Week 209: Marriages and Chronic Pain
Please join us this week
in praying for marriages that must deal with chronic pain.
Couples
in these marriages can struggle sometimes because of an identification
problem: they identify the
suffering spouse as the problem instead the suffering spouse’s pain.
This misidentification can lead to false blame: the healthy spouse can
blame the suffering spouse for their problems, but maybe more often the
suffering spouse can blame himself or herself. In either case, this false
blame can be destructive to the intimate marriage relationship the spouses
should enjoy.
Financial
pressures can often assail these marriages as couples seek any and all possible
solutions to the debilitating situation. It is not unusual for treatment
programs or medications to work for a time but need adjustment as time passes.
These adjustments cost money. It is also not unusual for couples dealing
with chronic pain to be lured into expensive treatments that promise relief but
fail to delivery.
Just
the day-to-day grind of managing pain is physically and emotionally
exhausting. The pain is like an unwelcome house-guest who will not go
away and demands constant attention beyond the couples’ typical life
responsibilities.
And
finally, chronic pain can steal a couple’s hope. Marriage should be full
of hope: hope of enjoying life with another, hope of children, hope of
ministering in God’s kingdom together. Chronic pain can foster
hopelessness because it delays some goals and crushes others. When hope
is pushed aside, depression can rush in to take its place with devastating
results.
Please
pray with us that these couples will
- have faithful prayer warriors to lift them up consistently
- rightly identify the pain, not the suffering spouse, as the burden
- not be crushed by financial pressures
- be able to discern between solid, helpful treatments and those that are self-serving schemes that rob them of money and hope
- not lose hope but rejoice in the hope they have in Christ Jesus
- receive the care they need and freely express gratitude for that care
- be joyful as they experience periods of relief, even though the relief may be temporary and of a short duration
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