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How can a pastor or church leader minister to a couple when one spouse wants counseling help and the other doesn't?



Topics:Counseling, Difficult people, Family ministry, Relationships
Filters:Counseling, Divorce care, Pastor, Spiritual director
Purpose:Ministry
Date Added:July 15, 2008

Total Reader Responses: 2 (see below)
Add your own comment

We—and others who are working in the area of reconciling troubled marriages—hear this question from pastors and couples quite frequently. We have seen God turn the whole tide of a marriage around with the willing heart of only one spouse—the perseverance of one spouse to hold firmly to the rope of reconciliation that God extends through his son Jesus Christ. Time and time again in his ministry, Jesus focused on working with what was placed before him.

Take, for example, the story we commonly refer to as "the feeding of the 5,000." Unlike his disciples, Jesus focused on using what God had given them, not what appeared to be an impossible circumstance. "'How many loaves do you have?' Jesus asked" (Mark 8:5). He took the five loaves and two fish and, through the power of prayer, met the need against all odds.

Reconciliation is possible, even with an unwilling spouse. Many available resources are specifically designed with this seemingly impossible situation in mind. Joe and Michelle Williams,of Reconciling God's Way, in Modesto, California, have specifically designed resources to use when only one spouse is willing to reconcile the relationship. Their resources can be accessed through their website at www.reconcilingGodsway.org. In addition, there are other resources available through the Reconciling Troubled Marriages Focus Group, which is a part of the Association of Marriage and Family Ministries (AMFM) at www.amfmonline.com. We encourage individual spouses and pastors to start with what they've got and "pray it forward" from there. There is no relationship so shattered that it lies beyond God's restorative reach!




Lindsey Foster   (Guest) Posted: July 17, 2008
are there any resources to assist a couple who is blending families? The kids are teenagers and there are some deiciplinary issues as well as past relationship issues. Thanks



tim+anne   (Guest) Posted: July 17, 2008
Our experience is spouses are often at different places in their openness for personal growth. When one spouse demands another 'do' something it opens the door for rejection. One spouse feels they are 'not-okay.' This feeds their rejection and leads to trying to control. When attempts to control do not work, it opens the door for rebellion. Their rebellion can be passive-(disrespectful, unloving, withholding, withdrawing...), or aggressive-(demanding, demeaning, abusive behavior, or issuing ultimatums...) This destructive cycle can operate in the spouse who is pro-counseling and in the spouse who is resistant to it. We encourage pastors to challenge the spouse who desires counseling to focus on prayer, personal growth, and making healthy/Godly choices. The spouse who is resistant or even totally against counseling will often change their mind as they see it working and bearing fruit (love-joy-peace-patience-kindness-goodness-gentleness-faithfulness...) in their spouse's life.



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