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02/14/06
Comments (17)

A Valentine's Day Reflection

“I think the holiday is total crap,” says a newly married 27-year-old man from Greenwich, Connecticut. Leslie, 28, a single editor at Glamour magazine in New York agrees. “I really hate it. I think I always hated it, even when I had a boyfriend. I always felt that it was really hokey. I’m not a teddy bears and roses kind of person.” “It’s damned if you do and damned if you don’t,” says a 40-year-old married father of three from Nantucket. “There are a lot of things that run across your mind that you’d like to do, but with busy schedules, you don’t always have the time. But when you don’t do them, you feel guilty.”

A lot of people hate Valentine’s Day, as evidence from those snippets of an article published today at FoxNews. The man from Connecticut explains part of his disgust for the holiday. “All the responsibility for Valentine’s Day falls on the guy. If the guy and the girl both agree to do nothing, and the guy doesn’t come up with at least a flower and the girl doesn’t do anything, it doesn’t hold the same value. There’s no reciprocated holiday for the guy. Like how about a steak and porn night? Would that be so awful?” Little wonder that he requested to remain anonymous. He has vented to his wife about “one of those holidays exploited by the Hallmarks and De Beers” - but despite his best efforts he always gets sucked into the holiday. “Yeah, I rant to her, but I always wind up breaking down and getting her something. I’m a broken man. I don’t think I’ve ever done chocolates. I’ve done flowers and hotel rooms.” What does he get or hope to get from Valentine’s Day? “Nothing. Hopefully sex,” he said, laughing.

I don’t know that I like the chances of that marriage surviving for long. The selfishness of the man from Connecticut is startling. Shocking. He has made the day to be all about himself. He despises the day because he must give rather than receive.

But I can’t deny that I once felt much the same. I regarded Valentine’s Day as a corporate fabrication - a holiday created to bring relief to the late-winter retail blues. I thought it was a holiday created by Hallmark for the sole purpose of marketing and selling cards, gifts and chocolate. I did my duty as a husband, but did it with little passion and little motivation beyond doing what was expected of me. I don’t know that she was convinced.

But then I read my Bible.

What continues to surprise me about reactions towards Valentine’s Day, and the reactions of men in particular, is their hesitation to celebrate their wives. Valentine’s Day may be a fabricated holiday. There is nothing special about February 14 that dictates that we must lavish gifts and attention upon our wives. But when the opportunity presents itself, why would we hesitate?

If my Bible had a home page it would be somewhere in Proverbs. I love that book. I feel at home in that book. When I do not know what to read or when I have a few moments before church begins on Sunday, I turn to Proverbs. I try to spent a full month every year reading and studying Proverbs. I love and adore the book. That Solomon guy had some good things to say. What he said is as relevant to us today as it was to him three thousand years ago.

“Rejoice in the wife of your youth,” he said. “Be intoxicated always in her love.”

“An excellent wife is the crown of her husband.”

“House and wealth are inherited from fathers, but a prudent wife is from the Lord.”

King Lemuel, another contributor to Proverbs describes the infamous Proverbs 31 woman. He begins by saying, “An excellent wife who can find? She is far more precious than jewels.”

A wife is a precious gift. A wife makes her husband look better. A wife makes her husband act better. Her excellence, her prudence crowns a husband. She fulfills him. Completes him. Makes him what he is. Makes him more than he is.

But it is not easy to be a wife. It is not easy to be a mother. It is especially difficult to be a stay-at-home mother as my wife is (and wants to be). Dorothy Patterson says it like this:

Much of the world would agree that being a housekeeper is acceptable as long as you are not caring for your own home; treating men with attentive devotion would also be right as long as the man is the boss in the office and not your husband; caring for children would even be deemed heroic service for which presidential awards could be given as long as the children are someone else’s and not your own.

A damning indictment of our society. It may even be an indictment of the church. Or your heart. Or mine. Wives and mothers are desperately underappreciated in our society. But the Bible does not tell us that society should bring them honor and praise. That task, which ought to be done with great joy, great sincerity and great frequency, falls to the husband and children.

Lemuel closes his reflection on the excellent wife in this way. “Her children rise up and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praises her. ‘Many women have done excellently, but you surpass them all.’” A wife, a mother desires and deserves praise from her husband and her children. Her great reward is not financial. It is something far deeper, far more meaningful. Her reward is the praise of those who love her most. It is the praise of those who see her at her best and at her worst. It is the praise of those who see her life of service. It is the praise of those for whom she has labored and sacrificed.

Valentine’s Day may be a contrived holiday. There is no objective reason that I should celebrate love in a special way today rather than yesterday or tomorrow. But if this is a day where people celebrate love, should not I, as a grateful husband, celebrate my wife? Should I not model to my children a love, a passion, a joy in my wife? Should I not reflect today on my intoxication with her love? Should I not praise, honor and bless her for being just who she is: a precious, beautiful, excellent gift from God?

Valentine’s Day provides me with a day to love and honor my wife. It provides me with a day to ensure I take the focus off myself and lavish it on my wife. Why would I want to refuse that opportunity?

A Valentine's Day Reflection

Comments (17) »


1. Jim
February 14, 2006
12:04 PM

A good reminder, our wives are indeed a most precious gift. Let’s not sentimentally celebrate their value but sincerely honour them as scripture commands and entreats.


2. Tim Challies
February 14, 2006
12:37 PM

“Let’s not sentimentally celebrate their value”

Amen. Especially if such celebration is merely the means to an end. Nothing makes the day hollow like an obvious demand that all the husband’s attention must be repaid at the end of the day.


3. nate
February 14, 2006
1:14 PM

thanks for the great insights tim. i have struggled with the pressure of valentines day since i met my wife and always feel like i’m going to screw it up. every time i turn around there are things telling me i have to do it perfectly or else a divorce may result. thankfully my wife is wonderful and every year she tells me how much she enjoys any date we go on, and that valentines day is just another day to celebrate our marriage.


4. Grace
February 14, 2006
1:36 PM

Glad to see you appreciate Aileen so much…she is an amazing wife and mother!


5. mpethe
February 14, 2006
3:18 PM

Also, you don’t have to buy in to all of the consumerism junk offered around this holiday. Both my wife and I can’t stand all that stuff.

However, to celebrate your love for each other in a unique way that manages to avoid the mass marketing is a great thing. I stink at it, but I’ve even tried my hand at writing poetry. Even when it’s sub-par as far as poetry goes, it stil gives me a chance to contemplate the amazing gift God has given me in my wife. There are dozens of great ways to celebrate your love without resorting to a Hallmark card and box of chocolates!


6. Mike Garner
February 14, 2006
3:59 PM

Well, I am still young so I may end up changing my mind sometime in the future. In fact, I do hope I am convinced that I am wrong - then I can be more popular :)

Anyway, I guess I would ask whether any of those verses (or anywhere else) teach a consistent love that manifests itself throughout the year in various ways, orwhether they teach that there is to be one day where a person is “especially loved and cared for?”

I think I’d then consider some of those responses in the first paragraph of Tim’s article and conclude that many people feel like they are forced into doing something because if they do not then there is something wrong with them or they do not truly love their wife. Is the faithful husband who lives out the year constantly and consistently loving his wife to be depreciated and the man who celbrates his wife just as the world tells him to on Feb. 14 to be praised?

Now, before I sound too negative, I should mention that I agree with Tim on very much of what he said. The man who lamented the fact that he had to serve his wife annd wanted an equal day where he could watch porn (among other things) is to be looked to as a bad example. We are in fact to love and cherish the woman God has created for us. I think that I can confidently say that this quotation is definitely something we ought to all be striving to do better: “Rejoice in the wife of your youth,” he said. “Be intoxicated always in her love.”

Also, I should make two notes. My objection is not primarily (or even secondarily) a result of the historical development of the holiday. I actually think that those arguments are usually poor. Second, this is not an objection that I have with Valentine’s Day, I believe I am consistent with most holidays. Good Friday/ Easter is probably a good example. Does the bible seem to teach a One-Day-Per-Year time where we especially remember the death and Resurrection of our Lord and look forward to our own Resurrection? Or does it teach that we should do this consistently throughout the year, every time that we partake of the bread and wine?

I should make one final remark. I don’t necessarily believe it is wrong to have “special days” like Valentine’s Day, Easter, Etc. However, I’m not sure that it should be expected (by society but primarily by Christians) and I can think of no biblical reason to consider a person Wrong, less Spiritual, less loving, etc., shouild he choose to refrain from said holiday.

All of that being said, Katelyn and I will be going out to dinner tonight. Why? My last point would be that one person in a relationship should never hold to a position so trivial as this if it would hurt the feelings of the other person. I may have my objections to it, but I think that it is something that should be small enough to look past and to celebrate for the benefit of the other person. If it would cause one person to feel under-valued, hurt, lonely, etc., then I think we should be the ones to give in for their sake.

Just my unpopular thoughts.

In Christ alone, mike


Those who get bent out of shape over a day such as today need to stop thinking so much of themselve, and they need to go out of their way and show a little love to their better half. This is my opinion, of course. I have to say that so there won’t be any replies of how I think my thoughts are the only real truth out there.

If Valentine’s Day really bothers you that much - and you are a married man (I’m speaking mainly to the men) - then I am afraid you are woefully engrossed in your own happiness, and you need to put some time and attention toward your spouse, toward the wife of your youth. If you are not currently doing so…you need to date your wife.

Just because you are married, that is no reason to stop dating your wife. Make a concerted effort to set aside some time just for the two of you on a consistent basis. If you say you don’t have the time, and you complain about doing it just like you complain about Valentine’s Day, then you need to do everything you can to relight the fire of passion in your heart for your wife.

Use today as a starting point for how you are going to stop focusing so much on yourself, and invest a little time and energy into your wife’s happiness.


8. john challiesb
February 14, 2006
9:17 PM

i’m so glad you love your wife so much, Tim. dad


9. David
February 14, 2006
10:29 PM

A fine piece of writing, Tim.

It is indeed interesting to observe how the male animal is bent out of shape as this day come near. Toronto’s Globe and Mail had a article that stated that men approach Valentine’s day with “fear and trepidation”. At first reading, I thought it was tongue in cheek, but it was straight up.

Because we are “in the world” my wife and I do wish each other a Happy Valentine’s. But this day comes and goes like most other days of our 21 years of marriage: with love, friendship and with giving as much as we can to each other, as humanly possible.

..although sitting here at my computer, I did just send my beloved a Valentine’s e-card - how hokey is that? So I apparently I’m not totally immune … :)


10. Susanna
February 15, 2006
12:55 AM

Bravo Tim! I’m SO very glad that we grew up in a house where dad was always glad to make mom feel special on Valentines Day and that you in turn do the same for Aileen! Rick has never thought twice before making me feel special and loved on this day(as well as every other day) but hey, neither of us ever had a valentine before meeting each other and man if we’re not going to make the day a special one!:)


11. Glenn
February 15, 2006
1:51 AM

Tim, good stuff.


12. deborah
February 15, 2006
7:07 AM

I agree with most of what Mike said. My protest against this holiday started years ago when it seemed irresponsible to spend money on flowers on a day when the prices are double what they were a week ago. Now the reason my husband and I abstain from celebrating Valentine’s Day is very simple, if Hallmark needs to remind you to show me how much you love me, (or the other way around) our marriage has bigger problems than choosing which card to buy. We have not celebrated Feb 14th in 16 years and have never been happier.


13. Shelley
February 15, 2006
8:10 AM

I got a bouquet of roses with three replacement windshieldwiper blades poking out of it like oversized licorice whips. Romantic AND practical!


14. Kim in ON
February 15, 2006
9:48 AM

Well, as a stay-at-home mother, I was very appreciative when my husband brought me home Chinese food for lunch. It was a small gesture, but appreciated.

Excellent post.


15. ken
February 15, 2006
10:41 AM

Valentine’s Day is a contrived holiday. It makes people who are in love feel pressured to do something they should be doing anyway. It becomes a contest (so-in-so’s husband gave her….). It becomes an in-your-face reminder to those that aren’t fortunate enough to have a significant other.

The fact that you found “Biblical” support for Valentine’s Day is rather disturbing, although I am sure that Hallmark could use it in their ad campaign. It would be one more way of guilting people into doing what they should be doing all year. Shame on you for trying to guilt others into participating in this sad holiday.

Surprising my wife with flowers for no reason in the middle of the week in July shows that I truely care so much more than buying into this contrived ‘holiday’.


16. Shelley
February 16, 2006
3:43 PM

What, are you the Che Guevara of cheesy holidays? Maybe this sort of thing is redundant out in places like California, but after our usual early February blizzard, turning one’s attention to red flowers and an having excuse to eat chocolate is a welcome distraction. This isn’t limited to couples. Inviting friends over on Income Tax Return Day for festive commiserating is another option.


17. Kathy
February 17, 2006
10:41 AM

I don’t have a strong opinion either way on Valentine’s Day; but I must give a hearty thumbs up to Shelley for writing “the Che Guevara of cheesy holidays.”


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