• When do you catch yourself
playing the “If, then” game? How does that affect your relationship with your
spouse?
• Do you consider you spouse
a teammate? Do you treat him or her as a teammate?
• Would you consider you and
your spouse to be on the same team, working from the same playbook in all
aspects of your marriage? Why?
• Do you play any games with
your marriage? Which ones? Who wins? Who loses?
• Describe to your spouse
your mindset when you make love with each other. Do you play a game so that you
get what you want?
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• What is love?
• What is intimacy?
• How would you describe the
intimacy within your marriage?
• What does giving a gift
mean to you?
• Are some gifts more
significant than others? Why?
• What is the most
significant gift you can give? Are you willing to give it?
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• Scripture says that we are
made in the image of God. What does that mean to you?
• What quality do you most
like about yourself?
• What do you most like
about your physical appearance?
• What quality do you most
like about your spouse?
• What do you most like
about your spouse’s physical appearance
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• How connected do you feel
to your spouse?
• What parts of life do you
share that bring you closer to your spouse?
• What parts of life keep
you from connecting with your spouse?
• When was the last time you
said to your spouse, “I love you” in way that came from your heart?
• How often are you
physically intimate with each other?
• What meaning does “making
love” have for you and the way you connect with your spouse?
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• What did you want to grow
up to be when you were a child? Did your plan come true?
• Does your vocation define
who you are? Why?
• What role does God play in
your vocation?
• Have you ever considered
your marriage to be a calling from God? Share with your spouse.
• What are some examples of
you being humble and gentle and patient with your spouse?
• Does your marriage
strengthen your relationship with God? How?
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• Get a piece of paper and
make a list of all the things you are thankful for in your spouse. Read your
list out loud to your spouse and then give your list to your spouse.
• Write a Psalm of
Thanksgiving to your spouse.
• Do you say, “thank you” to
your spouse with words or with deeds? How often do you say thank you?
• What are you willing to do
to be a better partner for your spouse? Give specific examples
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• Even if your spouse
already knows the story, tell your spouse the story of your family and your
growing up years. How has that experience shaped you?
• What do you like most
about the family you grew up with?
• What have you learned the
most from the family you grew up with?
• What do you like most
about the family you are creating?
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• How often do you and your
spouse pray together?
• How often do you and your
spouse worship together?
• Where is God in your life?
• Where is God in your
marriage?
• How can you and your
spouse include God more in your marriage? What steps are you willing to take?
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• Spend some time making a
list of all the great moments you recall in your marriage. Read the list aloud
to your spouse and give your spouse your list.
• What made those moments
special?
• What meaning did those
moments have for you?
• What do those memories say
about you? About your spouse?
• How often do you work to
create new special moments for your spouse? Are those moments recognized and
appreciated?
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• How would you rate the
feeling of love in your marriage right now?
• What are some ways you can
focus on your spouse and share the love you have in a way he or she will know
how you feel?
• What is one example in
your marriage when you had to work hard for love to endure in your
relationship? What was the situation? What did you do? How did you feel when it
was over?
• When times get tough, do
you reach out for help or do you try to go at things alone? How does your
spouse react to you?
• What are some difficult
issues you see coming in the future with your marriage? How will you endure?
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• When do you catch yourself
playing the “If, then” game? How does that affect your relationship with your
spouse?
• Do you consider you spouse
a teammate? Do you treat him or her as a teammate?
• Would you consider you and
your spouse to be on the same team, working from the same playbook in all
aspects of your marriage? Why?
• Do you play any games with
your marriage? Which ones? Who wins? Who loses?
• Describe to your spouse
your mindset when you make love with each other. Do you play a game so that you
get what you want
Share these questions
with your spouse:
• If you compared you
marriage to a vase of flowers, would it be fresh-cut and smelling pretty; nice
to look at, but lost the aroma; drooping buds with petals on the table; dried
up and crunchy flowers; rose bush with strong blooms? Why do you say that?
• How do you care and
nurture and feed the love in your marriage and for your spouse?
• How often do you talk on a
deep level to your spouse? Does that need to change? How?
• How often do you spend
quality adult time with your spouse? Does that need to change? How?
• How often do your actions
show your love for your spouse? Does that need to change? How?
What
can you do, individually, to continue total intimacy with your spouse?
• What can you do, together,
to continue total intimacy with each other?
• What steps are you willing
to make together? Write out some steps or an action plan on what You can do
together to remain closely connected and intimate.
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