Monday 30 September 2013

Song of Solomon 2:16


Characteristics of Love

Joel Osteen Ministries | Today's Word
Characteristics of Love
Today's Scripture:
Now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.
1 Corinthians 13:13, NIV.
Today's Word:
Spiritual maturity isn’t measured by how long you’ve been a Christian, how much you know, or how often you go to church. Spiritual maturity is measured by the way you treat other people. It’s measured by the love you allow to operate through you. First Corinthians 13 tells us about the characteristics of love. One characteristic is that it is not rude. That means, when we are walking in love, we treat other people with courtesy and respect. Are you courteous to other people? Are you kind to the person at the checkout counter that may be moving too slowly for you? Are you gentle when you are driving down the highway and someone cuts you off? Are you patient with your family and coworkers? These are all ways we show love.

Scripture also tells us that love is patient. It is kind. It does not envy; it is not proud. It is not rude. Love is not easily angered, and it keeps no record of wrongs. Love never fails. Notice that these characteristics don’t have anything to do with feelings. That’s because love is a choice. You can choose to walk in love toward people even when you don’t feel like it. Today, make the choice to do what is right. Choose today to show kindness and be courteous to others. Look for ways to cultivate the greatest thing in your life—love! As you do, you’ll move forward into the life of blessing God has in store for you!
Prayer for Today:
Heavenly Father, thank You for loving me so that I can show love to others. Teach me to be patient and kind and treat others the way You always treat me in Jesus’ name. Amen.
“Keep your roots deep in him, build your lives on him, and become stronger in your faith.” (Colossians 2:7a TEV)
You can do many different things to keep your marriage growing, like be affectionate, unselfish, and forgiving with one another. But by far the most important decision you and your spouse make in your marriage is to remain committed to following Jesus together.
The Bible says, “Keep your roots deep in him, build your lives on him, and become stronger in your faith” (Colossians 2:7a TEV). Both you and your spouse may have committed your lives to Jesus at some point, but you need to ask yourself, “Are we continuing to live out our faith as a couple?”
How do you do that?
  1. Get baptized together. If you haven’t done so already, publicly identify yourself as a Christian. If Jesus is going to be the center of your marriage, it only makes sense that you both “come out of the closet” and be willing to tell the world that you’re following him. I love to see husbands and wives get baptized together. It’s a wonderful way to tell the world that you’re committing your lives and your marriage to Jesus.
     
  2. Get in a small group together. Challenge your marriage spiritually by connecting with other Christian couples. As you learn together to apply God’s Word to your marriages and lives, you’ll sharpen one another spiritually. You’ll also be challenging each other to serve in ministry and share your faith regularly. Growing as a follower of Christ and as a spouse requires that kind of consistent accountability.
     
  3. Renew your wedding vows. If you’ve committed your life to Jesus or renewed that commitment in a meaningful way since you first repeated your wedding vows, consider renewing those vows. It’s likely they’ll mean something different to you today.
     
  4. Pray for and with one another. “Make this your common practice: Confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you can live together whole and healed” (James 5:16 MSG). Who doesn’t want a marriage where you live together whole and healed? The Bible tells us that will happen when we confess to one another when we’re wrong and pray with each other.
     
  5. Follow God’s Word. A few years ago I read about a national study that said one out of three marriages end in divorce. When a couple is married in a church service, that number drops to one out of 50. When married couples are involved in Christian service together, attend worship services, and maintain some form of family worship, it’s one out of 1,105 marriages. That’s the kind of difference it makes when couples strive to read God’s Word together and apply it to their lives.
Your marriage may have been going through a difficult season, but there’s still hope. Your marriage can find life again. It has to start with you putting Jesus at the center of it. Do what God tells you to do in his Word, and your marriage can start growing again.  Jesus is the glue for any marriage. He holds you together when everything is tearing you apart and you feel like giving up. 
Talk It Over
  • What makes it challenging for you and your spouse to grow together spiritually?
  • What are the biggest obstacles you and your spouse face as you try to pray together on a daily basis?
  • What changes can you begin to make in the next week that will help you and your spouse develop a more intimate spiritual relationship?

Meditate on God's Word

Meditate On God's Word by Joel Osteen

Life is often noisy and full of distractions


Concerns and problems flood our minds. There is always so much to do! But, God wants the very best for you but you just have to know how to recognize it and lay hold of it.
If you’ve ever said to yourself, “I don’t even have time to think,” then you know how hard it is to concentrate when you’re being bombarded from all sides. It’s even harder to focus on God when we can’t take time to renew our minds and refresh our spirits by quiet reflection. God doesn’t often shout to get our attention. Instead, He usually speaks to us in “a still small voice” (1 Kings 19:12, NKJV).
So, what can we do to put ourselves in a position to hear God’s voice? We have to make time in our daily lives to get quiet. David said of the Lord in Psalm 23:2, “He leads me beside quiet waters.” Today I want to encourage you to find those quiet waters where you can get alone with the Lord. It may be a room in your house, outside under the trees, or some other place where you can shut out the noise and distractions of the world for just a few precious minutes. The key to renewing your mind, body and spirit is to develop the habit and discipline of meditating on the Word of God every day — even if it is for just a moment.
The Bible is filled with the blessings and benefits of meditating
To meditate simply means to reflect on the same thing over and over again, visualize it and let the meaning of it sink deep down into your heart. Meditation is a spiritual practice that’s encouraged throughout Scripture. The key is to draw on God’s wisdom found in the Scriptures. In fact, the Bible is filled with the blessings and benefits of meditating on its principles. I have four of these benefits that I want to share with you today:

1. Meditating on God’s Word will give you spiritual success.

God told Joshua, “Study this Book of the Law continually. Meditate on it day and night so you may be sure to obey all that is written in it. Only then will you succeed” (Joshua 1:8, NLT). God’s definition of success in life is to know Him better. One way we do that is to read and understand His Word!

2. Meditating on God’s Word will help you keep your heart right before Him.

“The word of God is living and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart” (Hebrews 4:12, NIV). We need to evaluate our thoughts, deeds and motives each day, confessing any wrong attitudes or actions (1 John 1:9). The Bible gives us clear direction on how to live. It is a mirror that accurately shows us where our hearts really are.

3. Meditating on God’s Word will give you insights and wisdom that will guide you at every turn in your life.

“I have more insight than all my teachers, for I meditate on your statutes” (Psalm 119:99, NIV). There is supernatural wisdom that comes from meditating on God’s Word. It will strengthen you, guide you and give you hope and victory in every situation!

4. Meditating on Scripture will help you fill your mind with the things of God.

“Fix your thoughts on what is true and good and right. Think about things that are pure and lovely, and dwell on the fine, good things in others. Think about all you can praise God for and be glad about” (Philippians 4:8, TLB). Since we can only think about one thing at a time, meditating on God’s love and goodness leaves no room for wrong thinking.
The benefits of meditating on Scripture influence YOUR WHOLE DAY
There are incredible riches available when we invest in our relationship with God by spending time in His life-giving Word. We have God’s promise that, “No good thing will He withhold from those who walk uprightly” (Psalm 84:11, NKJV). This Scripture tells us that the Lord has good things waiting for you, but you have to do your part ... you have to walk uprightly. We walk uprightly when we live according to the principles of His Word.
Let me encourage you to find a quiet place where you can be still, hear the voice of the Lord and gain the strength you need to fight the good fight of faith. Take time every day in God’s presence, praying and filling your mind with Scripture. The exciting thing about meditating on God’s Word is that even when you leave your quiet place and start another busy day, your mind and spirit are still processing what you read — which means the benefits of meditating on Scripture influence your whole day!
As we walk this life of faith together, we need to remember how many have yet to experience the peace that comes from having a personal relationship with the living Savior. Your prayers and gifts to support this ministry enable us to share this Good News of Jesus with millions of people here in America and all around the world. Thank you so much for your support ... and be assured God is using your gifts to sow seeds of life, hope and blessing every day.
Be encouraged today. I believe that your very best days are ahead. Days filled with more joy, peace, encouragement, healing, restoration and hope.

Sunday 29 September 2013

1 Corinthians 13:7


Right Companions

Joel Osteen Ministries | Today's Word
Right Companions
Today's Scripture:
A man of many companions may come to ruin, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother.
Proverbs 18:24, NIV.
Today's Word:
Your destiny is too big to accomplish on your own. That’s why it’s so important to be connected to the right people. We have to understand that God has already arranged for certain people to speak faith into you. He has already placed people in your path that will inspire you, challenge you, and help you accomplish your dreams. The reason some people never reach their highest potential is because they never get away from the wrong people.

Recognize today that not everyone can go where God is taking you. You’ve got to connect with people who understand your destiny and can call forth your seeds of greatness. You don’t have time to spend on people who are always pushing you down, telling you what you can’t do, or never giving you their approval no matter how hard you try. Friend, life is too short to drag people along. If you will get the wrong people out of your life, then God will bring in the right people so you can fulfill the destiny He has in store for you.
Prayer for Today:
Father in heaven, thank You for placing the right people in my life. Help me to discern the right connections You have for me. Give me strength to release the wrong relationships so I have room in my life for the people You have chosen to connect with me in Jesus’ name. Amen.



“Encourage each other every day while it is ‘today.’” (Hebrews 3:13a NCV)
If you’re married, God has given you an incredibly important role: to be your spouse’s biggest fan. It’s a job only you can do in the way God desires, and your spouse desperately needs you to do it.
We live in a world full of critics. We don’t have to look far to find someone who will put us down.
That’s why every person on the planet desperately needs to be affirmed by someone on a regular basis. It’s how God wired us. If you’re married, one such person should be your spouse. To have a growing marriage, it’s essential for you and your spouse to build into your marriage continual affirmation of one another.
More than likely, it’s something that was a part of your marriage in the beginning. Few people will marry someone who doesn’t affirm them in some way. But like so many other parts of a growing marriage, it often fades over the course of time.
The Bible says in Hebrews 3:13, “Encourage each other every day while it is ‘today’” (NCV). What should you affirm in your spouse?
  1. Affirm his/her value. When you’re dealing with houses, the word “appreciate” means to rise in value. You raise the value of other people when you appreciate them. As you appreciate your spouse, you raise his or her value, and you raise the value of your marriage. Proverbs 12:25 says, “A word of encouragement does wonders” (LB). A word of encouragement will do wonders for your marriage — or any other relationship you’re in.
     
  2. Affirm his/her strengths. You will bring out the best in your spouse when you point out his or her best, not by pointing out his or her worst. Choose to be a dream builder, not a dream buster. We ultimately become what other people see in us. No person in your spouse’s life will impact his or her self-identity, and ultimately his or her future, like you.
     
  3. Affirm his/her ministry. Let your spouse know how much you appreciate what he or she does for God’s sake in the world. You can each make unique contributions to the world. Cheer your spouse on as he or she makes contributions. Help your spouse see the impact being made for Jesus’ sake.
We have incredible power over our spouses’ understanding of themselves. We can use that power to build them up or tear them down. It’s our choice.
And it’s one of the most important choices we make for the health of our marriage.
Talk It Over
  • What does your spouse affirm in you that impacts your life in an important way?
  • What keeps us from affirming our spouses more consistently?
  • What about your spouse do you need to affirm more often?

Saturday 28 September 2013

Proverbs 22:6


Our dad! =)
Meg

Vision for Increase

Joel Osteen Ministries | Today's Word
Vision for Increase
Today's Scripture:
Where there is no revelation, people cast off restraint; but blessed is the one who heeds wisdom's instruction.
Proverbs 29:18, NIV.
Today's Word:
God wants His people to be the most blessed! He wants His people to constantly increase so they can live as an example of His goodness. But in order to partake of everything He has in store for us, we have to be open to what He wants to do in our lives. We have to have a vision for increase. If you’re not expecting favor, or if you are just satisfied with where you are, then you will live below your privileges. But if you will get a vision for increase, a vision for who you are as a child of the Most High God and what He wants to do in your life, you’ll see supernatural opportunities, favor and increase in your life. When you look for what God is doing, when you follow His commands, you won’t just be “average” or “good enough.” No, as a child of the Most High, you are the most blessed.

Today, take time to focus your heart and mind on God and His promises. Meditate on His Word and ask Him to increase your capacity to receive His blessings. Get a vision for increase, embrace His promises, and boldly move forward in the good things God has in store for you.
Prayer for Today:
Father, today I choose to set my mind and focus on You. I choose to look for what You want to do in and through me. I let go of any wrong thinking, attitudes or actions that would hold me back from You in Jesus’ name. Amen.



PS...

Happy Birthday Tatay! =)

“You have left the love you had in the beginning. So remember where you were before you fell. Change your hearts and do what you did at first.” (Revelation 2:4-5 NCV)
At first glance you may not think the book of Revelation — with its images of beasts, lambs, and angels — has anything to do with romance and the kind of affection needed to sustain a growing marriage.
But it does.
In Revelation 2:4-5, Jesus uses an analogy from romantic love to describe the relationship of a church that had gone astray. Jesus said to the church of Laodicea: “You have left the love you had in the beginning. So remember where you were before you fell. Change your hearts and do what you did at first”(NCV).
He tells us to do four things that are important when recapturing our marriage: remember, return, repent, and repeat.
  1. Remember. Think about what you did in your first days together that made you fall in love in the first place. Think about the happy days. Stop thinking about all the problems you have now, and remember how your love began.
     
  2. Return. Return your focus to God. Your focus is likely on everything but God. It’s likely on your problems, your pressures, your stresses, and your career. But if you want to return to your first love, you need to turn your attention back to God.
     
  3. Repent. Choose to change how you think and act. Love isn’t a feeling, but it creates feelings — sometimes enormous feelings. But love is a choice. It’s a commitment to put someone else’s best interest over your own. Anything other than that isn’t love. God couldn’t command it if it were a feeling. Yet God commands us over and over in his Word to choose to love others (including our spouses). When you make a choice to love your spouse as Jesus would when you haven’t been doing so, that’s called repentance.
     
  4. Do what you did at first. Do what you did when you first fell in love. Feelings always follow actions. It’s easier to act your way into a feeling than to feel your way into an action. If you wait to feel affectionate and romantic, the devil will make sure you never feel it. So you choose to act in a loving way, and the feelings will come back.
The kind of affection that leads to a lasting relationship tends to seep out of marriages. It’s almost inevitable at some point. But how will you deal with it when it does?
The practice of “remember, return, repent, and repeat” should be continual in any marriage.
Talk It Over
  • What was it about your first days together that made you fall in love with your spouse?
  • What are the distractions that keep you and your spouse from making God your focus?
  • How often do you use the excuse, “I don’t feel like it”? When you’re tempted to use this excuse, what should you do instead?

Friday 27 September 2013

Proverbs 31:15


That's our mom! =)
Meg

Get the Capstone

Joel Osteen Ministries | Today's Word
Get the Capstone
Today's Scripture:
Who are you, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel you shall become a plain! And he shall bring forth the capstone with shouts of ‘Grace, grace to it!’
Zechariah 4:7, NKJV.
Today's Word:
In scripture, when Zerubabbel wanted to rebuild the temple, he laid the foundation, but people came against him and forced him to stop. For ten years, no work could be done. Zachariah, the prophet, came by and told him to do something interesting. He said, “Go get the capstone.” The capstone was the stone that was reserved as the final piece of stone for the building. It was symbolic. It represented the finished product. Why was it important that he keep the capstone in front of him? Because every time he looked at it, it would remind him that God would finish what he started. When Zerubabbel was tempted to get tired and discouraged, he would go look at that capstone. That was God saying to him, “I’m still on the throne. I’m going to do what I promised. Just stay in faith.”

Today, do you have your capstone in front of you? Do you have something that represents the final piece to your dreams? Keep that vision in front of you. Keep focused on where you are headed. Get the capstone and thank God for His faithfulness to complete the work in you.
Prayer for Today:
Father, thank You for the work You are doing in my life. Help me to keep the vision in front of me. Show me where to place my focus. Confirm Your Word with signs following as I stay on the course You have set for me in Jesus’ name. Amen


PS...

Happy Birthday Nanay! =)


“Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in others, too.” (Philippians 2:4 NLT)
Marriage gives you many opportunities to make adjustments in your life. Change happens all the time — from the changing stages of your children to moves to job changes to illnesses. When circumstances change in your lives, both you and your spouse will have to make adjustments to keep your marriage on track. In fact, simply being two imperfect people building a life together requires making adjustments for one another.
Marriages that grow will always demonstrate the ability to make adjustments for one another. At its core, it’s really about being unselfish. Learning to become less selfish is one of the greatest lessons of life. It might be the most important lesson God wants to teach you through your marriage.
How do you become less selfish and make positive adjustments for your spouse in your marriage?
  1. Think about what your spouse needs most. The Bible says, “Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in others, too”(Philippians 2:4 NLT)Unfortunately, often the longer we’re married the less we think about our spouse’s needs. The Bible says we should be concerned about everyone’s needs more than our own. That’s particularly true in our homes.
     
  2. Submit to one another. To adjust to your spouse, you have to submit to him or her. That simply means giving up what you really want in order to meet your spouse’s needs. Ephesians 5:21 says, “Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.” Some men think their wives should do the adjusting in their marriage because they are the spiritual leaders of the home. But being a leader means husbands should lead the way in service in their homes.
     
  3. Make adjustments in the little things. Maybe it means arriving a little bit later or leaving a little bit earlier. Maybe it means going to bed a little bit later or a little bit earlier. Maybe it means going to the movie or restaurant your spouse wants to go to. Maybe it means listening when your spouse needs you to listen and not just when you want to listen. It’s in those little daily decisions to adjust and meet each other’s needs where genuine love is expressed.
The test of your love toward your spouse isn’t what you say about your love. It’s how you demonstrate that love. Treat your mate as Jesus would. If you make that one decision, it changes everything. The definition of mature love is to treat other people as Jesus would. Jesus is our best example when it comes to love.This is how we know what love is: Christ gave his life for us” (1 John 3:16a GNT). 
You’ll spend the rest of your lives trying to apply that to your marriage, but your marriage will be incalculably better as you try.
Talk It Over
  • What is one adjustment you’ve seen your spouse make in your marriage that has meant a great deal to you? Have you told your spouse how much you appreciate his or her adjustment?
     
  • What’s one adjustment you could make this week as an act of love for your spouse?
     
  • How does treating your spouse as Jesus would change how you view your marriage?

Thursday 26 September 2013

Romans 8:38-39


Fix Your Mind

Joel Osteen Ministries | Today's Word
Fix Your Mind
Today's Scripture:
Whatever is true, whatever is honest, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is kind, if there is any virtue, if there is anything worthy of praise, think on these things.
Philippians 4:8, NIV.
Today's Word:
What you think about determines the quality and direction of your life. Naturally, people who think positive, uplifting thoughts have happier, healthier, longer lives. They are less stressed, more vibrant and enjoy better sleep. That’s why the scripture encourages us to think on good things—things that are true, noble and lovely. Some translations say to “fix your mind” on them. When you fix your mind on noble things, you close the door to the negative voices and open your heart to allow God to work in your life.

Choose today to fix your mind on good things. Do whatever you need to in order to keep those good thoughts before you. Write them on note cards and put them in a place where you can see them. Confess God’s promises over your life and declare His blessing on a daily basis. As you fix your mind on the goodness of God, you will rise higher in every area of your life. You will be filled with His peace and victory, and you’ll see every dream and desire in your heart come to pass.
Prayer for Today:
Father in heaven, I choose to fix my mind on noble things. I choose thoughts of peace and victory. Fill my heart with Your goodness that I may glorify You in everything I do in Jesus’ name. Amen.

“Be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry.” (James 1:19b NIV)
When you give your spouse your attention and focus, it’s like you give them a piece of your life. Those focused moments of intimate sharing are time you’ll never get back again. They are little pieces of your life. That’s why the most loving act you can show your spouse is to pay attention to him or her. It’s one of the most important ways you say, “I love you.”
The truth is, you fell in love by paying attention. You started paying attention to someone, and that person started paying attention to you. It’s that focused attention that’ll keep the romance alive after you say your nuptials, have kids, raise a family, dig deeper into your career, and grow old together.
You show you care by staying aware. To keep growing, you need to figure out how to keep paying attention to each other. If you don’t do that, your marriage will crumble.
One of the ways we let our attention fade in marriage is when we stop listening to one another. We assume we know what our spouses have said. We think we’ve heard them say it over and over and over. We start jumping over their words and thinking we know what they will say.
Why should you pay attention to your spouse? Consider these two important reasons:
  • You love the person. When you give your attention, you’re showing love.
  • Sometimes God speaks through your spouse. In fact, next to the Bible, it’s God’s favorite way to speak to you.
God gives us a great recipe in his Word for the kind of focused attention through listening that makes a marriage grow. James 1:19 says, “Be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry” (NIV). When you do the first two parts of that verse, the third one will be automatic. As you do this, you’ll keep your marriage growing and going.
Talk It Over

  • Why is it so difficult to focus on our spouses when we’re together?
     
  • What one change can you make in your life that will enhance your ability to give your spouse your attention (change your work responsibilities, turn off the television, turn off your cell phone, etc.)?
     
  • When was the last time you had the courage to ask your spouse to grade your ability to stay focused on him or her?
  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5F23GZj8xg

Wednesday 25 September 2013

An Excellent (Godly) Wife


by Grace Driscoll



“An excellent wife who can find? She is far more precious than jewels. The heart of her husband trusts in her, and he will have no lack of gain. She does him good, and not harm, all the days of her life.” – Proverbs 31:10–12
What is your honest first reaction to reading those verses? Do you think of all the ways you’ve failed as a wife? Does your pride make you defensive, recalling a list of ways you’ve succeeded as a wife? The fact that an excellent wife is still hard to find is a sad reality. Yet, if one is found, she is rare and valuable—a jewel.

More precious than jewels

What is your favorite piece of jewelry? A ring, necklace, or bracelet? Do you treasure it? Proverbs gives us the picture of an excellent wife being moreprecious than jewels. Like in our day, jewels were a beautiful and extremely valuable commodity in the Old Testament that were used for personal adornment. They were used for personal adornment, as a show of nobility or wealth, and were an important trade for craftsmen.
How does being an excellent wife relate to this? Just as a gem is shining and radiant, so is an excellent wife as she reflects godliness toward her husband by doing him good. First Peter 3:3-4 defines this as a gentle, quiet spirit that is an imperishable, precious jewel in God’s sight: "Do not let your adorning be external—the braiding of hair and the putting on of gold jewelry, or the clothing you wear—but let your adorning be the hidden person of the heart with the imperishable beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which in God’s sight is very precious."  
Commenting on these verses, Wayne Grudem says in Recovering Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, “The adjective gentle…only occurs three other times in the New Testament (Matt. 5:5; 11:29; 21:5), twice referring to Christ, but its related noun, translated ‘gentleness’ or ‘meekness’, is more frequent (Gal. 5:23; 6:1; James 3:13; etc.). It means ‘not insistent on one’s own rights’, or ‘not pushy, not selfishly assertive’, ‘not demanding one’s own way.’” 

Gentle and quiet

If you have a “loud personality,” what does it mean to have a gentle and quiet spirit? Do you ever get to say anything? A gentle spirit means you pray and listen to what the Holy Spirit wants you to say before you say anything. It means if and when you do speak, you have a respectful tone rather than an accusing or controlling one. 
A sinfully loud wife can push her husband to the “corner of the housetop” (Prov. 21:9) or be “like rottenness in his bones” (Prov. 12:4). For example, one woman sadly told me her sin of constant disrespect caused a part of her husband to die, and she made him afraid to lead her. He even avoids talking to her because she just argues, and he doesn’t trust that she loves him anymore. She thought if she took control that he would respect her, but instead she is “doing him harm.” On this point, John Calvin said in his Commentaries on the Catholic Epistles, "For we know how outrageous a being is an imperious and a self-willed woman. And further, nothing is more fitted to correct the vanity of which Peter speaks than a placid quietness of spirit."

If you have a “quiet personality,” are you already an excellent wife? Do you get to stay silent and just trust God to do everything for you? A gentle spirit doesn’t give you freedom to sin by never speaking into your husband’s life. God created you to be your husband’s helper (Gen. 2:18) and never speaking up is unhelpful. When you speak, you will need to pray against fear first and then trust God to give you the words and the right time to speak.
A sinfully quiet wife can be an enabler who makes her husband an idol rather than respecting and loving him toward godliness. Another woman, for example, falsely complimented her husband, thinking it would make him be nicer to her. She didn’t want to upset him, and so she outwardly submitted her actions while growing bitter and resentful in her heart toward him.
I began with silent disrespect in my marriage, then moved to fighting back verbally, and now God continually teaches me ways to work toward being an excellent wife by the empowering grace of the Holy Spirit. When I’m respectful and Mark is loving, there is nothing better than the oneness and friendship it creates in our marriage. While this has taken work and pain, it’s been worth it.
Both types of women—those with loud and those with quiet personalities, and those in between—should desire that “the heart of her husband trusts in her,” which is built over time with repentance and by being slow to speak and quick to listen. 
As wives, we need to be reading the Bible, praying with and for our husbands, serving them in ways they need (not just what we like to do), and encouraging them. How is that going for you? What would your husband say?

Submission to God first

Our ability to gain our husband’s trust and respect him in our journey toward godliness begins with our submission to God first! Our goal can’t be to fix our husband or make him respectable before we show respect. God is working on allof us, and when we seek how God wants our hearts and motives to change first, it will result in trusting God through our actions. We can wear jewels and adorn outward beauty, but God cares more about what is going on inside our hearts. We can’t fool him by wearing “fake jewelry.” He knows the difference!
Tell your husband that you want to be a crown, that you want his heart to trust you, and that you want to do him good, not harm. Then ask how you have done that well and what you need to work on. Take notes, repent, and be willing to ask God to redeem those sinful habits that keep you from being an excellent wife. As Proverbs 12:4 says, “An excellent wife is the crown of her husband, but she who brings shame is like rottenness in his bones.”

And next time you put your jewels on, let it remind you of how precious you are to God and to reflect that back to your husband as his treasured jewel.