There is a quiet truth about love that many of us only learn after time has passed: love is not sustained by feelings alone. Feelings come and go. They rise in moments of joy and fade in seasons of exhaustion, disappointment, or pain. Yet real love—the kind that lasts—remains when feelings waver, because it is rooted in a choice.
Many people enter marriage believing love will always feel the same as it did in the beginning. The excitement, the butterflies, the effortless affection. But life has a way of testing those expectations. Responsibilities grow. Pressures increase. Misunderstandings happen. And slowly, without warning, love can begin to feel harder.
This is where the deeper lesson begins.
Love, at its core, is not about how we feel on our best days. It is about what we choose on our hardest ones.
There were times in our own marriage when we realized that if love depended only on emotions, we would not stand very strong. We were not perfect people with perfect character. We brought our flaws, our fears, and our limitations into the relationship. But what changed everything was not our ability to love perfectly—it was our shared decision to submit our hearts to God as much as we could in that season.
When feelings were thin, faith carried us.
Choosing love does not mean pretending everything is fine. It does not mean ignoring hurt or silencing honest struggles. Choosing love means deciding to stay, to work through, to pray instead of walk away. It means believing that God can shape something beautiful even when the moment feels fragile.
Faith gives love a foundation deeper than emotion. It teaches us patience when we want quick relief. It teaches humility when pride wants to win. It teaches forgiveness when resentment feels justified. Most importantly, it reminds us that marriage was never meant to rely on human strength alone.
No marriage is sustained by perfection. Even if we had flawless character, life would still test us. What sustains a marriage is two imperfect people continually turning their hearts toward God, again and again, especially when it’s hard.
There were hardships we never would have chosen. Seasons we would rather forget. But looking back, we can see that God allowed those moments not to break us, but to grow us. Each challenge stretched our faith. And the deeper our faith grew, the deeper our capacity to love one another became.
Love matured. It softened. It strengthened.
Today, I would not trade our journey for an easier one. Not because it was painless—but because it was purposeful. God knew what we could endure, and He used it to shape a love that is steadier, humbler, and far more meaningful than the feelings that first brought us together.
If you are in a season where love feels heavy, uncertain, or quiet, know this: feelings do not define the strength of your marriage. Commitment does. Faith does. The daily decision to love, even imperfectly, does.
When love becomes a choice anchored in God, it no longer depends on emotion to survive. It becomes something deeper—something enduring—something sacred.
And that kind of love is worth choosing, again and again.


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