Age is just a number.

Worst advice for single Christians 🙄
What's the worst advice you've ever received about your singleness? Anything someone has said that just seemed to slap you in the face?
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Don’t have high expectations, u are already in your thirties; actually ladies above thirty years are considered as second hand 😳. Nowadays guys go for younger women 😳….
"You're not getting younger, you should have children, even if marriage comes later."
“Start exploring different men now so that when you finally get married you don’t crave cheating” ✋🏾😩 Yoh I can’t believe this is how other people think on a daily basis but anyway we listen, we do not judge. That was actually the worst I’m not gonna lie
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@Ben yea I saw some idiot on here telling you to stop playing videos. I play video games 🎮 not just because I want to, but because I need to - to stay relaxed 😎 … but I should say that it’s not the only thing I do!
“Date for fun. Don’t date for marriage until you have enough money set aside to get a divorce.”
Stop looking and you'll find them
Was anyone familiar with the book “I Kissed Dating Goodbye” by Joshua Harris? I would say the advice from that book was the worst, because it created strict rules around relationships, making people feel guilty or ashamed about normal feelings and physical intimacy. It also pushed people to think that courtship was the only right way to date, which limited the personal growth and understanding in relationships of a whole generation of christians.
That I am not as faithful as I should...
.Honey ... When you are ready .... I got someone to introduce you to 6 years later never got introduced 🤣
"Why don't you go out with anyone, don't kiss anyone. You only think about church things."
I’ve heard many of the things written here and boy it hurts. I think the very worst ‘advice’ though was the person who insisted that singleness was unbiblical and that I (and anyone else who was single) was sinning … by being single. 🙃 So, so many things wrong with that take – I hope no one took it seriously.
@Amanda Wow! Seems they forgot about Jesus being single. :)
They say don't be choosy..or maybe my future husband hasn't been born yet so don't lose hope 😬 It's hard to grow old alone 🙄
“Forget fellowshipping and making friends. Who cares about all that?Just date and romance and see how it goes, but TRY to make friends as you go along. It’s meant to be passionate and romantic, follow your heart and just enjoy before before actually committing for real”
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@Oasis friendships and fellowship 🤙
@Oasis Definitely. I mean you’re really giving yourself and the other person a GOOD chance that way. Based on the stats, you reduce the likelihood of divorce between 20-70%. It just makes sense from a logical standpoint. Takes away so much pressure too.
@Jude Hi Jude, Thanks for your input on this topic. I am wondering though where you got your stats on divorce? Divorce is a very complex matter involving the journey of an individual couple. The stats in Australia may differ in other countries too.
@Evelyn Thank you for your question. People reasonably fit in the MACROS. You’re talking about specific personalised experiences. I’m talking about aggregate data - IN GENERAL and ON AVERAGE, if you make friends and fellowship first before moving into a exclusive romantic relationship you’d reduce your likelihood of divorce.
@Evelyn Is it POSSIBLE that you don’t fit in the stats because your UNIQUE set of circumstances? YES Is it REASONABLE to think that you’re SO UNIQUE and DIFFERENT from everybody else? NO 😃
@Jude I'd be interested to know where you get these stats from? And if some groups within the studies have more stigma attached to divorce vs. other groups which could be contributing factor to the outcome (whereby correlation does not always equal causation 😉 )
@Angela oh hey! We’re back at the same conversation 😃 pretty much… 1. University of Virginia’s National Marriage Project 2. John Gottman’s Research 3. National Bureau of Economic Research
@Angela Quantifying the likelihood. “While exact percentages can vary, a friendship-based relationship may cut divorce likelihood nearly in half (50%) in many contexts. Couples in friendship-first relationships report divorce rates of 15-20%, compared to the broader population’s 40-50%. The strong correlation highlights the importance of fostering friendship not only as a precursor to marriage but also as a central aspect of marital relationship”
@Angela More importantly, I’m yet to see studies recommending romance and dating-first.
@Kati copyright ©
@Kati oh well, life’s not about that anyway🙃
@Kati is it about desire, romance, passion and the heart? 🙃 I’ll have a listen.
@Kati I’m not even sure if that’s a good thing to be honest 🙃
@Kati a moment of lucidity perhaps? 🙃
Don't worry, look at Helen, she got married to a lovely man when she was 58. ...I'm 33 😑
@Millie Lucky Helen 🙃
Insinuating men are ready to marry two days into Christianity but women have to be well seasoned and perfect before he shows up.
God forbid a man is ever found faulty or less prepared before a woman (heavily infused with sarcasm)
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@Kolten Am curious why you might think its bad advice to be yourself?
@Angela I think as a generic statement, “Just be yourself” seems to imply that people are intrinsically good, which isn’t entirely biblical. “My old self has been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me. So I live in this earthly body by trusting in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.” - Galatians 2:20 NLT “Just learn to be more like Jesus” 👌🧐
@Taylor That makes sense. Learning to be more like Jesus and being formed more into who we are in Christ is of utmost importance. Yet I don't think that takes away from God having also uniquely and wonderfully made each of us. Even as believers, we don't all have the same strengths, gifts, temperaments or even likes/dislikes...even though we are hopefully all growing in the same fruits of the Spirit and being formed into the Image of Christ.
@Taylor So often, people wear masks, attempting to be who they perceive others around them would like, rather than being honest with who they truly are. It seems like it isn't either "be yourself" or "be like Jesus" but rather be honest with who you are - temperament, giftings, preferences, likes/dislikes, etc... AND continue to grow in becoming more and more a reflection of Christ.
@Angela There’s some good stuff there for sure!
"Ugh, you have to settle, or else you're never going to find anyone"
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@Oasis yes! This comment was actually right after a break up, and I made it known what the issues were and that was their response. There's a difference between maintaining boundaries/respect for yourself, and the inability to accept flawed humans. Never had an issue accepting others as they are, but that doesn't mean I have to accept that's what I am worth.
Do not be so picky and lower your standards 🧐😑😅
Someone talking about marriage and kids, then saying “you’ve got all this to look forward to”… Oh and quoting verses such as Psalm 37:4, as if it’s some kinda formula.
"Maybe God knows you are not yet ready for a relationship and he keeps you single till you are"
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@Oasis I actually think “I kissed dating goodbye” made a few fair points. The guy wrote it when he believed in God and was a Christian. Solomon wrote Proverbs but went on to fall for many women who influenced him to worship pagan gods. Doesn’t mean you stop reading Proverbs. Similar principle for the Psalms with David.
@Oasis I’m yet to read this one. Maybe during the Christmas break 👌
@Oasis 2nd thread you’ve mentioned that book. Is that book going to be your first gift to your boyfriend and potential husband? 🙃
Trust God its in his timing. While true can feel like a cop out as it doesn't make ya feel seen or like what you are dealing with matters 😆 I say that but I'm in best place I've been in ever regarding singleness! 😄
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@Oasis well said 🤜🤛
@David that's right up there with "there is many fish in the sea"...