Wednesday, November 30, 2011

DAY 1..........

Love is patient
Be completely humble and gentle; be patient,
bearing with one another in love. —Ephesians 4:2 NIV
Love works. It is life’s most powerful motivator and has far greater depth and meaning than most people realize. It always does what is best for others and can empower us to face the greatest of problems. We are born with a lifelong thirst for love. Our hearts desperately need it like our lungs need oxygen. Love changes our motivation for living. Relationships become meaningful with it. No marriage is successful without it.
Love is built on two pillars that best define what it is. Those pillars are patience and kindness. All other characteristics of love are extensions of these two attributes. And that’s where your dare will begin. With patience.
Love will inspire you to become a patient person. When you choose to be patient, you respond in a positive way to a negative situation. You are slow to anger. You choose to have a long fuse instead of a quick temper. Rather than being restless and demanding, love helps you settle down and begin extending mercy to those around you. Patience brings an internal calm during an external storm.
No one likes to be around an impatient person. It causes you to overreact in angry, foolish, and regrettable ways. The irony of anger toward a wrongful action is that it spawns new wrongs of its own. Anger almost never makes things better. In fact, it usually generates additional problems. But patience stops problems in their tracks. More than biting your lip, more than clapping a hand over your mouth, patience is a deep breath. It clears the air. It stops foolishness from whipping its scorpion tail all over the room. It is a choice to control your emotions rather than allowing your emotions to control you, and shows discretion instead of returning evil for evil.
If your spouse offends you, do you quickly retaliate, or do you stay under control? Do you find that anger is your emotional default when treated unfairly? If so, you are spreading poison rather than medicine.
Anger is usually caused when the strong desire for something is mixed with disappointment or grief. You don’t get what you want and you start heating up inside. It is often an emotional reaction that flows out of our own selfishness, foolishness, or evil motives.
Patience, however, makes us wise. It doesn’t rush to judgment but listens to what the other person is saying. Patience stands in the doorway where anger is clawing to burst in, but waits to see the whole picture before passing judgment. The Bible says, “He who is slow to anger has great understanding, but he who is quick-tempered exalts folly” (Proverbs 14:29).
As sure as a lack of patience will turn your home into a war zone, the practice of patience will foster peace and quiet. “A hot-tempered man stirs up strife, but the slow to anger calms a dispute” (Proverbs 15:18). Statements like these from the Bible book of Proverbs are clear principles with timeless relevance. Patience is where love meets wisdom. And every marriage needs that combination to stay healthy.
Patience helps you give your spouse permission to be human. It understands that everyone fails. When a mistake is made, it chooses to give them more time than they deserve to correct it. It gives you the ability to hold on during the tough times in your relationship rather than bailing out under the pressure.
But can your spouse count on having a patient wife or husband to deal with? Can she know that locking her keys in the car will be met by your understanding rather than a demeaning lecture that makes her feel like a child? Can he know that cheering during the last seconds of a football game won’t invite a loud-mouthed laundry list of ways he should be spending his time? It turns out that few people are as hard to live with as an impatient person.
What would the tone and volume of your home be like if you tried this biblical approach: “See that no one repays another with evil for evil, but always seek after that which is good for one another” (1 Thessalonians 5:15).
Few of us do patience very well, and none of us do it naturally. But wise men and women will pursue it as an essential ingredient to their marriage relationships. That’s a good starting point to demonstrate true love.
This Love Dare journey is a process, and the first thing you must resolve to possess is patience. Think of it as a marathon, not a sprint. But it’s a race worth running.
Today's Dare
The first part of this dare is fairly
simple. Although love is communicated
in a number of ways, our words often
reflect the condition of our heart. For
the next day, resolve to demonstrate
patience and to say nothing negative
to your spouse at all. If the temptation
arises, choose not to say anything. It’s
better to hold your tongue than to say
something you’ll regret.




Tomorrow our COMMITMENT to THE LOVE DARE begins!!!!!

I will post our DAY ONE LATE tonight!!!  The reason I want to jump start it tonight is so that we wake up with a FRESH MIND and are INTENTIONAL from the time we place our feet on the ground!!!!

We can go to bed with prayer about our LOVE DARE for the next day and I think we will have a better chance of focusing!!

So, every night be on the lookout for your NEXT DAY DARE!!!!!

Invite your friends....everyone can  join even if they don't have the book.  I will have the entire dare on the BLOG and they can just follow along in a notebook if they prefer!!!

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Our efforts will prevent our lives from getting into a rut.....

Rut Busters....

Come, my beloved, let us go out into the country... . There I will give you my love.
Song of Solomon 7:11-12

I don't know what "routine" means to you, but this was ours when the kids were still at home:
Up before sunrise, have a few words together, maybe enjoy a little breakfast or a cup of coffee, exchange a kiss on the cheek and it's goodbye for the day.
I take kids to school and then drive on to the office, while Barbara stays home to get busy with her own work. She deals with endless issues involving the children--school, laundry, chores, errands, doctors and conflicts. Meanwhile, I juggle budgets and meetings and problem solving all day long.
Our paths cross again around 6 P.M., after both of us have emptied about 90 percent of our tanks. We take a glance at the news, eat dinner, flip through the mail, pay some bills, clean up the dishes, help with school work. Then an hour of getting the kids to bed. Barbara tries to get in some reading before sleep overtakes her.
That's the drill.
But there is no imagination in that. I'm not saying that a typical day can routinely accommodate wild swings of adventure, but I'll tell you this (if you haven't noticed already): A routine is just a few letters away from being shortened to a rut. A rut you will never escape unless you make a deliberate effort to do so. And I guarantee that your "rut" will never be on the same page as "romance" in your marital dictionary.
When the TV show Desperate Housewives first began its iconic rise into our national awareness, Newsweek did a feature article on the phenomenon. I remember one of the women who was interviewed lamenting, "Don't you remember the time when he kissed you with a kiss that launched a thousand kisses?"
Is there ever room for that in the middle of your routine?
Discuss
Ready to spice up the routine? How would you do it if you could? (You can, you know.)
Pray
Ask the Creator for a delightful dose of His creativity to give you a break from the routine.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Prepare ourselves for this journey...

Some of you may be ordering your studies to get started on this journey and as you wait maybe think of how long it has been since you watched the movie???  I plan to watch this again before we start THE LOVE DARE!!!!  If you can watch it with your spouse GREAT!!!!

I can't wait to get started....I pray that our group can hold eachother up through the tougher times and that we will feel God changing our relationships!!! 
Are you ready???

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Will you commit with me.....

Coming from a broken home, often times I forget I need to focus more on my spouse.  I need to work on what God has blessed me with.  Our marriage is wonderful, but as my husband says "It could be so much more"!!!!  So, I decided to pull out the book that I have had for three years and start this journey and COMMIT to the LOVE DARE......it is my hope that you will join me as I make a commitment to WORK on what I have been blessed with.  It isn't a time to give up, it is a time to GET IN and GET BUSY.  As we fill our lives with activities and commitments we forget about the MOST IMPORTANT COMMITMENTS we have and that is to GOD and our SPOUSE. 
I am a mother of four small children and without my husband I wouldn't have those precious children and without my effort to make him happy I will create a undesirable place that he may decide isn't so fun to come home to.  Do you think that if we focus on what is the most important to GOD that he will bless us abuntantly??  Do you think HE will bless us for loving and focusing on what HE has already given us???  I believe he will.......

Are you with me??  This isn't hard but it takes commitment and INTENTION!!!!  We are commited and intentional to other areas in our lives so lets learn to make a slight shift and use that energy where it will benefit us most...RIGHT IN OUR OWN HOMES!!!!!