That Same Stupid Fight: Handling Conflict with Your Spouse

Statement of Faith

We believe that God created man and that He created them male and female. As such He created them different so as to complement and complete each other. God instituted monogamous marriage between male and female as the foundation of the family and the basic structure of human society. Therefore, we perform and mentor marriages in accordance with Biblical guidelines. (Genesis 2:24; Matthew 19:4-6; John 4:16-18; Romans 1:18-32; 1 Corinthians 5:11, 6:9-11. 6:18-20, 7:1-3 and 7:8-9; Galatians 5:19-21; Ephesians 5:3-7; 1 Timothy 1:9-11)

 

That Same Stupid Fight: Handling Conflict with
Your Spouse

There’s a reason so many of us would rather get
a cavity filled with Kenny G in the background than have that same … stupid …
fight.

Conflict with your spouse is inevitable for all
couples. (Whoever got the idea into our heads that “marriage should be easy” …
probably wasn’t married.) How can you deal?

 The following concepts from Peacemaker
Ministries may result in love being a little less of a battlefield.

 Why do we fight?

Conflict with your spouse happens when values
collide. He wishes she would park straight; she wishes he would apply the same
logic to getting his socks 17 inches closer to the hamper.

 As James 4:1 puts it, “What causes quarrels and
what causes fights among you? Is it not this, that your passions are at war
within you?” Our goals are thwarted.

Conflict with your spouse can be unspoken or
overt, tangible or intangible, quiet or quite loud. They can involve clashes
within ourselves, with others, with the world at large, and with God Himself.

 Conflicts can be tricky because the way we go
about handling them is heavily influenced by the culture in our family of
origin. Whether our “normal” includes glossing over, gossiping, lashing out,
storming away, or having a family meeting, our personal experience has dictated
“acceptable” responses to conflict.

We all fall on a spectrum, right?

·       
Escaping: There are the classic “stuffers,” who
prefer a false peace. They’re escaping conflict by outright denial,
internalizing responses to conflict, perhaps denying.

·       
Attacking: On the other end of the spectrum are “blowers,”
who shoot for a false justice. They might attack with words, physical force, or
the withdrawal of privileges, like money or sex.

·       
Peacemaking: In the middle of these extremes is the
true peace and true justice of godly responses: Talking it out. Finding a
mediator. Overlooking an offense. Jesus calls us “blessed” when we are
peacemakers (Matthew 5:9). Not peace-fakers. Not peace-breakers.

The replay

We don’t act as “peacemakers” just because it’s
the moral thing to do. It’s because when we enter conflict, we have the
opportunity to honor God and replay His actions when He was in conflict
with 
us.

 (Wait. How I handle my spouse’s workaholism is a
chance to exemplify the gospel? Please explain.)

When sin broke our relationship with God, He
went the distance to repair that relationship and make peace with us. When we
were His enemies, God demonstrated the quality and quantity of His love by
making a way for peace (see Romans 5:8). And it’s a job God has passed on to
us.

 Second Corinthians 5:18-20 puts it this way:

Through Christ [God] reconciled us to himself
and gave us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was
reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them,
and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation. Therefore, we are
ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us.

The way we show forgiveness, peace, and justice
in our relationships is a show-and-tell about what God did for us through
Jesus. 

So, your response to the sniping of your
mother-in-law, or your husband’s passivity, or your wife’s nagging?

Those are opportunities to honor God and grow
more like Him. (
Will I obey God and trust Him? Will I make my desires, my
goals, my “rights,” and my agenda serve His will above mine? What is His will?
).

Conflict also allows us to serve others and to
grow as it gives us new ways of looking at life.

Does that mean conflict with your spouse could
actually improve the relationship?!

That’s exactly what I’m saying.

What next?

When my kids had learned some basic,
conflict-management skills, I was eager to lay down my referee’s jersey and
whistle and let them finally work it out on their own:
 Sit here. Don’t
get up till it’s resolved. Do not pass “Go.” Do not collect $200.

Yet even that tended to drag on, sounding like a
couple of cats tied up together in a sack. But you know what helped them cut to
the chase far quicker.

Asking them to start with the log in their own
eye.
 This comes from
Matthew 7:5: “You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then
you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye.”

I get to the core of the conflict a lot faster
when I start with addressing my own heart issues. Which means …

Resolving conflict with your spouse in a healthy
way starts with taking 100% responsibility for our contribution—even if we
think our contribution is only 5% of the problem.
 Here’s a tip I heard from author Gary
Thomas: We always underestimate the impact our sin has on other people.

Often, our desires have swollen not just from
something we want, but into something we must have. So we’re willing to pass
judgment and mete out punishment in order to achieve that desire (even in
stealthy forms like the silent treatment or emotional withdrawal). We’re not
trusting God to meet those desires. They have become demands.

As you’re able, consider how to embrace
humility and confess to the other person
 (you might be surprised how
this gets the ball rolling). Admit specifically what you did, as well as
admitting the attitude that was in your heart. And don’t forget to acknowledge
the hurt you’ve caused.

The PAUSE process

So you’ve decided you’ll intentionally honor God
and trust Him with this conflict with your spouse. You’ve spent time searching
your heart and repenting from your own sin. 
How can you move to a
place where it’s not “us against each other” but “us against the
problem”? 

How can this become “Let’s work on the issue of
household division of labor” rather than “her vs. him”?

Peacemakers outlines a five-step process to keep
in mind:
 

  1. Prepare: Seek counsel. Pray. Continue to examine
    your own heart and reactions. 
  2. Affirm Relationships: Show value for the relationship and hope
    for the future. Help them feel secure to address the problem and not worry
    about protecting themselves.
     
  3. Understand and Acknowledge Interests: People’s positions are motivated by their
    spoken and unspoken interests: Concerns. Desires. Needs. Limitations. Fears.
    Values.  It might help to dig below the
    presenting issue—whose family to visit over the holidays, or how you’re talking
    to me when you’re exhausted from work, or whose turn it is to cart the kids to
    school. Look beneath that: What’s the desire of each person, and why is it
    important to them (even if they’re expressing those in illegitimate, unjust, or
    downright rude ways)?  For example,
    behind the clipped responses after your long day at work? Maybe your spouse
    feels like everyone else gets the polite, presentable side of you. Or that
    ultimately, you don’t appreciate or truly see him or her. 
  4. Search for Creative Solutions: There are almost always more than two
    options. How can you think creatively about a solution to address both of your
    interests? 
  5. Evaluate
    Options:
     Which of these
    speak to both of our interests? Is there a way I need to willingly lay down one
    of my interests?

 

“How can I know if I’ve really forgiven
them?  I’m still mad when I think about
the issue.”

Forgiveness is one of the most challenging tasks
we face as human beings. It’s not a natural response but a supernatural one.

Forgiveness is a choice. It’s a decision modeled after God’s forgiveness
of us: a decision not to hold the offense against the offender (if you need a
pep talk, check out Matthew 18:21-35).

It releases the person from their sin against
us, desiring good and blessing for them. And since forgiveness is a
choice 
we make, it doesn’t even depend on the other person. We can
forgive whether the person is sorry or not.

But here’s what forgiveness isn’t. It’s not forgetting or excusing, releasing
someone from worldly consequences of sin. (This is different from revenge. It’s
accountability for their choices. A forgiven criminal should still go to jail.
An embezzler should not be given a position as an accountant.) Forgiveness
isn’t a feeling, although feeling might be present.

It’s promising the following….. I will not… 

  • Keep ruminating
    negatively on this. 
  • Seek to hurt my offender
    as a result of this; I will seek to bless him or her, even if that means
    establishing accountability and finding justice. 
         
  • Gossip about this,
    speaking to others who are not part of the solution. 

Instead, I will continue to pursue a
relationship with the offender (unless repentance has not been demonstrated and
love dictates I set boundaries to protect both of us).

In all of this, you might even come to a renewed
appreciation of the lengths God has gone to forgive us and play out the gospel
in your own life and for those you love.

Other healthy habits

Scientists agree that healthy communication and
conflict resolution is just one of five habits that directly relates to
marital health. Read about the other habits too.

·       
Commitment

·       
Spiritual Intimacy

·       
Self-Awareness

·       
Friendship


Copyright © 2019 Janel Breitenstein. All rights
reserved.

Janel Breitenstein is an author, freelance
writer, speaker and frequent contributor for FamilyLife, including
Passport2Identity®, Art of Parenting®, and regular articles. After five and a
half years in East Africa, her family of six has returned to Colorado, where
they continue to work on behalf of the poor with Engineering Ministries
International. Her book, on spiritual life skills for messy families
(Zondervan), releases March 2021. You can find her—“The Awkward Mom”—having
uncomfortable, important conversations at 
JanelBreitenstein.com, and on Instagram @janelbreit.