Myths of Christian Dating....

There are some myths out there that people assume to be gospel about dating.
Christian culture is like any other in that we develop truisms that we accept without verifying. There are things floating around that have little or nothing to do with the Bible.
Most are well intended and contain a nugget of truth.
Some are flat-out wrong.
Dating is hard enough without sifting through all this erroneous information,
so let's debunk some myths.
There are plenty of them, but let's focus on what I believe are the top five myths that make dating harder for Christian men.

Myth #1: "God has one woman picked out for you to marry. You are destined to be with her, and God will guide you to her."

Good luck finding this one in the Bible.
There is plenty of stuff about God's will for his people,
God wanting good things for you, and God's ultimate plan.
Nowhere, however, does it say that God picked out a spunky brunette whom he's waiting to spring on you at the right moment.
I'm not saying that he doesn't.
When it comes to God, I'm pretty careful about saying what he does or doesn't do.
But I do know this—if you rely on this idea too much, your dating life will get really confusing.
Some Christians take a lot of comfort in the idea that God will do the heavy lifting when it comes to dating.
God will tell them if a relationship is right, and God will end it if it's not.
All they have to do is sit back and enjoy the ride.
This may be the biggest excuse men use for being lazy in relationships, much less finding one.

German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer addresses this issue in a wedding sermon he wrote for his sister from a Nazi jail cell.
He says that God joins the relationship between a man and a woman at the point of marriage. Before that, the couple has to take the initiative.
Rather than directing the course of the relationship, God wants the couple to grow and learn how to make a commitment.
Once they've done that, God increases his sustaining presence.

I'm not saying that God doesn't have a will regarding your dating life.
God may, in fact, have a spunky brunette in mind, and he's steering you toward her as you read this.
But the Bible does not promise that God will provide a loving relationship for you while you sit around and do nothing.
But, as in all things, it's best to ask for his guidance.
The Bible promises he will provide that whenever we ask.
Rely on God's love, wisdom, and sustaining presence while you're dating.
Though God won't do all the work for you, he'll be with you every step of the way.
The good news is that most men don't have a problem with this.
Regardless of your theology on the Predestination of Girlfriends, you're probably eager to be an active participant in your dating life.
This brings us to our next myth.

Myth #2: "The Bible has clearly defined guidelines for dating."

People didn't date in biblical times.
Dating as a socially accepted means of finding a mate has been around for less than a century. Before that, strict courtship rituals governed the path to marriage.
Whom you married wasn't even up to you most of the time.
Falling in love before you got married or engaged is a twentieth-century concept.
Dating as we know it occurred after marriage.

In college, I had an older professor from Japan whose marriage had been arranged.
He made fun of modern dating, saying, "By the time you get married now, the fun is over.
In an arranged marriage, the fun starts after the wedding!"
(No, that wasn't a suggestion for you to set up an arranged marriage.)

For the Hebrews and the early church, dating wasn't an issue to be addressed in Scripture.
Sex and marriage were, but not dating.
When the Bible was written, a person basically had one of three options: remaining single, an amoral life with multiple partners or prostitutes, or an arranged marriage.

There were courtship rituals in place, but nothing that looks like what we consider dating today.
The church has reached a difficult crossroads when it comes to pre-marriage romance.
We no longer have rituals of courtship and arranged marriage to guide us every step of the way. This leaves a lot of room for error.
It's also spawned a whole range of opinions and advice on how to handle dating.
One glance at the numerous books about love, dating, and marriage suggests that we're making a lot of this up as we go along.
Of course, there are biblical principles that are essential in dating.
If you follow the biblical prescriptions for gentleness, respect, sexual purity, and kindness
(Gal. 5:19–23), you are bound to make much better decisions in dating situations.
Your head and your heart should be in Scripture at all times, but you won't find specific guidelines for dating.

Is it okay to kiss before marriage?
The answer isn't in the Bible (though the Song of Solomon sure gives us a clue).
How about going out on dates alone?
Nope, not in there either.
The Bible provides some crucial relational principles but doesn't address the specifics.

This requires more decision-making on your part.
You can't follow antiquated courtship rituals anymore.
(At least I don't advise it. Asking a woman's father if you can date his daughter without consulting her first might be a good way to never get a first date.)
You also don't have a scriptural field manual that tells you how to behave in every situation.
It's up to you to be in prayer and conversation with your Christian community about these things.
You're going to have to think, talk, pray, and be ready to make some mistakes.
Speaking of mistakes, let's look at our next myth.

Myth #3: "God will reveal to you the woman that you are going to marry the instant you meet her."

If this is true, I screwed up somewhere.
I thought my wife was out of my league when I met her.
We had a nice conversation, but I left thinking that she wouldn't go out with a guy like me. Regardless, I didn't get a divine telegram saying, "She's the one! Start picking out china patterns!"
Waiting for God to whack you on the head and tell you whom to marry isn't faith; it's fear.
Many people want nothing to do with dating because of the risk and potential pain that it involves.
This is certainly understandable, as dating can have traumatic results in unhealthy circumstances.
But what do you think serves us better in the long run?
Growing and suffering in the process of learning or a revelation that lets us off the hook?
I would have loved to know that the beautiful woman I was talking to would one day be my wife, but I might not have worked as hard to earn her hand in marriage.
I would have missed a lot of experiences that made me a better man.

Be careful if you think God has told you that Betty from the bookstore is the one for you,
but you have no idea if she feels the same way.
If you plunge in, convinced that you are on a mission from God, and she's not sure yet, it's a quick way to scare her off.

Our unconscious mind can kick up powerful feelings that sometimes get mistaken for a message from God.
Maybe she was nicer to you than anyone you've met in a long time.
Maybe she's the first woman you ever met that likes Cracker Jacks as much as you do.
Or maybe she's just drop-dead gorgeous.
Of course, a woman who's nice, white-hot cute, and likes Cracker Jacks might be someone you want to ask on a date.
I just wouldn't go ring shopping yet.
Especially if you want a second date.

Myth #4: "You have to be friends with a woman before you can date her."

This is the point where I might tick off some of you, so allow me to assuage your anger before I explain this myth.
I am not saying that you cannot or should not be friends before dating.
I'm also not talking about a man and a woman who are interested in each other and agree to be friends for a period before dating.
Some of the most successful relationships begin in friendship.
Sometimes you don't even know you want to date someone until you're friends with her.
I've met couples who were friends for years and then fell in love.
It's a super way to start a relationship.

The problem is that a lot of men think the best way to pursue a woman is to befriend her while hiding their interest in dating her. T
his is a rotten idea and sets a lot of men up for trouble.

Tommy was a client of mine who tried this approach.
He had been interested in a woman at his church for a few months, but he was terrified of rejection.
So he made his best effort to become her friend, never letting on that he wanted to be her boyfriend.
He gave her rides to church, had coffee with her, and talked to her on the phone two or three times a week.
Whenever she needed help or support, Tommy was there.
But he never asked her out.

Then another man in the church asked her out, and she accepted.
When she shared the news with Tommy, he was devastated.
He told her about his true feelings, and she was shocked.
She was hurt that he didn't tell her sooner and expressed regret that he'd never asked her out.

However, she refused to back out of the date with the other guy.
It proved the end of their friendship, and Tommy retreated into frustration and despair.

You have to be honest about what you're doing.

Don't kid yourself and don't lie to her.
Be friends all you want, but if you want to date her, she needs to know and you need to ask her out.
Some people distinguish "dating" from "friendship" based on one thing: physical intimacy.
More specifically, kissing.
A man and a woman who are interested in each other remain "friends" by going out only on group dates and refraining from intimate contact of any description.
Apparently, this means they aren't dating.

Whatever.

Friendship and dating are categorically different.
Of course, you must be friends with the person you date, but there's much more to it.
The emotional "heat" that occurs between people in a romantic relationship is both more exhilarating and more complicated than friendship.
People have higher expectations for someone they're considering for marriage.

Friendship cannot contain the emotions, intensity, and intimacy that dating does.
If you and a woman are hot for each other, you aren't "just friends."
I don't care if you go out on dates alone or with the whole church choir.
It also doesn't matter if you wear a HAZMAT suit and stay ten feet away from her at all times.
If romance is the goal of a man and woman's relationship, they are dating.

Confuse it with friendship at your peril.

Myth #5: "A man's sexuality is a ravenous, snarling beast that should be kept in a cage until he's married."

I admit I've never heard it put that way, but the implication is out there.
Any lecture or book on dating inevitably includes something about sex (and, yes, this one does too).
Frequently, the message is "Control yourself! Your sex drive is out to get you!
It's just waiting for one weak moment to jump out and turn you into a nymphomaniac and demolish your soul."
And then we wonder why so many Christians end up with sexual problems, both before and after marriage.
The Bible tells us to save sex for marriage (1Cor. 7:2). That's crucial.
But you knew that already. The problem is we tend to emphasize this prohibition and leave it at that.
No one talks about sexuality before marriage because sexuality before marriage is bad.
This leaves us with a small problem.
Our sexuality is part of who we are from the moment we're born.
If you take away a man's sexuality, you take away his identity.
Your sexuality will be there, playing an active role, from the moment you ask a woman out.

In fact, without sexuality, men wouldn't date.
They'd play video games and eat pizza.
Our sexuality is what gets us interested in women in the first place, and that's a good thing.

Did you think God gave you a sex drive just to torture you until you got married?

There are plenty of things God does that I don't understand, but he's not cruel.
Many people confuse sexual drives with sinful desires.
Though sexual drives, like all drives, can become sinful, they're holy in their raw state.
Yes, I said holy. Your sex drive comes from God.
If you don't think that makes it holy, take it up with him.
The trick we have to pull off is holy, healthy expression of our sexuality before marriage.
It's not easy, but it can be done.
It will look different for different people, but it needs to be expressed.

Otherwise it will force its way out.
Look at the crisis of Internet pornography running rampant through the church.
Men are dying for a way to embrace and express their sex drives.
You can't ignore your sexuality, and you can't white-knuckle your way through life until your wedding night.
Your sexuality isn't bad.
It's not sinful or dirty.
It's a gift from God, and we need to figure out a way to embrace that gift before marriage.

Copyright © 2008 ChristianityToday.com

Do all religions lead to God ultimately?

Don't all religions lead, ultimately, to God?

Just because all of the world's religions express important elements of spiritual truth doesn't mean that they all represent enough truth to lead to God.
The history of religion shows how immoral and violent religion can be.

Most modern people would look upon the actual practice of many extinct religions with horror. The Canaanites, for instance, practiced human sacrifice, bestiality, and ritual prostitution.
The Phoenicians practiced a similar, horrible religion.
In the New World, the Aztec Indians practiced ritual human sacrifice on a scale that is almost beyond modern imagination.

Even our relativistic, “Postmodern” culture would find it difficult to defend religions that encourage impersonal ritual sex, human sacrifice, and cannibalism.
It’s just too obvious that such religions don't bring out the best in people.
Neither do they produce healthy civilizations.

History also shows us that some civilizations that were founded on evil religion were ripe for destruction.
The Canaanites were conquered by Israel.
Carthage was utterly destroyed by Rome.
The Aztecs were conquered by a few hundred Spaniards and a vast army of Amerindian allies from surrounding tribes who longed for deliverance from Aztec terror.

The major religions that still survive today have lasted a long time, gained many followers, and produced complex and highly developed cultures.

Those that have survived into the 20th century generally uphold a moral law similar to the biblical 10 Commandments.

But the world’s major religions do not share a consensus about how to come to terms with our failure to live up to the moral standards of our faith.

While all major contemporary religions have a fairly close general consensus regarding the moral law—the kind of behavior that deserves to be classified as virtuous or sinful—they fall far short of showing us how to come to terms with our own failure to live up to the moral standards of our faith.

According to the New Testament gospel of Christ, knowledge of the moral law brings awareness of sin and guilt (Romans 3:19,20; 7:7-13; 1 Timothy 1:7-11),
but is in itself not a means of salvation.

Knowledge of the moral law only brings condemnation, and with condemnation comes guilt and the many destructive ways people try to suppress it (legalism, self-righteousness, scapegoating).

Only reliance upon Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection in our behalf provides a solution to the awareness of moral condemnation and agony of guilt that rises out of knowledge of the moral law.
Only Christianity offers access to God because it answers the problem of evil and guilt.

Jesus Christ fulfilled the moral law both in His life and in His death.
He obeyed it perfectly.
Of the entire human race, only He never sinned (see John 5:46; 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Peter 2:22).
He also laid down His life to pay the penalty for sin demanded by the law (see John 3:16; 10:11-l8; 11:50-52; Romans. 5:6-8; 2 Corinthians. 5:21).
Because Jesus Christ fulfilled the requirements of the moral law, believers in him are restored to relationship with God through grace and no longer alienated and tormented by guilt.
Only with Jesus Christ as both master and example can people manifest God’s love and exhibit a righteousness that fulfills the law without being shackled by it (Romans 13:8-10).

Can you give your life?

On October 2, 1954, First Lieutenant James O. Conway was taking off from Boston Logan Airport, flying a plane that carried a load of munitions.
When his plane became airborne, he suddenly lost power over Boston’s bay.
In an instant, Conway faced a brutal choice—

eject from the plane and save his own life,

or crash the plane into the bay causing his own death.

If he ejected, however, the plane would crash into an East Boston neighborhood filled with homes and families.

Amazingly, Conway chose to crash the plane into the bay—giving his life for the lives of others.

In John 15:13, Jesus said, “Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends.” The willingness to make the ultimate sacrifice to protect others shows a heart that cares more about the needs of others than the needs of one’s self. Someone once said that “the measure of love is what one is willing to give up for it.” God the Father loved so much that He gave up His Son. Christ loved so much that He gave up His life—even taking our sins on Himself and dying in our place.

The measure of God’s love for you is great. Have you accepted His love personally? — Bill Crowder

When Jesus gave His life for me,Enduring all the agonyUpon the cross of Calvary,He showed the love of God. —Sper

Nothing speaks more clearly of God’s love than the cross of Christ.

Your love can save life.....

One day, when I was a freshman in high school,
I saw a kid from my class walking home from school.
His name was Kyle.
It looked like he was carrying all of his books.
I thought to myself, "Why would anyone bring home all his books on a Friday?
He must really be a nerd." I
had quite a weekend planned (parties and a
football game with my friend the following afternoon),
so I shrugged my shoulders and went on.
As I was walking, I saw a bunch of kids running toward him.
They ran at him, knocking all his books out of his arms and
tripping him so he landed in the dirt.

His glasses went flying, and I saw them land in the grass about ten feet from him.
He looked up and I saw this terrible sadness in his eyes.
My heart went out to him.
So, I jogged over to him, and as he crawled around looking for his glasses,
I saw a tear in his eye.
I handed him his glasses and said, "Those guys are jerks.
They really should get lives.
He looked at me and said, "Hey, thanks!"
There was a big smile on his face.
It was one of those smiles that showed real gratitude.
I helped him pick up his books, and asked him where he lived.
It turned out he lived near me, so I asked him why I had never seen him before.
He said he had gone to private school before coming to this school.
I would have never hung out with a private school kid before.

We talked all the way home, and I carried his books.
He turned out to be a pretty cool kid. I asked him if he wanted to play football on Saturday with me and my friends.
He said yes.
We hung all weekend and the more I got to know Kyle, the more I liked him.
And my friends thought the same of him.

Monday morning came,
and there was Kyle with the huge stack of books again.
I stopped him and said, "Damn boy, you are gonna really build some serious muscles with this pile of books everyday!".
He just laughed and handed me half the books.
Over the next four years, Kyle and I became best friends.

When we were seniors, we began to think about college.
Kyle decided on Georgetown, and I was going to Duke.
I knew that we would always be friends, that the miles would never be a problem.
He was going to be a doctor, and I was going for business on a football scholarship.

Kyle was valedictorian of our class.
I teased him all the time about being a nerd.
He had to prepare a speech for graduation.
I was so glad it wasn't me having to get up there and speak.

Graduation day arrived - I saw Kyle and he looked great.
He was one of those guys that really found himself during high school.
He filled out and actually looked good in glasses.
He had more dates than me and all the girls loved him!
Boy, sometimes I was jealous.

Today was one of those days.
I could see that he was nervous about his speech.
So, I smacked him on the back and said, "Hey, big guy, you'll be great!"
He looked at me with one of those looks (the really grateful one) and smiled.
"Thanks," he said.

As he started his speech, he cleared his throat, and began.
"Graduation is a time to thank those who helped you make it through those tough years.
Your parents, your teachers, your siblings, maybe a coach... but mostly your friends.
I am here to tell all of you that being a friend to someone is the best gift you can give them.

I am going to tell you a story."
I stared at my friend in disbelief as he told the story of the first day we met.

He had planned to kill himself over the weekend.
talked of how he had cleaned out his locker so his Mom wouldn't have to do it later and was carrying his stuff home.
He looked hard at me and gave me a little smile.

"Thankfully, I was saved.
My friend saved me from doing the unspeakable."
I heard the gasp go through the crowd as this handsome, popular boy told us all about his weakest moment.

I saw his Mom and dad looking at me and smiling that same grateful smile.
Not until that moment did I realize its depth.

Never underestimate the power of your actions.
With one small gesture you can change a person's life.
For better or for worse.
God puts us all in each other's lives to impact one another in some way.
Look for God in others.
"Friends are angels who lift us to our feet when
our wings have trouble remembering how to fly

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