Missionary Families of Christ

Keeping the Love Tank Full

May 2020 Young Couples Date Night Topic
Young couples date night topics

Grab

What actions did your spouse do to you lately that made you feel loved?

Grace

Read: 1 Corinthians 13:13

“And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.”

Child psychologists affirm that every child has certain basic emotional needs that must be met if he is to be emotionally stable. Among those emotional needs, none is more basic than the need for love and affection, the need to sense that he or she belongs and is wanted. With an adequate supply of affection, the child will likely develop into a responsible adult. Without that love, he or she will be emotionally and socially retarded.

I liked the metaphor the first time I heard it: “Inside every child is an ’emotional tank’ waiting to be filled with love. When a child really feels loved, he will develop normally but when the love tank is empty, the child will misbehave. Much of the misbehavior of children is motivated by the cravings of an empty ‘love tank.’” The emotional need for love, however, is not simply a childhood phenomenon. That need follows us into adulthood and into marriage.

The “in love” experience temporarily meets that need, but it is inevitably a quick fix and has a limited and predictable life span. After we come down from the high of the “in love” obsession, the emotional need for love resurfaces because it is fundamental to our nature. It is at the center of our emotional desires. At the heart of mankind’s existence is the desire to be intimate and to be loved by another. Marriage is designed to meet that need for intimacy and love. That is why the ancient biblical writings spoke of the husband and wife becoming “one flesh.” That did not mean that individuals would lose their identity; it meant that they would enter into each other’s lives in a deep and intimate way. 

I am convinced that keeping the emotional love tank full is as important to a marriage as maintaining the proper oil level is to an automobile. Running your marriage on an empty “love tank” may cost you even more than trying to drive your car without oil. Thus, we need to make sure that our love tank is full. For with love we will climb mountains, cross seas, traverse desert sands, and endure untold hardships. Without love, mountains become unclimbable, seas uncrossable, deserts unbearable, and hardships our plight in life. 

The Christian apostle to the Gentiles, Paul, exalted love when he indicated that all human accomplishments that are not motivated by love are, in the end, empty. He concluded that in the last scene of the human drama, only three characters will remain: “faith, hope, and love. But the greatest of these is love.” 

(excerpt from “The Love Language” by Gary Chapman)

Gather

For discussion, answer the following question/s:

  1. How is your love tank right now? Is it FULL, HALF FULL, or LOW. What do you think will make it full?
  2. How are you filling the love tank of your spouse right now?

Go Forth

Do something this week that will show your spouse how much you love her.

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