The Lesson of the
Butter Dish
Many people
have asked me if Elizabeth and I felt strange because we never had an
opportunity to know each other before our marriage.
The fact is
that we did not feel like strangers. After marriage we began to talk as if we
had known each other for many years. Of course, we both had known the same
intimate Friend, Jesus Christ. We both desired to copy His character traits in
our lives. This God-factor made a difference.
Sadly, many
people today leave God-factor out. God is definitely interested in our
well-being. He wants to show His greatness through our family. Whatever the
psychological makeup of a couple, God has designed every family with great
potential to glorify Him.
It is true
that many people take factors like health, wealth and status into account when
considering marriage. Many think of the God-factor, but only in terms of their
own material prosperity. When such people experience material loss, they
question God and even blame Him. If we entrust God with anything, we can be
assured that everything will be perfect. It may not be perfect according to our
terms, but we must remember that we have a limited perspective. God makes
everything perfect on His terms.
Coming back
to my marriage, I say that it was ‘God-arranged’.
In this
context, a God-arranged marriage means an arrangement that involves the ‘Altar
Test’. This is when both parties put everything on the altar and give up their
rights and expectations. In a way, a God-arranged marriage is like purifying
gold in the furnace, where all the unwanted elements burn away, leaving only
the best.
Elizabeth and
I wanted to seek God’s kingdom first through our lives together. It was a
thrilling and encouraging experience to be with friends who sincerely prayed
for us and wished us God’s best.
We knew we
were going to have an exciting future because we had several friends who had
prayed for us. We thought of all the things we could do in the future, with the
backing of supportive prayers from sincere friends, a great family heritage,
education, and all the abilities God had given us.
We were well
received by our friends in the church and our social circle. We were given opportunities
to exercise leadership, which helped build our confidence. We felt we had been
prepared by God in a special way for each other, and that we were ready to set
an example as a deeply spiritual family. After all, we were mature and needed
to achieve so much for God through the many opportunities, He had given us. We
also sensed the need to get ourselves better equipped for God’s work—although
we felt our prayer life and our daily devotional life were strong, at least by
normal standards.
Why, then,
did some minor matters begin to bother me?
For example,
during those early days, we enjoyed a quick breakfast of bread, butter, jam and
boiled eggs. It was my habit to cover the butter dish or replace the lid of the
jam bottle as soon as I used these items. My wife’s habit, however, was to
leave all the lids and covers off, and to close them only when breakfast was
over.
I didn’t like
to see the butter dish and the jam bottle left open. I did not want to tell Elizabeth
about it or force her to change her habits, but I did wish she would close them
up the way I liked it!
I decided that
the best way to deal with it was to close them gently myself every time I found
them left open. I hoped she would follow my good example in a few days. When
this didn’t happen, I figured she had not gotten the message. So I began to
close the containers more forcefully to produce a good clicking noise! This
would let her know that I wanted them closed. But even that failed to change
her. My wife still left the jars and butter dish uncovered.
Now what was
I supposed to do? Was I going to have to live with such an annoyance all my
life? Even after enjoying a nice breakfast, the unclosed lids haunted my
thoughts. I began to think about the lids even while I travelled to my office.
She did not close them! She did not have the sense to follow what I wanted! Why
can’t she close them?
I began to
get worked up and irritated—and once even ended up getting on the wrong bus. My
frustration continued to bother me even after I reached work. It affected my
thinking process, and I began to ask question like: “Why did God give me this
kind of wife? What happened to the prayers of so many friends? Is this the kind
of wife God wanted me to have?”
It’s amazing
how easily we come to believe that our foundations are being shaken. We need to
recognize that God has many ways of speaking to us. I learned from C.S. Lewis’s
book, The Problem of Pain, that God
sometimes uses pain as a kind of megaphone to get our attention when He wants
to speak to us.
In this
situation, God spoke to me and taught me some great and valuable lessons. In
the midst of my agitation, he answered my angry questions. But the answer was
far different from what I had expected. He told me, “Until you change your
attitude, your wife will continue to keep the butter dish and jam opened. Until
you stop getting agitated and view your wife differently, she will not close
them!”
Now I could
see more clearly what was happening.
I had been
saying that I wanted to accomplish God’s purpose in my life. God was testing my
desire to accomplish His purposes by giving me the ‘right’ kind of wife—one who
would help me to see my own weaknesses and faults. God wanted to develop my
personality, and He provided the right kind of tool with that purpose in mind.
He was using my wife as a precious tool in His hands to chip away the rough
edges of my personality. My pastor could not do it. My mentor could not do it.
My supervisor at work could not do it. The best tool God could use was my own
wife. Therefore, I should not get worked up when I go through hard times.
Instead, I must say, “Thank you Lord for my wife!”
It wasn’t
long before my wife discovered the very same truth, especially when I behaved
contrary to her expectations. She also began to thank God for me. (she probably
had to thank God more often, because of my rough and selfish nature!) Before
marriage, we were two; after marriage we became one. We both benefited from
being used as God’s tool on each other.