DiscoverDelight Your Marriage504-When Your Words Actually Bring Life (And How to Avoid Death): Interview With Ann & Dave Wilson
504-When Your Words Actually Bring Life (And How to Avoid Death): Interview With Ann & Dave Wilson

504-When Your Words Actually Bring Life (And How to Avoid Death): Interview With Ann & Dave Wilson

Update: 2025-10-10
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When Your Words Actually Bring Life (And How to Avoid Death): Interview With Ann & Dave Wilson

Do you remember when you first fell in love—how easy it was to cheer him on?
You’d light up at his stories. You’d say, “You’re amazing!” and mean it. You noticed everything good.

But somewhere along the way, the cheers turned into corrections. The same man who once felt like your hero now feels like your project. And instead of applause, he mostly hears... boo.

That’s what Ann Wilson discovered the day her husband, Dave, vulnerably told a room full of women that marriage sometimes felt that way to him—like he’d walked off the football field to a stadium full of boos. Ann was stunned. She thought she was helping him. But in that moment, she realized how her words had chipped away at his confidence and joy.

I was so honored to talk with Dave and Ann Wilson—pastors, marriage speakers, authors of Vertical Marriage, and co-hosts of FamilyLife Today. For more than 30 years, they’ve led thousands of couples toward hope, healing, and connection. But their story didn’t start with success.

The Power of Words in Scripture

Scripture is clear: “The tongue has the power of life and death.” — Proverbs 18:21

Your words can resurrect a weary heart—or crush it. They can draw your husband home or make him quietly retreat.

And as Dave and Ann share, the transformation didn’t start with more compliments or clever communication—it started with repentance.

A Night of Repentance and New Beginning in Marriage

Ten years into marriage, they were on the verge of losing everything. Dave was busy building ministry– starting a new church at home and a chaplain for the Detroit Lions, often times away traveling with the team. Meanwhile, Ann was at home with two little boys, beginning to feel lonely, angry, and done.

One night, sitting in a parked car late at night on their 10 year anniversary, she finally said, “I’ve lost all my feelings for you.”

Dave was stunned. He thought they were great. Ann had never shared otherwise. How could she say he was disregarding her? How could she say she felt alone and he was always away?

As he reached for his planner to defend himself, the the gentle and firm voice of the Holy Spirit whispered: “Repent.”

He dropped his arguments and dropped to his knees—right there in the front seat of their Honda Accord. He realized he had put himself first instead of Jesus.

In that sacred moment, Ann felt conviction too. God showed her that she’d made her husband and marriage an idol and she had been wanting Dave to fill every need, when that was never the role God was supposed to have. She got on her knees as well, surrendering her expectations back to the Lord.

That night became the beginning of something new—a vertical marriage, grounded in repentance and intimacy with Jesus first.

When You Stop Cheering on Your Spouse

Years later, when Ann shared her “booing” moment at church, she used a visual: a plant.
She explained that when you're dating, you pick a healthy, vibrant plant—your husband. But after a few years, you start noticing brown leaves. you take out the clippers, thinking it’s your job to prune him. Before long, you've hacked away so much that there’s barely a stump left.

After this sermon, Ann saw a couple that in the auditorium that stayed long after everyone had left. She approached them and saw an older man, head in his hands, tears dropping heavy on the ground, his wife sitting next to him bewildered. When asked what was wrong, he simply pointed at the stump and said, "That's me."

It’s not that we don’t love our husbands. We do. But we’ve forgotten that change is God’s job—not ours.

Our job is to water with words that bring life.

How to Speak Life (When You Want to Yell)

Ann admits she used to “speak her mind” freely—then justify it as honesty. But over time, God taught her a new rhythm of restraint and prayer, asking “Lord, should I say this? If yes, when should I say it? And how should I say it?” Not in an anxious way, but surrendered and thoughtful, knowing how much her words matter.

Just that short prayer created space for the Holy Spirit to guide her words.

One night, when Dave mentioned getting criticism on his sermons, her first instinct was to correct him (“Maybe if you studied more…”). But instead, she prayed that quick prayer—and said, “I can’t imagine the weight you carry, with thousands relying on your walk with God.”

Dave turned around, pulled her close and whispered, “You are my life.” Her empathy, not critique, drew him near.

Words That Heal

Ann now also prays daily, “God, show me the greatness in my husband.” That prayer changes everything—because God always sees the greatness He planted there, even when we can’t.

Romans 12:2 says, “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” When we ask God to renew how we think about our spouse, our words follow. And when our words change, the whole atmosphere of the home begins to heal.

“Gracious words are a honeycomb, sweet to the soul and healing to the bones.” — Proverbs 16:24

Speaking Life Doesn’t Mean Losing Your Voice

This isn’t about silencing yourself or ignoring real problems, but when encouragement becomes your default, your occasional hard truth carries more weight. Your words no longer sound like attack—they sound like love.

And as Dave says, “When you praise your man, he becomes better. Critique doesn’t motivate—it deflates. But genuine admiration calls out his God-given potential.”

Repentance Starts Revival

If you’ve been critical, impatient, or weary—we get it. And it’s okay. The path back is repentance.
It’s not a shame-filled, heavy thing. It’s the most freeing thing you can do.
Start there.
Let God soften your heart again.
Ask Him to show you the greatness in your spouse.
Then, begin to speak it out—one small sentence at a time.

You can do this.

 

Blessings,

 

The Delight Your Marriage Team

 

PS - If you're ready for the next step in healing your marriage, even if you're the only one doing the work, we're ready to talk with you. Schedule a free Clarity Call at delightym.com/cc or call +1 332-239-2379.

PPS - Here is a quote from a recent graduate:
"I am in control of my mood by controlling my own behavior instead of letting it get set for me by my husband's behavior and what I expect of him. I have released expectations of my husband. I see him as God's son now, which means he is NOT my responsibility to fix, direct, correct, discipline, etc. and instead I love, support, encourage and pray for him.  I am less controlling of my husband and I am more content with life in general."

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504-When Your Words Actually Bring Life (And How to Avoid Death): Interview With Ann & Dave Wilson

504-When Your Words Actually Bring Life (And How to Avoid Death): Interview With Ann & Dave Wilson