Chrysostom
Beloved
The pain you feel is real, and God does not despise the cry of a heavy heart. Yet the medicine for the soul often stings before it heals. You ask for peace in your home, and this is a good desire, for peace is a great gift. But consider what true peace is.
It is not merely the quieting of noise or the end of an argument. The angels proclaimed, "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace," but this peace is the fruit of reconciliation, the joining of Heaven and earth through the cutting away of sin. There can be no peace where the diseased part is not first amputated. Robbers agree together, but their concord is a curse, not a blessing.
So I ask you: what is the source of this hurt between you and your husband? Is there an offense against the holiness that marriage must guard? Marriage is honorable and pure, but it does not itself give holiness; it preserves the holiness that comes from Faith by barring the door to all defilement. If some uncleanness, some root of bitterness, some wandering of the heart or body has crept in, praying for calm feelings while leaving the sin unaddressed is like a physician soothing pain while the tumor grows.
God Himself says to the healed paralytic, "Sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto you." The sickness of the body was a mercy compared to the death of the soul. Your hurt may be such a warning. True peace begins when each one is first at war with the evil within. The worst war is not between you and your husband, but within your own selves, where flesh battles against spirit.
Until that internal war is stilled by full submission to Christ’s commands, living chaste and orderly within marriage, forgiving from the heart, speaking truth in love, and putting away all wrath, the outward peace you seek will remain fragile and false. Wait for God's wisdom, yes, but do not wait passively. Examine your own ways. Soften your own heart by turning from every thought and action that offends Him.
If you both would be peacemakers, and so called children of God, you must build peace on the foundation of godliness and honesty, not on the shifting sand of mutual feeling. Commend your pain to the Lord, but let your prayer rise beyond comfort alone. Ask Him to do whatever sharp surgery is needed to cut away the sin that breeds strife, so that the peace of Christ, given from His own mouth, may truly rule in your hearts and home.
It is not merely the quieting of noise or the end of an argument. The angels proclaimed, "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace," but this peace is the fruit of reconciliation, the joining of Heaven and earth through the cutting away of sin. There can be no peace where the diseased part is not first amputated. Robbers agree together, but their concord is a curse, not a blessing.
So I ask you: what is the source of this hurt between you and your husband? Is there an offense against the holiness that marriage must guard? Marriage is honorable and pure, but it does not itself give holiness; it preserves the holiness that comes from Faith by barring the door to all defilement. If some uncleanness, some root of bitterness, some wandering of the heart or body has crept in, praying for calm feelings while leaving the sin unaddressed is like a physician soothing pain while the tumor grows.
God Himself says to the healed paralytic, "Sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto you." The sickness of the body was a mercy compared to the death of the soul. Your hurt may be such a warning. True peace begins when each one is first at war with the evil within. The worst war is not between you and your husband, but within your own selves, where flesh battles against spirit.
Until that internal war is stilled by full submission to Christ’s commands, living chaste and orderly within marriage, forgiving from the heart, speaking truth in love, and putting away all wrath, the outward peace you seek will remain fragile and false. Wait for God's wisdom, yes, but do not wait passively. Examine your own ways. Soften your own heart by turning from every thought and action that offends Him.
If you both would be peacemakers, and so called children of God, you must build peace on the foundation of godliness and honesty, not on the shifting sand of mutual feeling. Commend your pain to the Lord, but let your prayer rise beyond comfort alone. Ask Him to do whatever sharp surgery is needed to cut away the sin that breeds strife, so that the peace of Christ, given from His own mouth, may truly rule in your hearts and home.
