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Choosing Forgiveness:  Your Journey to FreedomChoosing Forgiveness: Your Journey to Freedom By Nancy Leigh DeMoss Nancy Leigh DeMoss explains how forgiving like God is a choice that frees us from the burdens of bitterness, anger, and isolation. If you struggle with long-held hurts, God's truth and Nancy's wisdom hold help and healing for you.

Read

When It's Hard to Forgive by Nancy Leigh DeMoss As Christians, we can excuse the unforgivable in others because God has excused the unforgivable in us.  More Forgiveness articles

Listen

Love Renewed: Tom and Brenda Preston Guests include: Tom and Brenda Preston Tom Preston, national director for the Executive Ministries of Campus Crusade, and his wife, Brenda, talk openly about their once troubled marriage and the miracle of God's intervention. More Forgiveness broadcasts
Help! I Married a Sinner

Sabrina Beasley

When David and I were dating, I thought he was Prince Charming come to life. He did a lot of wonderful things, like take me on romantic dates and listen intently to my stories. One of the biggest impressions he made was the fact that even though he was a football fan, he rarely watched it on television—an endearing quality to a girl who didn’t grow up in a football home. I think we spent only one Saturday afternoon during our engagement cheering his favorite college team together.

What I didn’t know then was that after he dropped me off from our dates, he would stay up hours after midnight researching professional football players on the Internet and updating his Fantasy Football rosters. Funny … he conveniently forgot to mention that to me!

After our wedding in September (smack in the busiest part of football season), I was soon disillusioned by his sports habit and by the realization that this ritual would be a consuming part of everyday life each and every year from August to January. He watched hours of football on Sundays, and then there was the big Monday night game, most Thursday games, and occasional Saturdays.

I was more than disappointed—I felt deceived. I was beginning to see that he wasn’t perfect after all. And there were still many shortcomings to discover. During the years, I’ve been privileged to see the behind the scenes footage unfold—from disagreeable spending habits to the way he sticks his foot in his mouth when he’s angry with me.

The truth became clear—I married a sinner.

We Are All Guilty

It’s easy to see faults in other people, isn’t it? I can tell you all about someone else’s faults, but ask me about my own, and I might miss a few. My husband, however, could probably triple my list. I’m sure there were times when David felt somewhat deceived when he married me—I was putting my best foot forward as much as he was. 

I certainly can’t claim to be the perfect wife. I know when I’m acting out of sinful behavior—rolling eyes, deep heavy sighs, finger-pointing. Not exactly Christ-like. The fact is, David married a sinner, too! And so did your spouse. We are all sinners in need of each other’s forgiveness and grace. 

Somehow we have been convinced that our spouses should be like fairytale royalty—always perfect, always attractive, always sensitive to our needs. Yet we don’t expect to be treated with the same standard. We expect our spouses to be tolerant of our sins, but not the other way around.

Practicing What We Preach

All of us should expect our spouses to fail from time to time. We shouldn’t be surprised when it happens, but instead let it push us to build marriages that are grace-filled. One definition of grace is “unmerited favor,” which means extending kindness to your spouse even when he doesn’t deserve it. This is how God treats us—giving gifts and joys and good things even when our sinfulness should keep us from it. And that’s how God expects us to treat one another.

Realizing that we’re married to sinners gives us Christians the opportunity to practice what we preach. It’s easy to talk about love, grace, and mercy, and not so easy to do. But as the book of James reminds us, if you can’t put your words into practice, how can you say that you really believe it? “Faith, if it has no works, is dead, being by itself. But someone may well say, ‘You have faith and I have works; show me your faith without the works, and I will show you my faith by my works’” (James 2:17-18).

Instead of dwelling on disappointment when your spouse fails, ask yourself what you can do to encourage your husband as he pulls himself back up. In their book Building Your Mate’s Self-Esteem, Dennis and Barbara Rainey refer to this as giving your spouse the “freedom to fail.” 

When you give your mate the freedom to fail, you begin to remove the pressure to perform for acceptance. You free your mate to take risks and try again. You free him to excel. Failure then becomes a tutor, not a judge. In the presence of freedom, we learn from failures instead of being intimidated by them. In the absence of condemnation, confidence in how God can use you mounts.

Unfortunately, couples are often so preoccupied by taking score of each other’s shortcomings that they miss out on one of the greatest blessings of marriage—the benefit of not having to live under pressure to be perfect. It’s the one relationship, other than our relationship with Christ, where we can feel secure knowing that someone loves us for who we are, warts and all, and there is great peace in that. 

What can you do today to bring grace into your husband’s life? Are there any words of encouragement that he needs to hear from you? Do you need to work on areas of ending bitterness and extending forgiveness? If you’re having trouble giving grace and forgiveness to your husband, try making a list of all your own faults, and consider how God has forgiven you. Then learn to extend that same grace to your spouse. As you do, your marriage will become less focused on faults and more focused on love.

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Shanan @ 9/16/2008 8:49:17 AM 
Men are constantly under attack from the enemy, as are we wives. In fact if Satan can't get at us directly then he will go after our husbands in an attempt to hurt us. Make no mistake about it, Satan HATES marriage! He will do anything he can to rip a marriage apart, even if that means sneaky cheap shots at our spouses!!Fight for your marriages and fight on behalf of your DH's. God is on our side and God created your husband especially for you. He knows that you each have something that the other needs. It is such an amazing revelation that the Creator of the Universe takes such care to create a spouse that can meet some special need in our lives like no one else on earth can. It is such a precious gift from the Father. Hold on to it for all you are worth! I lost my first post so I hope that at least part of this helps someone.
Blessings
Shanan @ 9/16/2008 8:47:46 AM 
The forums at http://www.themarriagebed.com and http://www.shelleylubben.com/ are good places to find Christian support for dealing with porn issues. I also married a good Christian boy only to find out that he didn't have a true walk with the Lord and (10+ years down the road) that he was addicted to porn. One night at a marriage retreat we were talking alone in our room and he confessed his porn addiction to me and I told him about being sexually abused as a little girl. That was a huge turning point for us. I was able to be there for him when he was feeling tempted and he was there for me whenever I felt uncomfortable or would have flashbacks. We are not perfect and his sin of porn is not worse than my sin of losing my temper or being disrespectful. Sin is sin and we just deal with it and move on. Pray for your husband daily (yourself too).
melissa @ 8/1/2008 6:36:58 AM 
please understand that you must go to the Lord to heal your damaged emtions and not your husband....i have been where you are with the porn..it was devasting and went on for a few years...my husband was saved and God dealt with him on the porn but the pain in me was still there. We must take every thought captive to the Lord and not dwell on the pain of the past. We have to pray for the ability to forgive and pray for healing from the pain. It is impossible for our husbands to make it better. They are the ones that caused it so we think they should fix it...we sin and we cant fix it so Jesus had to die on the cross for us...just as we cannot fix our sin on our own, neither can our husbands fix their sin or the consequences...God must work in us. They have sinned against God more than us...we must give grace and mercy because we ourselves need that from God. If we keep perspective of our sin it helps us to be forgiving. My husband was repentant and understanding but no matter what he sa
Tim @ 5/22/2008 12:20:26 AM 
Any excuse will do. The person above, Anonymous, is not helping her husband, or herself, or her marriage. Since you got married, you are now "one" person in a triumverant with God. Therefore his "sin" is your sin as well.
A marriage is not 50-50. It is 100-100. If you only give 50% and your spouse is only giving 50%, a hundred percent is missing somewhere. The truth is that if you can only give 80%, your spouse must pick up the missing 20% and give 120%.
It is great that you are looking for answers. Family life is a great place to start.
Love your man. Give him a chance to grow into the man he wants to become.
Tim @ 5/22/2008 12:16:20 AM 
Great article! I totally disagree with the Anonymous comments above. They are missing the point of the article. "Warts and all." Pornography is a real problem in America and our world. The article is not asking anyone to "overlook" the sins of another but rather to realize that we are all sinners in need of encouragement and uplifting,grace and forgiveness. i know that if we FOCUS on the negatives, soon we will see more and more negatives in our mate. Then, that is all we will see. A NEGATIVE. However, the opposite is true as well! If you find a positive and begin to focus on it, soon you will find another and another, and soon your mate will positively glow in your eyes. What are you focused on? I bet they live up to it!
If you encourage a fat woman by focusing on say, her beautiful hair, or eyes, she can begin to look at herself more positively. If you continually tell her how fat she is, you are speaking destructive words into her life. By the way, she already knows she is fat.
Anonymous @ 5/5/2008 9:22:22 AM 
I guess I was disappointed somewhat by this article. I came to this website today thinking that the title "Help! I Married a Sinner" would actually address some more hurtful, damaging sins that spouses bring into a marriage. You see, I'm hurting because I too was duped, I thought I was marrying a "good Christian young man" ... afterall, he was a Baptist pastor's kid. On our 6 month wedding anniversary I discovered he was and somewhat still is addicted to porn. We've been married 12 years, have gone through a year of counceling, and are trying, but I'm struggling today. I only WISH my husband's "sin" was football. Please, someone write an article that I and others can relate more to. I just feel this author is a little out of touch with reality. The article had some typical "nice Christian talk" that I've heard before, but some sins in a marriage just aren't all that simple to clean up and keep tidy. Some sins require some serious work on both ends and some sins can leave a wif
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