Hope Relentless: The Christian Marriage Podcast

Hope Relentless

We're two former D1 athletes who built a business, raised a family, led in ministry, and learned the hard way that the drive that makes you effective in the world can quietly damage what matters most at home. Hope Relentless is our podcast for Christian couples who lead — in business, ministry, and community — and want a marriage that doesn't just survive the pressure of that calling, but thrives in it. www.hoperelentless.com

  1. 6d ago

    Why Am I Always the One Who Brings Things Up?

    If you feel like you're the only one who ever brings things up in your marriage, you're not broken and you're not alone. This is one of the most common patterns we see, and there's a way through it that doesn't leave one of you carrying the whole relationship. For a lot of couples, the frustration isn't really about who speaks up first. It's the story that gets attached to it. One spouse feels alone and worn out, like the nag who has to raise every issue. The other feels ambushed, like they're always on trial. Both of you end up protecting yourselves instead of working the problem together. In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle walk through three things that help when one of you feels like the only one bringing things up: awareness, perspective, and how you actually have the conversation. It's the same ground we cover with the couples we coach, and it moves you from me vs. you back to us vs. the problem. What We Cover Free Marriage & Communication Assessment Full Blog Post: Why Am I Always the One Who Brings Things Up? Start with awareness, on both sides. If you're usually the one bringing things up, get curious before you speak: what am I actually hoping for here, and what am I fixing my eyes on? If you're usually on the receiving end, notice how you show up. Defensiveness widens the gap. Awareness is what lets either of you take a step toward your spouse instead of away. Watch what you focus on. Philippians 4:8 calls us to think on whatever is true, noble, lovely, and admirable. If almost everything you bring up is something you want your spouse to fix, it's worth asking what you're focusing on. A steady diet of criticism drains both of you. The judgment hurts more than the issue. Often the pain isn't "you don't bring things up." It's the narrative stacked on top: "you see the problem and you just don't care." That assumption amplifies a small frustration into a big one, and it sends the conversation off topic fast. Your spouse has a different perspective, not a missing one. You see through different lenses. A quiet spouse isn't automatically a spouse who doesn't care. Picture two circles in a Venn diagram. Tension grows when you fix on where you're furthest apart. Connection grows when you look for the overlap, the both/and. Bringing it up doesn't mean it's already decided. Just because you raised something, and feel strongly about it, doesn't mean your way is the only outcome. Romans 12:10 calls us to honor one another above ourselves. That's the shift from getting my way to working as a team to figure out where we land. How you bring it up is everything. Bringing things up at all is proactive, and that's a good thing. But the how can be helpful or hurtful. Ownership and I-statements, a positive target, and a simple check-in ("Is this a good time to talk about the kids?") change the whole conversation. Get your spouse's attention and make eye contact before you start. Build a rhythm, like a meeting with a purpose. Some of the couples we coach set a weekly check-in: a standing time to celebrate and to surface anything that got dismissed on a busy night. Businesses run meetings with an agenda and a goal. That same focus helps you operate as teammates at home. For the receiver, shift to an attitude of gratitude. The spouse who brings something up is creating an opportunity to get back in alignment. Acknowledge what they shared. Validate it by reflecting it back instead of defending. When my heart posture is grateful instead of guarded, I don't have to try so hard to be kind. If it's not a good time, say so, then come back. You don't have to force a conversation. But if you ask to pause it and never return, that breaks trust in the rhythm. Make a plan together for when you'll pick it back up, and keep it. Celebrate the baby steps. You won't move from a weakness to a strength overnight. If a conversation that used to fall apart instantly now makes it ten minutes, celebrate that. Celebrating progress is what keeps both of you wanting to keep growing. Your Next Step One small thing this week. Before you raise the next issue, pause and answer two questions for yourself: what am I actually hoping for, and how do I take a step toward my spouse as I say it? And if you're usually the one receiving, practice reflecting back what your spouse shares before you respond. One change in how you start will change how the whole conversation goes. And if you want a coach in your corner, we offer a free 30-minute consultation. We'll ask a few questions, get a clear picture of where you are, and help you put together a plan to move forward as a team. We're cheering you on. Episode Themes Why one spouse ends up feeling like the only one who brings things upAwareness: knowing your pattern and taking a step toward your spouseWhat you focus on, and the drain of constant criticismThe judgment we attach to our spouse's silencePerspective and the both/and: finding the overlapBringing something up vs. deciding the outcomeThe how: ownership, a positive target, and the check-inWeekly check-ins and meetings with a purposeGratitude and validation for the spouse on the receiving endCelebrating baby steps and persevering as a teamScripture: Philippians 4:8; Romans 12:10; Galatians 6:7Reflection Questions For Personal Reflection When I bring something up, do I know what I'm actually hoping for, or am I just reacting to what's top of mind?What am I fixing my eyes on lately: what I'm grateful for, or what I want my spouse to fix?When my spouse brings something up, is my first move defensiveness, or a step toward them?What story am I attaching to my spouse's silence, and is it true?For Conversation with Your Spouse Which of us tends to bring things up, and how does that feel for each of us?What's a good time and place for us to have the harder conversations?Could we set a weekly check-in, and what would make it feel safe?What's one baby step of growth from the last month we can celebrate together?

    27 min
  2. Jun 16

    Why Hard Conversations in Marriage Go Sideways

    Episode Summary Most hard conversations don't go sideways because of what was said. They go sideways about ten to twenty seconds before it, when something gets triggered and your body quietly shifts into self-protection. For a lot of couples, it isn't the conversations where you came in swinging. It's the ones you entered with good intentions, even expecting to be on the same page, and somewhere in the middle the whole thing turned. From that moment on you're not really hearing each other. You're managing a threat, and the next thing you say comes from a compromised place. In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle get honest about why this happens, the four ways we tend to protect ourselves, fight, flight, freeze, and fawn, and the simple, practical steps that move a couple out of self-preservation and back to being teammates. What We Cover Free Marriage & Communication Assessment  Full Blog Post: Why Hard Conversations in Marriage Go Sideways The hijack happens before the words. We tend to replay what was said, but the conversation usually got compromised ten to twenty seconds earlier when a trigger fired. After that, you're reacting to a feeling, not really hearing your spouse. Fight, flight, freeze, and fawn are all the same move. They're four different strategies for one job, protecting yourself. Fight confronts the threat, flight escapes it, freeze stalls it out, and fawn appeases it (often through people pleasing, which quietly breeds resentment). Self-protection competes with connection. Marriage thrives on vulnerability and courage. If you feel the need to protect yourself, that need is working directly against your ability to be vulnerable. You can win the argument and lose the connection. You don't have to keep a conversation just because it turned. If your aim in the moment isn't connection, pausing is the wise move, not avoidance. Just because a conversation turns doesn't mean you have to keep having it right then. A peace pause buys you twenty to thirty seconds. When you feel yourself getting flooded (for Chad, the tell is his volume going up), take a short pause, breathe, and ask yourself: if we're on the same team, how would a kind person approach this right now? A pre-agreed timeout resets a flooded moment. Agree ahead of time on a word that means we're taking a break. Make the break at least thirty minutes, and use it to actually self-soothe (breathe, pray, listen to something that fills you up), not to disappear or to win. Proverbs 18:21 is your readiness test. Life and death are in the power of the tongue. If you head back into the conversation and your words are still bent toward blame and criticism, you're not ready yet. When you can return with life-giving words and a same-team heart, you're ready. A game plan beats good intentions. Championship teams don't make their biggest decisions spontaneously. They plan, they focus, and they take one thing at a time. Decide how you'll handle hard conversations before you're in them, and stay willing to pivot. You're not broken. You're wise. Celebrate the baby steps. Going from a two to a four out of ten is real growth. Celebrating it keeps you both wanting to keep working. Beating each other up over the missing six lands you right back on separate teams. Your Next Step One small thing this week. When you're both calm and not in the middle of anything tense, agree on your timeout word and what it will mean. Decide how long the break is, and what each of you will do during it to come back calmer rather than just distracted. That one agreement will change how your next hard conversation goes. And if you want a coach in your corner, we offer a free 30-minute consultation. We'll ask a few questions, get a clear picture of where you are, and help you put together a plan to move forward as a team. We're cheering you on. Episode Themes The trigger that hijacks a conversation before the wordsFight, flight, freeze, and fawn as self-protectionWhy self-protection competes with vulnerability and connectionYou don't have to finish a conversation just because it turnedThe peace pause and the pre-agreed timeoutSelf-soothing and knowing when you're ready to returnThe game plan and a same-team mindsetCelebrating baby steps over chasing perfectionScripture: Proverbs 18:21; James 1:19; Proverbs 15:1Reflection Questions For Personal ReflectionWhen a conversation gets tense, which do I default to first: fight, flight, freeze, or fawn?What's the tell that lets me know I'm getting flooded (volume, tone, going quiet, shutting down)?Where did I first learn to protect myself like this, and is it still serving our marriage?Am I genuinely self-soothing during a break, or just distracting myself until it passes?For Conversation with Your SpouseWhat should our timeout word be, and what will it mean when one of us calls it?When you get flooded, what do you most want me to understand about what's happening for you?What time and place tend to be best for us to have hard conversations?What's one baby step of growth from the last month that we can celebrate together?

    23 min
  3. Jun 9

    Prayer & Church: Two Doors to Deeper Spiritual Connection

    Prayer & Church: Two Doors to Deeper Spiritual ConnectionEpisode Summary Most couples agree that prayer and church matter. Far fewer actually do them together — and the gap quietly becomes distance. For a lot of couples, prayer feels like a performance one spouse is better at, so the other sits back. And church carries old wounds that make it easier to stay "spiritual, not religious." But walked through together, these two areas are some of the most powerful ways to build intimacy and unity in a marriage. In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle pick up where they left off on spiritual connection and go deeper into prayer and church — the landmines, the past hurts, and the simple next steps that move a couple toward each other and toward God. What We Cover 7-Day Couples Prayer Guide Full Blog Post: How to Pray as a Couple Prayer is relationship, not performance. There's no right or wrong way to pray — we're building a relationship with our Heavenly Father. Psalm 116:1-2 paints a picture of a God who bends down to hear every word. It's not about perfection; it's about rhythm. Start small and attach it to what you already do. Pray on a walk, pray when you wake up, pray over your meals. A mealtime prayer you already say can become the doorway to praying together out loud. Praying out loud is intimate. When your spouse prays out loud, you hear what's on their heart — what's heavy, what they're excited about, things "how was your day" never surfaces. And when you don't know what to pray, pray Scripture. God's Word does not return void. Prayer softens hearts. Husbands and wives are different people. Few things help a couple walk in unity like two soft hearts before God. Aim for the floor, not perfection. Research shared in the episode points to a tipping point: at three days a week there's little transformation, but at four, life starts to change. Shoot for seven, make four your floor, and when you miss a day, just keep going. Church is formative, not perfect. The most common reason couples step away is church hurt. But the church was never meant to be perfect — it's meant to shape us. Community shows up in our hardest seasons, and "those who are planted in the house of the Lord flourish" (Psalm 92:13). Apart from community, our faith tends to drift. "Spiritual, not religious" deserves an honest look. Many couples say they have a personal relationship with God but aren't reading His Word or talking to Him — an honest invitation to grow in the areas we say matter most. Your Next Step Two action items this week. First, commit to praying together in a regular rhythm — use the free 7-day prayer guide in the show notes as your tool. Second, take one baby step toward a local church: visit one this Sunday, commit to consistency, or join a team and serve. These areas produce freedom and connection.  We're cheering you on. Episode Themes Prayer as relationship vs. performanceBuilding a daily prayer rhythm as a coupleThe intimacy of praying out loud and praying ScripturePerseverance over perfection (the 4-out-of-7 tipping point)Church hurt and the expectation of perfectionCommunity, belonging, and being known"Spiritual, not religious" examined honestlyScripture: Psalm 116:1-2; Psalm 92:13; Hebrews 10:25Reflection Questions For Personal Reflection When it comes to praying out loud, am I leaning in or sitting back — and why?Have I been treating prayer as a performance instead of a relationship with God?Is there a past church hurt I'm still letting shape my expectations today?Am I genuinely growing in the spiritual areas I say are important to me?For Conversation with Your Spouse What's one small, existing rhythm we could attach prayer to this week?When you pray out loud, what do you want me to understand about your heart?What would "taking a baby step" toward a church home look like for us right now?What's one way being part of a community has blessed our marriage — and one way we could let it?

    21 min
  4. May 26

    How to Spiritually Connect

    Episode Summary You're both Christians. You both love God. But when it comes to actually connecting in faith together, something goes quiet. You pray separately, read separately, and call it good—but the gap you feel is real. It usually doesn't start with conflict. It starts with assumption. One spouse expects prayer every morning; the other thinks sharing a pew on Sunday is plenty. Both are sincere. Neither has said a word. That silence is where spiritual disconnection grows. In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle walk couples through what spiritual connection actually looks like, the three pitfalls that erode it fast, and how to start building it—no matter where you're starting from. Start with your individual faith. Spiritual connection between two people requires two people who are actually growing. When both spouses are drawing closer to God on their own—spending time in the Word, in prayer—connecting together becomes natural. God is already at the center. Show up with nothing, and there's nothing to share. Clarify your expectations. Couples rarely fight about spiritual connection directly. They fight about disappointment. Sarah-Gayle was quietly keeping track every time Chad didn't initiate prayer—never saying a word, just building resentment. The fix isn't a new habit. It's an honest conversation: what does spiritual connection actually mean to you, right now, in this season? Three pitfalls that kill spiritual connection. The first is weaponizing scripture—using the Bible to criticize, minimize, or blame your spouse. Jesus addressed this directly: deal with the plank in your own eye before the speck in your neighbor's (Matthew 7). The moment scripture becomes a weapon, safety disappears. Second is keeping score. Tracking who initiated, who showed up, who fell short turns marriage into a debt relationship. Third is pressure and judgment. When one spouse is on fire for God and the other isn't, criticism pushes them further away. Open invitations pull them closer. What healthy spiritual connection produces. Couples who are spiritually connected grow in knowing God together. That depth spills over into emotional intimacy. It also becomes visible—there's something different about them that people notice without being able to name it. A fragrance. An invitation. That's exactly what you were made for. Building it takes intentionality, grace, and margin. The seasons where Chad and Sarah-Gayle are most connected, they planned it. And when they read the same passage and walked away with different takeaways, grace made room for curiosity instead of criticism. Scripture is living and active—what God is doing in your spouse right now may look different than what he's doing in you. That's not a problem. That's the point. Start small. You don't need a 10 out of 10. A 2 or 3 is worth building on. Pick one harmful pattern from this episode to stop this week. Then choose a time—morning or evening—and start praying together. God designed your marriage for this, and he's cheering you on. Full blog post article: https://www.hoperelentless.com/how-to-spiritually-connect Episode Themes Spiritual disconnection despite shared faithIndividual relationship with God as the foundation for shared connectionMismatched expectations around spiritual intimacyWeaponizing scripture against a spouseKeeping score in spiritual mattersPressuring or judging a spiritually disengaged spouseSpiritual connection as a light and witness in the communityMatthew 7 (plank and speck)Intentionality, grace, and margin as the framework for sustainable spiritual rhythms Reflection Questions Start with these on your own. Then bring them to a conversation with your spouse. For Personal Reflection: How consistent is my individual time with God right now—and what am I actually bringing into our marriage from that?What does God's Word say about how I'm treating my spouse in areas where they're not where I want them to be spiritually?Have I been weaponizing scripture, keeping score, or pressuring my spouse? Which one?On a scale of 0–10, where is our spiritual connection right now—and what would a 2-point increase actually look like? For Conversation with Your Spouse: What does spiritual connection mean to each of us right now—are our expectations the same?When have we felt most spiritually connected, and what made that possible?What's one small step we can commit to this week—a time to pray together, something to read together?What do we want our spiritual connection to look like a year from now?

    18 min
  5. May 19

    Covenant vs Contract

    Most couples never realize their marriage has quietly become a contract. No one meant for it to happen. But somewhere along the way, love became conditional — and conflict started to feel like a courtroom. When a marriage runs on contract logic, tallies get kept, affection gets withheld, and threats of leaving surface during hard moments. The message is always the same: I'll give you what you deserve — and right now, you haven't earned it. In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle break down the difference between a contractual marriage and a covenant marriage, how couples drift into contract mode without realizing it, and what shifts when you choose something deeper. What a Contractual Marriage Looks Like. A contract is built on "I'll do A as long as you do B." In marriage, this shows up as scorekeeping, withholding affection when a spouse falls short, and threats of leaving during conflict. The clearest sign: conflict feels like a courtroom — two opponents trying to prove who's right. What Covenant Marriage Is Rooted In. Scripture uses the word covenant for marriage. "She is your companion and your wife by covenant" (Malachi 2:14). "What God has brought together, let no man separate" (Matthew 19:6). A covenant is sacred — a promise before God, built on commitment and faithfulness, not feeling or convenience. The Core Shift: Responding to God, Not What Your Spouse Deserves. The question isn't whether your spouse has earned grace — it's whether you're responding to how God treats you. His mercy becomes your standard. "Do everything as unto the Lord" (Colossians 3:23) means your spouse's behavior doesn't determine yours. This Isn't Willpower — It Requires the Holy Spirit. The supernatural design of marriage requires supernatural power. The same Spirit that raised Christ from the dead lives in you — and as you depend on Him, He gives you what you need to live this out. What Changes in Conflict. In a contract, conflict becomes blame — digging up failures, building a case. In a covenant, conflict becomes a search for healing. Emotional safety grows because neither person is threatening to leave, and that changes everything about what you're willing to say. Ask yourself where you've been operating out of a contract rather than a covenant. Then bring this conversation to your spouse this week — just naming the dynamic together is a powerful first step. God's design for your marriage is better than anything a contract can offer. Episode Themes Contractual vs. covenant mindset in marriageScorekeeping and conditional loveCovenant rooted in Scripture (Malachi 2:14, Matthew 19:6, Genesis 2:24, Ephesians 5, Colossians 3:23)Treating your spouse as unto the LordPersonal responsibility independent of your spouse's behaviorHoly Spirit as the power behind covenant livingEmotional safety and relational resilienceReflection Questions Start with these on your own. Then bring them to your spouse. For Personal Reflection: Where have I been keeping score — tracking what my spouse owes me or hasn't done?What would it look like to treat my spouse the way God treats me, not the way I feel they deserve?Have I withheld affection, forgiveness, or engagement as a consequence? When?Where am I operating most days — contract or covenant? What would one step toward covenant look like?For Conversation with Your Spouse: Have there been seasons where our marriage felt like a negotiation or a courtroom? Can we name that without assigning blame?What does a covenant marriage look like to each of us? Have we ever talked about what we actually want?What's one way we can shift from contract to covenant in how we handle conflict this week?What would it look like for our marriage to be a place where both of us feel safe — even in hard conversations?Hope Relentless Blog

    14 min
  6. May 12

    Should I Stay or Should I Go? Why the Grass Isn't Always Greener

    The question "should I stay or go?" sounds like a crossroads. It's actually a mirror. Most couples in this spot aren't comparing fairly. The new relationship gets dinners, weekend trips, and excitement. The current marriage gets bills, kids, and real life. That gap feels like evidence. It isn't. And research backs it up - second marriages fail at 60-67%, third marriages at 73%. The pattern isn't the spouse. It's the person who shows up in every relationship. In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle speak directly to couples wrestling with resentment, broken trust, and the pull toward starting over - and walk through four anchors to help them fight for their marriage well. Use Your Mind Creatively. When an exit plan lives in the back of your mind, you train for the one-mile race, not the five. Couples who stay mentally invested find solutions they never expected. God has equipped you for what He's called you to. The mind looking for ways out is the same mind that can find a way through. Take Your Thoughts Captive. Proverbs says as a man thinks, so is he. Taking thoughts captive isn't a soft suggestion - Scripture calls it warfare (2 Corinthians 10:5). It means noticing what you're feeding your mind, replacing fantasy comparisons with gratitude, and praying for your spouse rather than about them. Joyce Meyer's Battlefield of the Mind is worth picking up if this is your fight. Count the Real Cost. Leaving has a price. Staying without getting help has a price too. Kids pay part of it either way - they catch more than they're taught. Couples who push through hard seasons don't just save their marriage. They hand their kids a picture of what commitment looks like when it's tested. Remember Your Why. Gary Thomas asks in Sacred Marriage: what if God designed marriage to make us holy more than to make us happy? James calls us to count it pure joy when we face trials. That reframe changes everything. Conflict isn't failure. It's formation. And a covenant marriage, rooted in Christ, has access to a Restorer who specializes in what looks beyond repair. Pick one of these four anchors this week and put it to work. Not all four. Just one. The grass is greener where you water it - and God hasn't walked away from your marriage. Episode Themes The "grass is greener" myth in marriageSecond and third marriage failure rates (60-67% / 73%)Using creative thinking to invest in your current marriageTaking thoughts captive - 2 Corinthians 10:5Proverbs 23:7 - as a man thinks, so is heCounting the real cost of leaving vs. staying without helpGenerational impact of persevering through conflictCovenant marriage as God's designSacred Marriage by Gary Thomas / Battlefield of the Mind by Joyce MeyerFor Personal Reflection: When things get hard in my marriage, do my thoughts move toward solutions or exits?What does God's design for covenant marriage invite me toward that I've been resisting?Am I making an honest comparison - or measuring my worst days against someone else's highlight reel?What would it look like to take one recurring negative thought about my spouse captive this week and replace it with something true?For Conversation with Your Spouse: Is there a challenge we've mentally drifted away from instead of solving together?What did we originally want this marriage to look like - and what got in the way of that?What's one thing we could try this week to water what's already here?What do we want our kids - or the people closest to us - to say about how we handled this season?www.hoperelentless.com/should-i-stay-or-should-i-go

    22 min
  7. May 5

    Is Resentment Slowly Destroying Your Marriage?

    Resentment rarely announces itself. It builds quietly until it becomes a wall your spouse's growth can no longer break through. In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle break down where it starts, what it costs, and how to end it. Where it starts: Unspoken expectationsPoor communicationPride that won't take ownershipRepeated lack of follow-throughWhat it costs: It warps your lens. You stay focused on the gap even when your spouse is growing.It pulls you into withholding and indifference. Scripture calls these patterns sinful.The five-part inside game: Rely on God. Make Him your source, not your spouse's performance. (Col. 3:23)Walk in Humility. Get honest with yourself before focusing on your spouse. (Luke 6:41)Choose Forgiveness. Not seven times, but seventy-seven. (Matt. 18)Assume the Best. Fix your mind on what is true and praiseworthy. (Phil. 4:8)Seek Individual Counseling. Heal what is yours to carry.Pick one. Take ownership. Resentment is not yours to carry. God has more for your marriage. Episode Themes Resentment as a silent and costly threat to marital connectionUnspoken expectations as a breeding ground for bitternessPride and the refusal to take ownershipLack of follow-through as a source of recurring conflictThe "inside game" — personal ownership over lasting changePerspective distortion — locking your spouse in a boxObedience to Christ and staying in alignment with God's designProverbs 4:23; Colossians 3:23; Luke 6:41–42; Romans 3:23; Matthew 18:21–23; Matthew 6; Philippians 4:8Five-step framework: Rely on God, Humility, Forgiveness, Assume the Best, Individual Counseling Reflection Questions For Personal Reflection: Which of the five inside-game steps feels most out of reach for you right now — and what does that reveal about where your heart is?Is there a version of your spouse you're still seeing — one that's no longer accurate — because resentment has kept them in a box?Are there wounds from your family of origin that show up in how you interpret or respond to your spouse?On a scale of 1–10, how freely do you extend forgiveness in your marriage — and what would it look like to move one step forward? For Conversation with Your Spouse: Are there any recurring arguments or hurts we keep circling back to without real resolution?Is there an expectation one of us has been holding that we've never actually talked about?What's one thing we can do this week to assume the best of each other when things feel tense?What would our marriage look and feel like if resentment had no foothold in it?https://www.hoperelentless.com/how-to-deal-with-resentment-in-marriage

    23 min
  8. Apr 28

    When Trust Has Been Broken

    Episode Summary https://www.hoperelentless.com/when-trust-is-broken Trust can break in a moment. Rebuilding it is a different story. Whether it was one event or years of quiet erosion, broken trust creates a gap that doesn't close on its own. Sarah-Gayle sat with a wife married over 20 years - done, exhausted, ready to walk away. Her husband agreed: he hadn't been there. That honest admission was the first crack of hope. That's where rebuilding starts. In this episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle begin a two-part series on rebuilding trust - starting with practical steps for the person who broke it. Personal Responsibility. Both spouses have a role in rebuilding, even when those roles look different. Reconciliation takes two people willing to own their part. Resentment quietly moves in when ownership moves out. Invite God Into It. Shift from praying about your spouse to praying for them. "God, convict her" keeps your heart hard. Thanking God for your spouse and trusting him as Restorer begins to soften it. He went to the cross while we were yet sinners (Romans 5:8). Reconciliation is his heart. Create a Weekly Check-In. Fifteen minutes a week dedicated to trust. Ask what you can do to keep building. Listen without defending. Celebrate what's working. If it turns critical, call a timeout. What you focus on gets magnified - keep the focus on what promotes trust, not just what broke it. Be a Person of Your Word. Let your yes be yes and your no be no (Matthew 5:37). Follow through on what you commit to. When you don't, own it without excuses. Trust doesn't require perfection - it requires ownership. When you deflect, the gap widens. Time Is Not the Enemy. There's no finish line. Being trustworthy becomes the standard - the way you live your marriage. The goal is a relationship where your spouse knows, without question, that you do what you say. Pick one thing this week and do it. Set the check-in. Initiate the prayer. Follow through - and own it fast if you miss. Next episode, Chad and Sarah-Gayle cover the other side: forgiveness, resentment, and the role of the person who was hurt. Episode Themes Broken trust - single event vs. slow erosion over timePersonal responsibility for both spouses in the rebuilding processInviting God into trust repair - praying for vs. praying aboutGod as Restorer and ReconcilerCreating structured weekly trust check-insFocusing on what promotes trust, not just what broke itAvoiding the debtor mindset when rebuildingBeing a person of your word - follow-through and ownershipTrust as a lifelong standard, not a finish lineRomans 5:8 - "while we were yet sinners, he died for us"Matthew 5:37 - "let your yes be yes and your no be no"Personal Reflection: In what ways have I contributed to an environment where trust has eroded - through a specific event or gradual patterns over time?Am I praying for my spouse or about them? What would it look like to genuinely invite God into this repair?Is there a place where I have been making excuses instead of taking ownership? What would fully owning it look like this week?On a scale of 1-10, how confident is my spouse that I will do what I say? What is one step toward a higher number?Conversation with Your Spouse: Can we name the specific gap in trust without assigning blame - just describe what we have both been experiencing?What has trust looked like in our marriage at its best? What do we want to rebuild toward?Would we be willing to try a 15-minute weekly check-in for the next month?What is one small, concrete thing each of us can commit to this week to move toward each other?

    23 min
5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

We're two former D1 athletes who built a business, raised a family, led in ministry, and learned the hard way that the drive that makes you effective in the world can quietly damage what matters most at home. Hope Relentless is our podcast for Christian couples who lead — in business, ministry, and community — and want a marriage that doesn't just survive the pressure of that calling, but thrives in it. www.hoperelentless.com

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