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Kristen Anne Glover

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I Don’t Want an Equal Marriage

This week, my Facebook stream was commandeered by an army of red equal signs.

At first, I didn’t know what that meant because I’ve always been a little socially awkward, even social media awkward, and I was oblivious.  Was the entire nation suddenly becoming more interested in math?

Thankfully, before I had the chance to make a fool of myself, some other clueless person asked and the secret came tumbling out.  That equal sign stood for marriage equality.

I had no intention of stepping in to the marriage equality debate on Facebook or anywhere else where meanings can be misconstrued and misapplied, where allegiances divide friendships and shut down communication before it even starts.

But I stopped when I saw the words marriage equality coupled with that great big equal sign because I realized something that might make the culture cringe, and it really has very little to do with the current debate and much more to do with my own heart and my own home.

I realized I don’t want an equal marriage.

Marriage Equality

Before my husband was my husband, back when we were just two kids talking marriage on a park bench in the forest of Chicago, we asked ourselves this question: Can we be better together than apart?  Because we were both self-centered enough to know that equal wasn’t worth it.  We wanted to know that together, we’d be more than the sum of our parts.

We wanted a marriage that was exponential, not equal.

Of course, we could have just taken our two equal selves and done some simple addition.  After all, 1+1=2, and two is already better than one, right?

An equal marriage might work that way.  But I didn’t want an equal marriage.

I wanted a marriage in which 1+1=1, and then somehow equals 3 or 4, or in our case, 7.  That kind of math meant sacrifice, a dying to self, a setting aside of rights.  It meant elevating the needs of the other above my own.  That kind of math requires submission—mine and his.

If I had stuck to simple addition, I would not be the mother of five children.  If I had stuck to simple addition, I would not have dropped out of school to help my husband finish two graduate degrees.  He would not have taken the kids on vacation without me because I needed a break from everyone more than I needed a break with everyone.  He would not have put a PhD program on the way back burner because he knew I couldn’t do it again, not yet.

We have both subtracted a lot out of lives and God has multiplied the remnants into something more than I could have imagined.  But it wouldn’t have happened if we were both more interested in being equal than submissive.

Submission isn’t a popular word these days because being submissive means you have to consider someone else as better than yourself.  You have to put someone else’s needs above your own and some days, that goes against every fiber of our being because deep down inside, we’re much less concerned about sacrifice than we are about rights.  Our rights.  Marriage rights.

That term—marriage rights—makes my heart a little sick every time I hear it, and it has nothing to do with homosexuality or Christianity or being gay or being straight or being something in between.  It has to do with what I believe marriage is, not who it is for.

The term “marriage rights” cuts at my heart because I believe that when we reduce marriage to nothing more than a battle of rights, we’ve already lost.  The beauty and reality of marriage is that it is a place to die, not a place to elevate rights.  It is a place to subtract self and will and equality and all that other stuff that is in our nature but is not in our God and love someone more than ourselves. 

Marriage Equality

That is sacrifice.  Submission.  Tough stuff.

It is tough because self is the hardest thing to die and the hardest thing to make submit, especially if there’s another self in the room.  Self will proclaim, “He’s no better than me!” and “I have the right to be happy!” and while that kind of talk is normal and perhaps even logical, it is not biblical, and it does nothing to make a marriage that multiplies because self-talk constantly reduces the multipliers to 1.

Any number times one always equals itself, nothing more.

I do not want to struggle through marriage for nothing more than what I went in with.  I do not want an equal marriage.  I want an exponential marriage.

So while the debate over marriage rights rages on, I am battling to keep marriage equality out of my own home.  It is hard because I am selfish.  But I am choosing to keep my focus on the math that matters, the subtraction and division that will build up my husband, my children, and myself into more than just the sum of our parts.

I am choosing to have a marriage that multiplies. 

 

 

Marriage 22 Comments

Fathers and Daughters: 100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood {23}

Fathers and daughters

My dad died when I was not much older than she is now.  I think of it in moments like this when he puts his arms around her shoulders and squeezes her to his side.

I think of it when he calls her Fluffer-Puff and asks her about her day, or when she’s tucked into her bed with a book and he sits down by her feet and talks to her in his unhurried way.  He is never as hurried as I am.

I think of it when he builds the Swing of Awesome because he knows she’ll love it.  It’s constructed out of a curvy old bike handle and a length of chain strung way up high in a sprawling tree.  He pushes her out over the field where the bank slides away and her giggles fly away into the sky.

I can’t watch.

Holding Daddy's hand

I think of my dad when her dad buys her bread sticks because she likes them, or when he let her have chickens even though he did not want chickens.  But she did.

I think of it when he asks me how he can pray for her better, and I am reminded of how my own father prayed for me.  It is not even a memory.  It is part of my making.

And it minsters to me so deeply, the fatherhood of my husband toward our children.  I see in him the love my own father had for me, and I am grateful.  I see in him the love the heavenly Father has for me, and I am amazed.

I watch them together and I am thankful that she has him.  I am thankful that her father’s love will lead her to understand the love of the Father.  I know my husband is securing her affections toward the things that are good and holy, pure and righteous, beautiful and lovely.  My daddy did the same thing for me, and if the story repeats itself as I think it will, she will not be able, after, to choose anything less.

So on this beautiful day of motherhood, I am thankful for the ministry of fatherhood.  I am thankful that God has given us a picture of Himself that I can’t see in my mirror.  I am thankful that I can see it in him.

Father and baby daughter

Parenting 8 Comments

100 Beautiful Days of Motherhood: Hospitality {9}

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

We are having company for dinner tonight, which means I am in a mad scramble to make it look like no one lives here.  I have almost finished the lasagna but the floor still needs to be mopped and the kitchen is a wreck and there’s an entire corner of the living room where random Christmas trimmings have been collecting since the morning of December 25.

I look up at the clock where the minutes keep on ticking by and I realize that I never fixed that tear in the couch.  I notice that I don’t have enough matching dishes and I’m completely out of napkins.  I have forgotten all about making the brownies for dessert but I have become acutely aware of the fact that my children still have not learned to flush the toilet in the hall.

Anxious thoughts flood my mind.  I don’t know what to do next.  I can’t think.  Then the children stomp through and demand my time with comments and questions that seem so menial in the light of my greater responsibility.  “I had it first!”  “He hit me!”  “Can we have a snack?”

I feel anger welling up.  Why are they bothering me now?  Can’t they see I’m busy?  “I don’t have time for this!” I snap.  “Go find something to do!”

But what I really mean is, you are too much of a bother.  You are getting in the way of the little show I’m trying to pull off.  You are messing up the mirage that we have it all together.

Why do I do this to myself?   I think as I mop the floor.  Every time we have company over, it’s the same way.  I fall into a trap of trying to be perfect.  I suddenly become dissatisfied with my home and my children and my husband and especially myself.  My husband can never be helpful enough and the children can never play quietly enough and I can never do enough to make myself look much better than I really am.

It’s the old hypocrite in me coming out to play.  I talk a big talk about grace, but on Friday nights when company is coming over, I don’t want it.  I want a clean house.  I want to keep up appearances.  I will worry about all that sin that is death after the company goes home and no one cares if I have dirty dishes in my sink.

After every one goes home, I will apologize to my husband and the kids and say things like, “I’m sorry I was a little cranky,” because saying “I’m sorry I was a little cranky” is easier than saying, “I’m sorry I yelled at you” or “I’m sorry I didn’t have time for you” or “I’m sorry I loved a clean kitchen sink more than you.”

I will say it sincerely enough, though, as if I learned something.  But really, all I want is to justify the tyrannical behavior that got me what I wanted.  I acted unlovingly toward my husband and children but I got a clean house.  It seems like a fair enough trade.

But of course, it isn’t.  Trading grace for works is the ransom of a birthright for a pot of stew.  It is a cheap exchange that leaves everything around me tainted no matter how hard I clean.

Today, getting the house clean in time seemed to be more important than love or grace or any of those things that tend to leave dirty footprints on my floor.  Today, checking off the to-do list was more important than being honest and real and kind.

But on this beautiful day, God did not leave me in my sin.  He reminded me of grace.  Deep down, I know that a friend will not care if my house is clean or not.  I certainly don’t care if hers is.  In fact, I don’t mind if there are a few crumbs on the floor or dust on the windowsills because I can understand that.  That makes me feel right at home and I love her all the more because she trusts me enough to know that it is okay for me to see her smudges.

And I am nothing if not a little smudgy.  I fall short just like everyone else.  I understand that, I think, until it’s time for me to be on the receiving end of grace.  Then I don’t like it.  Then, I want to work it out so I can give grace without having to swallow any of it myself.

But it’s not enough to give grace.  I must receive it.  I must let people in to the mess and the brokenness and trust that they will love me all the more for my weakness.  I must hold on to the promise that Christ will indeed be more glorified through the broken pot than the whitewashed vessel.

On this beautiful day, I got to be a broken pot, an open door, a woman acquainted with grace.

Parenting 28 Comments

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I believe you can find grace for the mother you are and help to become the mother you long to be—a mom who has the freedom to choose the better things and enjoy her kids right now.

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