Five Ways the Examen Can Play a Role in Marriage

couple praying togetherI remain thankful for all who taught me Ignatian spirituality. It is not only the spirituality that guides my relationship with God, but it is also the spirituality that guides my marriage. Here are five ways the Examen can play a role in marriage.

1. The Examen helps us pray our marriage.

When I teach someone about the Examen, I often say, “It helps you pray your life.” Our relationships and marriages are significant pieces of our lives. The Examen helps us bring all of our lives before God, and our relationships are part of this. The Examen provides a framework to pray through all aspects of your marriage: emotional, spiritual, physical, and social.

Daily interactions with our spouse are brought before God, and God can help us see where we gave or showed love to our spouse, where we received love from our spouse, and where we could do better in showing love for our spouse.

2. The Examen guides us in making small decisions.

The Examen guides us to know what steps to take on a daily basis. It helps us know what brings an increase of faith, hope, and love into our marriage, and what brings a decrease of faith, hope, and love into our marriage. It might help us know that we are in need of quality time together or that we are saying yes to other things that compete with keeping our relationships a priority. The Examen acts as a rudder, slowly helping us shift and make choices that help us both continue to grow in God.

3. The Examen leads to deeper reflection and conversation as a couple.

My husband Chris and I check in with each other regularly on what is arising for each of us as we pray the Examen individually. We may move through the steps of the Examen in our sharing, giving us each a chance to share what we are thankful for, where we feel God’s presence, where we are struggling to feel God’s presence, and what we are hopeful or fearful of as we look to the future. Praying the Examen means we never run out of things to talk about!

4. The Examen helps us unpack what’s going on in our relationship.

The Examen serves as a way for us to name what is happening between the two of us. Perhaps we feel we are “off,” and praying the Examen and sharing our responses might help us name that we feel “off” due to the focus on children’s activities with little time for us, or perhaps we are a little too addicted to the newest TV show we are watching and instead we need time just to talk. Like the Examen does in all aspects of our lives, it helps us name what is causing consolation and desolation in our relationship with each other.

5. The Examen helps us make major decisions.

Chris and I lean hard and heavy on the Examen when we need to make big decisions as a couple. Looking back at our 13 years of marriage, I can name multiple times the Examen grounded us in God and in the values of our faith as we discerned graduate school for Chris, career moves, having children, raising children, how to spend our money, what home to buy, and on and on. The Examen offers us a way to see which of these decisions will deepen our relationship with God and each other, and which decisions will not.

Chris and I tap into the power of Ignatian spirituality to strengthen our marriage and guide us through life’s many ups and downs. It is not uncommon for me to say to people: “If it weren’t for the gifts of Ignatian spirituality in our lives, we would be flat on our faces when things got tough.” The gift of Ignatian wisdom is the history and legacy of this spirituality providing pathways to live deeper, fuller lives of meaning and purpose. A key prayer tool of Ignatian spirituality is the Examen, and I invite you to use this prayer tool in your marriage. I assure you, it will be an invaluable asset in your relationship!

5 COMMENTS

  1. Becky, I was looking for a way to use the Examen together, but your essay is confirming that the Examen will help you as an individual which will in turn ground you as a husband or wife – communicating with your partner is the next step. I would like to hear how the Examen contributes directly to resolution of conflicting conclusions in spite of faithfully engaging in the Examen.

  2. Thank you. I had not thought of applying consolation/desolation in relationships specifically. This will help me in my marriage/relationship counselling and psychotherapy work.

  3. Thank you Becky
    At the very least,at the end of the day,saying thank you for everything that went well and sorry for everthing that didn’t-and tomorrow is a new day!

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