Case Title: “We Love Each Other, But We Keep Fighting”
A married couple says:
“We truly love each other, but we keep
arguing. Small matters quickly become painful conflicts. We no longer feel
understood.”
This struggle is common within many
homes. Orthodox Christian counseling does not view such conflict merely as a
personality problem or emotional incompatibility. Rather, it understands it as
a deeper relational and spiritual struggle involving wounded communication,
weakened humility, emotional reactions, and the gradual loss of Christ-centered
love.
Marriage and family are not merely
social arrangements or emotional partnerships. They are sacred spiritual
relationships designed to reflect communion, sacrifice, peace, and mutual
growth in God.
1. Marriage Conflict
1.1 Understanding
Conflict in Marriage
Conflict itself is not always evidence of a failed marriage. In Orthodox
understanding, conflict often reveals deeper spiritual and emotional realities,
such as:
• unhealed emotional wounds
• unmet expectations
• lack of spiritual maturity in communication
• self-centered reactions and pride
• accumulated resentment (ቂም) and frustration
St. Paul teaches:
“መራርነትና ንዴት ቁጣም ጩኸትም መሳደብም ሁሉ ከክፋት ሁሉ ጋር ከእናንተ ዘንድ ይወገድ።” (Ephesians 4:31)
Marriage becomes wounded when anger replaces patience and when the desire
to win becomes stronger than the desire to love.
1.2 The Spiritual
Root of Conflict
Most marital arguments are not truly
about surface-level issues such as money, assignments, schedules, or
responsibilities. Beneath these visible struggles often lie deeper inner
conditions:
• pride and inflexibility
• impatience
• inability to forgive
• emotional insecurity
• desire for control
• lack of spiritual discipline
Many couples fight externally while
silently carrying unresolved inner pain.
1.3 Patristic
Insight
As St. John Chrysostom (347 - 407 AD)
teaches:
“Nothing attaches husband and wife like
mutual virtue and love in Christ.”
The Fathers consistently emphasize
that unity in marriage is sustained not merely through emotion, but through
virtue, humility, patience, and shared spiritual life.
1.4 Therapeutic
Response
Orthodox therapeutic care encourages couples to:
• pause before reacting emotionally
• replace accusation (ክስ) with an honest explanation
• practice daily forgiveness
• learn patient listening
• pray together regularly. If that is not possible, never cease praying
individually for your marriage.
• restore Christ as the center of the relationship
Healing begins when both spouses stop fighting against one another and
begin struggling together against the passions that wound the relationship.
2. Communication
Issues
2.1 What Is Broken
Communication?
Communication becomes unhealthy when:
• listening disappears
• emotions dominate speech
• assumptions replace understanding
• criticism replaces compassion (ርኅራኄ)
• silence becomes emotional distance
Often, couples hear each other’s words but fail to understand the emotional
hurt (የስሜት መታመም) and emotional need behind them.
2.2 Biblical
Foundation
Holy Scripture teaches:
“ስለዚህ፥ የተወደዳችሁ ወንድሞቼ ሆይ፥ ሰው ሁሉ ለመስማት የፈጠነ ለመናገርም የዘገየ ለቍጣም የዘገየ ይሁን፤” (James 1:19)
The discipline of listening is a spiritual virtue. Many conflicts
intensify not because people speak too little, but because they listen too
little.
2.3 The Spiritual
Dimension of Communication
Poor communication frequently reflects deeper inner instability, such as:
• lack of inner peace
• emotional suddenness (በድንገት
ስሜታዊ መሆን)
• wounded pride
• inability to remain calm under stress
• absence of spiritual attentiveness
A restless heart often produces restless speech
2.4 Patristic
Teaching
As St. Isaac the Syrian (613 – 700 AD)
teaches:
“A gentle tongue heals the broken heart.”
The Fathers understood speech as a spiritual act capable of either
healing or wounding the soul.
2.5 Therapeutic
Response
Orthodox Christian counseling
encourages:
• listening fully before responding
• avoiding interruption during
conversation
• speaking with clarity rather than
emotional aggression
• avoiding insulting or humiliating
language
• praying before difficult discussions
• allowing silence when emotions
become intense
Peaceful communication is learned
through discipline, humility, and grace.
3. Parenting
Guidance
3.1 The Spiritual
Role of Parenting
In Orthodox anthropology (the study of
the human person), parenting is not limited to providing material needs or
education. Parents are assigned the sacred responsibility of forming the soul
of the child according to the image of God.
Parenting, therefore, includes:
• spiritual formation
• moral guidance
• emotional nurturing
• teaching virtue through example
• introducing the child to prayer and worship
As Scripture teaches:
“ልጅን በሚሄድበት መንገድ ምራው፥ በሸመገለም ጊዜ ከእርሱ ፈቀቅ አይልም።” (Proverbs 22:6)
Children are shaped not only by
instruction, but by the spiritual atmosphere of the home.
3.2 Common Parenting
Challenges
Many families
struggle with:
• conflict between
parents
• emotional frustration
• impatience
• excessive harshness
• lack of shared spiritual direction
• absence of healthy communication within the family
Children are deeply
affected by the emotional and spiritual condition of the household.
3.3 Patristic
Insight
As St. John Chrysostom (347 - 407 AD) teaches:
“The home is a small church.”
The Christian home is meant to become a place of peace, prayer,
forgiveness, and spiritual growth.
3.4 Therapeutic
Response
Orthodox therapeutic guidance encourages parents to:
• maintain a collaborative parenting approach
• discipline with love rather than anger
• Pray together with your children whenever possible; if not, encourage them to
pray morning and evening for at least 1–2 minutes. Above all, be an example
through your own prayer life.
• model virtue consistently
• create a peaceful spiritual environment at home
• correct behavior without humiliating (ማሳደድ) the child
Children learn holiness first through what they see lived before them.
4. Work and Social
Stress
4.1 Understanding
External Pressure
The pressures of work and social life frequently create:
• physical exhaustion
• emotional strain (ውጥረት)
• reduced patience within the family
• anxiety and irritability
• loss of spiritual attentiveness
When external stress remains unmanaged, it often enters the home and
damages relationships.
4.2 Spiritual
Interpretation
External burdens become spiritually
harmful when:
• they dominate inner peace
• they are carried without prayer
• they consume all emotional energy
• they are transferred into family relationships
Christ Himself says:
“እናንተ ደካሞች ሸክማችሁ የከበደ ሁሉ፥ ወደ እኔ ኑ፥ እኔም አሳርፋችኋለሁ።” (Matthew 11:28)
Orthodox spirituality teaches that
rest is not merely physical recovery, but restoration of the soul in God.
4.3 Patristic
Insight
St. Basil the Great (329 - 379 AD)
teaches:
“Order your life, and your soul will
find peace.”
Disorder in daily life often produces
disorder within relationships and within the heart.
4.4 Therapeutic
Response
Orthodox counseling encourages families to:
• establish healthy boundaries between work and home
• pray during transition periods of the day
• treat rest as a spiritual necessity
• prioritize meaningful family interaction
• reduce unnecessary distractions
• preserve moments of silence and peace within the home
A peaceful household requires intentional spiritual pace.
5. Applying the
Case: “We Keep Fighting.”
5.1 Orthodox
Diagnosis
Recurring marital conflict frequently
emerges from:
• lack of humility in communication
• emotional impulsiveness (ግድ
የለሽነት)
• unresolved inner wounds
• accumulated resentment (ቂም)
• spiritual distance from God within the home
• absence of shared or individual prayer and spiritual grounding
Thus, many marital struggles are
fundamentally spiritual struggles expressed through relationships.
5.2 Therapeutic
Response
1. Restore Christ at
the Center
Marriage becomes
stronger when both spouses turn together toward God rather than merely
demanding change from one another.
2. Practice Humble
Listening
Seek understanding
before defense. True listening is an act of love.
3. Learn the
Discipline of Forgiveness
Forgiveness must
become continual, not occasional. Without forgiveness, resentment (ቂም) slowly hardens the heart.
4. Create a
Spiritual Rhythm in the Home
Shared prayer (when
possible) or individual prayer, peace, Scripture reading, fasting, and
spiritual conversation strengthen the unity of the family.
5. Separate Emotion
from Action
Strong emotions
should not immediately control speech or behavior. Pausing before reacting
prevents many wounds.
Conclusion
Orthodox Christian
counseling affirms that:
• Marriage is a
sacred spiritual union, not merely emotional compatibility
• Conflict often reveals inner wounds rather than only external disagreements
• Communication is healed through humility, patience, and attentive love
• Family life becomes stronger through shared spiritual life in Christ
• Peace within the home begins with spiritual healing within the heart
Therefore, the
question:
“We love each other,
but we keep fighting—why?”
is answered:
• Because love must
mature through humility
• Because communication must be healed through patience
• Because family life requires continual spiritual formation
• Because peace in relationships grows through life in Christ
As St. Paul the
Apostle teaches:
“ፍቅር ይታገሣል፥ ቸርነትንም ያደርጋል፤ ፍቅር አይቀናም፤ ፍቅር አይመካም፥ አይታበይም፤” (1 Corinthians 13:4–5)

