THE LOVE TEST
Photo credit: shutterstock.com |
The following tests can help you
determine that the love is genuine to ensure the success of the relationship.
1. The Sharing Test: True love always
wants to share and give. It thinks and looks out for opportunities to give to the
other. How often do you like to share with your partner a good book you read, a
good counsel you received, exciting news you heard or your money? There is one
thing which is indispensable for relationships. That is sharing! Share to
enrich your relationships.
Ask yourself: Are we able to share together? Is our love
more interested in giving than getting?
2. The Respect Test: There is no real love
without respect. Does your partner have your respect? You may admire your
partner for something they do; but would you feel honoured to introduce him or her
to your friends, and be proud to have him or her as the father or mother of your
children? Can you envision yourself walking side by side and hand in hand with
this person, even in your old age?
Ask yourself: Do we really respect each other, and proud
of ourselves?
3. The Habit Test: Love accepts the other
one for who they are – including their shortcomings and flaws. Sure, you love
each other; but can you stand the way your partner eats, talks and even laughs –
which you find so disgusting – for the rest of your life, since those habits
are likely not to change?
Ask yourself: Do we only love each other, or we also like
each other?
4. The Quarrel Test: Have you ever had a
quarrel? Don’t be deceived to believe that in true love quarrels are absent. Once
you are two different people living together, there will definitely be quarrels.
But the most important thing is your ability to resolve your quarrels. This
ability must be a ‘required’ premarital experience – it must be trained and
tested.
Ask yourself: Are we able to forgive each other and reconcile
after a serious quarrel?
5. The Growth Test: Real love grows and it
makes you also grow in all spheres of life – personally, professionally,
spiritually, socially, and economically. How often are you interested in the
growth and development of your partner? If your love doesn’t make you a better
person, then it is not worth it.
Ask yourself: Are we concerned about each other’s growth,
and are we growing together?
6. The Time Test: It is good to know
yourselves enough; one year reasonable, two years safer. Know each other not
just in church clothes, at work or social functions; but also in daily living
in normal dress, with hair unwashed or unkempt, and in “horrible” situations. Know
yourselves through all the seasons before making any major decisions. The old
saying: “Never get married until you have summered and wintered with your
partner” is very valid. Time will best test your love!
Ask yourself: Have we summered and wintered together? Do
we know ourselves through all the seasons?
7. The Agape Test: The love described in First
Corinthians 13 (the Love Chapter) has the quality to bind perfectly all
relationships forever. It is a good exercise for partners who want to test
their love for marriage by comparing it with the love [Agape] described in the
Love Chapter. This love never ends and so a husband-wife relationship which is permanent
needs to be patterned after it.
Ask yourself: Is our love patterned after God’s love for
mankind? Does our love measure up to the characteristics of love in the Love
Chapter?
References:
- Married You by Walter Trobisch
- The Rules of Love by Richard Templar
Comments
Thanks for the write up sir.