A few thoughts on ideas raised about finding a spouse
at New City.
By Randy Nabors
(These are just my very earthly opinions, with some
Scriptural thoughts thrown in, so feel free to disagree and criticize with my
very man centered observations.)
As a pastor it has always been a concern of
mine about the ability of our young people to find a godly spouse and to
marry. Marriage is under attack in our
society and New City is affected by the reality of that attack.
· In poor communities the rate of marriage and the model
of marriage seems to be negative.
Although the statistics show that most people in the world will find a
spouse, our American inner city context is a marriage wilderness.
· The availability of “good” men is low, due to poor
education, dysfunctional behavior, drugs, prison, and early death. Homicide is still one of the leading causes
of death for African American males under the age of 30. The rising rate of homosexuality is also a
factor.
· A good man might be one who treats himself and others
with respect, who has the ability to work, works, and is faithful when he makes
a commitment.
· Finding a straight good man who is also a Christian,
and thus qualified to marry a Christian woman, is even harder to find. Finding such a man who is also a leader is an
even greater challenge. One word of hope, they are out there, and even some who are not ready are going to get saved and made ready.
In addition to the endangered species of
marriageable men is the complication of being in a place where they can be met,
and where a relationship might begin, and where such relationships lead to
marriage. This of course is not the
primary function of the church, and no matter how the discussion goes that
principle must be kept in mind. Our
culture in general finds it hard to create safe places for relationships to
begin and be nurtured. School, work,
social activities, relatives of friends, the military, church, and even the
internet are all places where people meet but they don’t have the coherence
traditional societies used to have for courtship and marriage. As a pastor this has caused me to pray for
good match-ups. As a father this has
given me great concern and pushed my prayers for my children, especially my
daughter.
Believe me, many older people notice those
who are single and pray for them to find a good spouse. Some of us have
actually tried our hand at match making, with decidedly mixed results. Nothing could horrify my own children more
than that. Some of us have felt pretty
frustrated especially when we see a not only good, but a great young woman, who
wants to get married and eligible men seem to do everything but pursue
them. Men walk around treasure and don’t
see what they are missing and too often choose cosmetic jewelry instead of
diamonds. We can and do pray, we might
even try set ups, and we sometimes have been more direct and made
suggestions. As I said, the results have
been mixed. My point is that this is not
something only the singles have noticed.
I grant also that some don’t seek marriage, nor do we suppose that they
should, if they have the gift to remain single.
Churches are problematic in being the place
of meeting a spouse. Many traditional
churches especially in the black community have more women than men, and this
of course reflects the realities mentioned above. This gives the advantage to men of course in
being selective for a mate. Churches are
also very much like small towns or small colleges, where once a relationship is
begun everyone becomes aware of it. This
creates pressure against anonymous or deliberate pursuit of a relationship
since the penalties become high for failure and once it has failed a lot of
people will know. This certainly affects
men who are afraid of commitment and who would rather have the deal settled in
their own minds, and within the relationship, before they feel pressured to be
public about it. This is one reason
young men in our church often look outside of the church for a prospective
mate. Not always, but often.
Young men in the church tend to look on
young women, if they look on them without objectifying and lust, as sisters. Men are visual creatures, they can’t help
but look for whatever their estimation of beauty might be, and being a friend
or having a good personality will not automatically make them think
romantically. Guilt about women not
finding mates will not make them look on young women as potential mates for
marriage. Some of these things are more
biological than intellectual.
Another cultural reality is the delay many
young adults experience in marriage.
This was not always so, but today many people are pursuing education and
careers, and marriage is put off.
Unfortunately the statistics are not good for women who wait on those
relationships. In the meantime young men
are suffering in this culture with a heavy dose of ego weakness in an American
world of female competition. Men have an
emotional challenge is relating to any woman with whom they might feel is
competitive with them. They tend to walk
away rather than engaging in any head on competition. Men naturally take competition as a precursor
to violence and it takes maturity not to give way to it.
Our culture, and African American culture in
particular, has a great many very strong women.
They are encouraged to be so in this culture. In contrast we have an overabundance of very
insecure men. What is ironic is that
many of these seemingly competent and assertive women don’t necessarily feel as
strong as they appear. Wouldn’t it be
great if women could be as strong, and ambitious, and successful as they dared
and hoped while good men never felt intimidated
by them and could love them while cheering them on?
We are in the context we are in and getting
mad at the church is not going to change that.
In a church that celebrates marriage and family it can tend to make
singles feel even worse. One of the
dynamics of the modern church, and Chattanooga in particular, is the whole
tendency for young adults to rush to new churches where they think they are
going to meet other singles like themselves.
They leave the churches of their parents and create new “generational”
congregations, where they will all grow old together unless they learn to be
multi-generational. New church plants
are to some degree “meat markets” for singles, like a new bar or club might
be. This is crude but I think it has an
element of truth to it.
Another tendency is the temptation to just
let go, find somebody, have sex and have a baby, then repent and get back in
church to raise that child. The
biological urge is incredibly powerful, and it keeps pastors working overtime
due to sin, relationships, guilt, etc.
One dynamic in an inter-racial church like
New City is the reality of seeing inter-racial couples. Most people will marry within their race,
though the rate of inter-marriage between various races has skyrocketed since I
was married in 1971. It was about 1% of
the population then and it is a bit more than 10% of the population today. However, the chagrin and anger from black
women when one of our black young men becomes attached to a white young woman
is real, no matter how wonderful that woman might be. Even black women married to white men don’t
like it as black men (in this particular instance) are seen as community
assets, not simply as individual agents.
Getting past the flirting game, getting past
a sense of competition for dominance in a possible relationship, sometimes
deceives men into thinking the demure polite young woman is not actually as
opinionated and willful as every other woman might be. My observation and opinion is that loud, verbal,
and unintimidated women can be just as needy, lonely, and even as ready to be
led as the quiet ones if they are convinced a man loves them and respects them. However, the outer shell of looks and
personality are what men tend to deal with more than anything else.
I have seen men and women in our church who
were (or are) desperate for a relationship.
The more desperate they get the greater rejection from those they might
feel acceptable seems to be the case.
Obviously one of the spiritual struggles here is idolatry as the wrong
response to the Biblical mandate to multiply and replenish the earth. We have a God given desire and it can’t be
met, so a very good and wonderful thing becomes an idol. Now, at the same time I have met women who
wanted to be married and succeeded, yet couldn’t get pregnant. That desire has sometimes been even more
overpowering than the desire to get married.
Probably no anguish is so clearly exampled in Scripture and mirrored in
life.
What happens when you achieve your idol,
your desire is satisfied, and the reality is corrupted, evil, and
disastrous? God forbid, but it is a
caution about any idolatry. It is like
the rape of Tamar, whose rapist had to have her but after he did he despised
her. Let it not be for those who
earnestly, sincerely, and from a God-given desire want a godly spouse.
So let me ask, if you are tired of waiting,
what options do you have? Wait on the
Lord! If you are mad at our culture,
what options do you have? Seek to change
the way our people think, seek to change the statistics, point out the
truth. And, wait on the Lord! If you are not content, you haven’t learned
to be content, and are mad at the church that it can’t deliver up what you need
then it might be an option to go find a church that gives you better
options. Okay, but I surmise you might still need to learn
contentment even if you don’t really want to, as you would rather apprehend what
you think you need. There is no escape
from what God wants you to do and learn.
You must learn to trust him, you must learn to pray, you must learn to
stop complaining, you must pursue godliness and not sexual immorality, you must
give up your grip on your idols, you must learn to wait on the Lord. And, as you seek his kingdom, may God give
you the desires of your heart.
END.
Thank you pastor! From a New City Single
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