Commuting with four carpool buddies offers ample opportunity to chew the fat, so one day I posed the question: What’s the difference between commitment and faithfulness? After a few rounds of debate the jury was in: Commitment is our intent to stay in relationship with our wives; faithfulness is the practice of doing so.
That said, let’s admit that a committed spouse is not necessarily a faithful spouse. Men in particular succumb to the idea that they can have their Kate and Edith too. Kate is the stable spouse with whom they raise kids, attend church, and gray with time. Edith represents the workplace “friendship” or sexual fling. In their mind they are committed to both, but in practice faithful to neither.
So what of commitment? If it is not a guarantee for faithfulness, what’s it worth?

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Research tells us that the more deeply people are committed to their spouse and marriage, the more likely they are to:
They also tend not to scan the horizon for alternative partners.
Commitment transforms our talk
Commitment also translates powerfully into our marriages through our talk. Dave and Michelle live on the west coast where Dave serves as discipleship coordinator at a Christian college and Michelle recently left a pastor role to take care of Jonas, their first-born. How did they show their commitment to each other today? Dave waxed practical.
“I woke up at 5 a.m. and spent time with Jonas who was crying so Michelle could get an hour of peaceful sleep. I gave her a call from the office half way through the day. She e-mailed me and told me she appreciated my help around the house.”
Showing commitment through faithfulness
The evidence above is encouraging. Committed couples interact with each other in distinctly positive ways. But how do we communicate faithfulness? Perhaps we should start with asking what is faithfulness?
For many the answer is “sexual fidelity” — we are faithful if we have not touched, kissed, or made love with someone who isn’t our spouse. However, before physical infidelity becomes an issue there are two precursors: mental and emotional unfaithfulness. In all three cases, infidelity violates a trust and breaks a bond.
Mental infidelity is the practice of fantasizing about other partners. Whenever men think “I wonder what life would be like with her,” we’ve crossed the line. Whenever women think “I love the way he listens to me,” they invest their thoughts untruly. Anytime our thoughts or beliefs begin to entertain ideas of relating to, spending time with, enjoying sex with, or daydreaming about someone else besides our mate, we’ve committed mental infidelity.
If we think a little fantasizing is harmless, recall that Jesus said doing so is adulterous.
While studies vary, experts estimate that between 44% of husbands and 25% of wives have had extramarital intercourse — and this in a culture where 80% of Americans disapprove of having an affair. Sadly, the four main reasons people cite to justify affairs include:
Men tend to justify infidelity for reason #1 new sex, and women tend to justify it for reason #2 new love.
Ironically, these findings parallel the long list of benefits which committed couples enjoy, such as sexual responsiveness, emotional sharing, and companionship. Somewhere our commitment has to convert into will power if we want to be faithful. How do we exercise faithfulness? Here are some tips.
Mental purity: My thoughts are with you always
Since men tend to be visually stimulated much more than women, we need to guard our eyes. Today’s media elite do not make it easy for us. They know sex sells, so they try to hook us with sex at every turn.
When we begin to entertain unfaithful thoughts or beliefs, it’s good to do a check and say aloud to ourselves, “I’m in control of my thoughts,” or “How might I make [spouse’s name] better today?” Focusing afresh on our spouse redeems our thinking.
Relational guards: Sorry, but this person is taken
Neal and Yolanda live in Vancouver where Neal teaches high school and Yolanda volunteers at their kids’ schools. Both are energetic, engaging middle-aged people who appear attractive to others.
Setting relational safeguards work like waist-high fences. Both draw a line to show what, and who, belongs where, yet neither are cool or distant. We tap these fences into place every time we make little choices in word and deed that help us avoid compromising relationships, or even the optics of one.
Sexual de-tempting: That would be inappropriate
In the old days men worked outside the home and took sexual infidelity as a privilege of position and power with out-of-town strangers. Today men and women work as equals and the new morality allows for sex among consenting adults. But even non-religious people still value old-school fidelity, and think that once you have committed to a spouse, you should be true to him or her sexually. This double standard of romping promiscuously in one’s single years but hoping for loyalty in married life creates a tension in the workplace. It’s the tension between appropriate workplace interaction and relational come-on.
Many people think its okay for a married person to receive emotional support from an opposite-sex work colleague over lunch. But doing so blurs the lines of appropriateness. Sharing our marriage struggles with an empathetic colleague seems innocent enough, but is exactly the kind of emotional infidelity that leads to more complex involvement. While we may think everything’s above board, emotional and sexual attraction can spark quickly, igniting more than collegiality.
So, what to do? Given the gray line between emotional and sexual attraction, it’s wise to be on guard at your workplace. Are you in appropriate professional relationship with your colleagues? Are you fooling yourself that you are “just friends”? Similarly, guard your broader social network. Old flames and your spouses’ friends often become potential threats to fidelity. Can you stake a fence? Finally, guard your personal computer. Some people think making a friend on the internet is an innocent activity, but long-term relating — even through email and the occasional photo — can misdirect your allegiances.
Yolanda put it well when she said, “Faithfulness isn’t all sexual. It’s multi-layered. I believe our emotions and mind can engage unfaithfully without a person actually being physically unfaithful, and that creates a wedge.”
What Do You Fear?
What do you fear, and why? Is it holding you back from realizing your full potential?
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my wife has been away for 5months training in ouside country with my sister.Asper the sisters information she has got a boyfriend there and they spend all the night going for dinner and night club.Before when she was with she never goes to party and drink wine.My drought is that one night she and one of her friend went to dinner with the guy who is having relation with her at that time he was with one another friend.That nigh two of them spend their night in single bed room and she left her friend in another guy.at night other guy try to touch her but she refuse and made a call to my sister for help at 3pm.afterthat sister called me about that night.my wife never useto share about where sheis going and whatshe is doing.after forcing her she toldme that she has a good friend and he always take her for dinner and night club.before that she didnt tell that she has a good friend.for his convinent she has prepond my birthday celebration also. the firstcake was offered to him keeping my own sister beside her.can you kindly suggest me weather she is faithful wife for me or not?
well i say if he cheatiin he need a beatiin