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Gail Song Bantum - Choosing Us

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Gail Song Bantum Choosing Us

Choosing Us: summary, description and annotation

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For years, people have asked Gail Song Bantum and Brian Bantum to reveal the secret to their marriage as a multiracial Christian couple, each with a high-profile ministry calling. This book reveals the lessons, mistakes, and principles that have helped the Bantums navigate race, family history, and gender dynamics in their twenty-plus years of marriage, while inspiring readers to pursue mutual flourishing in their marriages and relationships.Marriage is about more than constant bliss or unending sacrifice, say the Bantums. Its about exploring your own story, seeing the other for who they are (even as they change), and being flexible in discovering how those differences and stories come alive in new ways when joined together. Its the discovery of life in the gaps and the mysteries that emerge when we live in mutuality, believing that fullness is possible for each.Choosing Us reflects the realities and demands of modern marriage and respects the callings and ambitions of both partners. It shows that marriage is about choosing the others flourishing on a daily basis, amid differences and even systemic obstacles, to build a relationship that thrives and reflects the kingdom of God.

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Endorsements

Marriage books written by people who arent therapists or marriage researchers are usually full of common nonsense that has little bearing upon marital success. Choosing Us is the exception. It is the long-awaited resource for couples committed to building progressive, equitable relationships where both partners have highly demanding careers. It is not a how-to guide to replicating Gail and Brians relationship. It is a source of wisdom for creating your own.

Chanequa Walker-Barnes , clinical psychologist and author of I Bring the Voices of My People

How can we flourish together? What does mutual submission really entail? Why must I look inward before casting blame on my partner? When there are no models, how do we build something healthy together? While there are countless marriage books, few focus on cultivating egalitarian unions where couples grow together and individually fulfill their created purpose. Choosing Us achieves this and equips readers to love selflessly, even when its counterintuitive and inconvenient. This book will bless your marriage and empower you to love your partner more authentically. It illuminates how couples can thrive beyond the honeymoon phase and go the distance together.

Dominique DuBois Gilliard , author of Subversive Witness: Scriptures Call to Leverage Privilege and Rethinking Incarceration: Advocating for Justice That Restores

Marriage is a journey, and no matter where you and your spouse are in it, Choosing Us is an important guide. The Bantums share with tender honesty, inviting us into their past, and offer incisive questions, encouraging us in our present. They do not shy away from pointing out how gender, racial, and ethnic identity and cultural norms can shape faith and marriage, inviting all readers to consider the assumptions and expectations we bring into it. Do yourself and your marriage a favor. Read this book.

Kathy Khang , author of Raise Your Voice: Why We Stay Silent and How to Speak Up

Choosing Us arrived on my desk at the right moment in my marriage of thirty years. Without minimizing how hard it is to sustain a marriage, especially when negotiating differences in race and culture, the Bantums demonstrate that marriage is difficult but worth it. They open the inner sanctum of their trials and growth as a couple struggling to fight their own demons and those inherited from family and culture, letting the light in and the wisdom born out of their faith and struggle to come through. Choosing Us speaks transparently to readers of our naive assumptions about love and lopsided gender roles that we bring into marriage. Gail and Brian bring their full selves to this book, two strong-minded people willing to listen, negotiate, forgive, and grow. Choosing Us offers readers invaluable lessons on how to use natural differences and conflicts to work toward a loving relationship that is built on the strength of ones differences, creating a healthy marriage as the first step in building a just world.

Renita J. Weems , minister, biblical scholar, and author of What Matters Most: Ten Passionate Lessons on the Song of Solomon

Half Title Page
Title Page
Copyright Page

2022 by Gail Song Bantum and Brian Bantum

Published by Brazos Press

a division of Baker Publishing Group

PO Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

www.brazospress.com

Ebook edition created 2022

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any meansfor example, electronic, photocopy, recordingwithout the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

ISBN 978-1-4934-3522-7

Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Baker Publishing Group publications use paper produced from sustainable forestry practices and post-consumer waste whenever possible.

Dedication

To our Regroup squad:

Beth and Justin
Carrie and Jeff
Michelle and Jeremy
Liz and Kevin
Kenneth (and Kathleen)
Marsha (and Liz)

for the gift of letting us
journey with you

Contents

Endorsements

Half Title Page

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

Prologue: Our Why

1. The Plan

2. Learning the Other

3. Race and Belonging

4. Its a Mans World? Gender and Marriage from a Mans Perspective

5. Glass Bulbs and Rubber Balls: Gender and Marriage from a Womans Perspective

6. Our Golden Rule

7. Covenant for Community

Acknowledgments

Notes

Cover Flaps

Back Cover

Prologue

Our Why

I n some ways, our marriage and relationship has had a certain storybook feel. Two young college students, at schools three hundred miles apart, are introduced by Jeannette, a mutual friend. A first letter. A first call that lasts two and a half hours. She calls him back, and they talk for another two and a half hours. More letters. More long-distance calls (between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m., when its ten cents a minute). They fall in love. Then they meet in person. They share a first awkward car ride, neither of them looking at the other because voices were all they knew. A year later, he proposes. Another year later, theyre married. Its practically a movie.

But a lot can happen in twenty-seven years. A mutual friend of ours set me (Gail) up with Brian because she had heard that my mom had just died and knew that his dad had recently died as well. Unexpectedly, a serious long-distance relationship emerged. But when I told my dad I wanted to marry Brian, I was confronted with a heartbreaking choice: either obey him and not marry Brian because he was a Black man, or disobey my dad and potentially lose years of relationship with him. He asked me to leave the house when I chose Brian. As a result, I had to navigate life in close quarters with Brians family for every school break thereafter. We decided to get married while we were still in college, grieving the fact that my dad wouldnt be at our wedding. Upon graduating, we quickly had to figure out how to pursue each of our calls to ministry. A year later, we were figuring out life with a newborn while Brian headed back to school for seminary. Two years later, we had our second child and grieved the loss of Brians mom to cancer. As if those losses werent enough, during those years we also endured three miscarriages.

But in fits and starts we made our way. Brian graduated from seminary as I scrappily worked part time, then full time, as a worship minister. We were unexpectedly pregnant with our third child, trying desperately to figure out how to raise three young kids while completing school and pursuing our vocations. Eventually, and years later, I would heed the call to seminary while Brian pursued his doctorate. Both of us still working on the side, the baby tagged along with us to classes, lectures, and music practices like a boss! A few years later, we moved to Seattle, where Brian landed his first job in the field he had worked so hard for, while my gifts would also be fully received and realized in this new season. My dad and I were finally able to reconcile twenty-one years later as I heard him earnestly say to me, Brian is a good man. While pointing to a Korean-Black, mixed pop artist on the television, a woman named Insooni, he also said, Shes my favorite artist. If youd had a daughter, I bet she wouldve looked like her. Tears! Thats my Korean fathers way of saying, Im sorry. He died one year later, in 2017, after battling cancer.

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