Bridging the Expectation Gap in Marriage

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Bible Study Guide

Sermon Clips

### Quotes for Outreach

1. "Well, good morning, Arrows Church. You guys doing well today? It's been a great day so far. My name's Robert. I'm the pastor of Arrows Church, and somewhere around here is my wife. This is Shelly. You don't get off that easy. We want to welcome you here today. One of our values here at Arrows Church is to be together, and here's why that's important, especially in the context of our relationships, even marriages, is because when you're together with other people, it helps protect those relationships and protect those marriages." [01:40]( | | )

2. "We've all seen those wildlife documentaries where the weak, small, injured animal gets attacked by the wolves, and sometimes our relationships and marriages are in that state, and when we're around other people, there's protection in that, and so we're all for about being together just to protect what we have." [01:40]( | | )

3. "We want to invite you guys to come to the church. We want to invite you guys to come to the church. We want you guys to come back next week. We're going to close this out and we're going to do it in kind of a cool way. Um, and so we're going to close and it's mother's day next week." [44:37]( | | )

### Quotes for Members

1. "Expectations that are not met lead to... To ongoing feelings of sadness, disappointment, frustration, and anger. Expectations that are not met will lead to sadness, disappointment, frustration, and anger. Have you ever been those things with your spouse? Have you ever been frustrated, and mad, and angry, and upset, disappointed with your spouse? And you don't even know why." [05:46]( | | )

2. "The truth is this. Expectations that are not met lead to... To ongoing feelings of sadness, disappointment, frustration, and anger. Expectations that are not met will lead to sadness, disappointment, frustration, and anger. Have you ever been those things with your spouse? Have you ever been frustrated, and mad, and angry, and upset, disappointed with your spouse? And you don't even know why." [05:46]( | | )

3. "How you handle that discrepancy, how you handle that gap tells us almost everything we need to know about if your marriage is going to last long term, and here's why. Because how you handle that gap tells us almost everything we need to know about you as a person. Because you have a couple of options in that moment. You can fill that gap with a lot of different things." [11:15]( | | )

4. "Let me tell you the way that most people do it because it takes no work, no effort on your part. You can fill that gap with things like motive. You can say, you know what? I expected Shelly to do this. Here's what she actually did. I know why she did that. I know why she did that. She did that on purpose. She didn't want me to be happy, right? I'm assigning motive to her actions because she didn't meet my expectation, okay?" [11:15]( | | )

5. "The hard thing to do is to fill that gap with things like grace and trust, and to look at your spouse, or that person in your life, and say, you know what? They did not meet the expectation I had, and that's okay. That's okay. They're not perfect. I'm not perfect. Nobody's perfect. To fill that gap, that discrepancy with trust, you know what? Sure they didn't meet that, and there was probably a really good reason why they did not meet that. I wonder what that reason is." [12:45]( | | )

6. "I'm going to get curious as to what that reason is. Do you see how that takes much more work and effort on your part? Do you see how that takes much more work and effort on your part? Do you see how that takes much more work and effort on your part to fill that discrepancy with grace and truth?" [12:45]( | | )

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