DOI: 10.37898/spiritualpc.1776478 ISSN: 2458-9675

Spirituality and Marital Harmony in Indonesian Muslim Couples: Implications for Counseling

Devi Mariyani, Yulia Ayriza, Mujidin Mujidin, Sya’ban Maghfur, Asmara Yumarni
Marital harmony is a key determinant of relationship stability and family resilience, particularly among Muslim families where Islamic values form the normative foundation. Prior research has largely relied on quantitative measures of satisfaction, conflict frequency, or gender roles, often neglecting deeper spiritual and relational dimensions. Limited qualitative studies have examined this issue from a counseling perspective, with most focusing on dysfunctions such as divorce or violence rather than positive constructs. Addressing this gap, the present study explored the lived meanings of marital harmony among Muslim couples and its implications for counseling practice. A qualitative phenomenological design was employed with six Muslim couples married for more than five years, selected purposively. Data were collected through in-depth interviews and analyzed thematically. Findings reveal that harmony is not the absence of conflict but a dynamic process cultivated through open communication, shared worship, flexible role negotiation, Islamic-based conflict resolution, and spiritual values such as sabr (patience), shukr (gratitude), tawakkul (trust in God), and ikhlas (sincerity). Marriage was perceived as a divine trust (amanah), shaping how couples approached challenges. These insights highlight the need for faith-based and culturally grounded premarital and marital counseling programs that integrate communication skills, role negotiation, trust-building, and shared spiritual practices to foster resilience, intimacy, and long-term marital stability.

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