

We were just convinced that, “Our marriage is going to be different because we love each other differently than everyone else.”īob: Who doesn’t think that way on the wedding day?īob: We all look and go, “Look, doesn’t matter what happens, we’re going to hold together because we’ve just experienced this kind of desperate passion for one another that will never go away.” So, we had looked at our upbringings and talked through some of those nuances. We’ve talked about-we had gone through some pre-marital counseling. We love each other a lot.” We talked about all of our differences, and we know the differences of our families. Justin: Yes, I think we got into marriage, thinking, “We love each other.
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I don’t know how to summarize it any better than Bob did already but it wasn’t long into the marriage, before you realized that what you’d bargained for in this relationship was much, much more than you ever imagined.īob: Well, you found out that you were more different than you’d realized in your year-and-a-half of getting to know one another in dating, and engagement, and all of that right? Your marriage started out with quite a start. They’ve written a book called Beyond Ordinary. Justin is a pastor in the Nashville area, and together they do some blogging. They’ve been married since 1995-have three children. Well, I hope that you’ve gotten all the frivolity out of your system from what we’ve already heard this week.ĭennis: Yes, and I think if you haven’t already heard what we talked about this week, I’d encourage you to go back and listen because the story that Justin and Trish Davis tell is absolutely-well, it’s hysterical.īob: It’s the story of how they met, how they got married, how they went on their honeymoon. Nobody thinks they’re going to be that couple do they? But many of us find ourselves in isolation, not long after we’ve said, “I do.” Stay tuned.Īnd welcome to FamilyLife Today.

Our host is the President of FamilyLife ®, Dennis Rainey, and I’m Bob Lepine. Through those choices-there were consequences that we never thought we would be that couple-even though we knew the choices we were making were destructive.īob: This is FamilyLife Today for Tuesday, January 15 th. When you become strangers, you stop fighting altogether. The most dangerous place that we got to is we became strangers.

Trisha: We went from being best friends to eventually becoming enemies. Bob: Trisha Davis can look back today and see how her marriage began its drift toward isolation.
