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Couples married for 50-plus years offer advice in church celebration

NewsABPnews  |  May 25, 2006

HOUSTON (ABP) — It not only takes a village to raise a child; it takes a village to make marriage successful, some long-married Baptist couples said. Members of Houston's Tallowood Baptist Church agreed, and they recently honored 139 couples from their membership who have been married 50 years or longer.

First pastored by Russell Dilday, the former president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Tallowood is unique in the number of couples it has who have reached their golden anniversary — and beyond.

“It's important to be part of community,” Bill Osborne said, pointing to examples from 60 years of life together with his wife, Ruth, to illustrate the principle. He met his future wife in a sociology class at Purdue University in 1945. He was a Baptist farm boy from Kansas; she grew up in Indiana, the daughter of strict Roman Catholic parents.

“He was taught that everyone who was Catholic was a heathen, and I was taught that everyone who wasn't Catholic was a heathen,” she recalled. Once they started dating, though, they learned to respect each other's commitments to God.

“I grew up believing only priests and nuns could interpret the Bible,” she said. “I was impressed by the way he could quote Scripture and how he could explain it.”

As their relationship grew more serious and they discussed marriage, they committed to find a church where they could worship together. After exploring the beliefs of several denominations, they finally agreed Baptists seemed closest to their understanding of New Testament teachings.

When they decided to marry at a Baptist church in West Lafayette, Ind., Osborne's parents were several hundred miles away and unable to help with the wedding. Her parents — who disapproved of her marriage to a Protestant — refused to participate in any way.

“So the church gave us a wedding,” Osborne said. “In the 60 years since then, I've never known of another congregation to do that for a young couple. But they provided everything for us.”

Church members even gave the young couple a reception — once they were able to round up enough rationed sugar for a wedding cake.

“When we needed them, the community responded to us. … And community is a two-way street,” she said. “It's important for a couple to find a place where they can work together — to contribute and share the experience of doing something meaningful.”

Since they moved to Houston in 1968, the Osbornes — parents of four children — found community at Tallowood Baptist. And they're not alone, what with the many other couples married for more than 50 years who also attend.

“To say that, it sounds as if our church is made up entirely of senior adults, but the wonderful thing about our congregation is how intergenerational it is,” Duane Brooks, the pastor, said. “The young people look up to these couples, and they encourage each other.”

One long-married couple at Tallowood — B.O. and Marilyn Wilkins — met as students at Louisiana State University. She was society editor of the campus paper; he came to the newspaper office to submit brief items for an engineering student organization. They struck up a conversation and agreed to go on a date.

“And we didn't like each other a bit,” she recalled. “At a Tiger football game, I was interested in hats and high heels, but he was interested in football.”

But several years later, after Wilkins completed his military service in World War II, graduated from college and began work in Port Arthur, they reconnected. After a four-month engagement, they married. And 56 years later, they still begin each day with a kiss and the words “I love you,” he noted.

Their love for each other — sustained in the context of a supportive community at Tallowood Baptist, where they have been members since 1965 — helped them withstand heartache, particularly the death of one of their two children, 22-year-old son Stephen, in 1973.

“For all those years, we sang in the choir and stood by each other,” both literally and figuratively, she said. “We learned to keep on keeping on. Even after the death of our son, we were singing in the choir. Later, people told us what an encouragement it was to see us there.”

Another Tallowood Baptist couple, Hudson and Claire Mann, met on the tennis courts in their hometown of Homer, La. She was in the seventh grade, and he was a sophomore. They dated in high school but drifted apart as he went to LSU and she attended Baylor University. But he never forgot her, and an aunt encouraged him to write her at Baylor to let her know he still cared. She received the same urging to write him, and their letters crossed in the mail. After a fairly brief courtship, they married in 1947.

“Long before we got married, her faith in God was a great attraction to me, even more than her ability on the tennis court or her physical beauty — which was considerable,” he said. “I had prayed the Lord would bring her back into my life. So when he did, I felt obligated to marry her.”

“A good sense of humor helps out a lot, too,” she added.

Lavonia Duck met her future husband, Roger, during a morning devotional time on the Hardin-Simmons University campus. She fell in love with the young business major, and after they dated about a year and a half, they married. To her dismay, during his senior year, he felt God's calling into ministry.

“I grew up in the Depression, and my father was the pastor of half-time churches that paid him in chickens and produce,” she recalled. “…But I just didn't see myself in the role of a pastor's wife. I wanted more stability than what I had seen growing up.”

But she adjusted, and for 56 years she has served alongside her husband in ministry — first in the pastorate, later as missionaries in Colombia and finally in their shared practice as marriage and family therapists.

“We have spent most of our married life working together or in close proximity, and we seldom get tired of each other,” he said. But it hasn't always been easy. Since they married young, they faced a big challenge learning how to grow up as individuals and learn to respect their differences, Duck said.

“We are certainly not compatible in many ways. Actually, we go about almost everything we do differently,” he said. But in time, they learned to “define those differences and celebrate them.”

Roy and Audrey Stolting — who have been Tallowood Baptist members 13 years — first met when she was 13 years old and he was a 20-year-old man about to enlist in the military. When he returned from active duty three years later, “she had changed considerably,” he recalled — and he liked the changes.

Initially, she agreed to date him just to make another boy jealous. But he impressed her, and “even met with my parents' approval, which wasn't easy,” she said.

After a 13-month courtship, they married, and they have been together 58 years.

The couple learned early the importance of depending on God. When he returned to active duty in the Air Force — at the promise of twice the salary he was making as a first-year school teacher in New Jersey — he was shipped off to Japan for more than three years. At the point when his wife was preparing to join him, the United States entered the Korean War, and the military denied all requests for dependent family travel overseas for two years.

“The Lord never took his hand off us,” she said. “He promised he would never leave us nor forsake us, and he never has.”

When asked what advice they would offer young couples, Stolting responded: “Be truthful. Be faithful. And discuss things before making a decision. Talk about it before you go out and do foolish things.”

-30-

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