Walking In Loveنموونە
Andrew Jackson’s Greatest Achievement
Andrew Jackson was a fierce warrior of a man: He fought in the Revolutionary War as a youngster; he fought Native Americans in Tennessee; he led soldiers into battle; and he was a military hero in a great battle at New Orleans. He would become a senator and the president of the United States. He was a tough, fierce, and formidable man.
And yet, Jackson had the most tender and loving relationship with his wife, Rachel. He was devoted to her. Whenever he was away from home, he would pine for her and miss her terribly. He wrote the most tender love letters to her.
One of Jackson’s biographers, H.W. Brands, wrote in The People’s President that they were soul mates: “Their affection for each other was of the tenderest kind…The General always treated her as if she were his pride and glory, and words can faintly describe her devotion to him.”
When Rachel died, “A friend recalled that he held her so tightly after death that the body had to be pried from his arms to prepare it for burial. Another remembered that he looked ‘twenty years older in a night.’”
Andrew Jackson was incredibly successful: a military hero, a US senator, the president, and one of the most famous men in America. But I have no doubt that the highlight of his life was his tender, loving relationship with his wife. Andrew Jackson understood the priority, the urgency, and the beauty of a husband loving his wife.
This is God’s call to every husband. Love her, love her, love her.
Scripture
About this Plan
In Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, he addresses many questions to the church about the nature of their relationship with their Savior and how that affects the believer’s life. How should God’s children be imitators of God in the way they love others? How does God’s Spirit enable the believer to better love and serve? These selections from Ephesians 5 are a reflection on how the believer’s relationship with God will affect their relationships with others.
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