When my husband and I were first married the best advice we got from our parents was, “Always say a prayer together before discussing money.” We have always tried to follow that counsel and not only has it helped us manage our household better, but it was also the first way we learned to counsel together as husband and wife. We learned how to pray together before discussing hard topics, we learned to listen to one another’s viewpoints, to respect the revelation received by the other person, and we learned how keep our voices kind. Later on in our marriage we began doing weekly Family Executive Council (FEC) which has been a big blessing to our family. We use to be good about doing it every week, which we need to get back to doing. Now it seems we usually only have one when things reach a crisis point!
The pattern of counseling together is one that has been taught repeatedly by our church leaders. They have stressed the importance of holding regular counsels, at the Stake, Ward and family level. The point of a counsel is to listen to everyone’s viewpoint and then work together to figure out what God wold like you to do, not what you want to do. This is an important principle for any organization but nowhere is counseling together more important than in a marriage, where both the husband and the wife have equal stewardship and authority over their family.
There is a really great story in the scriptures that models what counseling together in marriage looks like. It is the story of Jacob, Rachel and Leah in Genesis 31. If you remember, Jacob was the son of Issac and Rebekah and the twin brother of Esau. When Jacob received the birthright Esau was angry and Jacob’s parents were afraid he would kill him. So his parents sent Jacob to go live with his Uncle Laban in Padan-aram and to seek a wife from among his family. Jacob ended up staying with Laban for many years and married two of his daughters, Leah and Rachel. After marrying Rachel and Leah Jacob worked with his father-in-law Laban as a shepherd for a long time. Even though Laban was never honest or fair with him, Jacob’s riches began to eclipse those of Laban. This made Laban and his son’s jealous and eventually, things between Laban and Jacob reach a crisis point. As it says in Genesis 31:2, “…Jacob beheld the countenance of Laban, and behold, it as not towards him as before.”
In response to the situation Jacob received a message from God telling him “Return unto the land of they fathers, and to they kindred; and I will be with thee.” (Gen. 31:3) One would expect that since Jacob was the patriarch of the household that he would waste no time in deciding that the family should leave. especially since he’d received a direct message from God.
But he doesn’t.
Instead Jacob “called Rachel and Leah to the filed unto his flock” (Gen. 31:4) and discussed the situation with them. He told them about how he’d noticed that Laban did not have kind feelings towards him anymore, how he’d been honest in his dealings with their father even when he hadn’t been honest with him, and finally how God had told him that he should take his family and return to his homeland.
The powerful thing about Jacob’s example is that he wasn’t telling his wives about what he was going to do. He was asking them about what they thought they should do. This is evident by the response Rachel and Leah give in Genesis 31: 14,
“And Rachel and Leah answered and said unto him, Is there yet any portion of inheritance for us in our father’s house? Are we not counted of him as strangers? for he hath sold us, and hath quite devoured also our money. For all the riches which God hath taken from our father, that is ours, and our children’s; now, then, whatsoever God hath said unto thee, do.”
Rachel and Leah were just as unhappy with the way their father had treated them as Jacob was. They understood the situation and felt it would be better for them, and for their children, to leave. They were willing to trust the instructions God had given Jacob to return to Canaan. This was a brave choice considering that moving their family (which was huge by this time) and traveling back to a land where there is a brother-in-law who may or may not want to kill you was a big deal. It was only after this family council in the field that Jacob, “rose up, and st his sons and his wives upon camels; And he carried away his cattle and all his good which he had gotten… for to go to Issac his father in the land of Canaan.” (Gen. 31:17-18)