You’ve heard the statistics. You’ve even been encouraged by them. Couples who pray together have less than a 1% chance of divorce. So if there’s a 99% chance that your marriage would succeed if you just do this one, little thing… why is it so difficult for even committed Christians to get in the habit and stick to it?
Authors and marriage mentors Lori and David Hatcher found themselves in the same situation. Ten years into their marriage, they had hit a plateau. The responsibilities of parenting young children had left them exhausted – and more like roommates than lovers. “Children can be loud and demanding, and you have to take care of them,” David said. Like most of us, they knew Christian couples were “supposed to” read the Bible and pray together. And like most of us, they tried, and failed to make it a habit. Every year they’d give each other a new devotional at Christmas, but when evening rolled around, and the kids were finally in bed, they’d fall asleep before they could finish even a page.
The Hatchers heard a phrase at a conference that inspired them to look at their priorities. “The best gift you can give your children is a solid marriage.” “We realized when you are committed to your marriage, everything else falls in place,” Lori said. This flipped a switch in Lori’s heart that motivated her to make a change.
She realized they had developed a pattern when the children were small where David tiptoed out of the house for work early while Lori enjoyed a last few moments of sleep before hitting the ground running to begin her responsibilities with the children and home. The two often would barely think about each other during their hectic days apart. In the early years of midnight feedings and teething babies Lori needed to rest whenever she could. But she realized the girls weren’t babies anymore. And she really wanted to start praying and reading the Bible with David.
God gave her an idea of how they could carve out this time together without slowing down David’s off-to-work routine. Lori woke with him, prepared breakfast while he showered, and then read a short devotion together while he ate. Before he left, they would share prayer concerns for the day.
While rising early initially felt like a sacrifice, Lori felt God asking her how badly she wanted this, and she wanted it badly enough to give the new routine a try.
“We’d gotten to the point of saying, ‘How was your day?’ responding, ‘Fine.’ Then off we would go on our separate ways. Asking each other about ways we could pray unlocked some specifics about our days and gave us something to share in the evening,” Lori said. Now David knew Lori was struggling to teach Algebra that day in a homeschool lesson. Lori knew David had a difficult meeting with a customer. They had a point of connection, and because they committed to pray for each other, they found they thought about each other more often during the day. “We realized God was knitting our hearts back together again,” Lori said.