Some ladies responding to advice that is of no help to singleness. Sad much!
Taken from :
https://gospelrelevance.com/2016/08/14/5-lies-single-christian-believes/
Kip
March 14, 2017 at 9:54 pm
Easy to say for someone who’s married. It seems like once people get married or get engaged, they feel completely entitled to give flippant advice on “lies” we believe. Sounds like I don’t love God enough because I don’t fully desire Him. I’m sorry, are we not humans? Is it so terrible to desire a relationship without other christians worrying about us veering off into idolatry? This is why I’m so distant from my fellow Christians. All so tone deaf. All so ready to piously give advice after they’ve received what they’ve wanted all of their lives…
Pastors and friends do this all of the time. It’s so easy for married people or coupled folks to be far removed from the ache of loneliness once they’ve found someone. Their words seem pompous. Their advice shallow of humanity because well, theyre in love. So, they simply tell their single friends to “abandon themselves” in Jesus or serve a little more.
My friends all have families and boyfriends. You try having conversations with them but the baby needs feeding or the boyfriend gets all their attention.
I wish Christians (I’m christian) can offer more in advice than “love God more” or “abandon yourself to Him” or, worse yet, insinuating that your mere desire or hope for love is in any way a sin. Or, that you’re not seeking Him enough. I got that same crap when I was hospitalized 3 years ago. It’s just all fluff! Why can’t christians talk straight, plain English with compassion? Why all the christianese about idolatry and not being Christian enough to be in love. It’s so easy for married people to forget the ache of loneliness and you’re no different.
I’m sorry. I’m just so tired of it all. The blanket advice my christians friends seem to so easily delve out. The waiting. The hoping. Being the 3rd wheel. The feeling inferior to other christians because I don’t want God enough. The feeling of condemnation. The lonely days and nights of pretending everything is fine. The embarrassment of falling apart in front of everyone because a potential relationship didn’t pan out. The being told that it’s just a matter of waiting. I’m reluctant to approach God in spending time with Him. It bores me I guess because it feels empty, so I avoid it. But my life is empty in geberal. Everyday is the same to me. There’s nothing new. Nobody to talk to. Everyone’s so busy. I am fault for that, though. When I was depressed, I alienated all of my friends. I talk to my friends but not about my true feelings of boredom and sadness and loneliness. They’ll only tell me that it’ll happen one day and all is well. Or, that being in a relationship isn’t all isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. All lies.
I’m not saying a relationship will complete me. I’m not saying a man will make it all better. I just wish I had a companion. Someone to talk and grow with. I feel slighted. I’d share with you what happened in my life 2 years ago but I fear that, just like every other Christian, you’ll shred that story to pieces because God talking to us is “impossible” or sometimes things are just coincidences but God is “bigger than our pain”. I’m at a stale point in life. I no longer know where to turn.
-------------------------------------------
Rachel Nichols
October 7, 2017 at 7:18 am
How about “there’s someone for everyone?” Or “God is always on time.” Maybe He’s not on time because the answer to decades of prayers and tearful waiting is a resounding “No!” And there will be no happy ending for you this side of eternity.
Christian marrieds love to deny this. Trying to cheer us up with sappy anecdotes about your great aunt Haggatha who married for the first time at 99. (Uh, why? Seriously.)
Seriously, there are more than twice as many Christian spinsters as bachelors. Should we A. Embrace polygamy? B. Turn lesbian? or C. Marry atheists/maybe leave Christ altogether?
Most single women my age are choosing C. I prefer to remain faithful to God even if my life stinks and will never improve till I go to Heaven. “Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him.” As Job said. Unfortunately my Christian friends surround me with platitudes, condemnation (You weren’t more proactive in chasing men in college!) and judgment as they call my grief bitterness.Thanks for mocking me on my ash heap you sorry comforters.
----------------------------------------------------
Churchianity lacks PRACTICAL answers for too many single women!
Sad much!
Taken from :
https://gospelrelevance.com/2016/08/14/5-lies-single-christian-believes/
Kip
March 14, 2017 at 9:54 pm
Easy to say for someone who’s married. It seems like once people get married or get engaged, they feel completely entitled to give flippant advice on “lies” we believe. Sounds like I don’t love God enough because I don’t fully desire Him. I’m sorry, are we not humans? Is it so terrible to desire a relationship without other christians worrying about us veering off into idolatry? This is why I’m so distant from my fellow Christians. All so tone deaf. All so ready to piously give advice after they’ve received what they’ve wanted all of their lives…
Pastors and friends do this all of the time. It’s so easy for married people or coupled folks to be far removed from the ache of loneliness once they’ve found someone. Their words seem pompous. Their advice shallow of humanity because well, theyre in love. So, they simply tell their single friends to “abandon themselves” in Jesus or serve a little more.
My friends all have families and boyfriends. You try having conversations with them but the baby needs feeding or the boyfriend gets all their attention.
I wish Christians (I’m christian) can offer more in advice than “love God more” or “abandon yourself to Him” or, worse yet, insinuating that your mere desire or hope for love is in any way a sin. Or, that you’re not seeking Him enough. I got that same crap when I was hospitalized 3 years ago. It’s just all fluff! Why can’t christians talk straight, plain English with compassion? Why all the christianese about idolatry and not being Christian enough to be in love. It’s so easy for married people to forget the ache of loneliness and you’re no different.
I’m sorry. I’m just so tired of it all. The blanket advice my christians friends seem to so easily delve out. The waiting. The hoping. Being the 3rd wheel. The feeling inferior to other christians because I don’t want God enough. The feeling of condemnation. The lonely days and nights of pretending everything is fine. The embarrassment of falling apart in front of everyone because a potential relationship didn’t pan out. The being told that it’s just a matter of waiting. I’m reluctant to approach God in spending time with Him. It bores me I guess because it feels empty, so I avoid it. But my life is empty in geberal. Everyday is the same to me. There’s nothing new. Nobody to talk to. Everyone’s so busy. I am fault for that, though. When I was depressed, I alienated all of my friends. I talk to my friends but not about my true feelings of boredom and sadness and loneliness. They’ll only tell me that it’ll happen one day and all is well. Or, that being in a relationship isn’t all isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. All lies.
I’m not saying a relationship will complete me. I’m not saying a man will make it all better. I just wish I had a companion. Someone to talk and grow with. I feel slighted. I’d share with you what happened in my life 2 years ago but I fear that, just like every other Christian, you’ll shred that story to pieces because God talking to us is “impossible” or sometimes things are just coincidences but God is “bigger than our pain”. I’m at a stale point in life. I no longer know where to turn.
-------------------------------------------
Rachel Nichols
October 7, 2017 at 7:18 am
How about “there’s someone for everyone?” Or “God is always on time.” Maybe He’s not on time because the answer to decades of prayers and tearful waiting is a resounding “No!” And there will be no happy ending for you this side of eternity.
Christian marrieds love to deny this. Trying to cheer us up with sappy anecdotes about your great aunt Haggatha who married for the first time at 99. (Uh, why? Seriously.)
Seriously, there are more than twice as many Christian spinsters as bachelors. Should we A. Embrace polygamy? B. Turn lesbian? or C. Marry atheists/maybe leave Christ altogether?
Most single women my age are choosing C. I prefer to remain faithful to God even if my life stinks and will never improve till I go to Heaven. “Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him.” As Job said. Unfortunately my Christian friends surround me with platitudes, condemnation (You weren’t more proactive in chasing men in college!) and judgment as they call my grief bitterness.Thanks for mocking me on my ash heap you sorry comforters.
----------------------------------------------------
Churchianity lacks PRACTICAL answers for too many single women!
Sad much!