When I married my wife, I married someone whose parents were very successful in business and respected by everyone in their community. And their community was different from the community I had known growing up. My dad used to say we were dirt farmers, and it made sense since we spent most of our time tending crops in the fields of our family farm operation. And we were always dirty.
But on my wedding day I got cleaned up. I remember looking out at those in attendance sitting in the pews of my wife’s family’s church. These were a different class of people from what I was used to (other dirt farmers), and I was tempted to believe that I didn’t belong there.

One look at my bride as she walked up the aisle toward me, on the arm of her very distinguished father, and I was reassured. She loved me and was somehow as excited to be marrying me as I was about marrying her.
But I distinctly remember thinking in that moment, “Man, I’m really marrying up.”

It makes sense that only one in a marriage can marry up; the other would have to be marrying down, right? Not necessarily. It’s possible – I’ve seen it many times, and you probably have, too – for both spouses to feel they’ve married up.
I spoke to a friend recently, whose wife is very gifted as a wife, a mom, and a woman of God, not to mention her artistic talent. I said to him, “Not just anyone could win someone like her; it could only be someone like you. He’s also pretty impressive as a husband, father, man of God, and a professional. When I look at that couple, it seems they’ve both married up.

There’s another way to look at the whole marry up thing.
Picture a man standing, looking up to God; also, picture a woman standing a distance from the man, looking up to God, herself. They both are seeking God. The two of them and God form a triangle. As they each move closer to God, each moving upward, as it were, they notice that they are moving ever closer to each other.

What they have most in common is that they both love God, are seeking Him, and are moving upward in closeness to Him. As they become a couple and continue their upward motion toward the Lord, they find themselves growing closer together; their triangle gets smaller and smaller.
One day they get married; into their marriage, they never stop growing closer to God, and therefore, never stop growing closer to each other.
They aren’t just growing closer horizontally as a couple, they’re also growing vertically to God. They’ve married up, both of them, and continued in an upward marriage as long as they are both alive.

Now that’s marrying up! It’s the best kind of marrying up!
If that isn’t your story, it isn’t too late. Just start, both you and your spouse, growing closer to God, and you’ll find yourselves getting closer. And you’ll find that you both have married up.

Love this! My hubby and I were both military brats growing up and worked in the tobacco field during the summer. We both had similar education and salaries when we married 20+ years ago. I still think I married up and I don’t think he thinks he married “down”. But as we grow in Christ our marriage is better and better…I do miss his long hair though.