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Managing the Role Revolution

Posted by Juli_Slattery on Oct 22, 2009 4:38:39 PM

This week's Time magazine cover explores how the roles of women have changed over the last generation. A woman working outside of the home (even after she has children) is now the norm. In fact, Time reports that in almost 40% of marriages, the wife is the primary wage earner.

 

This trend trickles down into many areas of marriage and parenting. But what I want to blog about today is that even with all of the opportunity, women are more unhappy (and far more stressed) today than they were in their parents' generation. I can relate. The balancing act of family and work takes its toll. There are many things I can ask my mom about, but not this. She was a full-time homemaker. How do I walk with integrity as a Christian woman, using my gifts in ministry, while still keeping my marriage and kids #1?

 

As a young married couple, you are setting patterns in your home that will constantly need to be tweaked and revisited, without the benefit of "doing it the way your parents did it." As you navigate through these decisions, here are a few tips I've learned along the way.

 

Although roles and opportunities have changed, a man and woman's basic needs in marriage have not. A husband still needs to feel like the protector and provider of the family and still needs to be respected as the leader of the home. If his wife is knocking the cover off the ball at work, his need for respect hasn't changed. While cheering for her, he may also feel threatened by her.

 

Likewise, a wife still needs to feel protected and valued in her marriage. She will not ultimately be happy with success at work if her primary relationships are failing. Although at first she might be grateful for the opportunity to pursue her career, eventually she will feel resentful if she must carry both burdens of the home and the financial health of the family.

 

In our marriage, we have had to constantly battle the temptation to work against God's design. Even if it would make financial sense for me to work full-time and for Mike's job to take second-fiddle, we've decided not to go that route because of the stress that would put on our relationship.

 

In your marriage, you might have to make some decisions that go against the grain. As you approach decisions about whose job takes priority and how to balance work/home responsibilities, begin with Biblical principles (like the husband is the head of the wife). Then be honest about your basic personal needs (like the husband needs to feel competent and respected). Finally, work out the details of how to make it happen.

 

Unfortunately, most young couples make decisions about work and finances based on "what makes sense" instead of looking at the facts through biblical and psychological truths. How you work out the roles in your marriage will change over time -- be flexible. But never compromise on time-tested principles.

864 Views Tags: marriage, roles, balance


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Oct 23, 2009 8:14 AM Guest Marie K.  says:

"women are more powerful but less happy"

 

I'm not surprised. We have the 'power' to choose what role we want but this shift in today's American woman is concerning. I choose  to stay home whenever we start having babies but the undertone feels like American culture is trying to tell me that staying home to be a wife and mother is not a valid choice these days. I pray Christian culture will battle hard to elevate staying home as a valid choice and a powerful  role.

 

Thanks for writing about this! The role revolution is certainly interesting.

Oct 23, 2009 10:33 AM thepagemage thepagemage    says:

We are more unhappy then ever? I'd be interested in learning how people judge the happiness of themselves or others... it seems unquantifiable.

 

Money is a tricky thing - it plays strongly into our pride.

I agree that if the woman earned more, it would put stress on the man, but is that God's design coming into play, or is that our human frailty, our insecurity and our jealousy?

Oct 24, 2009 12:03 PM Guest Cosondra C.  says:
Why can't you do it the way your mother did?  Who says you HAVE to work outside the home.  My husband and I have been married 32 years, and I haven't worked outside the home one day of them.  We have "given up" a lot of things that most people say are necessities today, but we don't regret it at all.  Our children are much more important than things.  You could ask our boys, and they would tell you that they are very glad that I was able to be at home with them.  They are very glad they did not have to go to daycare or come home from school to an empty home.  My boys were able to enjoy their summers out of school.  They could stay home and not have to go to daycare.  We don't have a lot, and it's all paid for, but we have two wonderful sons who are well worth the "sacrifice."
Oct 24, 2009 7:33 PM Guest Carly  says in response to Cosondra C.:
Hear hear!
Oct 26, 2009 12:04 PM Snowday Snowday    says in response to Marie K.:

I agree with this.  When I was younger, I worked a ton and tried to have a family also, I found it to be almost impossible to find enough hrs in the day.  My family was on the losing end of that, unfortunately.  My mom tried it too and it was difficult at that point in time for women to have a flex schedule.  She really couldn't do it either ... she stayed at home, and I'm glad because she was a very good mother.  Your family has to be one of the main focus points, guys too.

 

Now I hear on TV on the time about how woman are making more than men, now my husband is now talking about that all the time at home.  It seems like I won't be making ANY money for about six months there if I did get pregnant in the future, so I don't know why he expects that now.

Oct 26, 2009 12:15 PM Juli_Slattery Juli_Slattery    says in response to Snowday:
The response to my post confirms that there are a lot of strong and differing opinions about what roles (biblical and cultural) should look like. In some cases, husband and wife disagree! Decisions about who works, who makes how much money, whose career is primary, etc... will make you wrestle with the biblical text and will also touch the core needs of who you are as a man/woman. Don't take either lightly. I've met with many couples years down the road who have boatloads of bitterness and resentment based on decisions they made early in the marriage based primarily on logistics. Make these decisions carefully and prayerfully based on conviction rather than convenience! The logistics WILL work out in the long run. I also want to say that these convictions may look differently for every family. Some will chose to have the wife stay home; some will not. Paul's letter to Corinth (I Corinthians 10) reminds us to give each other freedom in Christ as we seek God's direction and leading in our individual families.
Oct 26, 2009 12:48 PM thepagemage thepagemage    says in response to Juli_Slattery:
Decisions about who works, who makes how much money, whose career is primary, etc... will make you wrestle with the biblical text and will also touch the core needs of who you are as a man/woman.

 

What are the texts that you're referring to? I'd like to enter into this "wrestling" process as I explore how God is calling me to - whether it's to work part-time, full-time, etc. If it's just the verse about the husband being the head - can you offer any insight into practical application of that? (Could you do another blog post about this?)