
Apologies for the lack of posts lately. This mommy’s usual blogging time was spent snuggling a sweet little girl with a case of the sniffles over the last couple of weeks. She was extra cuddly and not thrilled about long naps by herself in the crib for a while. As I write this, she is snoring happily in her room. Praise God!
I recently had cause to consider the role of the Catholic faith in marriage. It’s easy to gush about the beauty and permanence of sacramental true love when everything is shiny and new. My husband and I are still living the fairytale. We have been married for nearly three years and have fallen even more in love with each other since we said I do. We have one perfect baby girl and, God willing, will be giving her some siblings in the near future. With the exception of a few difficult days I can honestly say that thus far marriage has been a delight. However, I was reminded of something the priest said during our Pre-Cana. The wedding is not the goal. It’s not the end. For most couples it’s not even happily ever after. Certainly happiness will be seeded throughout the life that you’ll build together but real marriage is not a fairytale. Rather the wedding is the beginning of the story.
No matter who you are or how in love you may be, the honeymoon will come to a close eventually. The reality of the rest of your life with this same, flawed, broken person will set in. You may say and do things to each other that you regret. You may learn things about your spouse which very well may have been deal breakers if you’d known them before getting married. Someday you may even wonder if you would’ve been long separated if not for your mutual commitment to the Catholic faith. These thoughts of doubt do not make you a bad spouse but are merely manifestations of our fallen human nature.
As with any vocation, marriage comes with seasons of joy and of hardship. You and your spouse are different people and will clash eventually. Of course kindness toward your spouse is never overrated. There is no single person on the planet more deserving of your forgiveness and grace than the one who has promised to put up with all of your nonsense for the rest of their life. Unfortunately, it’s also true that familiarity breeds contempt. There may come a day when compassion toward your spouse falls shy on your list of priorities.
It is in these seasons of darkness and distance in your marriage when a strong Catholic faith is absolutely critical. If it was easy everyone would do it. We Catholics are not called to do what’s easy. The cross of marriage can be the heaviest of all, particularly in those moments when it seems like your faith is the only thing you have left in common. That cross will grow and some days seem unbearable. We will fall under its weight like our Lord on the Way to Calvary and, like our Lord, we too must find the strength to pick it up daily and continue on in our marriage as a loving husband or wife. That one thin, crucifix-shaped tether between you and your spouse can and will hold you together and see you to better seasons if you let it. God can work miracles through anyone. Even if you have to wait for the bliss of salvation in Heaven, better days are coming.
As I write this I know full well that our difficult seasons are still to come. These lessons don’t come from my own experience but from listening to the experiences of others. As God intended, marriage is the closest we can get to heaven on earth but in our fallen nature we often forget the bliss of this particular sacrament. Thus, it is always necessary to remind ourselves of the fairytale when our own stories first began by perusing the wedding album or making time for date night. As stated earlier, marriage is not a job or merely a relationship. It is a vocation calling us to give one hundred percent of ourselves even on those days when it seems that one hundred percent doesn’t amount to all that much.









