I wish I could say that such wrongs have never happened in my marriage, but the truth is, I have sinned against both God and my spouse. And, at times, my wife has also sinned against God and me. It has been my experience, both in my own marriage and in the many I have counseled, that the real problem in marital conflict that must be dealt with is our sin against God.
The first married couple to experience conflict was Adam and Eve (see Genesis 3). Satan tempted Eve to disobey God. Eve disobeyed God and tempted Adam to do likewise. Adam was drawn into Eve’s sin and chose to disobey God. Adam then sinned against Eve by blaming her for his sin. Sin complicated everything. Their sinful actions and reactions to sin created conflict in their marriage. Their sin against God both wronged one another and hurt one another. And if they had not first sinned against God they would have never sinned against each other. Oh, how you and I need to understand this.
Since the very first marriage this principle of sin has been at work destroying unity and stealing closeness in all marriages – including yours and mine. We sin against God before we sin against our spouse. We offend God before we hurt our spouse. Sin against God always precedes sin against others. This is why the greatest command in the Bible is actually one and the same – “Love God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength” and “Love your neighbor as yourself”. This is why our greatest need in our marriage is an improved relationship with God.
Since 2003, as director of Lowcountry Biblical Counseling Center, I have had the unfortunate experience of witnessing many ways that spouse’s sin against each other. On the other hand, I have also been blessed to see many of those typical patterns of sin change because each spouse was humble enough to see and focus on their need for change more than their spouse’s need for change. That’s humble.
At the following link you will find some typical ways married couples sin against one another: Common Areas of Sin in Marriage & Change Journal. (See the Counselor Resource Center for all our assignments)I have broken these common sins down into six main categories. Seek to be humble enough before the Lord to see your own sin.The first step in successful marriage counseling, the kind that will positively affect unity and avoid destruction, requires at least one person to accurately assess and acknowledge specific sins against their spouse and then be motivated to change because this sin is sin against God.
May the Lord help each of us to build our marriages and help other marriages build (and in some cases rebuild) in a God-centered manner. May He give us grace to to see our root problems as first of all a problem in our relationship with God \”with whom we have to do\” (Hebrews 4:13). We need a growing love and respect for God leading to a growing love and respect for the spouse He has given us.