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Is singleness really a "gift"?
Singles live in a time when their church leaders and friends have told them that their state of singleness should be considered a "gift" from the Lord, a special time to devote
themselves to spiritual work. Bumper sticker flattery is routinely
used to justify prolonging the single years. Perhaps it's time to
ask whether singleness in general — specifically protracted singleness (apart from "celibate service") — has much historical or biblical legitimacy.
A Historical Take on Singleness
On the whole of history, past generations of Christians saw
singles under a divine obligation — one might say a
duty — to marry. The marriage mandate was considered universal in its
application, and the purposes of marriage were uniformly
understood to be three-fold:
- for society (companionship)
- for love (physical affection), and
- for the production of the next generation of the church
(children)
It was not only the duty to marry that was held
sacrosanct, but also the proper and timely execution thereof. With I Corinthians 7 intact in
their Bibles, Christians used to believe that extended singleness
had no biblical warrant. The Westminster Confession, for
example, lists the "undue delay of marriage" as sin (Q. 139). Even
Scripture five times hearkens to the phrase "wife/bridegroom of
your youth," not your middle ages, youth being the only
season that allows one to enjoy the full bundle of rights and
privileges of marriage, and to accomplish its generational
purposes.
The laws and practices of these former cultures likewise
conveyed to all what was normative and what behavior was
expected. Throughout the ages, for example, women enjoyed an
infrastructure (their family or clan) to see them into the safe
harbor of marriage. From arranged marriages to
courtship/calling, all conspired to protect and guide women
from squandering their best, most fertile years in futility.
In these earlier systems, those who were beholden to the
bride through either blood or other ties were given the
responsibility to guide her into marriage. This was primarily
done by conditioning access of any prospective suitor on
demonstrable showings of worthiness. Men were kept on a tight
leash in these earlier systems. Today, we are stuck in a system
that is the exact opposite — the balance of power has
shifted to some random young man who, though he has virtually
unfettered access to the woman, has no binding to her to initiate
and bring about a marriage.
Also in these former cultures, there were consequences
when behavior fell below the expected societal standard. The
Puritans, for example, actually maintained laws that executed
fines and imprisonment for single living. In one case where a
single man John Littleale was found living by himself, where he
was "subject to many sins, which are ordinarily the companions
of a solitary life," he was ordered to move in with a family, or be
placed in the house of corrections in the Hamptons.
I suspect that there was nothing as off-putting to a grown
man as being treated like a child in the home of another.
However, the shame alone in such measures would have caused
John and others like him to grow up and meet the demands of
true biblical masculinity as defined by those around him.
Even as late as the 1950s, the bachelor was considered a
freak for he had avoided the mantle of adulthood in taking on
the responsibilities of a wife and family. He was considered
"eccentric," a "late bloomer," a man who never really could prove
he was a man. An unwed woman was pitied in terms such as "old
maid," for she had been the victim of poor opportunities in the
unrelenting passage of time. And a few women were rightly
considered "spinsters," for their actions had frustrated any
potential suitors.
Now, compare those beliefs to what singles are told today.
"God is your husband." "Bloom where you are planted." "There
are plenty of ministries you can help with during this time." "Be
content." "Make the desire of your heart Jesus, not marriage."
The desire for marriage has been placed on a collision course
with the desire for God, the One Who made marriage in the first
place. With this kind of pitting, singles are often reduced to
extolling singleness, much like a witch having the grace to
drown to prove innocence. In the same vein, these messages
dissuade young men from seeking marriage because of the false
validation they receive for embarking on the less taxing
challenges of mere service activities.
Chronological Snobbery
Why are Christians today so apt to validate a lifestyle that in
the past would have been considered wayward and askew? To
borrow a phrase from C.S. Lewis, our own "chronological
snobbery" may make us believe that somehow we know more
today than those who preceded us. However, our contemporary
belief that Scripture validates singleness en masse is a modern
invention that has sprouted only in this generation.
The ease of flattery and our alliance with pop culture has
produced a language of holy doublespeak where adult
singleness is thought of as acceptable, even biblical. Instead of
placing this modern phenomenon of protracted singleness
under Scripture for scrutiny, we have done the exact opposite
— we have made Scripture the handmaiden to the
phenomenon. I Corinthians 7, anyone? Instead of viewing
Scripture as a whole and acknowledging that out of the
thousands of characters, only a handful were single, we like to
take parts out of context and argue that it gives us cover.
Past Christians also read I Corinthians 7, and they
understood that Paul was writing at a time of "great distress,"
referring to the famine in the Greek countryside and the
percolating persecutions taking place at the time. Because of
these threatening circumstances, Paul advised that marriage
could temporarily be placed on the back-burner. They
understood that letter to convey expediency, nothing more.
Paul never held marriage and singleness to be on equal
planes, and neither did past Christians. Paul acknowledged
celibacy (i.e., the supernatural removal of sexual desire) as a
God-given gift. He acknowledged that the celibate could be
single, but that the single could not necessarily be celibate and
therefore prescribed marriage.
Contemporary Christian teaching on this subject blurs the
line between celibacy and singleness and leaves singles
mistakenly believing that the two are the same. God is often
painted as capriciously willing singleness for some and not
others. Consequently and sadly, many Christian singles resign
themselves to this less-than-ideal state. A more thoughtful and
critical examination reveals that today's singleness is not some
sort of divinely ordained, interminable state for a quarter of the
population, but the result of a string of systematic impediments
to marriage:
- a male-friendly mating structure that is not geared
toward marriage, but toward low-commitment, short term,
shallow cyclical relationships
- a low view of marriage, with the process to achieve it
reflecting its value: the casual nature of dating ultimately reflects
the casual nature with which we treat our marriages
- lack of male leadership in the home, with parents
bringing up boys to remain boys
- a protracted education system that doesn't really
educate
- the removal of shame for indulging in the Indian
Summer of one's adolescence or for being a perennial
bachelor
- a privatized version of the meaning of marriage
- a diminished expectation of marriage from the divorce
culture, and
- a redefinition or a defining downward of healthy
biblical adulthood
In the church, instead of acknowledging that singles are
operating in the most dysfunctional mating scheme known to
world history, we simply presume on the Lord and his
sovereignty to override our collective recklessness. Instead of
recognizing that many single women are victims because of the
deficits in the present construct, we dismiss their unwanted
status as simply "God's will."
Today's singleness is not celibacy-induced kingdom work
unaccommodating to family life. No, it's the result of choices
and mistakes by both the individual and society. Today's
singleness is either a lifestyle option or purely circumstantial;
therefore, it is largely unbiblical.
Because past Christian thinkers rightly understood that
biblically excused singleness was a rare exception, they also
correctly believed that the rest of us were under the creation
mandate to marry in a timely manner. This duty is hard to
appreciate in a generation where the very permanency of
marriage is in doubt. If marriage can be unilaterally modified by
the reneging spouse, and the costs of stakeholders in the union
(such as children) be overlooked, then is there any room for
discussion of whether one fails to marry in the first place?
But this goes to the heart of the argument —
accountability. John Calvin intimated that any man who, without
the gift of continence, failed to marry was guilty of stealing a
husband from a wife. He thought that if the two sexes be
separated they were like "mutilated members of a mangled
body." Martin Luther agreed, and believed that the male and
female ordering of Genesis mandated marriage for mankind.
Marriage was not thought of as optional.
We are a generation that blinds itself to the notion that the
failure to marry timely (i.e., in the Spring of our adult lives) can
be as costly as a divorce. It costs someone a spouse, it robs
someone of legitimate sexual relations, it deprives grandparents
of their grandchildren, it fails to replenish the nursery of the
church.
In Defense of Women
I know this proposition stings modern ears. I can think of
many women, myself included at one time, who might argue,
"But it's not my fault I'm single." True, most women are not to
blame here as they are not the ones to bend down on one knee
and propose. But being blameless cannot serve to validate an
unintended outcome.
Single women may take the conclusion offered in this article
as a personal affront. They may insist upon validation and
affirmation for a state they readily admit resembles a cruel joke
as opposed to a gift. However, the answer to our dilemma is not
to accelerate our cultural acceptance of protracted singleness or
make it look more glorified than it really is. Validating
singleness categorically only guarantees more singleness.
Perhaps it's time to challenge the ideas that are now in play,
especially those in the church.
Women will have no relief from the present holding cell of
unwanted singleness until we recapture a world life view that
exalts marriage as both a blessing and an obligation.
That worldview restrains men's baser instincts and desire to live
unconstrained, immature lives. That worldview assists women
and pities them when their desire to be a homemaker is snuffed
out. That worldview has checks and balances. That worldview
holds real promise for women to achieve their maximum biblical
potential, instead of the momentary comfort of flattery. That
worldview believes adult singleness, in the vast number of cases,
to be unbiblical.
Please understand that I'm not proposing a return to the
past, but a recapturing of these older, irrefutable, wiser truths.
Because ideas have consequences, what we believe about
singleness and marriage will shape how we will live, and
ultimately whether we will realize marriage during the most
desirable season.
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