Week 88: Marriages and Job Loss
This week please remember in prayer those married
couples who have experienced a job loss. In addition to the financial
pressures a job loss can bring to a marriage, it can also cause the one who has
lost the job to question his or her self-worth. If a new job does not
materialize quickly, hope can be lost and, when hope is lost, inertia can set
in and eventually lead to deep depression.
If both spouses have been working, the spouse who
is still employed will often attempt to make up some of the income loss by
working more hours. This response, though helpful in closing the income
gap, can inadvertently create a feeling of guilt in the life of the spouse who
has lost the job, while at the same time exhaust the spouse who is taking on
the extra work, particularly if the situation continues for an extended time.
Inertia, depression, guilt and exhaustion are all
negative effects of job loss that can cause marriages to spiral out of
control. Couples can descend into the
blame game, a game in which there is no winner, not the husband, not the wife,
not the marriage.
Pray that these couples will
- Remember their standing before God has not changed; they are still His beloved children
- Not lose hope but trust in God as their source of provision
- Not descend into the blame game
- Be blessed with a new job, one even better than before
- Be spared the crippling effect of guilt
- Be wise in their efforts to balance their income needs with their need for rest
- Be supported in prayer and generosity by fellow believers
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