Keep it Fresh

How many of your original wedding gifts are still around? If you were married only recently, you probably still have all of them—and perhaps a closet full of duplicates yet to be exchanged. Many of these gifts, the very things you wished and hoped for haven’t even been used.

Photo from Pixabay

Photo from Pixabay

If you have been married for ten years or so, you are likely missing several things from your original cache of wedding gifts. A few pieces of your good china probably bit the dust—broken by you or one of the kids. Your first set of towels and linens is now threadbare and consigned to the rag bag. Your wedding toaster finally crackled, zapped, and gave up the ghost. Except perhaps for a few expensive items, your surviving wedding gifts are worth a mere fraction of their original value.

And for those of you who, like us, have more than 40 years of marriage under your belts, you may have to search a bit to locate some of those gifts. You can put your finger on a few important things but a lot of them are long gone. Worn out or broken, some gifts have been discarded. Your tastes changed over the years, so several items were dispatched via garage sales or trips to the thrift store. And when the kids moved out, you sent with them some stuff that you no longer use.

Bottom line: No matter how we try to prevent it, new things become old, stuff breaks down and deteriorates, and our physical bodies age. Decay is normal. This old world of ours is slowly winding down and falling apart. In fact, scientists tell us that everything in the universe is perpetually moving to greater and greater disorder—a state of entropy. Your best china will eventually turn to worthless dust. Your expensive new car will need expensive new replacement parts in a few years just to stay running. Your physically fit body will someday require supplements, therapy, glasses, or maybe even a pacemaker to keep you functioning efficiently. And even the modern marvels of medical science can only postpone the inevitable final breakdown of death.

Before you lapse into a blue funk, let us share with you the good news. Some things have the capacity to break the sentence of entropy hanging over the physical creation. No, we’re not gearing up to sell you a bottle of snake oil or magic elixir guaranteed to reverse the aging process or eliminate gray hair or baldness. We’re talking about things that transcend the physical world. We’re talking about spiritual things.

As the apostle Paul suggests in 2 Corinthians 3:18, when you allow the Holy Spirit to do his work in your life, you are being renewed spiritually. So as you slowly grow older, weaker, and less agile physically, you can become more mature, stronger, and more agile spiritually. As your body ages and you look less and less like your old, youthful self, you can be more and more like the new you, who is being formed in the image of Christ. Think about it: On the day your physical strength runs out and you breathe your last, you should be just peaking spiritually, fit and ready for all the adventures of eternity with Jesus!

We happen to think this principle has a parallel in marriage. Why? Because, at the core, your marriage is a spiritual union ordained and blessed by God. Your special, God-blessed relationship with your spouse doesn’t have to grow old and wear out—even though the two of you may look and feel a little older every year. The magnetism that drew you together doesn’t have to diminish; it can even grow stronger. The warmth of passion that bonded your hearts at the altar is not destined to cool; it can and should burn even hotter. Your bodies may grow more decrepit with time, but your hearts don’t have to.

God’s version of married love is like a potted plant. Unlike a bouquet of cut flowers, which after a few days dries up and crumbles, a potted plant is alive. It can bloom again and again. What we all need is a love that allows our relationship to grow continually and blossom repeatedly. We call this facet of love renewing love.

But beware: Unless a marriage is purposely kept fresh and nurtured, it will become as worthless as that old toaster that vaporized before your tenth anniversary. Marriage is a dynamic love relationship between a man and a woman, a relationship that is either growing deeper and richer, or stagnating and decaying. Your marriage doesn’t have to wear out or break down, but it takes initiative and effort to reverse the process of entropy.

The real heart of renewing love is a commitment to never stop growing together. It’s an ongoing promise to love to the utmost of your ability—and to never leave. It’s a commitment sealed by the unbreakable bond God formed between you and your spouse when you made that one-of-a-kind promise. It’s a living commitment powered by God.

Just as you grow deeper spiritually by welcoming and participating with the work of the Spirit in your heart, you grow deeper as a couple by welcoming and participating with the Spirit in your relationship. Renewing love works— if you work at it together.

*For more helpful insights on how to connect with your spouse, check out Renewing Your Love: Devotions for Couples in our online bookstore.