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Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

How Do You Handle Marital Fights?

Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

J.D. Greear

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.9624 Ratings

🗓️ 5 December 2022

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, as we continue our marriage and family series, Pastor J.D. answers a question about marital conflict. He's joined by his wife, Veronica, for another episode.

Show Notes:

Let me dispel a myth right from the beginning: good couples are not couples who never fight; good couples are couples who have learned to fight fairly; to fight Christianly. If you’re one of those starry-eyed engaged couples who feel like, “We never fight…” Veronica and I were like that, too. How blissful it is to be young! You just can’t get close to another sinner without there being conflict.
10 Stages in Grace-Saturated, Gospel-Centered Fighting:
1. Examine YOUR heart.

Even if you’ve been wronged, what does your anger say about your heart? 
Has malice, wrath, anger, and bitterness snuck in? 
Mind the smoke detectors! Rage, malice, wrath, and bitterness always indicate idolatry, which is a bigger problem in your heart than whatever your spouse is doing to you.
And this is why you need outside counsel in your life. 


2. Overlook whatever you can. 

You don’t have to comment on every little infraction. Choose your battles.

Proverbs 19:11 It is to a man’s glory to overlook an offense. 
Proverbs 12:16 The vexation of a fool is known at once, but the prudent ignores an insult.


This would not apply to things that do lasting damage to your relationship with each other or them. Or any kind of abuse. 

Sometimes, we don’t want to bring up their sin against us because we don’t want to disturb the peace. 
Guys are especially bad at this. You just want to maintain the peace. A few times in our relationship (I’m being really transparent…) I’ve had to speak up.


There are times you need to speak up and confront; and there are times just to let it go, and there’s a real art to knowing the difference. 


3. Be practical in how you fight.



Proverbs 12:18: “There is one whose rash words are like sword thrusts, but the tongue of the wise brings healing.”
“Rash words.” Words not thought out, spoken in anger, or not given at a good time.
Veronica and I have found it helpful to boundarize conflict within times, zones, and moods: For example, allowing an argument to begin if we are both physically tired. We have set certain rooms, certain times, off limits.

We will invoke what I call the “24 hour rule.” “I promise to come back to this.” 
Now, men, you have to keep your word, otherwise you lose credibility. 






You say, “What about, ‘Don’t let sun go down on your wrath?’ Doesn’t that mean we have to deal with our anger before we go to bed? 


It can’t mean literally before the sun goes down because that would mean some people in Sweden could nurse their grievances for three months in the summer but in the winter they’d only have about two hours… 


The main point of that verse is that we need to deal with our wrath and vengeance and get it out of our hearts.
Sometimes 24 hrs helps us to separate unrighteous, selfish irritation from righteous, loving, others-centered anger.


4. Be quick to listen and slow to speak.



Proverbs 18:13: “He who gives an answer before he hears, it is a folly and a shame.”
This is exactly what some of you do, especially you men. 

Brad Hambrick, our pastoral counselor: “The vast majority of communication problems are not expression problems, but listening problems.”






Let me offer you some remedial help on listening (and I need these two,

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, everybody.

0:17.7

Hey, everybody, welcome to Ask Me Anything.

0:20.4

My name is Matt Love, and I am here with Pastor J.D. Greer,

0:26.0

and we are in the middle of a marriage and family series, and we have a great two-part episode starting with this part one.

0:34.4

And the question is for Pastor J.D., and actually, Veronica, Pastor Jadie's wife as well,

0:39.4

is here. And it'll become clear why in just a second, because the question is, how do you handle

0:44.8

marital fights? And we figured, you know, we wouldn't let J.D. answered this one to one side. So how

0:50.4

do you handle marital fights? Well, babe, good to have you. Everybody always likes it better when

0:55.6

you're here. But maybe the first thing to do is dispel a myth, and that is that good couples who are

1:00.7

good couples never fight. I would say that Veronica and I have proven that thesis. I think we're a

1:07.2

pretty good couple, but I feel like we fight from time to time. Is that correct? We see things a wee bit different. And that's also despite what you told me that you were so proud of like your parents. They did not ever fight in front of you. No fighting. That's true. My I thought at the time, oh dear. Yeah. So anyway, Veronica and I've made up for that.

1:29.9

You know, one thing you see now is that couples, good couples are couples who have learned to fight fairly.

1:34.4

Or you can even say fight Christianly.

1:36.7

If you do happen to be one of those starry-eyed couples who feel like we never fight, I will tell you,

1:42.2

Veronica and I were like that too in our dating and engagement.

1:44.6

We thought, hey, we never fight. We even remember kind of joke coming out of the premarital thing

1:48.8

on conflict. We're like, oh, I wonder who this is applicable to. It'll never be applicable to us.

1:53.2

It seemed like such a waste of time. Yeah. Maybe that was our problem. We should have.

1:57.3

One things we've learned, and maybe this is a good way to jump in, is that the problems that split up marriages are usually not like some kind of special class that something got revealed about you and her that just makes you a couple that can't get along and you're going to have to get divorced.

2:11.5

It's usually a generic problem that is present in some way in every marriage.

2:16.4

Some marriage is worse than others,

2:18.1

but what happens is that one or the other of the partners does not know how to handle conflict.

...

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