Heart & Soul: Five ways to pray for your spouse
This Valentine’s Day, one thing will say “I love you” better than any card, outlive any flower and be remembered longer than any romantic dinner.
Pray for your spouse.
In my wedding vows, I committed to pray daily for my husband, and the most effective way he communicates love to me is when he prays for me. Keeping a journal of our prayer requests lets us record God’s answers. When we pray specifically, we see specific results.
Lyn Breiding knows those kinds of results firsthand.
She prayed that her husband, Greg, would keep his focus on the Lord despite intense competition at work. When everyone else at his consulting firm worked late hours every night, he refused to give up time with his family and his responsibilities at church. He missed late-night political wranglings, and he declined the three-martini lunches, so he was passed up for promotions for three years.

Video: Affair-proof marriage
Move forward in your marriage: Learn from our Life Lessons
Lyn continued to pray the prayer of martyred missionary Jim Elliot: “God, make [Greg's] way prosperous, not to achieve high station, but that his life would be an exhibit to the value of knowing You.”
When the company started tracking the hours billed to clients, not the hours worked, Greg won an award for his efficiency—producing the most revenue while working significantly less hours.
Here are five suggestions on how to pray specifically for your spouse:
- Pray for your spouse’s spouse.
That means you. “[Your heart] must be clean before God in order for you to see good results,” wrote Stormie Omartian in The Power of a Praying Wife. “If you have resentment, anger, unforgiveness, or an ungodly attitude, even if there’s good reason for it, you’ll have a difficult time seeing answers to your prayers. But if you can [confess and repent of] those feelings to God in total honesty, and then move into prayer, there is nothing that can change a marriage more dramatically.” - Pray for your spouse’s relationship with God.
Pray that your spouse would know God, trust God and remain in Him. Jesus says in John 15:5, “I am the vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me, and I in him, he bears much fruit; for apart from Me you can do nothing.” Nothing means that without Jesus, your spouse can’t be patient, unconditionally love you, nor be the man/woman you need.Rather than nagging about a growing “honey-do” list or an area of weakness in your spouse, “pray before you say.” Openly communicate with each other, but pray that your spouse would spend time listening to God. Trust the Holy Spirit to provide ultimate correction.
- Pray for their God-given role.
Wives, pray for your husband’s leadership in your marriage. Ask God to give him strength to carry out his responsibilities and help him prioritize time with his family. The Lord has entrusted many things to you both—money, time, a home—so pray for your husband to be a wise manager of God’s gifts.Husbands, as you provide direction for your family, pray for your wife’s role as your partner—the person who can come alongside to help you. Ask God to remind her to pray about her worries so she’ll experience Christ’s peace. Pray that her day will go smoothly and she would accomplish much.
- Pray for strong relationships with godly members of the same sex.
Same-sex friendships are vital. If a person looks to their spouse to meet all their friendship needs, chances are their spouse will eventually crumple under the pressure. But remember, those whom your spouse spends extra time with will shape them as a person. Pray that he/she would be surrounded with followers of Jesus Christ. - Pray practically.
Good intentions don’t naturally lead to good results. You have to have a plan. Pick Scripture by which to pray for your spouse, then put it on your dashboard and pray while on your morning commute. As you fold your spouse’s laundry, pray for them or use your lunch hour once a week to pray.Resist the temptation to turn this into an obligatory checklist. Instead, this guide highlights areas where spouses need prayer. Your spouse is God’s gift to you; take time to speak with Him about that gift. I wish I could say I prayed for Aaron for hours each day, but that’s not the case. Some days, as I drift off to sleep, I just ask God to bless his work tomorrow and keep him safe.Recently, a Tuesday deadline approached too quickly and I was in knots by Monday night. To my delight, I finished writing the magazine article the next day with time to spare. It felt like my hours had multiplied—a specific answer to Aaron’s prayer for my workday.
Other than the Lord, no one knows me better than my husband. When the two of them get together on my behalf, I’m blessed.
For “Lifting Your Family in Prayer” cards to help you pray for your spouse, visit www.familylife.com. To find the cards, quick-search for “Prayer” in the online store.
Used with permission of Worldwide Challenge magazine. Copyright © 2003, Campus Crusade for Christ International. All rights reserved.
Photo courtesty Models for Christ
Hi Tumi, you are describing the marriage relationship that I know a lot of Christians have: they know it should be better and want it to be better but they don’t know how to make that happen. Let me first remind you that God is able to help you overcome any problem that you and your husband are having. It doesn’t matter how big the walls between you have become, God is able to knock those down and bind your hearts in a mutually serving love.
Second, let me also remind you that because you are followers of Jesus Satan would be very pleased to see your marriage destroyed. So he is working hard at making you and your husband into enemies of each other rather than a team pulling together. So this is first and foremost a spiritual issue and not just problems between you and your husband.
If you are going to see things turn around you are going to need to have the help of the Holy Spirit to unite your hearts and defend against Satan’s attempts at pulling you apart. So practically speaking, talk to your husband and let him know your concern about the walls that are being built between you. Pray together and ask for God’s help in unifying your hearts so that you are working together as a team. Then take one issue that creates arguments and talk about how you deal with this issue as a team rather than as enemies. Both of you are going to have to ask God to help you see this issue from the other’s point of view. You are likely both going to have to sacrifice something of yourself for the other. It is going to mean trusting that the other is working with you not against you.
Does this make sense?
my hubby and i are fighting over alot of things he is always on the road and also there is this financial burden that we are experiencing bt wat i know is that i love this man very much but the constant arguments about these issues are a strain towards our relationship we are both both born again
What an interesting request on your part Felesia! Had you heard of other married couples doing that? or where did the idea come from? That gives new meaning to the verse, Pray without ceasing! :-)
When I married my spouse who is a Pastor, I asked him to do something that I really think was very different and unique. I asked Him “Can you pray while we making love? He said yes. It was beautiful, awesome, exciting, all I said was Wow God, how Great you Are, LOL!!!!!! God ordained marriages so we didnt have know issues in the mist. Our love is even stronger and so awesome.