{My second son is getting married in about a week. This letter is to his fiance, but maybe it will speak to others as well. After all, marriage and mothers/daughters-in-law have been around since the beginning of time, and will continue until the Lord returns.}
He who finds a wife finds a good thing, and obtains favor from the Lord. Proverbs 18:22
My dear, I want you to know that I love you. I determined long before I met you that I would love you. And my heart is overjoyed to find that it is an easy thing to do. In everything we do and say and live through our lives in the future, my hope is that you will always remember this and keep it in the front of your heart and mind.
Thank you for loving my son. And for loving me. Thank you for the thoughtfulness you put into the words you say. And the way that you say them. You touch me deeply with your kindness towards my son and our family. I pray that this will always be so. At any rate, we are off to a great start!
Over the years to come, you likely will see into our lives in ways that few ever will. You will see our strengths, but I am sure it is our weaknesses that will stand out more. Be patient with us.
You will see the areas where we are more prone to sin. You will see the places we try to hide from the wider world. You know, those places of vulnerability and heartache. Be gentle with us.
And as we see those areas in your life, my heart hopes that we will also be patient and gentle with you.
I’m sure my son will not only tell you of the joys, the highs, the triumphs in our lives, but he will share the low points, the places where we failed. We all have those, you know. We like to pretend that we don’t. But we do. Like most Christian parents, we desire to raise our children well, in the love and nurture of the Lord. But like all parents from all times, we are still dealing with real life: exhaustion, bills, impatience, sin. And so, it doesn’t always look like that shiny brochure we imagined when we got married and started having kids: the one that pictures perfectly dressed children, a “House Beautiful” home, a sophisticated wardrobe that fits on a slender body, and a perpetually happy husband.
Unless it’s the one you find at the bottom of my purse, with crumbs ground into it, pen markings, smudges. If that’s the brochure you have in mind, then we’re good.
I have found that the trick is to keep our eyes on Christ, not on our crumpled brochure. Why is it that we cling so tenaciously to the ideals we manufacture in our minds? Don’t we know that that isn’t real life, even as we pour over Pinterest and Facebook, with all the happy ideas and smiles?
Mostly, we have had an incredibly happy life together, raising this son who will soon be your Mister. He is tenacious. He is faithful. He is generous. He is stubborn. He is not easily swayed. But, when he is in, he’s all in. You never have to doubt his commitment. He loves deeply, with everything that is in him. He is tender and soft, in that hard, rugged way. But, I think you know all of that. Be careful with him. Your words have great power to build or to tear him down. Never forget the power you have. Proverbs 14:1 teaches us that “The wise woman builds her house, but the foolish pulls it down with her hands.” Yes, and yes. Try to grasp that concept. I’m still trying to grasp it after 25 years of marriage. It’s a huge thing. I am still baffled when I learn how strongly my words have impacted my husband. Both for good and for bad. Be quick to repent and apologize. We have nothing to gain by stubbornness. Only days, months, years to lose to bitterness and strife. Choose the good. Choose the joy. Choose the love. Choose tenderness and compassion. You’ll be blessed so much more with those.
I look forward to watching the two of you make your life together. You will have struggles, but those are great opportunities to unite your hearts as one as you work together to get through them. You will have victories. They may be small, like getting the toddler to eat his vegetables; they may be great, like buying your first house or triumphing over sin through the power of Christ in you.
And I will be here cheering you on. Encouraging you in your role as a wife. I want you to succeed at being the best wife you can be to my son. Because I believe it will help him be the best husband to you. And everyone wins. For generations to come.
It is not my desire to be that meddling mother in law in the middle of your lives. My desire is to come alongside you, offering encouragement. And advice when asked. If I seem aloof at times, it is likely because I am trying to give you space. You are always welcome into my little world. But I will try never to presume a central spot in yours. My door is always open to you, or my texting phone, whichever the case may be. And you two are always welcome at all family and holiday occasions. But, we will never have expectations that you will be there. I pray that you never feel any pressure from us in these potentially difficult matters. We will take great joy for any and all the times we have together. And be thankful for those times. And understanding when it can’t be so. At least that’s our heart in the matter. I pray the Lord will give us strength and perspective that blesses you in your marriage.
I no longer have an allegiance to my son. I have an allegiance to YOU: the two of you as one flesh. I love you as though I bore you myself — because my son loves you and has chosen you for his bride. It’s a wonderful bonus that I like you, too. God is so good.
So, my dear, welcome to the family. I think my son has done a wonderful job in choosing a wife. I pray that he is the husband to you that you need: for companionship, love, your personal sanctification, and growing in maturity in the Lord. He has had an excellent example in his father.
I love you.
photo credit: Sierra Candler
This blog post is shared over at A Wise Woman Builds Her Home.