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"I cannot recall a time when an article stirred such anger in
me.... I am SHOCKED that Focus on the Family would allow
such an article to be placed on its website." " I must say that I
can hardly find words to properly express my horror at the
bogus expert that was posted on your website."
So began two of many emails we received complaining about
"The Cost of Delaying Marriage," an
excerpt from Danielle Crittenden's book What Our Mothers
Didn't Tell Us. The women who wrote those messages
were not alone in their sentiments. More than any other article
we've run on Boundless, this one stirred up strong emotions,
especially among singles.
I wasn't surprised by the response -- it was very much like
what we received the first time we ran this excerpt six years
ago. But I was discouraged. Discouraged by the possibility that
we haven't made more progress on the issue of singleness in
the church. And concerned that many readers seemingly found
her article more controversial this time around.
Thankfully the response wasn’t monolithic. After mentioning all
the negative responses to readers of our weekly email update,
lots more readers wrote in to applaud Danielle's stance. And to
all of you, I say thanks. It was heartening to know
marriage is still esteemed among many.
And yet I think it's important to answer some of the more
troubling, and common complaints we received. For those of
you who are still fuming from what we published, this response
is for you.
Jesus Is Enough
The top complaint from singles that want to get married but
haven't yet had the opportunity has a spiritual bent. It goes
something like this: The single years are more virtuous than
the married ones, characterized by more faithful, focused and
selfless living for the Kingdom. Christ is the sum total of what
fulfills us -- to suggest that marriage can, or should
fulfill us, is to devalue the role of Christ in our lives.
Simply put: all we need is Jesus.
The response to this could be an article in itself, because this
belief seems to be an emerging motto of Christian singles
everywhere. There's just one problem: Adam had perfect
communion with God in the Garden of Eden and still God said,
"It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper
suitable for him" (Genesis 2:18) Everything else about Eden was
said to be "good" by God. Everything, that is, except a man.
Alone.
People who claim that Jesus is enough typically quote 1
Corinthians 7. In it Paul says, "It is good for a man not to
marry" and "an unmarried woman or virgin is concerned about
the Lord's affairs: Her aim is to be devoted to the Lord in both
body and spirit." Paul is describing celibate service -- a calling
God places on a select few men and women. Though Paul does
say, "I wish that all men were as I am," he goes on to say, "But
each man has his own gift from God; one has this gift, another
has that." The gift Paul is describing is celibacy -- a gift that
equips a person to not "burn with passion" while enabling them
to fully expend themselves in God's service without the
distractions of spouse and children.
How do you know if you have this gift? Dr. Albert Mohler ,
president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and
member of Focus' board of directors suggests asking yourself,
"can I go the rest of my life without sex, without the
companionship of marriage, without having children and
without being bitter about it?" If you answer yes, it's likely you
do.
For everyone else, the call is to marriage. To marry doesn't
diminish the need for Christ. In fact, it increases it: The reason
Christian marriage requires a vow is that no mere promise is
enough to hold two mortals together for life. We're dependent
on Christ to help us fulfill it.
It's Not My Fault
Some writers -- women especially -- were frustrated by their
singleness, admittedly wanting to be married but never having
had the opportunity to do so. They were offended by Danielle's
assertion that women who are still single in their 30s and
beyond must be that way because they disregarded the many
proposals they received in their 20s. Though some devoted
their 20s primarily to education and career development --
implying that their focus was not on finding a mate -- most in
this category were put off by the notion that their singleness
was their choice.
One example: "Do I sound bitter? I am really not bitter. I am
frustrated, because I see articles that do not seem to present
the other side of the story, that despite our best efforts, some
of us have just not met someone. That sometimes a person
does not have a choice about delaying marriage, because the
possibility has never presented itself.
And another: "I don't want to sound like a complainer, but I
think that the delayed marriage factor has a lot to do with
Christian men as well as women. I find it frustrating to be
accused of being very independent when I haven't even had the
option of anything else! It's not like I had ten suitors on my
doorstep, and I turned down marriage at 20. I didn't have the
option of marriage at 20 or even 30. … I need the support of
the Christian community. Your Boundless article seems to put
us all in the bucket of waiting too long or too late. But what
about just waiting, because that's your only choice."
I think this writer is on to something. The problem of delayed
marriage has a lot to do with men who won't take initiative.
Women want to be pursued and men are charged by God to be
the pursuers. Proverbs says, "he who finds a wife, "
Finds. That's no passive verb. It's active. It instructs the
man who wants God's blessing to get out there and
look. And to the men we say, get going. It's time you
accept the challenge to pursue marriage.
To the women, I say stop glorifying the single years as a super-
holy season of just you and Jesus. Yes, being single does
provide the chance to be uniquely intimate with Jesus. Enjoy
that. But don't advertise it. Why? Because it gives guys
permission to kick back and let you. If they think you're
perfectly happy as a single, why wouldn't they let you stay that
way? Especially when so many of them are gun shy. Thanks to
a 50 percent (give or take a few points) divorce rate and
absentee dad problem, many of them grew up without a mentor
(their dad) and without a godly model for what marriage should
look like. Many of them are scared, and for good reason.
Now to you women, that's not an excuse to bash men. You
have an important ability to help them move toward marriage.
How? By esteeming it. By not being embarrassed about wanting
it. By going after it -- to a point. You can nurture men toward
marriage by helping them see that it contains a lot of what
they're looking for, even if they don't yet know it. Think of
Jimmy Stewart in It's a Wonderful Life. He's depressed
that once again, his plans to get out of small town America and
see the world have been thwarted and he's left tending the
family business with just his mom and alcoholic uncle for
companionship. He's questioning his very existence; longing to
know his destiny. What's his mom's suggestion? "Why don't you
go talk to Mary," she says. "I'll bet she could help you find the
answers you're looking for."
Marriage holds the possibility of partnership, adventure,
creativity, challenge and many more of the things we long for,
but try to obtain with inferior pursuits. As Amy and Leon Kass
observed in their roles as professors at the University of
Chicago, "…we detect among our students certain (albeit
sometimes unarticulated) longings -- for friendship, for
wholeness, for a life that is serious and deep, and for
associations that are trustworthy and lasting -- longings that
they do not realize could be largely satisfied by marrying well."
(Wing to Wing, Oar to Oar, p. 2)
Singles Have More Fun
Crittenden's article artificially elevates marriage while
underestimating the value of living single, independent and
free, said some. What's so bad about choosing to be single?
It's a lot more fun, they argued.
Ms. Crittenden's article is critical of single women and
suggests that we have somehow missed God's plan for our lives
by doing what we want to do. She states that we single 30 year
old women have a second-rate life that can only be tolerated.
In addition, without men that we will remain unfulfilled and
sad.
And another:
"Yes, God makes some of us to be parents and spouses as
part of our identy," wrote one. "But he also gives us spiritual
gifts that allow us to contribute to our church; he gives us
friends to enrich our lives; he gives us talents to praise him; he
gives us careers that fulfill our dreams. Being single doesn't
cancel out my identity. And to hear that my identity as a child
of God is not complete without a spouse is judgmental and
disturbing."
It's not about identity. It's about obedience. When it comes to
marriage, we don't need a burning bush to know if it's
God's will. He's already told us it is. If we're not specially gifted
to be celibate, we're called to marriage. There's no third option;
no lifestyle choice to remain single because it's more fun or
more fulfilling or more spiritual than being married. Yes, if
you're gifted with a calling to celibacy, a la Paul, then
that is your duty. But if you're not -- and Scripture is clear that
most of us aren't -- then our calling is marriage.
For women, that means remaining open to the possibility, praying boldly for the opportunity
and living intentionally so as not to undermine your prospects.
For men, it means "finding a wife" and "leaving and cleaving;"
taking initiative -- looking at the women you know, identifying
the ones who would be a godly wife and good mother and
pursuing one of them. Be active.
For both men and women it means living purely -- being
faithful with your sexuality -- actively participating in Christian
community and being a good steward of your time, money and
talents. These are all things that protect and prepare you for
the commitment of marriage.
Marriageandbabies Isn't One Word
Not all women want to raise families others pointed
out.
This letter explained, "I have a Christian friend who's
married and absolutely loathes small children. The thought of
changing a diaper is disgusting to her. She will probably never
have children even though she's found the man she wants to
spend the rest of her life with."
Now that my two little ones are potty trained I can say with all
honesty, changing diapers is a disgusting thing. But's
that's no reason not to have children. Especially as believers. It's
only since the advent of pharmaceutical birth control that
humans even had the option of choosing marriage while
remaining closed to the possibility -- and blessing -- of
children. And it's only since people started writing their own
wedding vows that we stopped including the part about
promising to receive children and raise them to know God.
Severing the link between marriage and children is a modern
concept, born of material wealth, political freedom and
technological advancements. But just because we can
do something doesn't mean we should. God has not
revoked His charge to the first couple, Adam and Eve, to be
fruitful and multiply. (And contrary to public opinion, we're in dire
need of more, not fewer, people on this earth.)
When we marry and choose not to have children, we violate our
very design and disobey our God. (We've talked at length about
this on Boundless, including articles by J. Budziszewski and Matt Kaufman.)
Men are Jerks
One writer quoted Crittenden:
The 33-year-old single woman who decides
she wants more from life than her career cannot so readily walk
into marriage and children; by postponing them, all she has
done is to push them ahead to a point in her life when she has
less sexual power to attain them.
And had this to say,
"Gee, thanks. So, women over 30 aren't sexy enough to get
a man, we better get them while we are young and perky?"
It's amazing how much of the world's mentality we've absorbed
as Christians. It's not about "getting a man," it's about being in
reality about when a woman is most likely to marry and still be
able to have children. Youth is a wonderful thing for meeting
eligible mates (thanks in large part to our system of higher
education), having the time to date (again, thanks to college)
and for pregnancy. The older a woman gets, the harder it is for
her to conceive and the more likely she'll have complications if
she does.
Still another writer said it's our fault for making men look
bad. "Crittenden takes a very critical and unflattering view
of men," she wrote. "She appears to assume that the good men
only want women while they're still young, sexually attractive
and fertile. Crittenden mentions nothing of men who may
simply want partners they can love and connect with on a
deeper emotional basis, and men who care nothing of age,
fertility or looks and instead want intellectual and emotional
equals.
Men and women are different. It's well established by Christian
and secular researchers alike that men are more sight oriented
than women and that looks matter a great deal to men when it
comes to issues of attraction. If that's all they care about, we
call them shallow. But to suggest that men should forgo
externals and focus instead on deep emotional connections is
to ask men to think like women.
As a woman, I'll venture to say that we women still hold a lot of
sway over men. Next time you're verbalizing your contentment
with being single (especially if what you really want is to marry)
or going after one more degree or one more promotion,
remember, men are watching. In many areas, they still look to
us for cues.
Consider what Boundless reader Mark T. had to say:
This is a welcome breath of fresh air for a
male in his early 20s with a professional degree, and the
beginnings of a career that would love nothing more than to be
able to share his life with someone, but only seems to meet
young attractive and ambitious women that want to pursue the
independent lifestyle for another 10 years all by
themselves.
Did We Make a Mistake?
Sometimes we run things on Boundless that we don't
completely agree with in order to get readers thinking, or
thinking in a different direction. Sometimes we spotlight an
article, author or movie to point out where we think they're
wrong.
This was not one of those articles.
Danielle's excerpt is one thing we stand behind fully. She's on
to something important and even though she doesn't write
from an explicitly Christian perspective, the issues she raises
are critical to the church. Boundless isn't alone in thinking this.
Dr. Dobson interviewed Danielle about her book for a recent
Focus on the Family broadcast (incidentally this was a re-air of
the show, originally recorded in 1999).
Afterward, Dr. Mohler called this excerpt "a must read" on his blog. Saying, "This is an
issue I address often, and I appreciate Crittenden's thoughtful
analysis -- as well as her perspective as a woman.... The article
is really important. Her intelligent celebration of marriage is
refreshing."
We're glad to know the article got you thinking -- even if you
wrote to say you totally disagree with it. And we hope you'll
prayerfully consider the reasons we so thoroughly endorse it.
Yes, hoping for and getting married requires some serious
risk-taking, especially in this culture. But it's still a divine gift
worth pursuing and receiving.
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