Marriage as a Lifetime of Suffering

This article first appeared in 2015. I have thought it worth re-publishing in honor of mine and my wife’s celebration of 50 years of marriage, joined this past weekend by my children and grandchildren and a host of friends. The service (a molieben with additional prayers appropriate to the occasion) had many of the prayers from the wedding service, with changes as needed. It’s very different to look at marriage from the vantage point of 50 years versus the wedding day of youth. My beloved wife lovingly tolerates my description of marriage as a “lifetime of suffering.” The priest who presided at this service for us quoted liberally from this article. I can only pray for the many marriages out there – that whatever you endure in this sacramental life will abound to your salvation and the salvation of all around you. I would eagerly do it again and again! God grant you many years!

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When couples come to ministers to talk about their marriage ceremonies, ministers think it’s interesting to ask if they love one another. What a stupid question! How would they know? A Christian marriage isn’t about whether you’re in love. Christian marriage is giving you the practice of fidelity over a lifetime in which you can look back upon the marriage and call it love. It is a hard discipline over many years. – Stanley Hauerwas

No issues in the modern world seem to be pressing the Church with as much force as those surrounding sex and marriage. The so-called Sexual Revolution has, for the most part, succeeded in radically changing how our culture understands both matters. Drawing from a highly selective (and sometimes contradictory) set of political, sociological and scientific arguments, opponents of the Christian tradition are pressing the case for radical reform with an abandon that bears all of the hallmarks of a revolution. And they have moved into the ascendancy.

Those manning the barricades describe themselves as “defending marriage.” That is a deep inaccuracy: marriage, as an institution, was surrendered quite some time ago. Today’s battles are not about marriage but simply about dividing the spoils of its destruction. It is too late to defend marriage. Rather than being defended, marriage needs to be taught and lived. The Church needs to be willing to become the place where that teaching occurs as well as the place that can sustain couples in the struggle required to live it. Fortunately, the spiritual inheritance of the Church has gifted it with all of the tools necessary for that task. It lacks only people who are willing to take up the struggle.

Marriage laws were once the legal framework of a Christian culture. Despite the ravages of the Enlightenment and Reformation, the general framework of marriage remained untouched. The Church, in many lands, particularly those of English legal tradition, acted as an arm of the State while the State acted to uphold the Christian ideal of marriage. As Hauerwas noted in the opening quote, marriage as an institution was never traditionally about romantic love: it was about fidelity, stability, paternity and duty towards family. The traditional Western marriage rite never asked a couple, “Do you love him?” It simply asked, “Do you promise to love?” That simple promise was only one of a number of things:

WILT thou have this woman to thy wedded wife, to live together after God’s ordinance in the holy estate of Matrimony? Wilt thou love her, comfort her, honor, and keep her, in sickness, and in health? And forsaking all others, keep thee only to her, so long as you both shall live?

And this:

I N. take thee N. to my wedded wife, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness, and in health, to love and to cherish, until we are parted by death; according to God’s holy ordinance, and thereto I plight thee my troth.

Obviously, the primary intent of these promises was faithfulness in all circumstances over the course of an entire lifetime. The laws that surrounded marriage existed to enforce this promise and sought to make it difficult to do otherwise.

Divorce was difficult to obtain – long waiting periods were required and very specific conditions had to be met for one to be granted. Churches made remarriage quite difficult, to say the least. Obligations to children were very well-defined and grounded in parental (biological) rights and obligations. Indeed, there was a large complex of family laws that tilted the culture towards marriage at every turn.

Of course, none of this would have represented any benefit had it not also reflected a cultural consensus. Contrary to popular sayings, morality can indeed be legislated (laws do almost nothing else). But moral laws are simply experienced as oppression if they do not generally agree with the moral consensus of a culture. The laws upholding marriage were themselves a cultural consensus: people felt these laws to be inherently correct.

Parenthetically, it must be stated as well that the laws governing marriage and property were often tilted against women – that is a matter that I will not address in this present article.

The moral consensus governing marriage began to dissolve primarily in the Post-World War II era in Western cultures. There are many causes that contributed to this breakdown. My favorite culprit is the rapid rise in mobility (particularly in America) that destroyed the stability of the extended family and atomized family life.

The first major legal blow to this traditional arrangement was the enactment of “no-fault” divorce laws, in which no reasons needed to be given for a divorce. It is worth noting that these were first enacted in Russia in early 1918, shortly after the Bolshevik Revolution. The purpose (as stated in Wikipedia) was to “revolutionize society at every level.” That experiment later met with significant revisions.  The first state to enact such laws in the U.S. was California, which did not do so until 1969. Such laws have since become normative across the country.

These changes in marriage law have been accompanied by an evolution in the cultural meaning of marriage. From the earlier bond of a virtually indissoluble union, marriage has morphed into a contractual agreement between two persons for their own self-defined ends. According to a 2002 study, by age 44, roughly 95 percent of all American adults have had pre-marital sex. For all intents, we may say that virtually all Americans, by mid-life, have had sex outside of marriage.

These are clear reasons for understanding that “defense of marriage” is simply too late. The Tradition has become passé. But none of this says that the Tradition is wrong or in any way incorrect.

Of course, there are many “remnants” of traditional Christian marriage. Most people still imagine that marriage will be for a life-time, though they worry that somehow they may not be so lucky themselves. Pre-nuptial agreements are primarily tools of the rich. But all of the sentiments surrounding life-long commitments are just that – sentiments. They are not grounded in the most obvious reasons for life-long relationships. Rather, they belong to the genre of fairy tales: “living happily ever after.”

The classical Christian marriage belongs to the genre of martyrdom. It is a commitment to death. As Hauerwas notes: faithfulness over the course of a life-time defines what it means to “love” someone. At the end of a faithful life, we may say of someone, “He loved his wife.” 

Some have begun to write about the so-called “Benedict Option,” a notion first introduced by Alasdair MacIntyre in his book, After Virtue. It compares the contemporary situation to that of the collapse of the Roman Christian Imperium in the West (i.e., the Dark Ages). Christian civilization, MacIntyre notes, was not rebuilt through a major conquering or legislating force, but through the patient endurance of small monastic communities and surrounding Christian villages. That pattern marked the spread of Christian civilization for many centuries in many places, both East and West.

It would seem clear that a legislative option has long been a moot point. When 95 percent of the population is engaging in sex outside of marriage (at some point) no legislation of a traditional sort is likely to make a difference. The greater question is whether such a cultural tidal wave will inundate the Church’s teaching or render it inert – a canonical witness to a by-gone time, acknowledged perhaps in confession but irrelevant to daily choices (this is already true in many places).

The “Benedict Option” can only be judged over the course of centuries, doubtless to the dismay of our impatient age. But, as noted, those things required are already largely in place. The marriage rite (in those Churches who refuse the present errors) remains committed to the life-long union of a man and a woman with clearly stated goals of fidelity. The canon laws supporting such marriages remain intact. Lacking is sufficient teaching and formation in the virtues required to live the martyrdom of marriage.

Modern culture has emphasized suffering as undesirable and an object to be remedied. Our resources are devoted to the ending of suffering and not to its endurance. Of course, the abiding myth of Modernity is that suffering can be eliminated. This is neither true nor desirable.

Virtues of patience, endurance, sacrifice, selflessness, generosity, kindness, steadfastness, loyalty, and other such qualities are impossible without the presence of suffering. The Christian faith does not disparage the relief of suffering, but neither does it make it definitive for the acquisition of virtue. Christ is quite clear that all will suffer.  It is pretty much the case that no good thing comes about in human society except through the voluntary suffering of some person or persons. The goodness in our lives is rooted in the grace of heroic actions.

In the absence of stable, life-long, self-sacrificing marriages, all discussion of sex and sexuality is reduced to abstractions. An eloquent case for traditional families is currently being made by the chaos and dysfunction set in motion by their absence. No amount of legislation or social programs will succeed in replacing the most natural of human traditions. The social corrosion represented by our over-populated prisons, births outside of marriage (over 40 percent in the general population and over 70 percent among non-Hispanic African Americans), and similar phenomenon continue to predict a breakdown of civility on the most fundamental level. We passed into the “Dark Ages” some time ago. The “Benedict Option” is already in place. It is in your parish and in your marriage. Every day you endure and succeed in a faithful union to your spouse and children is a heroic act of grace-filled living.

We are not promised that the Option will be successful as a civilizational cure. Such things are in the hands of God. But we should have no doubt about the Modern Project going on around us. It is not building a Brave New World. It is merely destroying the old one and letting its children roam amid the ruins.

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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60 responses to “Marriage as a Lifetime of Suffering”

  1. Glennis Moriarty Avatar
    Glennis Moriarty

    Thank you Father Freeman.
    I don’t think you mentioned that with a sacramental marriage one or other or both can freely ask for – and receive – God’s help in their ‘suffering’. That makes so much difference, as we both experienced along the way of our 40/years of marriage.

  2. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    Happy anniversary, Father!

    Thank you for this timely repost. My former husband was married today — daughter is with him, out of state — I’m 38 years old and have known him for 33 years. We’ve been separated for 9 now. Please pray for David’s happiness in his new marriage!

  3. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Glennis,
    There’s so much that I didn’t mention…for sure. The nature of a sacramental (particularly in the sacrament of marriage) is that all that we do, ideally, we do in union with Christ. In the Western rite of marriage, traditionally, there was the phrase, “for richer, for poorer, for better, for worse, in sickness and in health…to death do us part.” I think it’s easy to imagine that these were just matters of good versus bad fortune. In truth, just finding yourself in a bad mood, but choosing to be kind is a form of virtuous suffering. Love is “laying down one’s life for a friend.” In my years of marriage, it has been the quiet crucible of learning to lean into kindness, gentleness, meekness, and such things – and a whole lot of patience required of us both. I was not very good at all that to start with. These days I have to say that I wish I had known from the start how wonderful things are at this point – but I don’t think that’s really possible – you have to live through stuff to get here – but I’m deeply grateful. Deeply.

    May God continue to bless you in your marriage!

  4. Gretchen Joanna Avatar

    Happy Anniversary, Fr. Stephen and Matushka! I can tell by your smiles that the suffering has been good for you both. Many Years!!

  5. Leah Kirchoff Avatar
    Leah Kirchoff

    Congratulations on your 50th anniversary!! Many years!!

  6. Konstantinos Rozakis Avatar
    Konstantinos Rozakis

    Happy Anniversary, Fr. Stephen!

    Thank you for this helpful piece of writing. Regarding the fact that “the laws governing marriage and property were often tilted against women”, let me say this: not against women, but tailored to men who bear the responsibility of defending the land with their blood. Property rights are not a privilege, but an honourable burden for men to carry.

  7. Deborah Thieme Avatar
    Deborah Thieme

    “Lacking is sufficient teaching and formation in the virtues required to live the martyrdom of marriage.“ I was chatting with a schoolteacher the other day at church. She lamented how difficult it has become to teach kids with “TicTok attention spans.” So how in the world can we teach patience to people who may have never seen it in action?
    We celebrated 52 years of marriage this year. It had its rough spots, especially in the beginning. We have two children who have each been married to their one and only spouse for over 25 years. When we started out, we were completely clueless. I think the parents silently gave us six months. We just get up every day and do our best. Glory to God for all things! No way we would have made it without Him and the example of my parents (69 years, until death) . I can only hope that our little lamps can shed a glimmer of light to those around us.

  8. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    So happy for you both!

    Congrats!

  9. Colin Reeve Avatar
    Colin Reeve

    Father, I feel a deep sense of shame at the ending ( not by my choice at all) of our 38 year Christian marriage. I pray for a miracle but 2 years later still nothing. Please pray for me x

  10. Andrew R. Avatar
    Andrew R.

    Happy 50th anniversary to you Father and Matushka Freeman.

  11. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Konstantine,
    That’s an interesting read on history – but I stand by my take on the topic.

  12. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Deborah,
    We seem to have a habit of doing things to children without thinking about the consequences – particularly if it’ll make money. I am seeing a quiet refusal to go along with many of these things (usually in the private sphere – rather than the public schools). Nevertheless, if marriage is a lifetime of suffering, raising children is even harder (though also among the sweetest things). Love (in the Christian sense) is victorious – but slow. What great examples in your family. My parents were married 66 years – there were times as a child I wished they’d divorce – but that’s the suffering of being a child – which deserves its own article. Nevertheless, they endured, I changed my mind, and I see clearly how their marriage was salvific.

  13. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Colin,
    That’s is indeed a hard thing to bear. May God give you grace to offer it to Him and to let love endure – in whatever circumstances.

  14. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    Many more years to you and your Presvytera, Father!

    As a divorced person this article made me aware of my shame, both healthy and toxic. I think it’s because like the word shame, the word suffering might have both a healthy and a toxic version. Healthy suffering in a marriage leads to salvation; toxic suffering along with lots of misunderstanding and superficial prescriptive remedies does not. And like shame, it’s very confusing sometimes to differentiate healthy from toxic suffering.

  15. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Helen,
    This is a tremendous insight – and spot on!

  16. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    I appreciate that confirmation, Father. It certainly impacted me this way. I think this might be why as a culture at large, and perhaps even within some Orthodox communities we avoid both shame and suffering.

    Perhaps another book topic for you? 🙂

  17. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Helen,
    I think that one of the things that separates our culture of the present from that of the past is our ability to deal with suffering. As modernity creates more and more tools to alleviate certain forms of suffering, and creates ever greater ways of entertaining us, our expectations for suffering have changed. Disappointment is one of the sub-categories of shame. Oddly, it has been my observation that our culture tends to magnify the “successful” (it’s what’s being sold to us), even though most people never quite get there. It is for just such people that I write.

    My parents’ generation was one of the last to have something of a built-in expectation that life was hard. They were born in 1924 and endured the Great Depression, WWII, etc. Both were picking cotton so soon as they could drag a sack. My mother was one of 12, my Dad, one of 5.

    Generations prior to them were pre-antibiotics, etc. Many children never survived childhood. And so on.

    That toxic shame can be healed (it’s hard and takes time). It requires lots of love and lots of understanding and support. Many people never find either of those. I’ve been extremely fortunate – my wife has been a healing tonic for me for more than 50 years. I understand that I have been particularly blessed.

    My in-laws were dear saints. When my wife was born, they told me, they began to pray for whomever she was to marry. I later realized that she brought with her the priceless dowry of 21 years’ worth of saints prayers for me. In that my own family was not given to prayer, I can see in hindsight how powerful her parents’ prayers were.

    I often think of St. Paul. Ananias the prophet who Baptized him was concerned (since he knew that Paul had been an enemy of Christians). But the Lord said to Ananias, “Go! This man is my chosen instrument to proclaim my name to the Gentiles and their kings and to the people of Israel. I will show him how much he must suffer for my name.”

    I think few of us would want to have such a vision of our life. But all of us suffer. God bears our shame even as we bear His.

  18. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    Indeed, they say marriage is about love, but I’m not sure any of us really know what love is. What we usually know is the rush of chemistry or the dream of what might be. It might be captivatingly beautiful, but that’s not love. True love is born through endurance, through faithfulness, through staying when you want to run, and bearing with another when your selfishness demands them to bear with you instead.
    If marriage is truly a path to holiness rather than just a way to feel happy, then it isn’t about getting what you want but about dying to self, learning to love as God loves steadily, sacrificially, without demand. It’s a school that introduces one to divine love.
    And the heart of that lesson is fidelity, the quiet refusal of self-gratification and willingness to suffer love until the heart, once consumed by its own fleeting desires, becomes a fire of otherwordly stability.

  19. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much for those thoughts about love and marriage Dino.

  20. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    The Beatitudes were not a “motivational speech” with promises of a better life and a way to avoid suffering. But I think we forget this, even in the church. Or we don’t know what this means and our culture pulls us even further away.

    One of the things I remember hearing from a well-meaning (Orthodox) friend in the context of my getting a divorce was that “God wants you to be happy”. She understood very well the dynamics of my marriage and I know was trying to comfort me, and yet, “God wants you to be happy” felt a little off.

  21. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen wrote:

    “But moral laws are simply experienced as oppression if they do not generally agree with the moral consensus of a culture. The laws upholding marriage were themselves a cultural consensus: people felt these laws to be inherently correct.”

    I´m wondering, Fr.. Stephen, what does all this mean for the unmoral Christian? Should Christians be mainly about supporting laws that reflect morals which are regarded as inherently correct? I agree with what the Church has traditionally taught regarding sexuality and gender and basic morality, but I also cringe at the thought of living in a Handmaid´s Tale reality or even under circumstances which mimic those of Victorian England´s moral society as an example.

    I would much rather (I think) concentrate on the inward journey, which at present I am not doing a very good job of!

  22. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    Who knows the difference between good suffering and bad suffering? Perhaps God knows…

    I think it’s a noble goal to keep our family first and forever, our oldest friends as long as possible, etc. — to maintain connection with everyone, but especially through time.

    St Paul describes how Christ saves materiality through the metaphor of marriage. Christ is the bridegroom, the Church is the bride. It’s kenosis. Marriage can be for children, but the language is really metaphorical… marriage can also look like the marriage between St John of Kronstadt and his Matushka, Elizabeth Constantinova. It can look like monasticism, with many people in community together.

    As long as we’re not alone, I think —
    and for those of us who are (very much of the time, in my case at least)
    I wonder frequently what it might be to fall in love with the lake, or the fields, or the sky. To begin with forgiveness there, some sort of reparation, some sort of patient flirtation or playfulness that might help me to see life that greets me everywhere I go.

    I don’t know, but thank you all for bearing patiently with me as we try to approach love together <3

  23. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dino,
    “the fire of otherworldly stability…” I think you’ve become a poet today. Thank you.

  24. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Helen,
    “To be happy…” I often remember that the word “happy” is connected to the word, “happen.” And there are meditations that follow…

  25. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    There was never a world of the “Handmaids Tale.” It’s a dark and bitter fantasy. But, we people are social beings as well as individuals. It is easier to “be good” if you are surrounded by a good community (relatively). The less this is true, the more heroic virtue becomes.

  26. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Michelle,
    I think that grace alone can make suffering to be good. May God give us all grace!

  27. Ilya Sterie Avatar
    Ilya Sterie

    “Parenthetically, it must be stated as well that the laws governing marriage and property were often tilted against women – that is a matter that I will not address in this present article.”

    Father, I’m afraid this has been and still is at the very basis of problematic marriage, the disrespect with which men have treated women – a society’s and family problem! – because they do not quantify a woman’s work in money, it’s just been “expected”. And more recently, women can afford to divorce. Of course, nobody benefits. Isn’t it time though for a revolution in men’s attitude? Humility, love, understanding, care… where are these? An angry woman is just brushed aside as hysterical or demanding because she is too fed up? Too often, men put the cart before the horse: the woman must obey the man – sure, but does he love her? ‘Cause that’s the order it’s spelled in the Bible, isn’t it – he needs to love her, and she needs to follow him. Not the other way around regardless of how he treats her.

    I married an Orthodox man who goes to church, reads the Psalms daily, is calm, “responsible”, and thus perceived as a model guy. He provides for us, his family. But he never wants to talk when there’s an issue, he never takes responsibility for emotional damage because he is emotionally immature, he never says sorry, he never hugs me when I’m upset, he never admits the financial part which I’ve brought to our marriage and the fact that I gave up my career to raise our 3 children. He has quite literally destroyed my self-confidence and my Orthodox priest tells me I must suck it up. Believe me when I say I sometimes raise my eyes to Christ’s icon and cry: where are the men?

  28. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    Big hugs, Ilya!

  29. Margaret Avatar
    Margaret

    Beautiful conversation here in your blog article — I enjoyed this when originally posted also — and the conversation here in comments. I believe I am enjoying the “gap” between the fleeting desires my heart was once consumed with and the fire of otherworldly stability that Our Lord, the Lover of Mankind, is creating within my heart, as described at the end of Dino’s comment. God is good and the laying aside of myself is not happening without Him.
    I would like for Ilya to know: I understand your words. As your children get older and require less care, please give yourself a break and may find a womens monastery to spend a few days at or perhaps even a local charity where your contribution is acknowledged and appreciated often. It is not the same as getting appreciation and understanding from your husband, but God and His Mother are with you and they see your tears, even part of your tears.

  30. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Ilya,
    I pray that your husband grows in maturity – it can be difficult. If it is a suffering you can bear – your prayers will be for his salvation (including in this life) as well as your own. The truth is – our culture has been very poor at nurturing both men and women. I will say that I came from parents who, though well intentioned, had almost no “tools” in their emotional toolkit and hurt each other repeatedly.

    When I got married, I had good intentions, but, again, had learned no emotional tools. It was sort of bumpy the first few years – but with patience, honesty, love, and forgiveness, we taught each other – and that has been the work of decades.

    We are working with broken stones as we build this house of our salvation. Give thanks, always, especially for what virtues you see in your husband and ask for God to give him grace. Do the same for yourself.

    We’re not born knowing these things – we have to learn them – and we often learn them the hard way. May God give you grace!

  31. Ilya Sterie Avatar
    Ilya Sterie

    Thank you, Father, for your kind words and I want to thank the other commentators who offered support. While I fully understand not having emotional tools and all – trust me, I was born and raised in a countru of the former Soviet block, I know trauma and lack of resources! – I do have a big problem with a conceited discourse which doesn’t even recognize and denies the need of such tools. And I have zero sympathy for people who are willingly hurting others because they do not want to look at their own garbage. Forgiveness is one thing, continuing a relationship when the other doesn’t say sorry is quite another. There have been many marriages in history which ended in disaster, murder, depression, suicide. I have a hard time believing those marriages were a tool of salvation.

  32. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Ilya,
    There are marriages that end for a good reason – as tragic as that is. I do not mean to suggest that everything must be endured because it’s for our salvation. There is freedom in our lives – God does not make us into slaves. We endure as an act of love – not as an act that is forced upon us. If we cannot love – or what is being done to us is more than we can endure – then even a marriage can end. But all things are for our salvation – not because all things are good or because all things are ok – but because God is greater than all things and uses all things for our good – for our salvation (that slow transformation into the image of Christ). That was the meaning of my statement.

  33. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen said:

    “It is easier to “be good” if you are surrounded by a good community (relatively). The less this is true, the more heroic virtue becomes.”

    I´m not sure what this means Fr. Stephen. My comment was centered around the question of how much morality the Church should be teaching and commanding. We should be unmoral Christians … shouldn´t we?

  34. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    Dear Father,
    Many more loving years to you and your dear wife. Such indeed is a gift of grace. And such brings a light to those who live around you and read your blog.

    Blessings dear Father and Matushka!

  35. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    We frequently “speak” in moral terms – though the reality is better understood as a personal formation within us (rather than just a free-will keeping rules). To be “unmoral” (my terminology) means to have an understanding that is deeper than just rule-keeping. But, human beings are social creatures. A virtuous culture tends to form virtuous people – not because of the rules so much as because of the nature of what surrounds us.

    Saints, for example, tend to “cluster,” such as the family of St. Basil and St. Gregory of Nyssa. There’s around 6 or 7 saints in the family. Truth told, you could never produce that with rule-keeping.

  36. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dee,
    We have had far more blessings than we can count – I credit my wife’s prayers.

  37. Mallory Avatar
    Mallory

    First, congratulations on your beautiful marriage, Fr. Stephen!

    I have to note that this is, personally a parenthetical I can’t side-step. For me, a woman who chose to leave a marriage with a young child, the parenthetical is the whole: “Parenthetically, it must be stated as well that the laws governing marriage and property were often tilted against women – that is a matter that I will not address in this present article.”

    When I separated from my husband, so many told me “Oh, it will be so hard to be a single mother” etc etc–it’s almost a trope. It was a bit bumpy at first, but I am not the only former-wife and mother who finds I have so much more love and energy and time to give to my young daughter, and, crucially, myself than I did when I was married. It is not harder, it was harder before. There are studies that have come out recently that show that women who are single mothers are actually, contrary to stereotype, much happier than when they were in (presumably) toxic marriages. Marriage NEEDS to change, it can’t just be reintroduced and retaught the way it was before–it’s not just about being “happy” as everyone in the comments and your blog makes clear is not the point of life, fine, but a woman giving up everything to do an shocking amount of unpaid, unacknowledged, invisible labor at home, often in isolation since we don’t raise children in “villages” anymore, financially supported by a husband because someone needs to stay home with the baby is in most cases a recipe for disaster, as we can see around us…And unless you’ve lived it, from the woman’s perspective, that invisible labor 24/7 with small children, PLUS the expectation to be a “wife” in the traditional sense. Oh, my. Not all suffering is necessary. I know it sounds silly to point out, but many saints, Jesus himself, did not have to endure the “nuclear family” option–and I don’t think they would be able to stand it, many of them. Truly. Some people need solitude and a sense of freedom after 12 hours and an endless bedtime routine, or need to explore their gifts without being attached to someone. I am a better mother, a better person, because I am no longer navigating a difficult marriage. I have room to see my daughter and work on my childhood trauma to be better for her. Also, I’m lucky that the father of my child shows up every day, literally, to spend time with her, and we often have family outings, etc. It looks different, but everyone is happier, and I do think she benefits from the ease she feels between us (which admittedly took a few years)….

    Anyway, sorry for the long post, but I don’t want women to think there’s shame in getting a divorce, and that doing almost all of the housework (which is STILL the case) is fair or just necessary suffering. Often the people who say this is the ideal family way are the ones not in charge of the invisible labor and seeing their self-worth shrink by the years.

  38. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Mallory, my parenthetical (“Parenthetically, it must be stated as well that the laws governing marriage and property were often tilted against women – that is a matter that I will not address in this present article.”) was particularly included in the article lest anyone imagine that I was referring to some sort of ideal past practice. A difficulty in even daring to write on the topic is the unique circumstances of personalities and real-world settings that people have in their experience. That said – I appreciate your comment and thoughts.

    Modernity has not been designed with the family in mind: it has been designed to maximize profits and productivity. For example, the family as a working unit (cottage industry) in England that predated the industrial revolution, represented a whole family at work at everything, not the 1950’s model popularized by television and magazines – a tiny blip in history. Marriage and family have always been difficult – which is the point of my article. Sometimes it simply doesn’t work. Sometimes that failure is devastating – and, as you note in your own case – sometimes, the failure yields something better. There are no ideal paths in life. For a Christian, the Cross is descriptive of reality. We have to take up our Cross, whatever form and shape it may be (it’s not one size fits all). The nature of the Cross is, on some level, voluntary suffering that is an inherent part of love.

    All of us today live in a culture that cares nothing for our children, our marriages, or much else other than profits and productivity. If it puts half of us out of work with AI, it will not apologize but explain it to us as “progress.”

    We do not live in “villages,” as you note. We do well, however, to think carefully about how to remedy this on some level to some extent. We need each other – we are social creatures.

  39. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Fr. Stephen.

  40. Justin Avatar
    Justin

    Fr Stephen you wrote:

    “Marriage and family have always been difficult – which is the point of my article. Sometimes it simply doesn’t work. Sometimes that failure is devastating – and, as you note in your own case – sometimes, the failure yields something better. There are no ideal paths in life.”

    My dear wife and I are coming to this knowledge, quite literally as I type. No one ever, before we got married or had kids, told us such things. And we wouldn’t have listened if they did. We are reaping the devastation and trying to find a path forward. In the end, marriage and family are for the courageous, and my courage is sorely beaten down at the moment.

    All that is left is, “Lord, have mercy on me.”

  41. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Justin,
    One of the benefits in reading the lives of the saints (lots and lots of them), is to get a feel for how ceaselessly God works for our good despite everything, and in everything. To pray, “Lord, have mercy,” is to ask for His goodness despite our failures and our sins. I promise you His goodness exceeds all imagining.

  42. Jenny Avatar
    Jenny

    Father,

    My husband is faithful, intelligent, loving and hardworking. He has a master’s degree now. He is a loving father and his family is the heart and soul of his life. He loves God and prays to Him as a Father every night.

    But he also had as much trauma in his childhood as mine, from different sources. He also endured a rough first marriage, ending in betrayal.

    Additionally, during his military service, he had three tours overseas, two to Iraq, both in combat. In his first tour, his tank ran over an IED. Keith was blown through the open hatch- if it had been closed, he would have been killed instantly, and thrown several yards away. When he returned to consciousness, he went back to the tank to rescue his trapped driver. This was far from the worst thing that occurred over there.

    With this amount of trauma and PTSD in both partners, anyone can imagine the kind of difficulties we had to face in our marriage. When I was trying to learn what it meant to be a disciple of Christ, it was in the midst of these cycles of pain and trauma.

    During this time, my husband was the only person I had available to practice obedience to Christ’s words. I had no enemies, for example, so I was at a loss for how to love them. Then I realized when Keith was in the midst of PTSD, he certainly felt like an enemy.

    So I set myself to try and love my “enemy.”At first, I only remembered this goal after completely failing. I would go to the Lord afterwards in shame and misery and beg Him again for grace to keep His words.

    Then I was able to remember the goal, but unable to act on it because his PTSD triggered my PTSD (or visa versa) and I couldn’t control my emotions enough to act independently of them.

    Cue again misery and prayer, each time experiencing the compassion, mercy and forgiveness of Christ, which forged a strong bond of trust in me toward Him. I knew He was always seeing me at my worst and still loving me.

    Finally, after over a year of failing, I remembered what I was supposed to do and was able, after some intense internal wrestling, to act on it.

    Over years I learned to hold my tongue, and then I learned to use my words as a way of turning my other cheek- that is, to apologize and validate his feelings, even if mine weren’t recognized at the time. I learned to do good to and bless my “enemy” by trying always to make breakfast and coffee and otherwise serve him just the same, despite the fact that I was often seething inside. But I could vent to the Lord and trust all things to His justice and mercy.

    Not that I did these things perfectly or always. But the goal was there and I kept trying to get to it, because the more mercy and comfort Christ showed me in my weakness, the more I wished to express the love and gratitude I had for Him by obeying His words. Being nourished in this way, I could hold on no matter what happened in my outside life.

    One day early on in this learning, while enduring a PTSD storm, I lost control of my tongue and said something that I knew was the worst possible thing. The next day, Keith got a lawyer and prepared to file for divorce.

    Merissa was only two, and at first I was devastated. This was the worst possible failure.

    Then I began to warm up to the idea- so attractive to leave my difficult lessons of dying to myself to live for Christ, which I kept failing anyway, to return to New England and my family, live with my parents in their rambling old house and get a part time job. Merissa was young, she would adjust and maybe I would marry again.

    Several days had passed by then. I had asked my dad to fly down so he could help me drive a uhaul back home. Around that time I realized that I had been avoiding prayer and I had probably better ask the Lord His opinion on all this.

    I was learning to pray by the Lord’s Prayer, which previously I’d viewed as dry, dusty and simply for show, but Jesus had begun to teach me otherwise.

    So I began, “Our Father Who art in Heaven…” and immediately I knew that the Father didn’t just love me. He was the Heavenly Father, and Keith was His child too and He loved him like a son.

    “Hallowed be Thy name,” I went on, and immediately I knew it was wrong for me to just go along with things.

    So I prayed the Lord’s will be done on earth as it is in Heaven and I finished the prayer that way. But what could I do other than that? I had already done all I could to make amends.

    The next day when Keith came home from work, he actually made eye contact with me. He stayed in the living room to play with Merissa. He kept looking at me with this expression of puzzlement.

    “I don’t understand what happened,” he finally began, “but last night I went to bed with nothing but hate for you in my heart. No love at all. Then this morning I woke up, the hatred was gone and my heart is full of love for you. Nothing but love. I don’t want a divorce. I already told the lawyer.”

    I feel that many things in my life are failures, but I thank God with all my heart that He enabled me to weather these storms.

    Because Keith did not ask for the suffering of his childhood- to abandon Keith because of trauma in his childhood would be like abandoning myself for the same reason. And he suffered deeply for his fellow soldiers and his country and so it is too much to think that the wounds received by that should also destroy the heart of his life now.

    All the years of my twenties I was a faithless woman, unable to keep my word, moving from relationship to relationship each time it got difficult. These were people that I said I loved! But the declaration always meant nothing in the end. Thank God He did not leave me that way!

    Guess what arrived in the mail on Sunday? My icon. I opened the wrapping and there was Christ- humiliated, mocked, beaten and tortured and patiently enduring for love’s sake. I remembered with a sudden shock that it was called extreme humility.

    Looking at Christ, my heart prayed without words. I love that icon very much. I put Him up on the kitchen shelf while I worked.

    I remember reading that martyrdom was considered optional by the early Fathers- that they debated it. Perhaps the choice of whether to stay and die for Christ or run and to serve Christ in life must lie in the grace given in the heart of each person, which only Christ Himself can know.

    In His parables, people often are given different amounts, which I’m quite sure never reflects their worth or the love He has for them, but are for the sake of His overarching purposes, which mostly are hidden from us.

    Do you think so, Father? That is how I have come to understand it. Please add your wise caveats to this as necessary.

    Or as you wrote in a recent comment- “We have to take up our Cross, whatever form and shape it may be (it’s not one size fits all). The nature of the Cross is, on some level, voluntary suffering that is an inherent part of love.”

    That is why I rarely, if ever, share the testimonies of my marriage. I was given a great deal, and to whom much is given, much is required- and even in the requiring of that, it is Christ’s power at work within that enables that person to give what is required. The Lord taught me that at the beginning of His lessons, so that I would not be afraid.

    Better than all things is the love of Christ, and the knowledge of Him which comes through sharing in His suffering. Perhaps that is why St Paul could steadfastly go from city to city, knowing each time he would suffer for Christ:

    “I do this so that I may know him and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings, being conformed to his death, in the hope that in some way I may arrive at the resurrection from the dead.
    Not that I have already obtained this or have already reached the goal, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus also took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider myself to have taken hold of it yet, but there is one thing I do: Forgetting the things that are behind and straining toward the things that are ahead, I press on toward the goal, for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.”
    Romans 3:10-14

  43. Dana Ames Avatar
    Dana Ames

    Congratulations and Many Years, dear Father, to you & Mat. Beth. So grateful to God for you both!

    Dana

  44. Margaret Avatar
    Margaret

    Thank you for sharing Jenny

  45. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Jenny,
    Such a testimony to grace!

  46. Ook Avatar
    Ook

    Father, congratulations to both of you on the anniversary.
    I remember reading this article when it was first posted. Reading it again in 2025, through the prism of an added 10 years of life experience, is somehow a deeper experience. Not that I’m suggesting that I’ve matured or anything…

  47. Alan Avatar
    Alan

    Jenny, thank you for sharing that wonderful story!

    Father, thank you for the many insights you have shared in this blog post / comments.

    Thank you to everyone who have shared your stories. We’re all broken people. May God have mercy on us all.

  48. Drewster2000 Avatar
    Drewster2000

    Yes Jenny, thank you so much. Your story is a healing balm and inspiring testimony all wrapped into one.

    Thank you for continually saying yes to God.

  49. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    Kay,
    Suffering doesn’t exclude attraction, joy or love. Our temperament as feelings is never in one permanent state. However this doesn’t sanction toxic or destructive relationships., either.

  50. Jenny Avatar
    Jenny

    I agree with Dee and Father Stephen- my attraction to my husband was never an issue. He’s over six feet tall, blue eyed and copper haired and he has a mischievous smile. Add to that a military uniform and his job as tank commander when we met- which he was very competent at- and this all makes a very attractive picture.

    Also, I hope it went without saying, but Keith is not at all the same person he was when we married, no more than I am the same. The Lord has grown us up together. My respect and admiration for him has only grown with time, and he still has that mischievous grin. 🙂

  51. Mallory Avatar
    Mallory

    Thank you so much, Fr. Stephen.

  52. Joyce Mcwitt Avatar
    Joyce Mcwitt

    David Schnarch calls marriage a “crucible” – highly recommend his writing on marriage as a “person building institution”.

  53. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Thank you, Joyce. It should not surprise us (though it does) that the most important things are the things we’ve always had.

  54. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    I think generally speaking most of us want to maximize happiness and minimize suffering.

    That´s it.

    When confronted with something which interferes with that goal (like a difficult marriage) we want to run far away. Also, when confronted with a religious worldview which challenges the notion of personal happiness without borders, we too want to run far away.

  55. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Can you please delete the first (not the second) comment?

    Thanks.

  56. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Please delete the first comment, not the second one. Thanks!

  57. Janine Avatar
    Janine

    I’m sorry I haven’t read through all the comments, so I don’t know if someone has mentioned this, but the Bridegroom icon, icon of marriage, is the perfect illustration to accompany this article.

    https://damascenegallery.com/cdn/shop/files/christ-the-bridegroom-759.jpg?v=1725636278

  58. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Janine!

  59. Joanie Miller Avatar
    Joanie Miller

    I think a better title would be “ Marriage is a refining fire. “ I fell into a burning ring of fire lol Old Johnny Cash song. Only its not that kind of fire. Ive been married almost 38 years and without Christ we would not have gotten this far. I was thinking of young people contemplating marriage its also a joyful time. Thats why we dance at weddings. I agree with your reflection and hopefully a young person that sees your article will read it and not bypass it because of its title.

  60. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Joanie,
    Thanks for the thoughtful suggestion!

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