How does one “court” a potential spouse? You see, here are
my concerns.
The world “dates.” But I don’t think that this is acceptable
for Christians to do. That may shock you, but let me explain why.
Dating has romance in mind. That is its end goal and objective. The
two parties are getting to know each other, progressively increasing in
romance. The only thing that separates the world and Christians, is that
Christians stop before sex (or at least they BETTER). But the romance
that leads up to that should be shunned as well.
Consider this: Modern dating is treated as a “testing” period of sorts, where
you are trying a relationship to see if you are suited for marriage. And
if problems or incompatibility arises during this “test” period, you “break-up.”
In the meantime though, it is safe to assume that you have participated in
romantic activities with that person. You’ve probably flirted, held
hands, hugged, rubbed on, kissed, etc. Now that you see this isn’t your
future spouse, guess what? You’ve done those activities to someone else’s
wife. And you’ve essentially “cheated” on your future spouse.
Just because it isn’t sex, doesn’t make it ok! Would you
want someone rubbing on your wife? Kissing your husband? Flirting
with your wife? Of course not! Not only that, you’ve probably committed
adultery in your heart! This worldly approach to finding your spouse is
wicked. I would never want to steal that honor from another mans wife, or
to rob her of that special and unique relationship with her husband.
So then we are left with the question, how DOES a Christian find a spouse? We’re so accustomed to
dating, that we don’t know any other way. And to be honest, I’m not sure
what it means to “court.” But here is how I desire for it to happen:
You do fellowship together, with no romantic intentions. In other words,
you treat each other like a brother or sister in Christ. You study the
Word together (preferably in a group setting to avoid temptation). You
share testimonies and prayer (again in group setting…I wouldn’t recommend
praying alone. That’s pretty intimate). You develop a friendship.
Now, at any point during that, if you feel the leading of the Lord
towards this person as a potential spouse, you vocalize that to her/him.
At which point, I think both of the parties should dedicate themselves to
prayer (individually) to find the will of God in this. To see if you
really are meant for each other. If the answer is yes, it then becomes a
more focused fellowship. You still leave romance out, but focus on
Scriptures on marriage. Carefully studying the topic together and
examining your compatibility on marriage/family issues. To see if you are
like minded. You also carefully share your past testimonies.
Exposing your hearts, desires, and faults to one another.
If after sharing your past, your goals/desires, and examining in
depth the marriage Scriptures, you decide that you are indeed made for each
other, then don’t waste time! No “dating” is necessary. Get married
as quick as possible.
Anyways, that’s how I see it. I see Christian “couples,” and
it grieves me. They act in romantic ways towards each other, but what if
you separate?! Look what you are doing to another person’s spouse!
You are stealing from them that precious unity that only belongs to a married
couple.
So let me summarize “courting” (as I see it) in this step-by-step
process:
1. You do fellowship together.
Treating each other like normal brothers/sisters in Christ. Growing together, edifying one another,
encouraging one another, correcting and teaching one another. Just like you do in with all your other
brothers and sisters.
2. If at any point you feel
prompted towards marriage, start praying!
And pray for as long as needed until you feel sure that the Lord wants
you to pursue marriage. Sometimes (at
least for me), my desires make it hard to hear from the Lord. I really want something, and so my deceitful
heart tricks me into thinking I have the Lord’s authorization. So be careful to pray thoroughly. Make sure that the Lord is authorizing you to
pursue this.
3. Tell her/him about it,
and ask them to set about praying about it in the same way. For as long as it is needed until they feel
sure.
4. Once confirmed, start an
"interview" process of sorts.
Examine each others past. Study
marriage/family verses together. Discuss
every area of life. How do you feel
about finances, jobs, kids, each others family, sex, where to live, doctrine,
church, friends, fellowship, EVERYTHING?
Keep a journal. Ask
questions. Write down everything that
may come up. Find mature Christian
marriages and ask them questions.
Examine your past together. Pray
over and heal from any past sins that may affect each other. If you've sinned in sex in the past, MAKE
SURE those bonds of unity (spiritual unity) are broken. Pray until the Lord breaks them.
5. Once everything is
settled, and you find that you are compatible and like minded on all the
important issues (or at least able to peaceably disagree), GET MARRIED.
6. THEN romance can
start. Both physical and non-physical.
"Dating" is mixing steps 4 and 6 without the commitment
of marriage and is wrong. It's a secular
concept, not a Biblical one. Are there
better ways of courting? I’m sure there
are, but this is how I see it being done while remaining pure and loving your
brothers and sisters enough not to do any injury to their future. It is surely preferable to modern day
“dating.”
Some Topics to Cover During Step 4:
ReplyDelete1. Diligent study of the past. Extensive look over everything.
2. Prayerfully break any previous bonding. Any past sexual experiences create a spiritual bond, especially with the first love. A "divorce" must be granted from God. This only comes through diligent prayer. Afterwards, pray together for healing.
3. Expose hearts…fears, anxieties, hopes, desires, plans, ministry desires, family desires, etc. It may be wise to hold off on revealing the very "worst" of our sins until we are firmly in love and set on marriage. Afterwards, pray together for healing.
4. Examine 1st Corinthians 7 in depth
5. Examine Ephesians 5 in depth
6. Hebrews 13:4
7. Genesis 2:24
8. Proverbs 21:9
9. Mark 10:8+
10. 1st Peter 3
11. What do you want from marriage? Why are you seeking marriage? What do you hope to gain? How can we fulfill that in each other? Can we?
12. Children? Do you have any? How do we deal with that? What about relationships with exes? Do you want children? How many? How do we discipline? How do we nurture? What about schooling? What about isolation from the world? Baby issues. Sports? What do you expose them to? Movies? Television? Friends? Technology? Teen years. How to deal with rebellion? Hatred? "Dating?" Sin? Lust? Peer Pressure? Drugs and alcohol?
13. Money? How do we spend it? Giving? Excess spending? Bills?
14. Doctrine? Perhaps look over statements of faith? Orthodox issues. What burns inside you as important? Teachers/Preachers? Church attendance? How to deal with false teaching? Submission and leadership. Unity and agreement.
15. KJV
16. Eschatology
17. Calvinism
18. Teachable
19. Submission
20. Church?
21. Ministry. How to do it together? Roles?
22. Gifts/Calling. How to use them in appropriate ways? How to encourage one another?
23. Fellowship. Who, when, where? Bible studies? Hanging out?
24. Time with brethren. A need for time with men and women. Protecting each others dignity. Never speaking ill of each other to anyone. How to address sensitive issues without betraying trust?
25. Need for alone time. Needy/Clingy. Time to gather thoughts is necessary. How much time? Being ok with it.
26. Sex. How much. A NEED to understand each others desires and to fulfill each other (1st Cor. 7). Foreplay. Positions. What are we comfortable with.
ReplyDelete27. Intimacy. How much is needed? What do you like? Kissing? Hugging? Holding hands? Rubbing? Massage? Public displays? Are they acceptable? Snuggling? Are you a "touch" love-type?
28. Prayer. When? How much? Alone prayer? Together prayer? Where?
29. Study. Habits and formulas. Times to do devotionals. Journaling? Alone? Together? Favorite books? Topics?
30. Reading. Time for such things? How much? When?
31. Television. What's ok? What do you like? What is tolerable? How much time? TV in bedroom? In living room? Phone and computer usage?
32. Music. What genres? How much? In the car? Volume levels?
33. Entertainment. What hobbies? What to do for fun? Free time? How much time/money should be spent? Possessions?
34. Jobs. Where to work? When to work? Hours? Commute?
35. Insurance. Cares? Needs?
36. Family – Time Allocation: Date nights? Devotionals? Home schooling?
37. Vacations. Where? When? Desires?
38. Free Time. How much with each other? How much apart? What's acceptable? What's not?
39. Household Chores. How to divide that up? Who does what? How often? What kind of mess are we ok with?
40. Food. Favorites? Cooking? Eating out? Breakfast, lunch, dinner habits? Extra's?
41. Spending. See Finances.
42. How to deal with anger. Alone time? Discussion? Recognizing trigger issues. Body language? What to do when we see the other getting angry? How to apologize? How to hold our tongues? Slow to speak. Don't say bad things about each other. Don't gossip.
43. How to deal with hurt? How to comfort? Touch? Isolation? Listening? Gifts? How to reconcile? Quick to forgive
44. Furniture. What kinds? Bedroom, living room, etc.
45. Layout of home. Pictures, art, plants, design. Preferences? Dislikes?
46. Clothing. How should we dress. Modestly. Like men and women. Designer? Cheap?
47. Government/Politics. Where do we stand? Come to agreement. Separate from the world. Be in unity on issues.
48. Pets. Yes/no? What kinds? Care of.
49. Interview other married couples. Ask them what their most difficult issues have been. How to reconcile. What we should be focused on. Anything else that they think is important.
50. Interview each others parents, siblings, and closest friends. Prior to that, advise your own to be brutally honest and open during the interview process. Ask about habits and temperment. Attitudes and character. Anything else that they think is important to know.
51. Bad habits. Any disgusting issues? Anything hurtful or dangerous that needs to be dealt with? Honest.
ReplyDelete52. Open up about sins? Past sins, current sins. Heart problems. Be brutally honest with each other. Are there things that men should keep to themselves and women should keep to themselves? What about the shocking and disgusting thoughts that everyone has, but is ashamed to admit? Do we open up about those?
53. Insecurities. What don't you like about yourself? How have you been hurt in the past? What defense mechanisms have you developed?
54. Worst things you’ve ever done. Do we need to know, or is it done and in the past?
55. Sleeping habits. Light/Dark? Background noise? Back, side, stomach? Cuddle? Which side of bed? Hot/cold sleeper? Lots of pillows and blankets, or no? Drool? Snore? Sleep walk? Talk in sleep?
56. Opposite sex friendship? Should it be allowed? Probably not. What about other couples? Alone time with others? No.
57. Hair Style, Smell, etc. Preferences? Dislikes?