turning the meat at the spit, or cleaning the house, or clearing away the dishes after meals (all chores or tasks she was given to carry out in her everyday life).     He explained that she did these things with genuine love, and imagined herself serving dinner to our Lord, or clearing away the plates of the apostles, and she tried to display that same love and respect for the family she was serving as she would if these holy guests graced her home.  Similarly, St. Frances of Rome once said that even if we were in the presence of God Himself at the altar, if word came to us that we were needed at home, we should leave him at the altar and rush home to tend to our family. Likewise, many readers will be familiar with the secret of holiness distilled by St. Therese of Lisieux (a great saint of the 20th century who died young but grew to great holiness) “Do small things with great love.”

Making Yourself an Offering

It occurred to me that at this time in my life, I gained the greatest spiritual benefit not by running out of the house and leaving my family to go and pray, but by praying through my service to them. I began to test it out. I would remind myself that getting up off the couch to play with the children when I was tired was not just a nice thing to do, but an opportunity to practice the virtue of generosity. I would tell myself that when I had a choice between doing the dishes without being asked or reading that great book I wanted to finish, washing the dishing would be an excellent way to practice charity and love for my wife. I would remind myself that speaking lovingly to my children–especially when they got on the last tip of the last split-end of my last nerve–I was practicing patience.  This morning, I had a chance to sleep in. My first counseling session didn’t start until ten. Unfortunately, my wife had an appointment at 7:30 am.  Having had to stay up until 2am the night before finishing a project, I must admit my original intention was to kiss her on the cheek when the alarm went off and go back to bed. It wouldn’t have been a crime. Nobody could have blamed me. But, as I lay there, covering my head with the pillow, I felt God knocking at the door of my heart. He wanted me to show my wife how special she was to us. I asked him how, and he told me to get her something for breakfast since she was running late and might not have time to eat. I got up.

I’m not looking for a medal. It was only a bagel and juice. But maybe you’ll understand that, tired as I was, I like to think of that bagel as my Morning Offering. And based on how it came about, I don’t think I’m deluding myself.  We all know that prayer is conversation with God. But what is the point of that conversation? It is to invite God into our everyday lives and to invite him to transform the ordinary into the extraordinary. What better way to do this than by practicing the virtues, the gifts and fruits of His spirit, which manifests His face to the world? We are told that we are made in God’s image and likeness, but what does that mean? Does it mean that we have God’s nose, or his green eyes, or dimple on his left cheek? Of course not. We see God’s face, not in the mirror, but in the acts of love we witness, the moments of generous service we experience, the times we feel cherished. When we see those qualities manifested in this too cold, too cruel, too busy world, we see his face as clearly as if he was standing there staring right back at us.

Pray Your Marriage & Family

Considering that, how better to invite God into my world than to ask him for the grace to show his face to my wife and children through my service, my love, my patience? When we actively work to do this (And it is work. Try it.) prayer transforms itself from something that we do into something–for that brief moment–that we are.  And lest you think I’m making all this up, just remember that marriage is a sacrament. Everything you do in the context of that relationship has been consecrated by God. Just as bread and wine become “divinized” and transformed in the Eucharist, so to do the mean tasks of domestic life become extraordinary moments of prayer when we connect them to the grace of the our marriage and see those same activities as conduits of peace, patience, fortitude, love, hope, and more.  So, yes, make time to go to a daily mass or two if you can. Say the rosary as often as you are able. Participate in as many of the formal prayers of the Church as you can. But the next time you feel like you prayer life needs a shot in the arm, instead of running to find the car keys, or a quiet place to be alone, jump into the fray, and invite God to consecrate this moment. Ask God to teach you how to “pray your marriage.”  You’ll be glad you did.

 

Stamp Out Date Night? Well, Maybe Just Rethink it.

Dr. Gregory Popcak

date night

 

I often joke that I’m on a mission to stamp out date night.     Don’t get me wrong, I love getting one-on-one time with my wife and as a marriage counselor, I would love for you and your spouse to get more regular time alone together too. I just find myself a little discouraged by the number of couples who save their entire marriage for that ever elusive date night.  I see these couples every day–in life as well as my practice–as they power through their week like it is one, long, interminable chore. Couples like this may be highly efficient machines when it comes to getting things done, bussing kids to their various activities, and checking “to-do’s” off the list, but they never stop to enjoy the life they are creating together or connect in the middle of the life they have created. They’re always wistfully dreaming of simpler times with fewer kids and fewer responsibilities and more…date nights.

There Is More

The even greater irony is that when these couples finally do get a date night, they often don’t know what to do with it. Not having taken any regular and consistent time to talk, pray, play, or work together when date night finally arrives, they either sit in an uncomfortable silence, talk about the kids, or argue. When we save our whole marriage for date night, there’s just too much pressure to get everything we need out of the 2, 4, 6 hours we’ve managed to squeeze out. The time becomes too loaded with expectations to be everything we want it to be.  Again, my point is not to convince you to give up date night, it’s to realize that there can be so much more to your marriage. Here are some suggestions for getting the most out of date night, and rest of your life together besides.

1. Bond Over Everyday Life

Life isn’t a series of chores to power through. All those chores and activities represent the life you’re building together. Do some of those things together. When my wife and I were dating in college, the dorms were separated into men and women, but the laundry room was co-ed! I’m no great fan of laundry, but all of a sudden, doing laundry with my girlfriend was a great opportunity to connect. I think couples need to hold on to this. Use some of those chores; cleaning up after dinner, folding laundry, grocery shopping, as an excuse to be together and talk. The kids won’t voluntarily be within 100 miles of a chore so you’ll get that time to catch up!

2. Do Things You Already Enjoy Separately…Together!

When I suggest that couples do more together, many times couples respond, “but we don’t enjoy the same things.” So what? My RX? Remember the times it didn’t matter WHAT you did with your partner as long as you got to do it together? Cultivate that!.

3. Pray Together

Make a daily appointment to pray together. Marriage isn’t a finish line. It’s just the beginning where we promise to spend the rest of our lives learning what it really means to love someone. God wants to show you the steps. Give him the chance to teach you by meeting together everyday.  Isn’t it time to make a regular commitment to creating daily opportunities for connection? It will make all your days and nights–including date nights–that much more precious.

For more information on cultivating a passionately-loving marriage that will stand the test of  time, check out  For Better…FOREVER! A Catholic Guide to Lifelong Marriage. Don’t wait, give everyday of your marriage the romance and spark of a date night with this helpful resource!

Four Secrets of Sacred Sex

By: Dr. Gregory Popcak

couple playful in bed

Most people believe that Catholics take a rather dim and ignorant view of sex. I used to be one of them. Growing up, it seemed to me that there were two prevailing schools of thought among Catholics. The first I call the “Keep God Out of My Bedroom” school. This is the more Mediterranean, must-leave-morning-Mass-early-so-I-can-have-breakfast-with-my-mistress, laissez-faire relationship between faith and fornication. The second is the “Aunt McGillicuddy’s Antique Urn” school. This group grudgingly admits that sex is beautiful (in a somewhat grotesque, gothic sort of way) but more importantly, sex is HOLY, and therefore must be handled DELICATELY, CAUTIOUSLY ,and ideally, INFREQUENTLY; like Aunt McGillicuddy’s antique urn. “Don’ ye be fussin’ with THAT now Missy! We only touch it if we have to dust it, and then only once a month er’ soo!”

The Truth is Out There

But both of these misconceptions melted away as I learned what the Church actually teaches about sex. The truth is, Catholics do not fear sex, we esteem it. Sex is holy, but not in the “Aunt McGillicuddy” keep-it-at-arms-length sense. It is holy in the context of the Incarnation. The Eastern Fathers spoke of the Incarnation as having “Divinized our Nature.” Sex is holy because it is the most profound way of communicating that divinized Nature. Sex is holy in that it has the power to unite two souls and co-create life. Sex is holy because it is one of the most apt metaphors for understanding what it is like to be in the presence of God. Christian spiritual masters have often alluded to the orgasmic nature of intimate contact with God. The Imitation of Christ refers to God as a “Divine Lover,” and saints who have experienced theophanies (beholding a vision or experience with the divine) didn’t call it “being in ecstacy” for nothing.

Finally, for the Catholic, sex is holy because when shared between a husband and wife, it plays a role in our sanctification. “How’s that?” you ask. The Church teaches that when a married couple makes love, they are celebrating the Sacrament of Matrimony. But sacraments are chiefly concerned with salvation. What could sex possibly have to do with getting ready for Eternal Life? Well, besides participating in the mysteries I have already described, when I die, I am going to stand before the Almighty and all His Glory–in all my glory (so to speak.) Every blemish, wrinkle, crease and bump of my physical and spiritual being will be–for all eternity–exposed to His penetrating gaze, vulnerable to His pervasive touch. Under such circumstances, I must be able to stand confidently in the presence of that gaze, like Adam and Eve while they still enjoyed their Original Innocence. What better way to prepare myself for this awesome responsibility than to challenge whatever vulnerability or shame I may feel when my wife gazes upon me in my nakedness and makes love with me? It is this unique power of sexuality to challenge shame and expand vulnerabillity at the deepest level that, in addition to its power to unite two people and create new life, makes lovemaking a spiritual exercise, first and foremost. Here are four ways you and your spouse can foster a truly fulfilling and sacred sexual relationship

1. Approach Lovemaking Joyfully.

Catholics are encouraged to celebrate the sacraments frequently and joyfully. Marriage is one sacrament I hope you will not give me too much trouble about celebrating in such a way. Sex is not a duty, a chore, an extra, or even a “nice thing” to do when you have the energy. If you are married, then lovemaking is the foundation of your vocation. It is God’s first commandment to all of humanity. (When God said, “Go forth and multiply,” He wasn’t giving math homework.)  A major obstacle to a joyful sexuality is that too many Christian husbands and wives think that they must be ashamed of their sexuality. Shame, causes us to hold back just where we are called to be generous. It prevents sex from being the “self-gift” the Pope John Paul II said that it ought to be. Our sexual and bodily shame is a direct descendent of the shame Adam and Eve encountered after the Fall, standing before God in their nakedness. If we are ashamed of being exposed and vulnerable before a mate, how will we ever tolerate standing exposed and vulnerable before our Divine Lover? Challenge your fears of vulnerabillty, of “losing control,” and you will find amazing joy in the arms of both your earthly beloved and your Heavenly one.

2. Maintain a Responsible Openness to Life.

For sexuality to be truly spiritual, we must learn to balance the virtues expressed by a responsible openness to life. On the one hand, openness to life helps us develop trust, generosity, vulnerability, self-lessness and identify with the Fatherhood of God, among other things. On the other hand, practicing this openness responsibly (as the Church’s teaching encourages us to do), gives us an opportunity to develop a different set of virtues; chastity, self-discipline, honesty, temperance, etc. Both sets of virtues are equally important to our Christian identity, but they can be hard to balance. The best way to strike this balance in marriage is to practice Natural Family Planning (NFP) a deeply spiritual, profoundly rewarding, and imminently practical form of family planning. If you don’t use it, I encourage you to at least learn more about it by contacting your Diocesan Family Life Office. Experience for yourself the richness it will afford your spiritual and sexual life.

3. Approach Each Other in Prayer.

Some people sniff at the notion of joining prayer and lovemaking as if it serves the same function as reciting baseball statistics. But prayer is absolutely essential to a spiritual sexuality. Mine goes something like this, “Lord, let me kiss her with your lips, love her with your gentle hands, consume her with your undying passion that I may show her how precious and beautiful she is to us.” Develop your own “lover’s prayer” and see if the Lord doesn’t help you become a more generous, loving, and attentive partner.

4. Guard Each Other’s Dignity.

The virtues I have mentioned, especially vulnerability, cannot flourish except in a marriage where the couple are fierce guardians of each other’s dignity. Spiritual sexuality cannot exist in the face of cruel humor, blunt criticism, name-calling, neglect, abuse, or other affronts to one’s personal dignity. The most definitive research on marriage tells us that for a couple to be happy there must be five times more affection, generosity, and kindness, than criticism, nagging, arguing, or expressions of contempt. Moreover, it has been my experience that this 5:1 ratio is only the beginning point of spiritual sexuality. If a couple exhibits a solid, sacred sexuality, then it is more likely that their positivity to negativity ratio is 7:1, or even 10:1.  If you want to achieve a spiritual sexuality then the only answer is to love. Love more, love better, love everyday. Not necessarily because your spouse deserves it, but because your Christian dignity demands it.

The secret is out. God gave sex to the Godly, and its time for us to take it back.  Well, what are you waiting for? Be sure to pick up a copy of  Holy Sex! A Catholic Guide to Toe-Curling, Mind-Blowing, Infallible Loving  and discover today how your love life can make the angels sing and the neighbors sick with envy.

Married with Children

By: Gregory Popcak

couple dreaming

I hear it all the time, “Children change everything.”  There is a popular notion that marriage can be divided into two epochs; B.C. (“Before Children”) and A.D. (“After Diapers”). The B.C. marriage is allegedly a time of wanton romance and joy; candlelight dinners, violins, dancing ‘til dawn, and all the things that “true love” entails. The A.D. marriage, by contrast, is what happens when people settle down, get responsible, boring, and old. According to popular culture, the A.D. marriage is the beginning of the end of the passion. This is the time when the couple starts paying exclusive attention to raising the kids (and paying for them) and becomes too busy, too tired, and too distracted for anything like romance.  But it doesn’t have to be that way.  Many couples actually have stronger marital friendships because they have children together. Many couples actually grow in love with each other because they have added children to the family. What gives these couples the strength to buck the conventional wisdom? It would seem that it is largely up to the husbands.

Husbands: Effecting Change through  Heroic Generosity  

Too often, husbands leave romance up to the wife. In many marriages, the wife plans date night, the wife makes the plans for the romantic dinner or that special event, the wife makes sure they take time for conversation, for prayer, etc., and the husband is the passive beneficiary of his wife’s loving effort. Then along comes baby and all of a sudden, the woman is pre-occupied with a little person who can’t take care of himself–and no, I don’t mean her husband. In the presence of this reality, the husband may respond in one of two ways; he can react with jealousy, or he can respond in love. The first option is the less desirable one. If the husband chooses jealousy over love, he will respond to the baby as a threat. The more involved the mother is with their child, the more he may act as if he feels himself to be an outsider. He may intentionally withdraw from childcare as a way to protest her “betrayal.” He may begin insisting that she make time for dates or sex before it is even physically possible or emotionally prudent. If she is anything but wildly enthusiastic about his proposals, then he may act like a pouting child who has been disciplined unjustly. If this pattern keeps up, the wife come to see her husband as “another child” whom she has to “take care of.” She learns to view romance, and especially sex, as “one more chore.” Barring a dramatic change, these marriages can devolve more and more into a brother-sister relationship that is tinged by resentment as neither the wife nor the husband is getting their own needs for intimacy and support met.

The second option, the more preferable one, is for the husband to step up to the plate and take advantage of the opportunity for love that has been presented to him with the birth of this child. In this scenario, the husband sees it as his responsibility to take as good care of the wife and marriage as she is of their child. He compliments her on her mothering and actively looks for ways to support and encourage her in the tiring job of tending to the baby. He reminds her that she’s beautiful but not in a way that implies that her beauty makes her an object to him. He reminds her that, in addition to being a mother, she is a woman with a mind and heart and soul, but he is careful to do this in a way that does not give the impression that he is taking care of her so that he can get something out of her. In other words, the parenting role calls both husband and wife to different forms of a very selfless kind of loving. If the husband responds to the wife in this manner, the wife will come to see her relationship with her husband as a safe haven, a retreat, the one place she can go to rest and feel cared for and recuperate from her long from her long day of caring for another. As she relaxes in her husband’s arms at the end of a long day, her romantic response to him will emerge as a logical response to him having loved her first and loved her well and self-donatively.

The Proof Is In the Research

I have found that it is in this kind of environment — one in which husband and wife truly see themselves as partners in the raising and caring of the children — that a truly loving openness to life will grow. This is also why it is so common for NFP couples to keep having children after they have the societal norm of two or three kids.  When I first asserted this observation in my book Parenting with Grace, I was criticized in some circles as having unrealistic expectations for husbands and being too pie-in-the-sky about life after kids, even though what I wrote was based upon my clinical observations of couples. Flash forward several years, and the Gottman Institute, the country’s premier research institute on marriage, published a major study saying essentially the same thing.     Gottman’s study, Bringing Baby Home, found that when husbands were as emotionally clued-in to the marital relationship as their wives and, as I described in the second option above, actively engaged in infant care, those couples actually become more intimate as their family size increases. Why? Because these couples see the parenting role as one more thing that draws them together, and the wife comes to be grateful to the husband for his loving, selfless attention to her, which then gives her the emotional peace and security she needs to be the point person for a great deal of the direct care of the baby.

In two career families, the husband’s active role is even more critical. In her book, Second Shift, sociologist Arlie Hochschild notes that despite society’s talk about equality of roles, most women who work outside the home are still responsible for the lion’s share of domestic chores and childrearing. In this dynamic, the marriage and the sexual relationship suffers horribly as the wife comes to see taking care of her husband the chore that is last on the list. By contrast, research shows that in two-carreer marriages in which the husband is an active partner in child-rearing and chores, the marital intimacy also increases because, rather than in spite, of children.  Of course, the idea that marital intimacy should increase with the advent of children completely gels with Catholic teaching. We are told, for example, that the family images the Trinity who, beginning as a powerful and intimate community of love, creates new life, brings that creation back into itself, and then is inspired (in a sense) by the now greater community of love to create more life and so on, and so on. The family images the Trinity in that it too is, ideally, an ever-expanding example of love which gives life, brings that life back into itself and is inspired by the intimacy experienced within that community to create more life, and so on, and so on.  Clearly, science and the Church agree. When husbands take their godly place as leaders in their home, acting like men who can love and care for their wives and be intimate partners to their wives, instead of becoming children who must be placated and pacified by wifely attention, marriages become stronger as the family increases.

 

Mixed Signals

By: Dr. Gregory Popcak

fighting couple

“No matter what I do, it’s never good enough. I just don’t feel like he loves me and I’m completely fed up.”  Colleen and David began marriage counseling as far apart as two people could be.     Often during a first session, I will make time to speak to the husband and wife separately, so that each can feel free to say what they need to without fear of being contradicted. Colleen took the first turn while David headed out for a cigarette.  “I have really tried hard to show him how much I love him.” She said. “I used to pack little notes in his lunch. I try to keep the house looking nice. I try to be romantic. Things have been rough for a while, but a couple of weeks ago, I thought I would try to do something special. I made a nice meal, lit candles, set the table with our good china….” Colleen trailed off, gathered her thoughts and began again.

“He barely said two words the whole meal. We just sat there, eating in silence. I wanted to stab him with my salad fork, I was so angry.” She grabbed for a Kleenex and composed herself. “It’s like that all the time. I try to do things that let him know that I love him, but he never responds. Not only doesn’t he appreciate what I do for him, he never does anything to show me he cares. He says he loves me, but those are just words. Why doesn’t he show me?”

~~~

We discussed a few more issues, getting the general overview of her situation, and then it was David’s turn.  “She is just so fussy. Everything has to be perfect all the time. I feel like it completely kills any spontaneity. The other week, she made this dinner. I came home and I was tired. I was really looking forward to an evening of just hanging out on the couch together, being close, just relaxing–maybe over a pizza or something–and I walk into all this pressure. She had the candles lit and the good china out.     All I wanted to do was get out of my jacket and tie, and all of a sudden I felt like I was underdressed in my own house.

“I was irritated, sure, but I figured this was important to her. We hadn’t been getting along all that well for a while, so I thought I would try to play along, maybe it would help soften her up a bit. I was enjoying the meal well enough, but then I saw her get that ‘prissy face’ she gets when she’s mad at me, and all I could think was, ‘Ah, man, what did I do now?’”  He sighed and made a face. “I was too tired to deal with it. I just kept my mouth shut and got out of there as fast as I could.”  David continued. “She’s always doing stuff like that. I’m always trying to do things to let her know I love her. I try to hug her, but she’s always a million miles away. I used to call her from work to see how she was, but she was always too busy with some project to talk. I tell her I love her, but she says, “That’s just words!”     I love to fix things and keep the house in good shape, you know, guy stuff (he smiled conspiratorially) but she doesn’t really need me to do any of that for her because she’s so competent. Meanwhile, I’m killing myself trying to show her that I care, and she isn’t doing anything for me. It’s always about what she wants.     I just got sick of it after a while.”

~~~

David and Colleen were struggling with a common but serious marital problem. Specifically, the couple’s individual “lovestyles” were crossed.     To put it another way, each was working hard to communicate love to the other in a way that made sense to him or her self, but was completely irrelevant to the other. Colleen, having a more visual lovestyle liked to concentrate on atmosphere.  She was attentive to details, and showed her love in the way she decorated the house, presented a meal, and set the mood with candles and other visual indicators of affection like her appearance, or notes and cards.  David on the other hand was not as visual as his wife. Employing both kinesthetic (kin-es-TET-ic) and auditory lovestyles, he was more oriented to touch and action-oriented expressions of love as well as verbal affection. He tried to communicate his feelings for Colleen through acts of service, hugs and other physical displays of affection, and calling her to check on her day, in addition to saying, “I love you.” as much as possible. Unfortunately, despite all this love going around, both David and Colleen felt horribly neglected.

Back to School.

To understand the concept of lovestyles better, I need to take you back to grade school for a minute. Teachers spend a great deal of time trying to figure out how their students learn best (their “Learning styles”). Some students are visual learners, and do well with reading assignments, workbook pages, and other visual input. Others are more auditory learners. They need to be talked through tasks. They also do well in lecture classes and discussion groups and other oral/auditory learning activities.     Others still are kinesthetic learners, who learn by doing. These students learn through their hands and do well with projects, acting out assignments, manipulatives, and other physical activities that inspire learning.  Because learning styles are neurologically based, they don’t disappear in adulthood, they generalize out of the classroom and become communication styles–and in marriage– what I call, “lovestyles,” which brings us back to our couple.

Both Colleen and David were working very hard to demonstrate their love for one another, but almost all of their efforts were for naught, because they were communicating love in a manner that the other was not neurologically “wired” to receive. Because of that, Colleen’s visual efforts at romance were dismissed as mere, “fussiness” by the more kinesthetic David, and David’s attempts to communicate love through physical affection and words were experienced by Colleen as being either “groping” or as “empty words” respectively.  When I explained this to the couple, they were initially underwhelmed if not outright pessimistic. David said, “It sounds like you’re saying we’re doomed. That we’re just wired differently and that’s all there is to it.”  Clearly, this is not what I was trying to say. The good news is, to the degree that you have five senses, you can rewire and expand your lovestyle. The difficulty is that it simply never occurs to most people.     A person with a more visual lovestyle tends to believe that everyone should give and receive affection just as they do. It never occurs to them to try anything else.     The same is true of the other lovestyles. So they tend to dismiss, or simply miss, those displays of affection not communicated in the lovestyle they are most comfortable with. And it never occurs to anyone to notice all that they are missing.

Rewiring

The answer to this problem is a combination of generosity and awareness. Catholic marriages are founded on the notion of self-donative love, the idea that it is a spouse’s duty and privilege to use his or her whole self–body, mind, and spirit–to work for the good of the other. By challenging our comfort zones and consciously working to love our spouse the way he or she needs to be loved, instead of just the way we want to love him or her, we expand our capacity to give and receive love, and open our own minds to experiencing a world previously unknown to us.  I suggested that David and Colleen try an experiment.     I asked them to list at least twenty different actions that communicated love or attentiveness to them. These items could be more romantic, like cards and flowers, or they could be more mundane, like taking the garbage to the curb, or giving up the TV remote for the evening. The only requirements were that these activities should be low-expense, not terribly time consuming, and still be meaningful enough to cause the recipient to have a gut-level reaction that says, “Ahh! That made me feel very well taken care of.”

Over the next few sessions, David and Colleen developed their lists and worked to overcome some of the basic objections to each other’s requests. Colleen said, “One of the first reactions to some of the things he wrote down was, “You want me to do WHAT!?     I’m ashamed to admit it now, because it wasn’t as if he was asking for anything immoral or demeaning, he just wanted me to do things that don’t mean a great deal to me, and would require me to challenge my comfort level. Things like holding his hand in public, or sitting on the couch and snuggling together in front of the fire even if there were chores that still needed to be done, or keeping him company when he changes the oil. I would NEVER think of doing those things on my own, and honestly, when he has asked me to do them in the past, I just dismissed them because they didn’t mean anything to me.”

David agreed. “My first reaction to her list was, ‘This is really stupid.’     I think I’m a pretty loving guy, but a lot of the things she wrote down didn’t seem so much loving, as they were fussy. ‘Wear something nicer than old sweats in the evening.’ or, ‘Write me a note that says you love me and why.’ or ‘make sure the bedroom is straightened up and light candles when you want to make love.’ I just don’t care about that kind of stuff on my own. Honestly, it seemed a little silly. I mean, why would I need to write her a note? I tell her I love all the time. I just thought she was being picky.”  But after we spent some time addressing their objections and they had an opportunity to practice the items on each other’s lists, the difference was remarkable. As Colleen put it, “It occurred to me that I had been very selfish.     I was only willing to love him the way I wanted to love him. I didn’t care how he needed to be loved. In a sense, my loving efforts in the past were more focused on helping me feel good than they were showing him affection in any meaningful way.”

David added, “It was hard for me to remember to do the things on her list at first, because they just don’t come naturally to me at all. But I tried to check the list everyday and tell myself that it wasn’t important if this stuff meant anything to me. It was just important that I wanted her to know I loved her, and in order to do that, I needed to learn to speak her language. And the first time she read the little love note I wrote in about ten minutes earlier in the day, she just beamed. I knew I’d scored big.”  But the benefits didn’t end there. David and Colleen both learned important lessons about themselves and opened their eyes to new ways to experience and share love. As David put it, “Colleen told me that she can really see how doing these things is helping her become a more open, loving person who is more relaxed and less ashamed about showing affection. And I’m becoming a whole lot more attentive as a husband. I used to think that as long as I was a better husband than most of the guys at the office, that was good enough. Now I realize that God expects me to be the husband she needs me to be, not just the husband my friends think I ought to be.”

If you are experiencing the tension of loving someone with a different love language, call your PaxCare Tele-Coach today and find the solutions you are looking for. Call us to get the skills you need to succeed.

Manly Men-Reflections on Masculinity

By: PaxCare Staff

guy

In the culture in which we live, there are many stereotypes and misconceptions regarding the roles and identities of men. What makes a man, well…a man? How do we determine manliness? This article will shed some light on the issue.

What’s the Manswer?

Read the following two character sketches and answer this question:   Which man is more masculine?

#1.   Mr. A is a florist by profession.   He enjoys going to the ballet, musical theater and supports the arts in general.  He dresses well and cares for his appearance. He is warm and affectionate to the people he meets.   He is in touch with his emotions and comfortable sharing them.

#2 Mr. B is a contractor by profession.   He enjoys monster truck rallies, loves to watch football, and judges the quality of a movie by the number of explosions in it.   His idea of dressing up is wearing  his nice plaid flannel shirt (the one without the beer stain).   He is friendly enough, but not very affectionate.   Some would describe him as gruff.     He does not enjoy talking about feelings.   He would rather solve problems than talk about them.

So, which is more masculine?   A or B?   Answer:   It is impossible to tell from the information presented.

Why?   Because masculinity has little to do with the jobs we do, the things we like, or the way we look.   Masculinity has much, much more to do with how effectively we live out our humanity through the male body given to us by God. Masculinity is determined by how comfortable a man is with his body and uses that body in the manner it was intended by God to be used; that is, to serve others.   Let’s use two different examples.

The Demands of Loving Service

Same question: Which is more masculine?

#1 Mr. C adores his wife. He is conscientious about fulfilling the promises he makes to her. He is an active father and makes sure to spend time with his children every day. He is concerned about caring for his family’s emotional and spiritual needs and regularly leads prayer in his home and encourages his family to take advantage of the sacraments.     His wife and children know that any time they need something, they can count on Mr. A to help them find the most godly and efficient way to meet their need.

#2 Mr. D says he loves his wife but really couldn’t tell you anything about what her needs are or what it takes to make her happy. When she asks him to do something for her, he will often promise to do it to get her to stop nagging him, but he rarely follows through. He is not very involved with his children. He avoids discussion anything he doesn’t have to with his family. He does not pray with them. He will go to church if his wife insists. Sometimes. By and large, his wife and children do not count on him for much.

So, which is more masculine? Clearly, Mr. C. Why? Because Mr. C presents as a man who knows himself, is comfortable in his own skin and he is using his self and his body in the way God intended it to be used; to serve others. A man might have more in common with either Mr. A or Mr. B above, but it doesn’t matter, because his masculinity is determined not by the job he has or the things he likes or the way he looks. It is determined by the way he uses his self and his body to serve.

Should I Answer the Call to Love? (Or, just let the machine get it?)

By: Gregory Popcak

couple smiling at each other

“Love is…the fundamental and innate vocation of every human being.”

-John Paul II

Familiaris Consortio.

I have a confession to make. I’m a screener. I know it’s an obnoxious habit, but there are just some evenings when, after a long day of counseling, I don’t want to talk to anyone on the phone unless they are; a.) Dying. b.) Sending me lots of money. c.) All of the above.  Sometimes, I’m sorry to say, I even try to put God on hold, especially when he’s calling me to love. We all do this from time to time. We know that the Scriptures tell us to love our spouses as Christ loves the Church, but we respond as if we are listening to a disembodied voice on our answering machine, “Thanks for calling, Lord. I’m washing the dog right now. (Ruff! Sit, Cujo. Sit!) If you leave your name and number at the tone….”

Marital Call Waiting.

But God–being so, well, Godly–sees through such pathetic attempts to put him off. Eventually, I am obliged to respond.  Which, to be perfectly honest, is in my best interest anyway. Being a marriage counselor gives me a unique opportunity to see for myself the effects of consistently choosing not to love; effects that range from the silly to the truly frightening. When I take a moment to consider these different situations, two kinds of “marital call-waiting” emerge. That is, there are two major excuses we give for ignoring our call to love; our addiction to comfort, and a game I call, Marital Chicken.

The Obstacles.

The first obstacle, our love of comfort (a.k.a. sloth) stops us from challenging ourselves to live out the love God has placed on our hearts. You could be more present, more romantic, more sexual, more helpful, a better listener, or a more attentive mate, except that you’re tired and just too comfortable in your own little corner of the house. It happens to all of us, men and women. We are called to be Christ to our mate, but too often, “Christ” is sacked out on the sofa, hiding out in a hobby or job, or out saving the rest of the world instead of actively searching for the million or so ways he or she could be loving right at home.  Marital Chicken is the second and more insidious obstacle to being Christ to our spouses. Like the game of “chicken” in the fifties where two teenagers drove toward each other at breakneck speed to see who would veer off the road first, Marital Chicken is the game couples play when they sit around whining to each other, “If you were more (romantic, sexual, helpful, complementary, emotional, rational, etc.), maybe I would be more (romantic, sexual, helpful, complimentary, emotional, rational, etc.) But I know you. You’ll never change!”

Playing this game allows us to avoid confronting our own fears of intimacy while getting to feel self-righteous at the same time. Obviously, the game can be fairly addicting. What the couple playing Marital Chicken forgets is that they are not really responsible to their partner for living out those loving qualities. Rather, they must become more affectionate/ sexual/ helpful/ complimentary/emotional/rational/etc. because that is the person they want to be, because that is the person God is calling them to be. When I die and God asks me if I lived out my vocation to love, I don’t really think the Almighty is going to accept, “Well, Lord, I would have, if only my spouse had been more….”

The Selfish Person’s Guide to Love.

Still, knowing all this doesn’t make responding to the call any easier. Sometimes, when we are choked with our own self-righteousness we may need a more immediate, more “selfish” reason for doing what we know is the right thing. God, in his mercy, gives us not one, but two reasons to take his call.

1) Choosing to love others helps us feel God’s love more.

When I bring a difficult situation in my marriage to the Lord, an odd thing happens. Somewhere in the middle of my prayer (which goes something like, “So help me God, you BETTER do something about this RIGHT NOW because if you think for one minute that I’m going to be loving….”) I hear a quiet voice that stops me in my tracks.

“You know, Greg. Now that you mention it, sometimes you do that to me.”

“What are you talking about, Lord?” I say, irritated at having been interrupted mid-rant.

“That thing you’re complaining about. Sometimes you do that to me.”

It doesn’t matter what it is. Invariably, God uses the circumstances of my anger to teach me about the latest way I have been putting him off, selling him short, or otherwise treating him with unintentional contempt. Moreover, where I might be tempted to whine, complain or argue with my wife to get what I want, God reminds me that he does none of these things when he wants me to change. He just loves me more persistently until I realize, “Hey, this God of mine isn’t so bad after all. Maybe I should trust him with more of my life.”  When I ask God to help me in my marriage, he begins by leading me to see my own resistances to his love. When I confess them, seek his pardon, and ask for his grace, he not only fills my soul with a peace beyond words, he shows me that the answer to my current marital struggle is simple; I must love more, love better, and love now. Opening myself up to his love, Christ gives me the courage to try and become the husband he would be.

2) Choosing to love increases my self-esteem.

There is a second reason I must choose to be loving even when I don’t feel like it. I simply don’t like the person I become when I choose not to love. If, as the Holy Father said, the call to love is innate within us, then to not love is to not be true to myself. When a person does things that are inconsistent with their Nature, it has a horrible effect on their self-esteem. I see examples of this all day long when people tell me that they despise how they’ve let their marital problems turn them into “a witch,” “an abuser,” “a miserable person,” or worse. When I can help these people make more loving choices in their marriages (not because their spouse deserves it but because their own dignity demands it) two remarkable things happen. First, they begin to like themselves again. There is a great deal of satisfaction that comes from being able to say that at the end of each day, no matter how “crazy” your spouse was, you behaved in a way that you can be proud of. Secondly, when the husband and wife respond to their calls to love, acting in a manner that is consistent with their personal dignity, nine times out of ten the marriage problems disappear; sometimes in a matter of weeks, sometimes overnight, but always faster than the couple would have ever dared dream was possible.  If I want to be loving to myself, the only logical choice I have is to be loving whether or not I feel like it. Whether or not I think “they” deserve it. To do otherwise is to become bitter and isolated. I deserve better than that. You do to.

“One, Ringy Dingy….

God rewards our choice to love with deeper submersion in his joy, greater self-satisfaction, and more fulfilling relationships. The call to love is indeed the most invigorating and most important call we could ever answer. It is our beginning, our middle and our end.