6 Stone Jars Marriage Preparation Resources for Catholic Singles

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fostering successful marriages that are permanent, faithful and fruitful.

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Key Ingredients of Love and Marriage That Lasts

I just came across this obituary of a married Catholic couple, Lou and Patricia DeMuro, who died on the same day after 62 years of marriage. It's a real old-fashioned love story.

It is a very touching story. The simplicity in which this couple approached life and each other is inspiring. Their contentment with what life offered them admirable. This couple's story should be what every person should be looking for when it comes to love and marriage. They offer two key ingredients to falling in love and a successful marriage; approaching life with simplicity and contentment.

Sadly, too many people complicate the process and get too demanding when it comes to their expectations of another person, making it almost impossible to find such love. The more qualifications necessary, the less likely to find happiness and share such a life.

It’s also important to realize that they had very humble beginnings and lived a humble life. They were not angry or frustrated about their financial situation. They were accepting of it, made do, and were thankful for their blessings. They were also very young. That helps too. When you marry young, it gives you more years together. And the more years you have living together in marriage, the less selfish you become.

But this couple have more to teach us about approaching love and marriage. They had an earnest desire to make each other happy and feel special. They did not take each other for granted. Let’s see how the reporter described their life from the research:

  • Their life together had few frills but many laughs.
  • They would sing the 1950s hit "How Much is That Doggie in the Window?". They listened to the soundtracks from "South Pacific" and "Mary Poppins" hundreds of times. The louder their kids sang along, the more the DeMuros smiled.
  • They were a tag team when it came to raising their three kids. When Mr. DeMuro got home from work, he was a hands-on parent, so Patricia DeMuro could head to her night job.
  • They did everything together.
  • They lived in a two-flat with relatives upstairs.
  • The children went to school across the street at Our Lady Help of Christians. They'd come home for lunch.
  • When the family moved in 1968, Mrs. DeMuro brushed up her secretarial skills and landed a job at AT&T. Mr. DeMuro was an order filler for Motorola and worked at a cutlery firm.
  • They would take bus tours and cruises to Alaska and the Caribbean, along the Mississippi River and through the Panama Canal.
  • They loved going to Massachusetts in the fall to watch the leaves change colors.

Laughed a lot, basic living, enjoyed their kids (loud kids made them smile!), sang corny songs, made home-made sausage, hands-on parenting as a team, living with relatives in the same house, kids went to Catholic school, she worked to help bring in money, he worked two jobs, simple pleasures. They did everything together.

Now let’s see how their kids describe them and their life with their parents:

  • They remember Dad barbecuing and getting the biggest kick out of watching the kids play.
  • The homemade sausage was so good, it spoiled them for anything else.
  • Their parents roller-skated, bowled and played pinochle together and even used his-and-hers lawnmowers to mow their grass side-by-side.
  • Mom was really in tune with their schoolwork. She was there all the time. She slept while they were at school.
  • Sundays meant pot roast for dinner.
  • They were always asking them 'How ya doing? Are you OK?' Always checking up on them. They were encouraging.
  • Dad enjoyed taking his sons golfing at Salt Creek Country Club in Itasca.
  • The family liked hitting Wood Dale Bowl and watching Clint Eastwood spaghetti Westerns at the old Thunderbird Theater in Hoffman Estates.
  • Dad would do the shopping and mom the cooking, making homemade ravioli, manicotti, pizza, pineapple upside-down cake and Italian cookies.

Togetherness, availability, genuine interest, hard-working, tender moments, frugality, attentiveness to the children’s needs.

What stands out to me is how happy they were, and more importantly, how happy the children were. Their children felt they had a rich life growing up. They certainly were not poor. Pot roast on Sunday is very middle class. They were careful with their money. And I’m sure they were “savers” and had money due to their being careful with their money and not reckless. They lived within their means, but still did special things. It was not a life of extravagance.

Another thing that stands out to me is that the things the children point out are all have to do with how the couple interacted together at a friendship level. It does not seem that either one dominated the other. The mutual respect seems to be what the children took from their relationship.

It really goes to show that bonding as friends with a mutual respect of each other is a key ingredient to success in marriage. Each person is free to be themselves, yet has a desire to do things together and be together. Seeking someone you can have that kind of bond with goes so far beyond age differences, physical attraction, child-bearing requirements, and the many kinds of things single people allow themselves to get so caught up in.

And this couple took the plunge. They saw in each other someone they wanted to be with; a suitable partner. They did not question it or ponder too deeply about if this is the one God had in mind. They did not reject the other in hopes of finding someone better. They probably gave it no thought at all. Since they were both people who approached life with simplicity and were not hard people to please, they knew how to be content and appreciate what they had. I’m sure this prepared them well for finding the kind of love in another person.

On her deathbed, Mr. DeMuro was brought in to see Mrs. DeMuro. He said “Hi Babe,” and she said “Lou, I love you. I had a wonderful life. I'll see you in another place.” They lived in such close union with each other in that bond of love. So it was fitting that, at the end, they died together, succumbing within hours of each other from a multitude of ailments. Lou had leukemia, Parkinson's disease and was in hospice. Patricia had diabetes, high blood pressure and heart failure. In the end, they both needed others to care for them. But their desire was always to take care of the other, especially each other’s hearts.

It is not dumb luck or a fluke that they cherished each other for 62 years and still felt so close after all that time. They gave themselves completely to the other, and wanted to, and found joy in it. If we all would approach life with simplicity and as content people, without over expectations and qualifications about the people who come along and whom we date, we just might end up with a life of love as Lou and Patricia DeMuro shared.

I'm not good enough for you.

I did a radio interview where the topic of fear in not being good enough for someone came up. I thought it would be a good thing to talk about a little more thoroughly then we covered on the air.

This is a common happening. You meet someone who seems wonderful, perhaps too good to be true. Suddenly, you are hit with a sense of fear about not being good enough for this person. So you try to sabotage the relationship so you have a good excuse to end it, when what you really did was say, "I don't deserve you.”

It's a shame that this happens. Perhaps it is because we have low self-esteem and think that no one could want us and love us for who we are. Perhaps it is a perfectionist issue that makes us think that we have to be a saint if we are going to make a wonderful, holy person happy in marriage.

Without question, it is a mistake to have this fear of not being good enough. It is a false humility that says "I am not worthy of you." No one is worthy of anyone else. The fact is we are all sinners. We don't marry a saint, but a sinner. Every human being has flaws, imperfections, weaknesses, tendencies, bad habits, any number of other negative aspects to themselves. We should be working on ourselves to correct these things. We should always be understanding that others have their issues. No one is perfect.

For the pursuit of marriage, it is imperative that we never make the mistake of thinking that we are dating a saint, and we are too sinful, weak, or broken for that person. It is also imperative that we do not put that other person on too high of a pedestal, and remember that they, too, are a sinner. If you are ever dating someone who comes across as believing there is nothing wrong with them, and they are picky and critical of you, please run away from that person as fast as you can and never look back.

To have an awareness of your own shortcomings is a great gift, both individually and socially. Individually, this gift helps you understand that before God, you are not yet a saint and have work to do. This should inspire you to keep doing the work of perfecting yourself by God’s grace. Socially, this gift helps you to approach other people with true humility, knowing that you are not "better" than anyone else. You feel honored when someone is interested in bringing you closer into their world. It also helps you approach this person in charity, knowing they have their flaws and issues, and these should be things you accept and gently help the other with.

It is a mistake to be turned off by someone's negative qualities. It is much better to be inclined to seek the good qualities. Let those good qualities overshadow any negative qualities, and (hardest of all) attempt to accept and even embrace the negative qualities. This is the secret of finding a suitable partner for marriage and being willing to make the commitment to that person. Once you are able to find the negative qualities endearing, and understand how both your qualities make you unique as a couple, then you are have what it takes to make marriage last.

If it sounds like what I am saying is that falling in love involves loving the negative as well as the positive, you are correct. Love is a total acceptance of the person, flaws and all. Deep love is experienced as the negative qualities take on an endearment to you. A marriage is in trouble when the two only love each other as their good qualities are experienced. The negative qualities have to be embraced and loved if you are to love each other for a lifetime.

Marriage is where two sinners come together in the lifetime commitment of being each other's path to sanctity. They have good times and bad times. The good times make life easy. The bad times make life challenging, perhaps even a hell on earth. The bad times are often moments where one is experiencing negative things from the other. It is in those moments that our character is tested and our opportunity to take a step forward toward becoming a saint is given as a gift from God.

The security of the sacramental bond protects the two sinners from losing their primary opportunity to become a saint. The union allows the two to fall without the fear of hurting themselves beyond repair. When one falls, the other is there to help navigate them back through the love accomplished by patient endurance, kindness, silence without reproach, and forgiveness. Perhaps it will take being the one to say "I'm sorry" when it is the one who has fallen who, in justice, should be the one apologizing. That is the mercy that true love brings to marriage and mirrors the love of God.

Who among us is good enough for anyone? Do we not realize that God loves us beyond measure even though we are sinners and not worthy of Him? How can we be a person who trusts in God if we don't have peace in His love for us?

We must have this same trust in other persons, especially in the person we will marry. It is a trust that says "despite my unworthiness, I believe in your love for me. I will love you with all I am, by God's grace.” To fear not being good enough for someone is to lack trust in that person and lack trust in God, Who has displayed that love is about giving yourself despite the other's faults and sins.

That is really where the problem lies. We do not trust the other person to take us as we are, with all our faults, flaws, weaknesses. Why would any person love me so completely? The reason is because that is how God loves us. Why should we settle for anything less? As Jesus Himself implied, it is easy to love someone when they are lovable. But not so easy when they are not; in moments when they bother you or hurt your feelings or do something that seems hateful. Human beings are going to have unlovable moments. There is no way around that. Your spouse is going to have those moments. What will you do? Say to yourself "Oh, I made a mistake, this person is not who I thought they were" and then turn away from that person in heart and mind, or even physically leave them?

Marital love does not fear getting hurt. It takes the risk of giving your whole self knowing you might get hurt. Love does not fear failing or not being good enough. Those who feel they are not good enough need to be reminded how God loves us despite our sinfulness, and is always risking Himself by His willingness to forgive us, have mercy on us, welcome us back to His embrace, and shower us with His grace. This is what love requires.

We turn to another human being and say, "You are not my God, nor can you provide me with the level of love that only God can give me. I am not your God. But we can love each other with all our shortcomings and rely on God to give us what we need to persevere when love seems hardest, and enjoy all the moments when we are most lovable, always accepting both experiences as gifts to us for our sanctity."

Fear nothing except offending God. Be yourself. Know yourself, flaws and all, so you know who it is the other is getting from you. Be open to the total person of the other. With this attitude, you will find there is nothing to fear; you can trust someone to love you for who you are. You will have the ability to give yourself to someone that you can love in every way. Your trust in God will empower you to cast away fear of unworthiness and take on gratitude and honor that someone would be so interested in loving you.

Be confident. Fear is a sign of weakness and it will cripple your ability to develop a healthy relationship and get married. Fear is a distraction tactic of the demonic. Confidence in who you are and God's love for you, and your own love for yourself will dispel fear once and for all, and make you very attractive to a potential future spouse. There is nothing quite so attractive in another person as experiencing their confidence in who they are, and their trust in being who they are in your presence. So be humble and confident.  And let the mystery of love flow freely and where it will.

Why "6 Stone Jars"?

I thought I would start out the first entry of my blog by explaining why I chose "6 Stone Jars" as the name. My work is all about Christian marriage. Most of my work is in helping single Catholics who have the vocation to marriage, those who know or work with single Catholics, but extends into marriage preparation and helping married persons within their vocation. Utlimately, I am about wanting solid, happy, lifetime marriages that will bring Christ into their families, communities and society. The blog name comes from a scene in the Gospel of St. John that accounts the Wedding Feast of Cana:

Miracle at Cana - Jn 2:1-11

1 On the third day there was a wedding in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there; 2 and both Jesus and His disciples were invited to the wedding. 3 When the wine ran out, the mother of Jesus said to Him, "They have no wine." 4 And Jesus said to her, "Woman, what does that have to do with us? My hour has not yet come." 5 His mother said to the servants, "Whatever He says to you, do it." 6 Now there were six stone jars set there for the Jewish custom of purification, containing twenty or thirty gallons each. 7 Jesus said to them, "Fill the waterpots with water." So they filled them up to the brim. 8 And He said to them, "Draw some out now and take it to the headwaiter." So they took it to him. 9 When the headwaiter tasted the water which had become wine, and did not know where it came from (but the servants who had drawn the water knew), the headwaiter called the bridegroom, 10 and said to him, "Every man serves the good wine first, and when the people have drunk freely, then he serves the poorer wine; but you have kept the good wine until now." 11 This beginning of His signs Jesus did in Cana of Galilee, and manifested His glory, and His disciples believed in Him.