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                    		| Marla Taviano is a gifted communicator with a passion for writing and reaching   young women with God’s truth. She has written four books for McGraw–Hill,   America’s leading educational publisher. She and her husband, Gabe, have two   preschool daughters. |  
                    		|  |  |  WEDDING & mARRIAGEWedding Rings and School Books By Marla Taviano 
 CBN.com  Many marriages face a special challenge in the first year:  At least one of the spouses is still in college. Many parents of college-age kids strongly encourage them to  finish school before they get married. But the parents often relent because  they would rather have their kids safely married than giving in to inevitable  sexual temptation. Christian young people tend to tie the knot at an earlier  age for that very reason. If you’re already sleeping with your boyfriend,  what’s the point of getting hitched? If you can have sex without the  commitment, what’s the big rush? On the other hand, if your morals and values tell you no sex  without a marriage license, then waiting until graduation can seem like pure  torture to two freshmen in love. When we got married, I had graduated, but Gabe had three  semesters left. With classes during the day, he had no choice but to work all  evening, so our time together was limited. For the first nine months, before I  got a full-time teaching job, our combined income was sparse and sporadic. My new job provided adequate and dependable income, but I  often resented the fact that I was waking up at 6:00 AM for work—and grading  papers late into the evening—while Gabe slept in until his 11:00 class. Getting married during school worked for us. Gabe had been a  typical college guy before—messing around more than he studied. If he wasn’t  e-mailing or calling me, he and his buddies were playing pranks on security  guards and breaking curfew. After we got married, it didn’t seem appropriate to stay out  until 5:00 AM with his pals while his wife was at home in his bed (he did try  it one last time). So what to do with all his free time while I was working? He  actually studied for tests and did his homework! His GPA soared! Even though school and marriage can work, it’s no walk in  the park. If you’re married and in college right now, take heart. It doesn’t  last forever. And it will produce some of your marriage’s most memorable  moments. If you’re in the process of deciding whether to get married  now or wait until you’re finished with school, carefully calculate the pros and  cons of each. Most importantly, pray—separately and together—and follow God’s  leading. The whole sexual temptation thing might be a real and valid  reason for moving your wedding date up rather than pushing it back. Paul isn’t  necessarily talking to college students in 1 Corinthians 7:9, but he could be:  “But if they cannot control themselves, they should marry, for it is better to  marry than to burn with passion.” Good verse to point out to Mom and Dad in  your quest to get married before you graduate. I showed it to my sister’s sophomore-in-college boyfriend  last night just to watch his face turn pink. “Hey Daniel, I found a theme verse  for you and Steph.” His cheeks stayed rosy the rest of the evening, poor guy.  But hey, it was winter, and the boy needed some color. More from this author:The First Year
 Spouse-Speak: A Whole  New Language
 
 Adapted from  From Blushing Bride to Wedded Wife  by Marla Taviano, Copyright 2006. Published by Harvest House Publishers. Used with permission.       
 
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