📖 Reading 7.4: Lifelong Covenant Pursuit
📖 Reading 7.4: Lifelong Covenant Pursuit
Introduction: Pursuit Is Not Only for the Young
Many couples pursue each other before marriage.
They notice each other.
They ask questions.
They dress with care.
They send thoughtful messages.
They plan dates.
They flirt.
They laugh.
They look forward to being together.
Then marriage comes. Years pass. Work gets busy. Children may arrive. Bodies change. Stress accumulates. Parents age. Bills increase. Sleep becomes thinner. Conversations become practical. The couple may still love each other, but pursuit slowly fades.
They still share a home.
They still share responsibilities.
They may still share faith.
But they no longer actively pursue one another.
This is dangerous.
A marriage can remain technically faithful while becoming emotionally cold. A husband and wife may avoid adultery but still neglect tenderness. They may never threaten divorce but stop moving toward each other. They may stay in the same house but live in separate emotional worlds.
Christian marriage calls for more than staying.
It calls for lifelong covenant pursuit.
What Is Lifelong Covenant Pursuit?
Lifelong covenant pursuit is the ongoing practice of turning toward your spouse with faithfulness, affection, curiosity, service, desire, and honor through every season of marriage.
It says:
“I will not stop learning you.”
“I will not stop cherishing you.”
“I will not treat our marriage as automatic.”
“I will keep choosing you in visible ways.”
“I will guard our covenant fire.”
“I will pursue you as my beloved, not merely manage life beside you.”
This kind of pursuit is not childish romance.
It is mature covenant love.
It does not depend on constant emotional intensity. It does not pretend that marriage is always easy. It does not deny fatigue, grief, aging, illness, body changes, or stress.
Instead, it says:
“Even here, I will move toward you.”
Covenant Fire Can Grow Later in Life
Many people assume marital passion belongs mostly to the young.
That is not true.
Some couples experience more sexual freedom, more honesty, more playfulness, and more covenant warmth later in marriage than they did earlier. This can happen because trust has deepened. Shame has weakened. The couple knows each other better. The children may be grown. Performance pressure may decrease. The husband and wife may finally have language for desire, delight, boundaries, and practical helps.
Later-life covenant fire is not about pretending to be young.
It is about being fully married now.
A couple in their sixties, seventies, or beyond may still be tender, sexually alive, playful, affectionate, and active. Their bodies may not be the same as when they were twenty-five, but their covenant can be deeper, wiser, freer, and more mutually responsible.
Christian marriage should not quietly teach older couples to expect coldness.
It should call them to hope.
Aging may change intimacy.
It does not have to end it.
Taking Responsibility for Delight
Many couples take responsibility for bills, schedules, children, home repairs, retirement planning, church involvement, and medical appointments.
But they do not take responsibility for delight.
They wait for warmth to happen automatically.
They wait for desire to return without conversation.
They wait for the other spouse to initiate.
They wait until life is less busy.
They wait until they feel young again.
They wait until shame disappears by itself.
But covenant fire must be tended.
Taking responsibility for delight means a husband and wife stop treating romance, affection, and sexual warmth as accidental. They begin to steward this part of marriage with holiness, honesty, and care.
They ask:
“What helps you feel desired?”
“What helps your body respond?”
“What makes you feel pressured?”
“What makes you feel safe?”
“What kind of touch feels loving in this season?”
“What practical help would make intimacy more comfortable?”
“What do we need to stop being embarrassed about?”
“How can we keep our marriage bed warm, faithful, playful, and holy?”
These questions are not crude.
They are covenant questions.
Freedom Without Shame
Some couples discover that later-life intimacy becomes more joyful when they stop being ashamed of needing help.
A wife may need more time, tenderness, reassurance, lubrication, medical care, or a marital aid.
A husband may need medical guidance, patience, honest conversation, or freedom from the pressure to perform.
A couple may need rest, privacy, counseling, humor, or a fresh rhythm of affection.
None of this means the marriage has failed.
It means the couple is learning to love as embodied souls.
A marital aid used together within the covenant is not a rival to the spouse. It can be received as a practical help that serves mutual delight, comfort, and connection.
A husband should not feel replaced by something that helps him love his wife well.
A wife should not feel ashamed because her body responds differently with age.
A couple should not confuse holiness with silence.
Holiness does not require embarrassment.
Holiness requires covenant faithfulness, mutual welcome, love, safety, self-control, and honor before God.
Freedom Is Not Selfishness
Christian freedom in marriage is not boundaryless.
Inside covenant, husband and wife may enjoy playful, creative, affectionate, and deeply personal intimacy. But this freedom must remain governed by love.
Covenant freedom is:
Exclusive
Mutually welcomed
Emotionally safe
Physically safe
Free from coercion
Free from humiliation
Free from pornography
Free from outside partners
Free from secrecy
Free from comparison
Increasing love
A couple should be able to ask:
“Does this strengthen our covenant?”
“Does this honor both of us?”
“Is this welcomed, not pressured?”
“Does this increase tenderness?”
“Does this keep desire at home?”
“Does this help us love each other as whole embodied souls?”
Freedom without covenant becomes selfishness.
Covenant without freedom can become cold duty.
Christian marriage holds freedom and holiness together.
God Pursues His People
The Bible repeatedly shows God as the faithful covenant pursuer.
God seeks Adam and Eve after they sin.
God calls Abraham.
God delivers Israel.
God sends prophets to call his people back.
God sends his Son.
Jesus comes seeking the lost.
The gospel is the story of divine pursuit.
Romans 5:8 says:
“But God commends his own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.”
Romans 5:8, WEB
God did not wait for humanity to become attractive, faithful, convenient, or easy to love. He moved toward us in grace and truth.
Christian marriage does not copy God perfectly. No spouse is a savior. No spouse should be asked to carry the weight that belongs only to Christ.
But Christian marriage can reflect something of God’s faithful love.
A husband pursues his wife not because she is always easy to understand, but because she is his covenant beloved.
A wife pursues her husband not because he always responds perfectly, but because he is her covenant beloved.
Covenant pursuit is not earned every day by mood or performance.
It is rooted in promise.
Pursuit Is More Than Sexual Initiation
When some couples hear the word pursuit, they think only of sexual initiation.
Sexual pursuit can be a beautiful part of marriage when it is mutual, welcomed, tender, and covenant-faithful.
But lifelong pursuit is larger than sexual initiation.
Pursuit includes:
Listening with attention
Speaking blessing
Showing affection
Praying together
Asking meaningful questions
Making time
Noticing weariness
Helping with burdens
Laughing together
Repairing after conflict
Protecting private moments
Encouraging spiritual growth
Honoring the body
Cultivating desire without pressure
Refusing contempt
A spouse may pursue sexually but neglect emotionally. That can feel selfish.
A spouse may serve practically but never show affection. That can feel cold.
A spouse may be faithful publicly but inattentive privately. That can feel lonely.
Healthy pursuit is whole-person pursuit.
It sees the spouse as an embodied soul.
The Opposite of Pursuit Is Drift
Most couples do not decide to become distant.
They drift.
Drift happens quietly.
A few missed conversations.
A few unrepaired hurts.
A few weeks without affection.
A few months of sleeping back-to-back.
A few years of mostly logistical communication.
A few secret resentments.
A few comparisons.
A few private disappointments.
A few screens between them every evening.
Then one day, they realize they are not enemies, but they are not close either.
They are running the same household but not sharing the same heart.
Drift is not always dramatic, but it is still dangerous.
Hebrews 2:1 says:
“Therefore we ought to pay greater attention to the things that were heard, lest perhaps we drift away.”
Hebrews 2:1, WEB
While this verse speaks about holding fast to the message of salvation, the principle of drift is also wise for marriage. Important things weaken when they are neglected.
A couple does not protect covenant fire by assuming it will maintain itself.
They protect it by paying attention.
Pursuit Through Early Marriage
Early marriage often includes discovery.
The couple is learning each other’s habits, bodies, moods, family patterns, money instincts, conflict styles, spiritual rhythms, and expectations.
This season can be joyful, but it can also be disorienting.
The spouse who seemed relaxed while dating may now seem careless.
The spouse who seemed responsible may now seem controlling.
The spouse who seemed romantic may now seem needy.
The spouse who seemed calm may now seem emotionally unavailable.
Lifelong pursuit in early marriage means refusing to turn disappointment into contempt.
It says:
“I am still learning you.”
“I will ask instead of assume.”
“I will tell the truth earlier instead of storing resentment.”
“I will not punish you for not being the fantasy version of marriage I imagined.”
Early marriage pursuit builds habits that matter for decades.
Pursuit Through the Parenting Years
The parenting years often test covenant warmth.
Children are a blessing, but they also bring exhaustion, noise, interruption, financial pressure, less privacy, body changes, and emotional overload.
Many couples stop pursuing each other during the parenting years because survival takes over.
The marriage becomes a management team.
Who is picking up the kids?
Who is making dinner?
Who paid the bill?
Who scheduled the dentist?
Who packed the lunch?
Who cleaned the bathroom?
These things matter. But if the couple only manages tasks, the marriage can grow thin.
Pursuit in the parenting years may look simple:
A real kiss before work
A hand on the back while passing in the kitchen
A ten-minute check-in after the children sleep
A text that says, “I still see you”
A date at home after bedtime
Praying together when both are tired
Protecting the marriage from becoming child-centered
Children are blessed when their parents love them.
They are also blessed when their parents visibly cherish each other.
Pursuit Through Midlife
Midlife often exposes buried questions.
Do I still matter?
Am I still desirable?
Have we become only functional?
Is this the life I imagined?
Did we lose something?
Can we begin again?
Midlife can be dangerous when disappointment becomes secrecy. A spouse may begin seeking attention outside the marriage. Comparison may grow. Pornography, flirtation, emotional affairs, or fantasy may seem tempting. Old regrets may return.
But midlife can also become a season of renewal.
A couple can stop pretending everything is fine.
They can talk honestly about desire, calling, fatigue, body changes, regrets, and hopes.
They can repent of neglect.
They can recover laughter.
They can seek counseling.
They can build new rhythms of affection, prayer, and play.
Pursuit in midlife says:
“We are not finished.”
“We can learn each other again.”
“We will not let disappointment drive us into secrecy.”
“We will bring our longings into the light.”
Pursuit Through Later-Life Freedom
Later-life pursuit may be one of the most beautiful forms of covenant love.
The world often treats romance as belonging to the young. Scripture gives a better vision.
The spouse of youth becomes the spouse of many years.
Proverbs 5:18 says:
“Let your spring be blessed.
Rejoice in the wife of your youth.”
Proverbs 5:18, WEB
This rejoicing does not expire when youth passes.
Later-life pursuit may include:
Holding hands in church
Bringing coffee in the morning
Remembering old mercies
Speaking beauty over wrinkles and weakness
Taking more time for intimacy
Using practical helps without shame
Laughing together in the bedroom
Learning what now brings pleasure and comfort
Praying through body changes
Remaining sexually alive without pretending to be young
Protecting exclusive delight
This is not lesser romance.
It is covenant love ripened by time.
A husband and wife can say:
“We know more now.”
“We trust more now.”
“We are freer now.”
“We still belong to each other.”
“We will keep tending the fire.”
Pursuit Through Illness and Weakness
Illness changes pursuit.
Sometimes pursuit is no longer a romantic evening out. It is helping a spouse stand up from a chair.
It is managing medication.
It is sitting in a waiting room.
It is learning new limits.
It is speaking dignity over a body that feels weak.
It is holding hands during fear.
It is grieving what changed while still cherishing who remains.
The caregiving spouse may need support too. Caregiving can be holy and exhausting at the same time. A spouse can love deeply and still feel weary.
Covenant pursuit in illness says:
“You are not a burden.”
“This is hard, but you are still my beloved.”
“We will ask for help when we need it.”
“Your weakness does not erase your dignity.”
“Our love may look different now, but it is still love.”
Illness may change the expression of desire. It may require medical guidance, counseling, patience, adaptation, and grief. But illness does not have to end tenderness.
Pursuit Requires Repentance
Sometimes pursuit has stopped because sin has entered the marriage.
A spouse may need to repent of:
Neglect
Harshness
Pornography
Emotional affairs
Flirtation
Contempt
Laziness
Selfish demand
Withholding affection as punishment
Using silence as control
Comparing the spouse to others
Refusing repair
Prioritizing work, children, ministry, or hobbies over the marriage
Repentance is not vague regret.
It is specific truth.
A spouse should not say:
“I’m sorry if you were hurt.”
A repentant spouse says:
“I sinned when I neglected you.”
“I have let distance become normal.”
“I gave attention elsewhere that belonged in our marriage.”
“I used pressure instead of tenderness.”
“I allowed resentment to cool my affection.”
“I want to change, and I am willing to take steps.”
Repentance can reopen the door to pursuit.
But where betrayal, addiction, abuse, coercion, intimidation, or serious destructive behavior is present, trust should not be rushed. Wise outside help, accountability, safety, and time may be needed.
Pursuit Requires Forgiveness
Lifelong covenant pursuit also requires forgiveness.
No couple can keep moving toward each other if every failure becomes permanent evidence against the other spouse.
Forgiveness does not mean denial.
Forgiveness does not mean there are no consequences.
Forgiveness does not mean trust is instantly restored.
Forgiveness does not mean safety concerns are ignored.
But forgiveness does mean refusing to make bitterness the ruler of the marriage.
A spouse may need to pray:
“Lord, help me release vengeance.”
“Help me tell the truth without keeping a record as a weapon.”
“Help me forgive without pretending.”
“Help us rebuild trust where repentance is real.”
A marriage without forgiveness becomes a courtroom.
A marriage with forgiveness can become a place of repair.
Pursuit Requires Curiosity
One of the most powerful ways to pursue a spouse is to remain curious.
Many couples stop asking questions because they assume they already know each other.
But people keep changing.
Your spouse today is not exactly the same person you married.
They have carried joys, griefs, disappointments, wounds, victories, temptations, prayers, and changes you may not fully know.
Curiosity asks:
“What has been heavy for you lately?”
“What do you miss about us?”
“Where do you feel close to me?”
“Where do you feel distant?”
“What do you need more of in this season?”
“What desire or fear have you been afraid to say?”
“How can I love you better right now?”
Curiosity is pursuit.
It says, “You are still worth discovering.”
Pursuit Requires Protection
Covenant pursuit includes guarding the marriage from what weakens it.
A couple must protect their covenant from:
Pornography
Secret messages
Emotional affairs
Private flirtation
Bitterness
Contempt
Overwork
Technology distraction
Unhealthy friendships
Comparison
Spiritual neglect
Unresolved conflict
Family interference
Sexual pressure
Shame-based silence
Protection is not fear-based control. It is faithful stewardship.
A couple can ask:
“What is cooling our marriage?”
“What is stealing our attention?”
“What are we allowing that makes pursuit harder?”
“What boundary would help us protect covenant warmth?”
A fire must be protected from both storms and neglect.
Pursuit Requires Playfulness
Playfulness is often underrated in Christian marriage.
A couple may be faithful, responsible, and serious, but rarely joyful.
Playfulness helps restore warmth.
It may include:
Private jokes
Flirtatious words
Dancing in the kitchen
Laughing over memories
A surprise note
A playful text
A light touch
Trying something new together
Teasing that is affectionate, not cutting
Marital play that both spouses welcome
Playfulness should never mock weakness, expose private vulnerability, or pressure a spouse.
Holy playfulness is safe.
It says, “Our marriage is not only work. We can still delight in each other.”
A Weekly Covenant Pursuit Practice
Couples can practice lifelong pursuit with a simple weekly rhythm.
1. Ask one heart question.
Examples:
“How did you feel loved by me this week?”
“Where did you feel alone?”
“What is one thing you need from me next week?”
2. Offer one specific appreciation.
Examples:
“I appreciated how patiently you handled that stressful call.”
“I noticed how hard you worked for our family.”
“I loved your laugh at dinner.”
3. Make one repair.
Examples:
“I was sharp on Tuesday morning. I am sorry.”
“I dismissed your concern. I want to listen again.”
“I avoided affection because I was hurt instead of talking honestly.”
4. Plan one warm connection.
Examples:
A walk
A date
A quiet coffee
A prayer time
A private conversation
A screen-free evening
A playful evening of affection
5. Ask one desire question.
Examples:
“What helps you feel desired in this season?”
“What feels tender and welcomed to you right now?”
“Is there any pressure, shame, or fear we need to talk about?”
“How can I help make our intimacy more joyful and safe?”
6. Pray one blessing.
Example:
“Lord, bless my spouse this week. Help me love faithfully, speak tenderly, and pursue wisely.”
Small rhythms can keep covenant warmth alive.
Practical Ministry Application
Officiants, ministers, chaplains, and life coaches can help couples recognize where pursuit has faded or where pursuit can grow.
Helpful questions include:
“When did you stop intentionally moving toward each other?”
“What season of life made pursuit harder?”
“What form of pursuit would feel meaningful now?”
“Where has drift become normal?”
“Are you assuming age means desire must fade?”
“Are you ashamed to talk about what helps your body now?”
“Are there practical helps, medical concerns, or marital aids that need to be discussed without embarrassment?”
“What resentment or hurt needs repair before warmth can grow?”
“Are there outside attachments or secret habits weakening covenant pursuit?”
“What would a small, faithful step of pursuit look like this week?”
Ministry leaders should encourage couples without shaming them. Many couples are tired, wounded, overwhelmed, or embarrassed. They need hope and practical next steps.
At the same time, ministry leaders should be clear: if there is abuse, coercion, sexual pressure, addiction, betrayal, intimidation, or danger, the call is not simply “pursue more.” The call is truth, safety, accountability, wise help, and repentance where needed.
Conclusion: Keep Moving Toward the Beloved
Lifelong covenant pursuit is one of the great practices of Christian marriage.
It protects couples from drift.
It keeps desire from becoming secret or cold.
It helps affection mature through changing seasons.
It reminds husband and wife that love is not only a memory from the beginning. It is a daily calling.
A couple may not feel young.
They may not feel effortless.
They may not feel constantly passionate.
They may be tired, aging, healing, rebuilding, grieving, or beginning again.
But by God’s grace, they can still pursue.
They can still ask.
They can still touch tenderly.
They can still speak blessing.
They can still laugh.
They can still repent.
They can still forgive.
They can still pray.
They can still enjoy each other.
They can still choose each other.
The covenant promise is not merely:
“I will stay.”
It is also:
“I will keep moving toward you in faithful love.”
Reflection Questions
Why is lifelong pursuit important after the wedding and early romance have passed?
What is the difference between staying in a marriage and actively pursuing a spouse?
How can a couple drift even if there has been no obvious betrayal?
Why should Christian couples reject the assumption that later-life desire must disappear?
What does it mean to take responsibility for delight?
How can practical helps, medical care, or marital aids serve covenant love without shame?
What is the difference between covenant freedom and selfish demand?
What is one weekly practice that could help a couple keep moving toward each other?
Closing Prayer
Lord Jesus,
teach husbands and wives to keep moving toward one another in covenant love.
Protect marriages from drift, neglect, secrecy, comparison, shame, pressure, and coldness.
Renew tenderness where life has become only practical.
Restore playfulness where heaviness has settled in.
Give courage for honest conversations, grace for forgiveness, and wisdom for holy freedom.
Help couples cherish each other through changing bodies and every season of life.
Make their pursuit a living witness of faithful love.
Amen.