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Resolving Conflict Peaceably, Part 1

Living on the Edge / Chip Ingram
The Truth Network Radio
February 27, 2026 2:01 am

Resolving Conflict Peaceably, Part 1

Living on the Edge / Chip Ingram

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February 27, 2026 2:01 am

Conflict is inevitable in marriage, but it can be a catalyst for growth when addressed wisely and lovingly. Chip Ingram teaches the two predictable patterns couples follow, the negative dance and the positive dance, and provides practical tools to resolve conflict peaceably, including defining the problem, initiating a time to talk, focusing on the perceived problem, and feeling each other's pain.

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Today on Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram, I'd like you to think with me. Who is someone's marriage that you think, I would love to have a marriage like theirs?

Now here's what I'm going to tell you. They have learned. one particular skill in their marriage that you need to learn. And that skill is what I'm going to talk about today. Stay with me.

Conflict is inevitable. It flows from different perspectives, selfish desires, and personality clashes. But healthy conflict produces growth when addressed wisely and lovingly. Today on Living on the Edge, Chip Ingram teaches the two predictable patterns couples follow. There's the negative dance, defensive, blaming, attacking, always focused on I and you.

Then there's the positive dance where we replaces I and resolution becomes possible. If conflict feels destructive in your marriage, this message offers hope. Here's Chippinggram with a new message titled, Resolving Conflict Peaceably. We are looking at skill number three. It's how to resolve conflict.

Are you ready for this? Peaceably.

Okay. You know, so nobody gets hurt. Number one, here's a biblical perspective of conflict. Number one, it is inevitable. Jesus said, in the world you will have tribulation.

So we wouldn't be surprised. Second, it flows from our differences in perspective. Paul and Barnabas, remember? John Mark was a flake. He went back.

The next trip, Barnabas says, hey, I think we should take John Mark. He's the son of encouragement. His gifts, his philosophy, everyone fails sometimes. Let's bring him along. Paul is very mission A-type.

You know what? We are not going to sacrifice the mission. He blew it one time. The mission is more important. If you want to help him, you stick around and help him.

And it says they had such a sharp disagreement, we get our word schism. And Paul and Barnabas went different ways. I don't think either of them are wrong. One was an encourager that needed to help a guy. The other realized, you know what?

Jesus told me to take the gospel to all the world, and I can't risk the mission on a guy that I can't depend on.

So there's differences in perspective.

Sometimes it's just selfish desires. James would say, What are the causes of fights and quarrels among you? Don't they come? from your desires to your lusts that battle within you. You want something and you don't get it.

You kill, you covet, but you can't have what you want. You quarrel and fight. You do not have because you do not ask God. And when you do ask God, you ask with the wrong motives, that you can spend it on your pleasures. You know, behind a lot of conflict is just plain old selfishness and sin.

And then finally, sometimes it's just personality differences. Paul has a couple ladies, Eodia, and Syntake, and he says they're both great, they're both helpers, they're both wonderful people, but they can't get along. Maybe it's personality. We don't know. But they needed an outside help.

They needed a counselor, according to Paul. I want you to get these two ladies together. They're both super. But together, they just rub each other the wrong way. All I want you to get is this: conflict is normal, and healthy conflict produces an opportunity for growth.

But can be destructive unless addressed wisely, lovingly, and with rules to govern the process. Our text is Colossians chapter 3, verses 12 through 17.

So As those who have been chosen. by God holy And beloved, that's who we are. We're putting on a heart of compassion. Kindness. Humility?

gentleness and patience, bearing with one another, and forgiving each other whoever has a complaint against anyone. Forgiving one another, just as the Lord forgave you, so also should you. And Beyond all these things, put on love. which is the perfect bond of unity. And let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts to which you've been called into one body.

and be thankful. The command is, here's the command, it's real simple. We are to deal with our mates as Christ has dealt with us and deals with us.

Okay, that's the issue.

Okay. I'm and if if you if you get nothing else What would that look like if you would say There's a conflict, there's a disagreement, I'm angry, I'm bitter, I'm resentful. Why did she do that again? I can't believe he did that. We've talked about it a hundred times, and when you come together, your one goal is: I want to treat him, or I want to treat her the way Christ treats me.

Doesn't mean you're not going to have conflict. But I'll guarantee If you bear with one another, If you forgive one another, If you, beyond all these things, put on love, and if you let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, it'll come out a lot differently. Turn the page, if you will, and I want to give you this picture before I walk through a little acronym that's helped me. I have a friend, Jim Burns is a good friend, and he's a Marriage and family therapist and speaker. And he says there's a negative dance.

And there's a positive dance. And it's very predictable.

So You start at the top, there's tension, friction, problem, pain, misunderstanding. And you know, you you can fill it in. In fact, for some of you, you don't have to think too hard. You can just think of some of the real recent ones. The negative dance is defensive: blaming, anger, control, attack, and the I language appears.

I did this, you ought to do that, I did this. It's very defensive. The positive dance is there's tension, friction, problem, pain, misunderstanding, and the response is we. We assume responsibility and we work together to resolve the issue. I'm going to give you some tools to do that.

By the way, in most conflict, You have sharks and turtles.

Some by personality, some by gender. And so, in a conflict, there's some of you that what you do is instinctively, because of your background, your personality, you just pull your head in. Amen. All you can get is a shell. And then there's those of us, you know, we just swarm the water.

And you know what? We're going to win and we're going to attack. And if we have verbal skills, we're going to reframe it. And you did this. By the time we're done, we were the problem, and you feel like it's all your fault.

And then you realize it's not. And then you resent us. And we have manipulated and we've been unkind and we haven't Been bearing with one another, and we haven't been forgiving. We haven't been humble, we haven't been patient. But here is it's a we.

Okay, we have an issue. We'll talk about getting that on the table. The we issue goes to resolution without a win or lose.

Okay. Yeah, this is a problem. How should we solve it? What are our options? Let's define the problem together.

Let's calmly talk about it in a way that I'll show you. And what did we learn from this? What was really going on? And as a result, what happens is um You learn about each other. What would God have us do in this situation?

You see it this way, I see it that way. And we're at odds. What is uh the umpire? But What's he say about this? Or do we need someone from the outside since we're at a deadlock?

Because we want this to go better, do we need someone on the outside to coach us and help us, mentor through this, who's objective? Because obviously, neither of us are. If we could have solved it, we probably would have solved it by now. And when you do that, then the result is authentic oneness and a feeling of being loved. And conflict actually becomes something where.

You grow closer. As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another, or one man and one woman sharpen another.

So, how do you take a problem and diffuse it, spread it out?

So, you get God's perspective and you deal with it.

Well, here's the acronym: the D is for define the problem on your own. Define the problem on Your own. Proverbs 15:4 says, The discerning heart seeks knowledge, but the mouth of a fool feeds on folly. When you have a disagreement, don't start by solving it with the person. Get by yourself and ask, what's bothering me?

How do I feel? When did this all begin? The I is for initiate a time to talk. Matthew 5. 23 and 24 says, Therefore, if you're offering your gift at the altar, and there remember your brother or mate has something against you, leave your gift there at the altar.

First, go and be reconciled to your brother or your mate, and then come and offer your offering. You're listening to Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram. We'll continue with Chip's teaching in just a minute. The message you're hearing today is part of our series, Choosing Love. If you want to dig deeper into these powerful principles, the complete series is waiting for you online at livingonthege.org.

You'll discover additional teaching, downloadable resources, and study questions to help you apply these truths. Visit us online at livingonthege.org.

Well now let's get back to the message. When I say initiate a time to talk, Jot these down. Right time, right place. Trying to solve A complex problem. At the wrong time and the wrong place will not go well.

It's a kind that's good for both of you. Don't be pushy. But don't procrastinate. No, we really need to meet.

Well, I'm exhausted now, and I gotta pick up the kids, and I've got to do this, and I've got to do that, yeah, and I've got a big meeting.

Okay, then. Friday morning.

Okay. I've got there's some things that are on my heart, I just want to discuss.

So you've defined it, you're clear, you've talked with the Lord. Um You initiate a time to talk. The F is focus on the perceived problem. not the person. Proverbs 18, 19 says, An offended brother is more unyielding than a fortified city, and disputes are like the barred gates of a citadel.

Um one of the Huge issues in our marriage was we, neither of us, her family didn't have any conflict. Because it was illegal. And my my folks They would have conflict. Um But they came from the school. Let's not do it in front of the kids.

So we never saw how conflict got resolved. And my dad blew up. And my mom stuffed. And and you do understand that Left to yourself, you pretty much do what Not what people told you, but what was modeled. And so you gotta, when I said some of you, you gotta break.

out of old patterns and develop new ones. And so jot this down, this is going to be important. The way you bring up a problem without attacking the person is called an I feel message. This was on our refrigerator for two years. an I feel message.

Let me tell you, and I'll just make it because I want you to know that it doesn't have to be over a big thing. It's usually big stuff under the surface.

So I'm late. Why are you late again? Don't you even care? You should come home on time. I fixed all this food and you don't even care.

You don't even give a rep. Who are you to tell me what to do all the time? My lands, I'm working full time, I'm going to school full time, I'm supporting the kids, I'm up late, I'm up early, I'm studying Greek. Man, I gotta have some fun too.

Well Silence, bedroom. Here we go. Three day. Journey. Oliver Dinner.

Except it wasn't. What I would learn later is I spent all day doing something to say I love you. and I fixed it and you didn't show up and you didn't even call. And what I heard was, There's no room for me to have a life of my own. I'm busting it like crazy.

I'm already insecure about being figuring out how to be a dad to two kids that I had, you know, I adopted a year ago. And when you start with that, you should, you ought, man, those are, for a man, those are fighting words. You ought, you should, you always, you never. That's how mothers talk to sons. Let me tell you, those are fighting words both directions.

Adults don't talk to adults like that. That's authority to inferiors.

Well then if that's true then How? How do you get it on the table? without saying you ought, you should, raising your voice. It's an I feel message.

So here's the picture. These are the stories you're about to hear. The names have not been changed to protect not the innocent, okay?

So this was, you know, we're in counseling and we're working through all this. And so, you know, it's another time and I'm feeling bad and I'm feeling guilty. I'm not going to attack her. But I walk in and it was such a great game. I mean, we just kept winning.

It was so wonderful. And there's a brotherhood. There's something about hanging with guys you haven't met and doing it that I just loved. And so I walk in, and the kids aren't around. and the table's set and there's candles lit.

And I'm going, oh gosh. Why does she always do this when I play basketball? And she's thinking, why does he always play basketball when I do this? And so I came in, and she goes, she was like calm in her right mind. No, no, I I'm you know, no fire in her eyes on hey.

It's like, hey, something's wrong here, you know? It's like you're on patrol and you know, I don't know what's wrong, but I can feel it.

Something's wrong. And she goes, Are you still hungry? I said, yeah, well, it's in the oven. I'll get it for you. No, no, sit down.

Candles are still lit.

So she gets it out of the oven and puts it on the table and And then she sits down. She doesn't look mad. Is this reverse psychology? What's coming on here? This is really starting to scare me.

So, you know, I eat, and she lets me eat, and do you like it? Yeah. And I'm thinking. I think I'm just going to get by with this. You know, and um That's shit so right time.

She processed personally what the real issue was. Right time, right way, candles. And then she looks at me and leans over eyeball to eyeball.

So I said, Chip, can I tell you something? Hello. I said, sure. She said, um I spent half of the day. preparing this meal for you.

Because I love you. I Feel hurt. when you don't call. and you don't get to enjoy this meal that I made. to express my love for you.

I found that. Feel hurt. See, you can't argue with someone's feelings. And because she did it in that way, a gentle answer turns away wrath, Proverbs 15. And I mean It was like God use the edge of.

Oh I mean, I just said, get up and fight like a real man. That was unfair. And for the first time, I made the connection between my lateness and her heart. and what she was experiencing. And she didn't nag.

She didn't attack. She gave an I feel message. And I can remember dozens of times later. Guys, bros, man, it's been great, super, man, I got a hot date with my wife, I gotta run, you wanna take my place? And I bet I wasn't late three or four times in the next five years.

Because now it's not about being light. I don't want to wound my wife. You do understand that your whole life changes too with the Lord when you realize that sin is never a behavioral issue. It's not, I should stop, you know, watching porn, or I should stop cussing, or I've got to break this addiction, or you know, I need to stop losing my temper. Those are behaviors.

You'll never change until you realize You know, Ephesians says, Don't grieve the Holy Spirit. It talks about all those abusive words and language and malice and slander and all those negative things. It breaks God's heart. When you could realize that when you sin and when I sin, what really happens, Jesus already took my punishment. It doesn't make God mad when you sin.

It makes him sad. See, he wants to be closer to you than you want to be closer to him. And when you begin to realize, should I do this or not do this? When I knew it was going to break my wife's heart, my heart changed. I mean, I may be a jerk, but I'm not going to treat her like that.

But if she wants to fight about You know, time you eat supper. And if she wants to control my life, Right? All those things I say. How did she do it? Can you imagine?

I feel frustrated when you raise your voice. I feel hurt when you bring that up in front of the children. I feel wounded. When after we've talked about that and you said you forgave me In a moment of heat, you bring that up about my failure in the past. I feel We had it on the refrigerator and we learned.

We learned when there was a problem, get alone, to find what the problem is. Process the whole thing first and before the Lord. Initiate the right time and right place to talk. and then focus on the perceived problem. By the way, I have a little note.

Eliminate you should, you ought, you always. You've never. And um It's always a win-win or a lose-lose. The second F is for feel their pain. as though it were you own your own.

Proverbs 17, 17 says, A friend loves at all times. and a brother. or a spouse. or a mate. was born for adversity.

No matter how angry you are, no matter how hurt. One of the axioms of relationships. You have to understand is everyone acts in a way that makes sense to them. I mean the things that make you nuts about your mate. They they by and large, it makes sense to them.

The way their mind, the way they're thinking in the moment, it made sense to them. Unless they're just. Absolutely evil, they weren't trying to think, hey, how can I just totally screw up our marriage? But they just find themselves in the same thing. And as difficult as it is, feel their pain as though it were your own.

You don't have to understand it. It doesn't have to be logical. That was a big one for me. And my wife's very intelligent, don't get me wrong. But when you're wounded and when you're hurt, or when things are happening, or when you've been through things, and we all have, and you all have.

Sometimes 2 plus 2 equals 7. And in your brain, somehow that makes sense. And if you're on the receiving end of that, And what I came to is, I need to feel what she feels. I need to understand. It doesn't have to make sense.

It doesn't have to be logical. But I want to identify And I want to Empathize with what she is actually feeling. This is Living on the Edge with Chip Ingram and a practical lesson on resolving conflict peaceably. Chip has more to share in just a moment, but remember, if you missed any part of today's lesson or just want to revisit what you've heard, you can always find these lessons online at livingonthege.org. In our series on choosing love, we've tackled spiritual intimacy, effective communication, and peaceful conflict resolution.

If these teachings have stirred something in you, Chip's newest book takes you even further. It's titled, I Choose Love. Here's what makes this resource so valuable. Chip demolishes the Hollywood myth that love is something beyond our control, a lightning strike of emotion we either experience or miss out on. Instead, he reveals what Scripture actually teaches: authentic love is a series of intentional decisions we make every single day.

Get your copy of this helpful resource today by going online to livingontheedge.org. Just look for Chip's book, I Choose Love. Across the country right now, families are being strengthened through this teaching. Marriages that felt stuck are gaining momentum. Parents are learning to love their kids more effectively.

This impact grows because friends like you invest in getting biblical truth to people who need it. Your generosity matters more than you know. Would you consider partnering with us? We've made it easy to give online at livingonthege.org or send your gift through the mail to LivingOnthege P.O. Box 3007 Atlanta, Georgia 30024.

You can also call us and give over the phone at 888-333-6003.

Well, now here's Chip. As we wrap up the first part of this message, I just want to remind you of some things that we often forget. Number one. Conflict doesn't mean you have a bad marriage. Arguments, conflict, misunderstandings, hurt feelings, we all have those.

The difference is: how do you learn to attack the problem instead of the person? When we collide with our spouse over an issue, If we can learn to not allow our emotions to engage quickly, our anger, or our mouth to get rolling before we begin to think and to process and what I call diffuse the anger, diffuse the situation so it gets spread out and then you get perspective and then you have some skills to begin to address, okay, what's really going on here? Why do I feel this way? What's behind this? What's the highest, best, most loving explanation for why he said that or did that or she said that or did that?

In our next broadcast, I'm going to walk through some very specific ways to address the core issue and how to defuse that conflict. I'm Dave Druy, inviting you to join us again next time when we continue with part two of our lesson called Resolving Conflict Peaceably. Don't miss Monday on Living on the Edge. Um Today's program is produced and sponsored by Living on the Edge. Uh

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