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GUEST
ARTICLE
Show Her! Don’t
Just Tell Her
 I read an article recently that touched me deeply; it also
prompted me to try to be a more demonstrative husband. That
of which I was reminded I would like to pass along to others
who may need a little nudge as well.
A delightful Christian lady
in another state wrote an excellent article in which she
discussed the fact that many men have
a difficult time verbally expressing their emotions. She
quoted the well-known quip of the wife who complained to
her husband that he never told her that he loved her, and
she wanted to hear that. He is reputed to have said, “I
told you I loved you when we got married; if I ever change
my mind, I’ll let you know.”
She commented that she was
not complaining about her own mate; she declared that he
was attentive to her emotional
needs. But she related an incident that occurred in an entirely “non-romantic” setting
that moved her more deeply than a dozen “I love yous” might
have done.
One day they were in an auto
store, and he wanted to look at tires. As she tagged along,
he went directly to the rack
that contained Michelin, Steel-belted, Radial tires.They
looked like just any other tires to her—round and black!
She asked him, perhaps with some degree of consternation: “Why
are you buying the most expensive tires in the whole store?”
“Honey,” he replied, “these are for your
car. I want the safest tires available for your car.” She
related how deeply those rather matter-of-fact words penetrated
her heart. The dear lady said that her husband could have
said, “I love you” ten times that day, and it
would not have meant as much to her as, “Honey, these
are for your car.”
My father’s side of my family was never very affectionate
outwardly. They loved one another (I never remember a family
feud), but when they came together on special occasions,
they just shook hands. My dad did the same to me; it was
the “Jackson” way.
When my sweet wife and I
married, I had to learn to be more demonstrative. For years
Betty nicknamed me “Kawlijah,” after
the “wooden Indian” who “never said a word” in
Hank Williams song of that title. I am far from perfect now,
but I’ve learned to do better.
I do not understand men who treat their wives so indifferently,
much less those who deliberately wound them with insulting
words or actually assault them physically. And some men of
this temperament profess to be Christians!
They are not remotely so.
Such men do not deserve a godly wife; they haven’t the faintest concept of Paul’s
admonition: “Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ
also loved the church, and gave himself up for it.” Later
the apostle said that a husband should love his wife “as
his own body” (Ephesians 5:25-29). If some husbands
treated their own bodies no better than they do their wives,
what emaciated wretches they would be.
Many a woman who has been
mistreated by her husband eventually has had her fill and,
in weakness, seeks a new man whom she
believes will treat her lovingly—even though perhaps
she had no scriptural right to marry (Matthew 19:9).
The forsaken husband then
imagines he is justified in finding himself another woman.
What about that situation? He has
no more right to another wife than if he had been an adulterer.
Husbands need to let their wives feel loved—both in
word and deed.
--Wayne Jackson
christiancourier.com/articles/1489
-show-her-dont-just-tell-her
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