to cherish something is to hold it dear.
Make your language intentional; several times a day find ways to communicate, "You're my favorite.”
* Cherish means to go out of our way to notice someone, appreciate someone, honor someone, and hold someone dear.
What if we considered that our job as husbands and wives was "to make the beautiful more beautiful"? By supporting, stabilizing, lifting, and turning our spouses to the "best sides" of their strengths and personalities, our spouses can become more and do more than they ever could on their own. We essentially affirm the beauty we see in them by helping them become even more beautiful.
The day you start thinking business success, ministry success, or personal happiness is more important to you than cherishing and showcasing your spouse is the day you stop cherishing your spouse and start feeling more distant from your spouse. You're essentially having a love affair with yourself, and you can't grow more intimate with your spouse when you're cherishing someone else.
To cherish is to be filled with joy not because your spouse brings you joy but because you take joy in your spouse's joy. You feel more elated over their blessings than even your own. To cherish is to almost desperately want others to see the best side of your spouse the way you do.
How can you better cherish your spouse so he or she can become the person God made them to be? What do you have to do in private? What do you have to do in public? What's the best way for you to showcase your particular spouse with their particular personality and gifts while helping them overcome their vulnerabilities and weaknesses?
Love, then, is giving for the sake of our spouse's becoming. | Tyler Ward
We have to keep noticing them, which is another way of saying we have to keep honoring them.
University of Washington professor and marriage expert Dr. John Gottman writes, "Without honor, all the marriage skills one can learn won't work."
When a cherished spouse enters the room or says something, you honor and cherish them by taking notice.
Your spouses needs will determine what makes them feel honored…
Romans 12:10 “Outdo one another” | How do you think your marriage would change if both of you (or even one of you) woke up with a goal every day to outdo your spouse in showing her or him honor?
whenever my wife expresses an opinion, reads something interesting from the local paper, or makes an observation, I am either cherishing her or neglecting her.
Here's how we might summarize noticing and honoring: sharing the lows with empathy and celebrating the highs with enthusiasm.
The act of consistently noticing and honoring our spouses cultivates and maintains a certain kind of relationship, and it shapes our hearts. Noticing and honoring sustain the force and power of cherishing.
Cherishing calls us to go to war against contempt. That's because cherishing is all about protecting our spouses-their reputation, their personhood, their sense of value and worth.
They don't realize their own attitude is the single biggest assault on their marriage…
Couples committed to cherishing each other do go to war, but never with each other. They go to war against contempt, always seeking to protect each other. This is how you know you're cherishing your spouse: you're protecting him or her instead of attacking them.
Cherishing our spouses shapes our minds and our hearts to such an extent that every cell in our body wants to protect, honor, and thank our cherished spouses, regardless of the cost to us.
What I love about the call to cherish each other is that it's an active decision to ask ourselves on a regular basis, "What do Ineed to do to protect my spouse?"
…the person who benefits most from gratitude is the person who expresses it.
we make daily choices about whether we scan our spouses for something to praise them for or something to find fault with. | Julie Gottman
'Today, you are my priority.’ It wasn't just that he gave me tickets; it's that he gave me himself.
* A godly marriage breathes life into each partner.
Of course, there's no promise that if you persevere, you'll get just what you're hoping for. But the one certainty is that if you give up, you definitely won't get it.
Cherish is something positive, not the lack of negative.
cherishing often isn't about what your spouse is saying; it's about who is saying it.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer calls listening one of the greatest services we can offer to each other:
The first service one owes to others in the fellowship consists in listening to them. Just as love to God begins with listening to His Word, so the beginning of love for the brethren is learning to listen to them... So it is His work that we do for our brother when we learn to listen to him... Listening can be of a greater service than speaking !
Cherishing is all about the particular.
Set aside time to ask your spouse, "What makes you feel cherished? Tell me the top three times you've felt cherished by me. Have there been any times when you sensed I was trying to cherish you, but I made some faulty assumptions?"
If you want to build a marriage in which you keep cherishing each other, you have to get over the hurdle of expecting your spouse to be perfect. No one would suggest, intellectually, that we expect our spouses to be perfect; we all would say, "Of course my spouse stumbles," but in our hearts, don't we often resent the particular way our spouses stumble, at the very least telling ourselves, “Wouldn't it be much better if he (shel stumbled in a different way?")
To keep cherishing each other, it follows that we must be good forgivers.
? Your ability to cherish your spouse when they stumble is, in fact, a direct barometer of your spiritual maturity. If you look at the Bible's teaching, half of holiness centers around being patient with other people's sins, as much as it involves dealing with—or avoiding our own sins…Our experiential holiness is defined in large part by our ability to gracefully bear the lack of holiness in others.
"Those with good sense are slow to anger, and it is their glory to overlook an offense" (Proverbs 19:11)
When you truly cherish someone, you look at the presence behind the problem. If you've accepted that every spouse stumbles in many ways, then you know it's not possible to have the positive presence of a spouse without a corresponding frustration or disappointment. So you look at the frustration as a marker of blessing: this is how the spouse you cherish occasionally stumbles.
Even when things may not look the best, seek understanding before you even think about censure.
begin with an open-ended question; don't prepare a speech. "Tell me what happened trom your perspective"
I can't put this forcefully enough: start these conversations with questions that seek understanding, not with accusations that seek submission. The former breeds cherishing; the latter feeds emotional distance.
husbands and wives are souls who want to be married to someone who will cherish the whole person, not just a particular role a person may fulfill.
We have to be intentional rather than distracted. We have to remind ourselves to think about our spouses with delight. It's not a choice; it's a hundred choices, a thousand choices, and then a hundred thousand choices.
We fashion grooves in our brains that often direct our actions. Repeated actions impact our brain so powerfully that whatever that action is becomes our default mode of response.
“we can grow cherish”
Philippians 4:8 tells us that when we think about our spouses, we should focus on:
* whatever is true
* whatever is noble
* whatever is right
* whatever is pure
* whatever is lovely
* whatever is admirable
* whatever is excellent or praiseworthy
There is more to be gained by sacrificing than by indulging.
Sacrifice lays the groundwork for a cherishing mind-set.
"The study demonstrates that experiential purchases, such as a meal out or theater tickets, result in increased well-being because they satisfy higher order needs."
Cherishing takes intention, purpose, and reflection.
To live lives of cherishing our spouses, we must be wary of cherishing too much of something else. We cannot live with appropriate intensity for our spouses if we are pouring ourselves out on something else.
If you want to be cherished, practice humility and admit there are some really irritating parts of you that need to be transformed-and welcome the transformation.
Tim Keller puts it: "While your character flaws may have created mild problems for other people, they will create major problems for your spouse and your marriage... No one else is as inconvenienced and hurt by your flaws as your spouse is. And therefore your spouse becomes more keenly aware of what is wrong with you than anyone else ever has been."
One of the quickest ways to increase your spouse's desire to cherish you is to find a need and meet it.
In your marriage, are you careful to devote yourself to do good works for your spouse?
Cherish is built and sustained by a lifetime of choices reinforced over decades, so that someone becomes increasingly important to us because they always have been and they always will be.