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The Love DareThe Love Dare By Alex Kendrick and Stephen KendrickLove Dare is a 40-day guided devotional experience that will lead your heart back to truly loving your spouse while learning more about the design, nature, and source of true love.

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Getting Away to Connect on a Deeper Level Guests include: Bill and Carolyn WellonsOn today's broadcast, Bill and Carolyn Wellons, married for over 30 years and co-authors of the book Getting Away to Get It Together, tell how their trips away as a couple helped them focus on their marriage and connect on a deeper level.More Improving your marriage broadcasts
My Story: Our Marriage Was a Mess

Sean O’Connell

My wife, Deb, and I used to fight all of the time. It was constant. Fight … fight … fight.

I would say: “It’s red.”

Deb would say: “No, it’s black.”

We had no role models for a godly marriage and didn’t know how to make our relationship succeed. When I was 12 years old, my father abandoned me and our family. With Dad gone, Mom had to go to work in a factory sewing tents to support us. Deb’s parents both drank heavily and her father was an alcoholic.

When Deb and I were teenagers, we were promiscuous. We married after Deb became pregnant. She was a young 16-year-old girl and I was a rebellious 15-year-old rock and roll guitar player whose band played in bars. Smoking pot and using illicit drugs like LSD was commonplace. We both dropped out of high school and depended on our monthly welfare check to survive.  Not much of a beginning for a marriage.

After we had been married for about a year, I remember thinking, What are we going to do? We’re uneducated. We have a baby. We have no money. We have nothing!

By the time I turned 21, Deb and I found ourselves living in Chicago. I remember sitting on the outside steps of our apartment, playing my guitar one afternoon, and this neighbor guy who I barely knew walked by. He asked, “Hey, do you want to go to Bible study?”

“Sure,” I said, and hopped into his car. That one decision directed the rest of my life. I asked Jesus Christ to be my Lord and Savior at that Bible study. Three days later Deb went to a women’s Bible study with the neighbor’s wife and she asked the Lord to take control of her life.

Help for our marriage

God began to gradually change Deb and me, and over time He created a truly remarkable legacy for our family.

As new Christians, we did our best to figure out what “this Christian thing” was all about. We learned about God’s Word, went to church, and joined Bible studies. Despite all this, we continued to have struggles and argue with one another. I’d find myself thinking in the midst of a heated discussion, Wait a minute, we’re Christians. We’re not supposed to do this anymore. To make matters worse, the illicit drug use from my teenage years was now replaced by a severe addiction to prescription drugs.

Deb and I had four kids by this time, and we had been married for about 11 years. The reality of life had completely set in. It was obvious to some friends that our marriage was a mess. “Boy, you guys need help!” they lovingly asserted, and sent us to a Weekend to Remember® marriage conference.

That conference was a pivotal point in our marriage. Dennis and Barbara Rainey were the speakers, and we remember seeing ourselves in the stories they both told. They gave us the practical tools we so desperately needed. We clung to an exhortation Dennis made at the conference to not allow divorce to be an option in our marriage. That weekend we began our training in how to communicate with one another ... without fighting.

Dennis and Barbara said, “We should not make our spouse compete for our affection,” and that really hit home for us. I had never considered that using drugs was another way of making Deb compete for my affection. At one point Deb said to me, “If it was another woman, I could figure out how to compete ... but drugs. You love drugs more than you love me.” She was right. I was addicted.

Mentoring younger couples

Although Deb and I have had our share of marital challenges, we’ve now stayed together for more than three decades. Over time I was delivered from my drug addiction; it was a lot of hard work, but well worth it. We’ve been mentored by godly, older couples, and joyfully reach out to mentor younger couples.

We were so excited about what we had learned at the Weekend to Remember conferences that we began teaching the concepts to other couples in our home and at church. In time, we began HomeBuilders groups. We look for opportunities to share what we’ve been through, and also how we overcame our struggles. We make sure couples understand that, “Whatever you tell us, you’re not going to stun us. We’re not going to think any worse of you; we’ve all got our skeletons in our closets.”

In 2008 we became the city directors for the Weekend to Remember in Branson, Missouri. That same year we started about eight HomeBuilders groups and spoke at about six or seven different churches. Deb and I talked about how God has used FamilyLife and what it has done in our lives. We encouraged couples to go to a Weekend to Remember conference.

In fact, among them were the same friends who originally sent us to our first FamilyLife marriage conference. After all the years we recently had a chance to give back to them. “You guys need a break,” we said. “You need to go to this.” They went to the Weekend to Remember and so did their married children.

An amazing legacy

Deb and I are very excited that our four children are now believers. They have all attended a Weekend to Remember with their spouses; some of them two and three times. A couple of years ago Deb and I had the opportunity to meet Dennis Rainey. We told him how our first FamilyLife marriage conference had saved our marriage. “It’s one thing when you hear these stories [of changed lives] at the end of a conference weekend,” Dennis said, “but to hear it almost 25 years later … to see that your children are Christians and they are raising their children in the Spirit of the Lord … it’s an amazing legacy!”

What God has done for Deb and me is so tremendous and we are forever grateful. Not too long ago I discovered that all this is an answer to prayers from many years ago. I met a lady at my mom’s surprise 70th birthday party. “You don’t know me,” she said, “but I am one of the ladies who prayed every day with your mother for your salvation when you were in trouble and getting kicked out of school. Your mother always knew that you would have a wonderful life. We would hold hands and pray for you on our break time at the old sewing factory when you were 12 or 13 years old.” All I could do was cry.

It’s been more than four decades since Mom and that beautiful lady prayed for a rebellious boy who had no direction for his life. God heard their prayers.

Related resources
Weekend to Remember audio CD
HomeBuilders: Resolving Conflict in Your Marriage
The Love Dare, by Alex and Stephen Kendrick
Special Offer: Love Renewed 


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Anonymous @ 11/6/2009 9:20:44 PM 
Sorry, it's me again. I forgot to say that I did NOT mean to imply that WTR teaches that it's ok to separate from your spouse. I honestly don't know for sure but I would suspect the teach exactly what the Bible says and that separation is "allowed" (vice encouraged) when there is ongoing, unconfessed, unrepentant physical sexual relations with someone other than your spouse or when the Unbelieve leaves because they want nothing to do with you or your spouse. In other words, the same as for a divorce. Everything else is Man-Centered Theology and not God-Centered Theology. This would include living under the same roof but moving to a separate bedroom. It's just as wrong.
Anonymous @ 11/6/2009 8:41:28 PM 
Sorry, it's me again. I forgot to say that I did NOT mean to imply that WTR teaches that it's ok to separate from your spouse. I honestly don't know for sure but I would suspect the teach exactly what the Bible says and that separation is "allowed" (vice encouraged) when there is ongoing, unconfessed, unrepentant physical sexual relations with someone other than your spouse or when the Unbelieve leaves because they want nothing to do with you or your spouse. In other words, the same as for a divorce. Everything else is Man-Centered Theology and not God-Centered Theology. This would include living under the same roof but moving to a separate bedroom. It's just as wrong.
Anonymous @ 11/6/2009 8:35:45 PM 
Forgot to add, I thank God that He never separates, leaves, or forsakes me because of my foolishness and complete selfishness. I would encourage you dear lady to consider whether you would want God to use your example toward your husband as the standard for whether he leaves you or not. If you think for a nano-second that you deserve Christ's commitment to you, then you better question whether or not you are even a Christian.
Anonymous @ 11/6/2009 8:31:02 PM 
As for "WHY" my wife "believes separation is appropriate" it's irrelevant. The ONLY thing that matters is what God says. Period. I have not committed adultery and I am a Christian that has not left her. Those are the ONLY two Scriptural reasons for separation. Here's the crux of the matter. You state, "he is welcome back whenever 'he comes to his senses' but in the mean time, our family will be protected from the daily battle of his foolishness and complete selfishness." I ask, where in all of Scripture does God give you that right or responsibility? Is not God big enough to protect you and your family from all that and more? Unfortunately, what you're missing is that you are living in sin by being separated. Two wrongs don't make it right.
Anonymous @ 11/6/2009 4:34:34 PM 
I have wanted to do just exactly that many times through the years and I have managed to overcome my escapist mentality by praying, specifically praying through the book "the power of a praying wife" by stormie omartian. That one book has saved my marriage on numerous occasions. I continue to struggle with keeping up praying for my husband and our marriage and will begin to fade off as things improve, but this time I am working very hard at remaining in prayer even when things are good.
By the way, there is a "power of a praying husband" too. How I would love my husband to pray for me from this book. 30 prayers cover 30 areas of a man/woman's life. It is an incredible gift and I highly recommend it.
Anonymous @ 11/6/2009 11:37:56 AM 
Only scriptural principles are taught at the WTR conferences. Though your wife MAY be twisting what she learned to justify her flesh, you have failed to mention WHY she believes separation from you is appropriate.

I have been separated for the better part of 3.5 years. My husband had to make a choice between our family and vodka. He chose the bottle. I pray for him and let him know he is welcome back whenever 'he comes to his senses' but in the mean time, our family will be protected from the daily battle of his foolishness and complete selfishness.

This is a great story. Nothing less than a testimony to God's awesome power in the lives of those who choose to surrender their wills for His.

Men or woman who choose to separate themselves, and their children, from the other spouse should not be judged as self-centered and inconsiderate of the consequences. Though this is sometimes the case, I believe there are many more who have chosen this option as a last resort in order to pro
Anonymous @ 10/27/2009 5:02:57 PM 
That is quite subjective. I have a friend that didn't want to get a divorce, so she seperated from her husband and took their children with her because he was abusive. I support her seperation until her husband is able to get some help with regarding his issues.
Anonymous @ 10/18/2009 10:03:45 AM 
She is wrong, I know because I did the same thing, I was wrong and ruined my marriage and childrens lives. Pray that someone comes into her life and tells her to go home. That's what I needed and didn't get. God is with you.
Anonymous @ 10/16/2009 7:30:17 PM 
That's a great story & a true testimony to what a WTR weekend can do for those who are willing to let it make a change. After attending a WTR, a Love & Respect Conference, and a Marriage Encounter Weekend, my wife decided that she could be a godly woman by getting an apartment, totally separating herself from me, and attending a church that tells her what she wants to hear and encourages her to stay that way until I can come to my senses and conform to the image she has of what I should be. I just happen to attend a church that believes physical separation inside or outside of the home is wrong.
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