Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
The Power of Empathy
The Power of Empathy
Jun 27, 2026 7:22 PM

  The Power of Empathy

  By Jen Ferguson

  “We who are strong ought to bear with the failings of the weakand not to please ourselves.” Romans 15:1, NIV

  I came down the stairs, my mind and stomach churning with anxiety. How will I get it all done? I thought. I recently received the blessing of increasing my hours at my job, but was figuring out how to manage the other aspects of my life with less available time. I’m a “get things done” kind of person. As such, it doesn’t cross my mind that some commitments may need to lose their space on the calendar. Instead, I play a game of Tetris in my head, trying to figure out how to squeeze more in.

  Craig sat in the chair waiting for me as we were headed out soon to meet a couple for lunch. As I gathered my things, I told him how I was feeling. He listened to my short sentence and responded with, “The solution to the problem is…”

  Sometimes there are instances when we share a problem and it requires fixing. If the washing machine isn’t working, I’m looking for a solution so that I can resume doing the laundry. If we have two girls that need to be in two different places at the same time, I want a solution so we can all get where we need to go. I don’t need Craig to ask me how I feel about mechanical things breaking or scheduling changes.

  However, when I’m sharing my feelings, I’m not looking for a fix. My feelings just are. I don’t want someone to come in and rearrange them into something that looks and feels better. And I certainly do not want anyone telling me I shouldn’t feel a certain way.

  But sometimes when we are standing across from someone (and I have been guilty of this, too), our inclination is to rescue instead of empathizing. We try to stamp out the negative thoughts and create a rosier picture. The hard truth is that sometimes we do this not because we solely want the other person to feel better, but because we want to feel better. We want to feel wise or important or in control. (It can be very difficult to feel in control when your spouse seems out of control.) We get that our spouse’s emotional state can impact our emotional state and we want that emotional state to be happy.

  And yet, while eventually our spouse may need some of our wisdom or our joy, what he or she first needs is someone to give them comfort, to try to get into his or her shoes and feel, if even momentarily, what he or she feels.

  Choosing to respond with empathy makes our marriages better. It drives connection. It says we care enough to temporarily shelve our own desires and feelings in order to experience someone else’s. Empathy is selfless and sacrificial.

  Brené Brown says, "Empathy doesn't require that we have the exact same experiences as the person sharing their story with us... Empathy is connecting with the emotion that someone is experiencing, not the event or the circumstance."

  Even if you can't wrap your head around the circumstances your partner is currently experiencing, you can wrap your heart around his/her emotional response.

  That Saturday morning, all I needed Craig to say was, “I see how adding more work hours makes for less time to do your other things. Shifting priorities and letting some things go is hard. I’m really glad you told me how you were feeling about all of this.” Hearing words like these makes me feel less alone, validated, and seen. It gives me confidence that I’m not crazy, but that I am capable.

  We need to be able to admit to our spouse when we’re feeling weak because God designed us to help one another. Consistently showing empathy creates a safe place for us to be vulnerable, to admit when we need encouragement. It does take practice! Consider how you might strengthen your empathy muscle. Perhaps ask your spouse in times of peace what s/he needs to hear in hard moments. When you’re watching television, create a script in your head about how you might come alongside characters in crisis. Finally, pay attention to what brings comfort to you when you’re distressed or sad. This practice will pay off, I promise, more than any quick fix you could ever offer.

  Jen Ferguson is a wife, author, and speaker who is passionate about helping couples thrive in their marriages. She and her husband, Craig, have shared their own hard story in their book, Pure Eyes, Clean Heart: A Couple’s Journey to Freedom from Pornography and are also creators of the Marriage Matters Prayer Cards. They continue to help couples along in their journeys to freedom and intimacy at The {K}not Project. Jen is also a mama to two girls and three high-maintenance dogs, which is probably why she runs. A lot. Even in the Texas heat.

  It's time we get real about marriage relationships! Join marriage coach, Dana Che, as she and her guests deliver witty, inspirational, real relationship talk from a faith-based perspective. New episodes of the Real Relationship Talk Podcast drop every Tuesday.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
Is Welfare Compassionate?
Many of our current economic problems have their roots in the moral crisis of our day. In these times of moral turmoil many have mistakenly equivocated government sponsored welfare with the virtue passion. Compassion is an adjective frequently used to describe state supported social programs. The question needs to be raised: Is State welfare passionate? Are we really serving the human needs of the people with state handouts? The theory behind today’s welfare state is that people need material...
Views of Wealth in the Bible and the Ancient World
Think back to the last time you heard someone from the pulpit in your church talk about money, the Bible, and your spiritual life. On those occasions when pastors venture into this area, the focus is often and rightly on matters of the heart and one’s attitude toward money and possessions. But in that emphasis often lies an unexamined assumption that goes something like this: Given that the Bible focuses on attitude, not accumulation per se, that materialism is...
The Accumulation of Moral Capital
By now most readers of this journal are familiar with arguments that the charitable impulse is not well-served by institutions of the modern welfare state. Indeed, many are persuaded that the modern state feeds itself from the fount of charitable feelings that have been created by the Judeo-Christian tradition. The state, by exploiting this ethos, has created a situation in which people feel more like suckers than Samaritans. In this article, I will argue that the economic significance of...
Single Mothers Deserve Better
In a peculiar ideological twist, some opponents of abortion are opposing cuts in aid to single mothers. Many prolifers including National Right to Life, fear that such reductions in benefits will lead to an increase in abortions. Even Henry Hyde has joined Patricia Shroeder in being skeptical of welfare reform. If this argument persuades, it could weaken ties between the Republican party and the anti-abortion movement. But is their concern legitimate? Should we continue to subsidize single motherhood for...
On Coercive Environmental Education
In The Religion of Environmentalism, John K. Williams wrote “Extreme environmentalism ... is a decidedly dangerous religion. Its vision of the world and of humanity's place in it reeks of superstition. The pattern of behavior it prescribes is morally grotesque....” Williams' sentiments are hardly unique. A growing number of people are disturbed by the methods and strategies used by the environmental special interest movement, particularly in the realm of environmental education. In a previous special edition of Religion &...
Welfare Gone Awry
In the movie “Schindler’s List”, Oskar Schindler, a Catholic, quotes an expression his father had often used; and I could imagine my own father saying something rather similar. He would say: “There are really only three people in life that you need depend on: a good doctor, a forgiving priest and a clever accountant.” The posters advertising “Schindler’s List” have a simple design: they show the hand of one person in that of another; they clearly intend to portray...
The Folly of Participating in Government Welfare
Willie Sutton, the famous bank robber, was once asked why he robbed banks. He responded by saying, “Because that’s where they keep the money.” Perhaps we can learn something from Mr. Sutton’s response. In one short statement he pinpointed the cause of the national debt and continuing deficits. The popular wisdom today assumes that the federal government can provide an overflowing abundance of goods and services in place of the scarcity that people face in reality. As a result,...
The Effectiveness of the Private Sector
The American public is still being cheated out of a welfare debate that will address in fundamental ways the disintegration of our neighborhoods and of our country. So far the debate has been dominated by two choruses: the Great Society chorus that keeps insisting that with a little more money (a few billion here and there) and a little more imagination (reinventing a program here and cutting a few bureaucrats there), we will solve the intransigent social problems facing...
Economic Crime and the Necessity of Morality
At present an alarming crime wave is engulfing Russia and is threatening to spiral out of control. Professor Mikhail Gelvanovsky of Moscow’s Orthodox Charity Center of Social Protection reflects a widespread fear when he points out, “In the past we had the Iron Curtain; now people need iron doors to protect themselves against the growing number of thieves.” Three to five thousand gangs now control some 40,000 businesses. Post-Soviet organized crime is mandeering an entire nation’s assets: factories, businesses,...
Morality as cooperation
Living a “moral” life is often contrasted with living a “prosperous” life. Major philosophers, ancient and modern, have tended to praise the virtuous life of personal sacrifice for the public good, while discounting the moral worth of the individual’s pursuit of individual happiness. When an individual’s pursuit of his own interests generates socially desirable es it is understood as a mere accident, and when attempts by political leaders to achieve a defined social virtue result in degradation (economic and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved