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Four Keys to Intimacy

From the series Experiencing God's Dream for Your Marriage

In this message, Chip reveals that there are four keys to cultivating intimacy in your marriage and they come straight out of the marriage handbook itself - the Bible, whether you’ve been married five months or fifty years.

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Message Transcript

Hearing God’s truth doesn’t bring change. Agreeing with God’s truth doesn’t bring change. Even agreeing that you need to change in what you’ve heard doesn’t bring change. Only one thing brings change. Acting on the truth.

When Jesus was preaching in John chapter 8 to a group of Jews, He says that to those Jews who had believed on Him, to those who abide in His word.

It’s a key word. Abide. Taking in the truth to put it into practice. He says to them, “You will know the truth and the truth will set you free.”

The fact is, most of us have learned, unconsciously, to traffic in truth. If I know it, if I agree with it, if I understand it, we get this small delusion into thinking, well, change is going to occur.

I want you to know, no change occurs until you put the truth into practice. And that’s what we’re going to do.

This is going to be one those – it is going to be so practical, it’s going to hurt. Okay? Very, very, I want to get to the practical, every day, what would it look like on Monday, what’s it going to look like next weekend? How are we going to do this together?

Because my experience is, that’s what you’re going to need if real change is going to occur.

I put together what I call the parable of the car to kind of give you an idea of how this is going to work and why it’s so important.

So this is a word picture, okay? I’m trying to get into your head, I’m trying to sneak around the corner to get you to really put some things into practice that you now know up here. But I just know, like, three days from now, your life’s going to be busy. I want to help you see how the change will occur and then give you some very practical steps.

Okay, I want you to pretend that you have a nephew. And he has been with your dear, beloved brother in the Amazon with his mom and dad, translating the Bible in the thicket of jungles and he probably speaks two or three tribal languages.

He’s never been to America. He’s learned some things, he doesn’t have a computer. His first exposure to Western civilization is they realize, that at about twenty, you know he probably needs to go to college and get an education.

And he’s very mature, in many ways, he’s a spiritual young man, he’s a godly young man. But he gets off the plane and he goes, “That big silver thing flew. This is wild.”

And he sees buildings and everything is brand new to him. Now, he’s heard about them and he’s seen some pictures but he’s never been here.

And so, you’re thinking to yourself, you better keep him kind of close. Why don’t we have him go to a community college, get him a good education and we’ll have him live here with us because my brother he ends up in one of those wild dorms.

You know, we’ll keep him at the house and so, you think to yourself, I do not want to get up every day and drive this kid to the community college.

And so you buy a pretty inexpensive second-hand car and you go out into a very big parking lot and you begin to teach him to drive. Okay?

And so you teach him the basics and he’s pretty athletic and so he picks it up pretty quickly. Scares you a little bit.

And you show him how the car works. You, kind of, get him moving a little bit. He learns just enough, goes down there, he’s a bright kid, passes his license.

And you do it once or twice together and then pretty soon you say, okay. Great. The fall semester starts, he gets in the car, he goes, and everything’s great for two weeks.

And then the other thing you informed him of is these magical little boxes that you can open up called cell phones.

And he carries one now and it buzzes and he opens it and he can talk to you anytime. In fact, he calls you at very odd times.

And so, now you get a call in the middle of a business meeting or maybe you’re home doing some things around the house.

And he says, “Uncle,” or “Aunt. The car you gave me doesn’t work anymore.” And he tells you, vaguely, where he is and you go down and you drive down and he’s right, it doesn’t work.

And you think to yourself, Now what’s wrong with this thing? You know, I had it all checked out by a mechanic and we got a problem here.

Well, what you find out is, it’s out of gas. And you say to him, “Well, why didn’t you put any gas in the car? And he says, “What’s gas?” “Oh, I know I should have told him about that.”

So, you sort of, okay. So he needs some fuel so you take him and you get the gas and you show him that every so often and here’s the dial, I really should have said something about. But he learns now.

And now for two, three, four months, things are going great. And then you get another phone call.

And this time he says, “Hey this car is making very, very funny smells and it’s very hot and there’s smoke coming out of the…I don’t know what’s wrong.”

And you say to him, “Well, when’s the last time you changed the oil?” And he says, “What’s the oil?”

And then you realize, oh brother, maintenance. I kinda skipped that one too. And you realize that hot moving parts need oil to keep things going in a good direction.

So you show him about that and how to change the oil and you go through that and everything’s fine and pretty soon he goes. His first year is just about over and he’s got about thirteen, fourteen months.

And then he calls you and he says, “[makes car noises]” And you hear this noise. “What’s that?” He says, “I don’t know, this car’s not working right, it’s making a really funny noise, it scares me.” And you say, “Well, when’s the last time you got it tuned up?” And he says, “What’s a tune up?” And you realize, “Oh…”

Are you getting the picture here? And so he takes it in and realizes you’ve got to tune it up and take care of things.

And then finally he has your confidence and he’s been there about eighteen months, he’s a good young man and he’s met this beautiful young woman but she’s in another city about seven hours drive.

And so he goes seven hours away and the highways it says I-75 and I-40 and I-this and he just thinks I don’t know what all these numbers mean but he gets there with someone else and then on the way back, he gets onto I-75 going the wrong direction and he lands somewhere about three or four hundred miles away from where he’s supposed to and doesn’t know how to get home and you get another call.

And you say to him, “You know, it wasn’t that expensive a car but did you plug in on the navigational system how to get home?”

He goes, “What’s the navigational system?” And you go, “Oh brother.”

Here’s the little parable. You know, you can have skill and you can know some basics but in marriage, it’s not about just getting started – fuel of commitment.

There’s going to be times, in your marriage, that things heat up. And so what you better find is you better learn the oil of communication.

And then, every marriage, I don’t care how good it is and you can set goals and work at things. There’s times where you’ve got to stop your marriage and get the marriage car off the road and get it into the shop and get some time away from everybody and have some nice walks and some good talks and some good food and reassess where you’ve been.

And you’ve got to tune up your marriage. And if you don’t do that on a regular basis, guess what. The same thing that happens to a marriage happens just like with the car.

And finally, you can be going in a marriage and be working and get so close to everything, you never ask yourself, what direction are we going as a couple?

It gets so focused on just us and our fulfillment and if you have kids, our kids and what are we doing here and there?

And so, all of a sudden, you drift, as a couple, and you wake up ten, twenty, twenty-five years and you realize that you never thought through. There was no navigational system about, what’s the mission? What’s our co-mission from God? Why are we here?

And what I want to give to you in just very, very practical ways with tools is to how to keep fuel of commitment in your marriage. How to oil it on a regular basis. How and why to take a tune-up. And then finally, how to lock in a navigational system that will set your car in alignment with what God wants do. Does that make sense?

So, see when you make up these stories, sometimes they make the point. They’re not all that interesting but you do the best you can.

But you’ve got a car called marriage. And it runs out of fuel quickly, doesn’t it? And it needs oil. Requires a tune-up. And you better know where you’re going.

So with that, open your notes with me and let’s dig in together. We’ve been through the parable of the car.

Most marriages do not work. This is how to make yours the exception. Most cars don’t run forever. But people who do these four things with their cars, they last a very, very long time.

And so, first, I want to talk about the fuel of commitment. The fuel of commitment. And the definition is a lifelong choice of unconditional love to an imperfect person. And circle the word “choice.”

The fuel. This is what keeps your marriage going. It’s not your feelings. That’s what you’re being told. Your feelings come, your feelings go.

The fuel of commitment is a lifelong choice. When you feel like it, when you don’t feel like it. Not to a wonderful, I love them all the time, they come through for me, person. But to an imperfect person.

Remember I said earlier? Love is giving to another person what they need the most when they deserve it the least at great personal cost.

And if there’s one thing I want you to get about the fuel of commitment, so many people give up on their marriage because they get love and infatuation confused. Love has nothing to do with feelings. Love is about choices.

Can I give you a biblical illustration? Final night on the earth. Jesus. He’s in the garden. Does Jesus love you? Yes or no? Yes. Did Jesus feel like going to the cross to pay the penalty for your sin? Yes or no? No.

In fact, so much so that here He is, on his knees and He’s praying. And He’s realizing, not simply that they’re going to stick thorns in His head. Not simply that He’s going to be drug through half naked. That’s He’s going to be humiliated by the people that He made and created and loved.

But there’s going to come a time where there’s going to be a separation from the Father, a cosmic division that has never occurred in all eternity as He would become your sin substitute.

And it’s so intense that He’s praying and He’s sweating like great drops of blood. And what does He pray? “Father, if there is a plan B that We haven’t thought of in the Godhead, let’s go with that one.”

Isn’t that really what He prayed? “I don’t want to do this. I don’t want to do this. I don’t want to do it. But. Nevertheless, not My will but Yours.”

That’s what it requires for the fuel of marriage. Love is a commitment that you make.

The mandate is Matthew 19:3 through 8. If you read it, you find that classic passage that most of you heard where Jesus is asked about divorce and remarriage and He says, “What God has brought together, let not anyone pull apart or pull asunder.”

The word “divorce” has never been used in our home, I have a friend who actually took a dictionary and cut it out of the dictionary.

Because the moment there is an option, how you process your problems changes a hundred percent. Love is a choice.

You know what? I’m ashamed to admit this but I’ll admit it. Have there been times that our marriage has been so difficult, so painful, so frustrating, if I could just get out, legally, before God, would I? Absolutely.

That’s how big our problems were. There’s times I felt so angry and so frustrated and, like, no amount of work can ever fix this.

But I chose to stay in my marriage. Man I’m glad I did.

Because most of us bail out of a very hard situation and we think it’s going to get better and it doesn’t.

The greatest thing you can ever do. You know, God wants to change your life through this process and what you have signed up, you’ve signed up for the spiritual NFL. And I’ve never seen an NFL running back come through the line, gain about five yards, get smashed, and then get up and go, “Boy, that hurt. How come you hit me? That wasn’t very nice.”

If you want to gain yards in the NFL, you get your head knocked off when you come across the middle of the receiver and linebackers take big shots when you come through the line.

But there’s not a lot of people that are running backs in the NFL who are experiencing, accomplishing what they are. And you know, this is a lot more than being a running back in football.

This is about getting some of the most precious experiences and quality of life with another person. But I want to tell you. The fuel of commitment begins with a lifelong choice.

And it says, the rational is, you can write the word, “to love.” Why do you do it? It’s to love. And then next to that, just write this little phrase: “I’m committed to you.” By the way, that’s the seed, that’s the soil, that’s the environment in which real love grows.

See, I’m not going to let you see who I am, as insecure as I am, unless I know that you’re not going to bail out on me.

People hold back for fear that, “Ooh, if I get vulnerable, they’re going to see how ugly and terrible and struggles I have and…”

Real deep love can only happen when that other person knows I’m in this and I’m in it for good. I’m in it when it’s good, I’m in it when it’s bad. I’m in it – are you ready for this? In sickness or in health. In happiness or in sorrow. ‘Til death do us part.

Do I understand that there are some, a couple biblical situations where someone can throw dynamite or TNT or nitroglycerine and blow up a marriage that you don’t have any control of?

That they just walk out on you and get involved with someone else? I understand. But in about ninety-eight percent of the cases, that’s not the case, is it?

How do you do that? You make a weekly choice to say, “I love you.” You know, it’s an amazing thing, every day choose. And especially try and do something you don’t feel like. Every day, try and do something you don’t feel like doing that you know communicates to your mate that you love them.

And you know what? It’s an amazing thing. You know, just like habits are built. Your love can be like a muscle that gets strengthened and little by little by little by little, you can become the kind of person that someone else is living with, “Wow, I knew you were tired and I knew you didn’t really feel like doing that and yet you loved me in this way.”

You know what that does? That causes a response. And that causes something very exciting to happen.

Now, you don’t do it. Now, by the way, love means if you don’t, nothing comes back, that’s okay. Because you didn’t do it for them, you did it for God. But, boy, as you do that, you’ll see great things happen. A weekly choice to say, “I love you.”

Our model is Jesus. You might jot in the corner of your notes, Hebrews 13:5. “I will never ever leave you or forsake you.”

Jesus has told me, “Chip, good days, bad days, hard days, terrible days, when you mess up, when you think terrible thoughts, when you’ve done things that make Me ashamed of you, as my son, after I’ve died for you. Chip. I will never ever leave you or forsake you.”

And if He’s going to do that for me, what’s He want me to do? He wants my mate to know, “I will never ever leave you or forsake you.” That’s the fuel. And that’s commitment.

The oil of communication is a lifelong skill of learning to understand each other. But notice it’s a lifelong skill. You just don’t get it and then you have it for good of learning to understand each other.

The mandate is Ephesians 4. Ephesians 4:15 and 16. “But speaking the truth to one another we’re to grow up in,” what? “All aspects into Him who is the head, even Christ.”And he goes on to say, “By that, which every joint supplies, according to the proper working of each individual part, causes the growth of the body to the building up of itself in love.”

And so when parts start moving, you make progress. They overheat, you need some oil in the relationship and communication does that. And the rational is to know. You want to communicate.

Loving is, says I’m committed to you. Communication says I want to know you. I want to know all about you. I want to be a student of you. I want to learn your likes and dislikes. I want to be close to you so I need to know who you are.

And when you know them then that little phrase you learn is, I trust you. That’s what you communicate when you communicate.

You know? When you say, I really want to get to know you. If that choice says, I love you, this says I trust you. I trust you. Well, why do you say that?

Because I’m going to progressively take the zipper of my heart, of who I really am, and I’m going to keep lowering it. And I’m going to take my heart, with vulnerable stuff, that if you wanted to, man, you could hurt me very badly. You do understand, the people that can love you the most can wound you the most deeply.

And so it takes trust and so what you do is, little by little, you kind of put your heart out on that platter. These are my fears. These are my dreams. These are my struggles.

And how you handle those will tell me how I’m going to respond to you next time.
The oil of communication is a lifelong skill of learning to understand each other. But notice it’s a lifelong skill. You just don’t get it and then you have it for good of learning to understand each other.

The mandate is Ephesians 4. Ephesians 4:15 and 16. “But speaking the truth to one another we’re to grow up in,” what? “All aspects into Him who is the head, even Christ.”And he goes on to say, “By that, which every joint supplies, according to the proper working of each individual part, causes the growth of the body to the building up of itself in love.”

And so when parts start moving, you make progress. They overheat, you need some oil in the relationship and communication does that. And the rational is to know. You want to communicate.

Loving is, says I’m committed to you. Communication says I want to know you. I want to know all about you. I want to be a student of you. I want to learn your likes and dislikes. I want to be close to you so I need to know who you are.

And when you know them then that little phrase you learn is, I trust you. That’s what you communicate when you communicate.

You know? When you say, I really want to get to know you. If that choice says, I love you, this says I trust you. I trust you. Well, why do you say that?

Because I’m going to progressively take the zipper of my heart, of who I really am, and I’m going to keep lowering it. And I’m going to take my heart, with vulnerable stuff, that if you wanted to, man, you could hurt me very badly. You do understand, the people that can love you the most can wound you the most deeply.

And so it takes trust and so what you do is, little by little, you kind of put your heart out on that platter. These are my fears. These are my dreams. These are my struggles.

And how you handle those will tell me how I’m going to respond to you next time.

And of course, the how there is, we went over it, a weekly conference. I suggest I did them two a week. And we just said like, Thursday night and Friday night and the way we did it. Don’t make this, like, such a big deal.

But often, I had four kids so it’s not, and I pastored a church that ended up growing to a very large size. So there were lots of pulls.

But we ate dinner at a certain time, we structured it in. And after dinner, our kids knew we’re going to make a pot of coffee, and you know what, kids? You got homework, go do whatever you want.

Sometimes it was fifteen minutes, sometimes it was forty-five. But we sat at the table and, “Hey, how did your day go? Kind of, what’s going on with you?”

And we stopped and communicated and two of those nights and it just perfunctory. “Theresa, what are you concerned about?” And then she would tell me. “So, what are you concerned about?” What do you dream? What do I dream? What are you willing to do?

And we did that to the point where, I will tell you, we don’t use those questions anymore. We just share, unconsciously, when we get together what we’re concerned about. And now that our kids are grown, we find ourselves eating dinner and there’s no kids to shoo away.

“Hey, you want to run out and grab a cup of coffee?” “Yeah. Let’s go.” And you drive in the car. And you would laugh at what we think is romantic at times. There’s a little fast food place with no scenery and we find ourselves with a broken Chick-fil-a sandwich between us.

And sitting in a car talking about life and God and one another. Looking into the beautiful oversight to the back of a Home Depot. It just really, you know?

But you know what it is? It’s just taking a little window to say, “I want to be with you and I trust you.”

And our model is Jeremiah 33:3. This is how God feels about you. “Call to Me and I will tell you great and mighty things that you don’t know.”

I want to commune, I want to relate, please speak to Me! And if you’ll speak to me, if you’ll open up the lines of communication, I want to show you things beyond what you’d ever dream. And so He models for us the kind of relationship.

And for those of you that are going through a tough time and those of you that feel like you’ve been wounded and you really can’t get this deeply in communication. I have a wild illustration I want to share.

You can follow along if you want. It’s in Isaiah 43. God’s people have turned against Him. God’s people, they’re worshipping idols. They won’t give Him the time of day.

And in Isaiah chapter 43 He talks about, in verse 21, the people who I formed for Myself will declare my praise, yet…

He says, I thought that’s what was supposed to be. And in verse 22, “Yet you’ve not called on me, O Jacob. You’ve become weary of Me, O Israel. You haven’t brought Me the sheep of your burnt offering. No worship, no sacrifice. You haven’t honored Me with your sacrifices.

“I have not burdened you with offerings. I wasn’t after your money. Neither have you filled Me with the fat of your sacrifices. Rather, you’ve burdened Me with your sins and you have wearied Me with your iniquities.”

Some of you feel like that? I’m just weary of all the junk I’ve put up this long in this relationship. We all get there sometimes, right? How does God respond when that’s where the relational dynamic is? Look at verse 25.

I read this, the first time I read it I thought, are you kidding me? God says, “I, even I, am the one who wipes out your transgressions for My own sake. And I will not remember your sins.”

Do you hear what He says? This relationship is so important, even though you’re not coming to Me. Even though a hundred percent of the problem is on your side, I’m going to step in and communicate. And I’m going to wipe out your sins, not for you. I’m going to do it for Me.

I love you so much, our relationship matters so much. I’m going to take the initiative. Even though this is your issue.

And then listen to verse 26. “Put Me in remembrance. Let us argue our case together.” In other words, “Hey, let’s have a good fight! Let’s just get the words coming.”

State your cause that you might be proved right. This is the God of the universe.

Final one, He says, “State your cause that you may be proved right. Your first fathers sinned and your spokesman have transgressed against Me.”

And then, so He talks about some judgment that will occur and it’s all because they wouldn’t come and say, “God, we just want to talk.”

So, let me encourage you, if you feel like it’s we’re a little too far beyond all this, our model is a God who says, the relationship matters so much, do whatever it takes to restore it.

We’ve got the fuel of commitment, the oil of communication. Third: the tune-up of caring.

An adventure of lifelong friendship, fun, and mutual fulfillment. Circle the word “adventure” will you?

Everyone thinks it’s not the way it was when we were dating. It’s not the way it was because you’re not doing what you used to do. Romance is not, like, reserved for teenagers, newlyweds, and people who’ve been married for, like, six months.

Romance is reserved for people who do all the things that newlyweds do and people that are dating. Right?

When you’re dating, you call impromptu. “How you doing?” Up late night. “How’s everything going?” Flowers unannounced. A little note that says, “I love you.” Attention to detail. Right?

Now, the euphoria begins to wear off and we get into the grind. You know what? Your relationship has got to be an adventure.

But life is life and you have voicemails and emails and many of you have kids and then you have bills. Some of you have some dogs. Then you got work, then you got people that get cancer, then you got ministry at the church, and beem, bom, beem, bom, beem.

And pretty soon, you wake up and you look at one another and you say, “I really love you. And ain’t feeling anything, are you?” “No.” You know what? Get a tune up.

Block off some time and if you don’t have money and you’re young then swap out with another couple that’s young and doesn’t have money either. We’ll watch your kids this time, you watch our kids the next time.

And you know, when you count the amount, of coffee that people buy and the movies that they rent. You’ve got the money if you have the priority to get away for at least two nights and three days. And get retooled. And have some fun. Enjoy one another.

And you don’t have to wait for the big getaway but you could have talks and you can take walks and you can go on dates and you can have actual hobbies and you can do weekends away and you can get back into the notes and the flowers.

And like, buy a new nightgown now and then and have some fun together and say, I want to keep the pizzazz in the relationship. I want there to be an adventure.

But what we do is, under the pressure, same old, same old. Same old, same old. Well, life gets tired if you eat steak for forty-five days in a row, about forty-six days, not even steaks taste good, right?

You’ve got to have variety and you’ve got to have adventure. And there’s got to be some things that you’re looking forward to. A lot of it, too, is maybe you don’t even know what you’re going to, but you know, hey. We’re seven weeks away from our getaway.

Or, this year, this time next year, this is what we’re going to do. And you dream and you think and some of it, you let him plan and you think this is not exactly what I think is a great time.

But you know what? If he really likes it, I’m going to go along and have fun. And on the other hand, you do it and you realize, yeah. We’ll have some fun and, brothers, I’ll tell you what.

I have done that, “Yeah, honey. I’ll sit right on this bench. These shops are really nice. I’ll just sit right on here on this bench and you let me know when you come.”

And I used to do that. And then I got to where, “Yeah, I’ll walk around with you." I do stuff now that twenty-five years ago, I thought, man, this is nuts. I would never do this.

And my wife is doing stuff now that she’s thinking, this is so sportsy. She did not grow up that way at all.

This is about being those best friends. How to do it? I put here a weekly date. Every Friday morning, we went out for breakfast. That was my day off. Every Friday, my wife knew and I knew. That’s our little oasis. And we’d get the kids off, take a drive, eat breakfast, walk around, goof off, and didn’t do anything but just be with one another until it was time for the kids to go out.

But we just knew there was a window of time built, you’ve got to structure it in.

When’s the last time you went on a meaningful date? When’s the last time you took a great walk? And by the way, just get out a calendar. And you know what will happen? It’ll be a hassle and some of you are rolling your eyes going, yeah right.

Tell you what, you put four or five weeks in a row together and you start having some fun, you know some of these other areas that some of you are real frustrated about? Fun covers a multitude of sins. That’s a Chipism. That’s not Bible.

The Bible is, “Love covers a multitude of sins.” That’s true. But fun does.

We spend so much energy working through all of our problems and issues. And you’ve just got to put some emotional gas into the tank of your relationship.

And, of course, our model is who? Jesus again. When His guys got tired and weary of the every day. “Come unto me, all of you who labor and are heavy laden. I’ll give you rest.”

This is Jesus. You know, so, some of us are Christian workaholics. He said, hey. Take a break. In fact, he says, and quit taking on so much responsibility. “Take My yoke upon Me and learn from Me. I’m meek and lowly in heart.” I’m not hard to please.

In other words, life has lots of pressures. Tell you what. Just like two oxen get together, I got supernatural power, I’ve got, I know all things. How about we hook up together and you just do the part you’re supposed to do and I’ll do all the part I’m supposed to do.

And why don’t you just take a deep breath and quit being more responsible for all the stuff in life that you can’t control anyway.

But come apart and rest. He invites us to do that, shouldn’t we invite ourselves to do that with one another?

Well, we’ve got C. First C is commitment. A lifelong choice. Another C, communication, a lifelong skill. That oil.

We’ve got the C of caring, which is, kind of, that tune-up on the car. And then the last C is the navigational system of a co-mission. This is a vision to impact the lives of others for Christ.

It’s a vision. Circle the word “vision.” It’s a vision. Everything needs a picture of a preferable future. Something that you’re aiming to toward one another. The mandate here is Matthew 28. That wasn’t given just to the disciples then. Jesus said, “Go, therefore, and make Christ followers.”

He wants you and you and you and you and me to team up, not just individually, but as marriage partners and make disciples to see lost people come to Christ, to see them grow to maturity, and see them reproduce their lives.

He wants to use us in our neighborhoods and where we work. He wants to use us in our local churches.

Make disciples. He wants you to have a ministry. He wants you do some things together that aren’t about you or your family or your kids or your fulfillment but about other people with needs.

And I’ll tell you, I do not know exactly how this works. But God, when we begin to think outside of ourselves, an amazing thing happens in the dynamic of the relationship. We get close.

The rationale is to serve. It’s to serve. We love. We know. We share. And we serve. And when we serve, it says, I need you. I need you.

And the average married couple that does not have a ministry where you’re investing your lives together in the lives of other people, you are missing out on one of the most powerful dynamics of how God brings you together.

My wife and I were involved in a ministry and just, she found like she does, someone who was really hurting and they had done really well for many years and fell back into a meth habit and so now we got these two meth addicts.

And the guy comes over to my house. He was going to do a little help and that was part of his profession. And Theresa, this is wild. Theresa comes, “You know what? Do you have any idea, do you know what these are?”

And she has this little plastic bag with crystals in it, you know? And I said, “Yeah, honey. I actually do know what those are. And I think our friends aren’t doing as well as they’re telling us.”

And confronted him. And it was just, I just can’t tell you sitting across the kitchen table with two people addicted to meth who long to get out of it, in tears, and are like this in their marriage.

And then going to a Celebrate Recovery in the area, letting them know it’s going to be okay, sitting down with them, introducing them to the pastor, introducing them to other people that are addicts.

And then watching, over the next three or four or five months, God deliver them. And then God forgive them. And then God restore them.

And you know, more than a few conversations around our table were about: how do we help this couple? “And honey, yeah, you did this part, I need to do this part.” “Well, Chip, I think if you don’t call him, I don’t think he’ll listen.” “Okay.”

Can I tell you that as we, together, helped this couple, God did something that bound our hearts together.

How? Let me suggest you have at least a weekly or a bi-weekly, monthly, some kind of ministry that you’re involved in on a regular basis.

You’re not a car, you’re a marriage. But it needs – fueled by commitment. It needs – oiled by communication. You need the tune-up of deep caring and fun together. And you need the navigational system of, why did God put us on this earth with these gifts that He’s brought together to make a difference?

And then the final important remember is, I’ll give you this. It’s a little equation that I have because when I give this message, what I learned is the real hard charging people try and do all of this all at once and they go real crazy and they try and align all their life.

And they work, work, work, work, work. And then they get completely burned out in four or five weeks.

Here’s my little equation for moving forward. Personal time plus supportive friends plus renewing activities equals a fully alive you and a full battery to be a giver.

And this may sound absolutely crazy. But some of you realize you really need to focus on your marriage right now. If you’re a man, you need some strong men friends to go through this with you.

If you’re a woman, you need some strong women friends to go through this with you. Because, see, you’re going to have to make deposits in your mate and they’re not going to give back.

You need some guys that you’re close to and you love. And ladies, you need a woman or two that you can really share your heart with.

And this may sound counterintuitive. But whether it’s working out or whether it’s a hobby or crocheting or knitting or rollerblading. I don’t know what ladies do or whatever…

But you better, as a woman, have renewing activities built in that fill your own personal tank.

And as a guy, you better have those. Because you need supportive friends and renewing activities so that you come into the things you’re going to address to be a giver.

Because what I’ve watched is people will hear something like this and they’ll just get so focused on each other that all they think about and all they work on is their marriage.

And pretty soon, the guy wakes up and goes, “I don’t have a single guy friend. I haven’t worked out in three months.”

And she’s thinking, “Man, I haven’t been shopping in forever and haven’t even called my sister. And I haven’t been out with the girls in…”

You’ve got to balance life where you get what you need so that you can give what you need to give. And you need to talk about how much is appropriate. Because what you think you need versus what your mate may think you need might be one of those areas of conversation.