Love Is A Verb  
 
 
Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the 
church and gave himself up for her. 
(Ephes. 5:25)
This command is unique in that it has no parallel in human 
relationships.  Wives are not 
commanded to love their husbands this way, or even at all. 
Children are not commanded to love their parents. 
But husbands are commanded to love their wives, and what's more, this is 
not an ordinary love, but an extra-ordinary one. 
We're to use the example of Christ and His Church as the standard. 
Think about that.  The Lord 
came down off His throne, confined Himself to a human body, and offered that 
body as a love gift to the Church.  
Not because the Church had done anything to deserve it, but so the Church could 
see the extent of His love. 
The Church is His consuming desire. 
He lived so that she might come into existence and be set apart.  
He longs for her to know how much He loves her. His every word and action 
brought her honor and expressed His devotion to her. 
He dedicated Himself to her and covered all her imperfections with His 
love.  And He gave His life for her. 
Truth be told, the Church has rarely if ever deserved or 
even appreciated such a love.  Within 
the lifetimes of the Apostles, the Church had already drifted off into a pattern 
of religious works, forsaking her first love in the process. (Rev. 2:4-5)
The Lord loves the Church because He's decided to do so. 
Day by day, moment by moment, He makes a conscious decision to love His 
Church.  Not just when the Church has 
done something to deserve it, but even when, as is most often the case, the 
Church has done something to prove herself unworthy.  
He loves the Church because He's chosen to, irrespective of merit. 
That's the standard. 
Let's Get Personal
My wife has to be one of the easiest women in the world to 
love. I know that a lot of you guys feel that way about your wives, but in my 
case it's true.  Beautiful, happy, 
and energetic, she lights up any place she walks in to. 
When she enters a room, men and women alike are naturally drawn to her. 
People look at us and see the relationship they would like to have, and 
I'm often asked to teach them how to have such a good marriage as ours. 
I don't know what I'd have done if I had been called to love someone who 
treated me the way the Church treats the Lord. 
I guess He knows I could never do it and that's why He's given me 
Samantha.      
But recently I've discovered just how much of a commitment 
is required to love even someone as easy to love as she is, and I've learned 
anew that love is a verb, not just a feeling or emotion. 
Even the strongest marriage can come under attack if it's taken for 
granted or ignored.  With our 
ministry requiring more and more time and attention, and with the ever present 
and often conflicting demands of family, I discovered that I haven't been paying 
enough attention to my primary responsibility, loving my wife. 
As I imagine is true with most men, I first noticed the 
problem when I began feeling a lack of love and affection directed at me. 
I discovered that while I had become busy with ministry work, she had 
become more focused on our 4 year old. 
Without realizing it or even intending it, each of us had found a new 
source of love.  We were living 
parallel, instead of interconnected, lives. 
The two were no longer one, in violation of Genesis 2:24. 
And as hard as this is to believe, it happened even though my office is 
in our home and neither one of us ever goes anyplace, or even takes a meal, 
without the other.  We're always in 
close proximity, yet we were hardly ever together. 
Believe me, it's a real wake up call to realize that you've been ignoring 
the love of your life.   What 
would I ever do without her?
Cultivating A Good Marriage
I think a marriage is like a garden. 
If you want a garden to sustain you, you have to continually nurture it. 
You can't just plant the seeds and then ignore it. Do that and you'll get 
weeds instead of succulent fruits and vegetables. 
Leave even a fruitful garden untended for very long and you'll find it's 
also vulnerable to attack by predators who want to steal the fruits of your 
labor.  And once in a while, a seed 
you didn't know you had planted can begin to grow unnoticed until it blossoms 
into something beautiful but poisonous. 
Every gardener knows that the work begins before anything grows and 
continues unabated until the harvest.                    
And so it is with marriage. 
It's a labor of love that begins before the wedding and ends when death 
parts us.  Most of us know how to do 
the first part pretty well.  It's 
called the engagement.  It's exciting 
to begin planning and preparing for a future together, taking something that 
exists only in our imaginations and turning it into reality. 
But because we've been taught that the goal is to get married, it's 
natural stop paying such close attention shortly after the wedding. 
We don't realize that the real goal is to be married. 
If we worked as hard at being married as we did at getting married there 
would be many more happy marriages.
Husbands, in the same way be 
considerate as you live with your wives, and treat them with respect as the 
weaker partner and as heirs with you of the gracious gift of life, so that 
nothing will hinder your prayers. (1 Peter 3:7)
And while we've been taught that marriage is the stable, 
permanent phase of a relationship, it's really very transitional. 
Left to itself, marriage is simply the phase 
between engagement and divorce. 
The way we prevent this from becoming true in our case to make day to day 
decisions to stay as close to the engagement phase of the relationship as 
possible.  That means we still date 
them, hold the door for them, compliment them on their wardrobes, buy them 
little things for no reason, listen to what they're saying, ask their opinions 
and preferences, spend quality time together and in general put their needs 
above ours.  In other words, love 
them.  This not only pleases our 
wives, but according to Peter makes the Lord more attentive to our prayers as 
well.  Everybody wins. 
Two Paths To Fulfillment
The Lord accused the church of being so busy doing His work 
that they had no time left for Him. We can become so busy building a life for 
our wives that we have no time for them. 
And I've never met a man who wasn't perplexed when his wife didn't accept 
his excuse for being away so much.  
“I'm only doing it for us.”  We don't 
understand that while our path to fulfillment lies in personal achievement, 
theirs is in relationships.  If we're 
to give ourselves up for them, that means applying our need for personal 
achievement to the relationship. That way we'll both be happier.
Obviously, if you've built a lifestyle that requires 2 or more 
incomes to support it, you're in danger of trading long term love and respect 
for short term material gratification. 
There simply won't be enough time or energy for both income production 
and relationship protection.  It's 
another good reason to scale back while you have the choice. When the hard times 
come, as they're giving every indication of doing, you'll find that it's much 
easier to get along with out a bunch of stuff that you won't have time for any 
way, than it is to get along without having someone you love at your side to 
help you through.  Remember, love is 
not just something you feel, it's something you do. 
Love is a verb.  Selah 
06-07-08