The former editor of Charisma Magazine, J. Lee Grady recently did two articles on Christian Home. Both went viral. More than 1.2Million have shared the message as at last count. They were titled: ''10 Men Christian Women Should Never Marry” and '8 Women Christian Men Should Never Marry'. This is apparently because so many single men and women are seriously asking for guidelines on finding a compatible mate. if you are praying for God to bless you with a spouse, you may run through the list and use them as a mirror to know if you are marriageable or not. We are sharing this trusting that it will be a blessing to someone else.
No
matter how desperate a God-fearing Christian woman is to marry, she must stay away from the following men:
1.
The unbeliever. Please write 2
Corinthians 6:14 on a Post-it note and tack it on your computer at work. It
says, “Do not be bound together with unbelievers; for what partnership have
righteousness and lawlessness, or what fellowship has light with darkness?”
(NASB). This is not an outdated religious rule. It is the Word of God for you
today.
Don’t allow a man’s charm,
looks or financial success (or his willingness to go to church with you) push
you to compromise what you know is right. “Missionary dating” is never a wise
strategy. If the guy is not a born-again Christian, scratch him off your list.
He’s not right for you. I’ve yet to meet a Christian woman who didn’t regret
marrying an unbeliever.
2. The liar. If you discover that the man you are
dating has lied to you about his past or that he’s always covering his tracks
to hide his secrets from you, run for the nearest exit. Marriage must be built
on a foundation of trust. If he can’t be truthful, break up now before he
bamboozles you with an even bigger deception.
3. The playboy. I wish I could say that if you meet a
nice guy at church, you can assume he’s living in sexual purity. But that’s not
the case today. I’ve heard horror stories about single guys who serve on the
worship team on Sunday but act like Casanovas during the week. If you marry a
guy who was sleeping around before your wedding, you can be sure he will be
sleeping around after your wedding.
4. The deadbeat. There are many solid Christian men who
experienced marital failure years ago. Since their divorce, they have
experienced the Holy Spirit’s restoration, and now they want to remarry. Second
marriages can be very happy. But if you find out that the man you are dating
hasn’t been caring for his children from a previous marriage, you have just
exposed a fatal flaw. Any man who will not pay for his past mistakes or support
children from a previous marriage is not going to treat you responsibly.
5. The addict. Churchgoing men who have addictions to
alcohol or drugs have learned to hide their problems—but you don’t want to wait
until your honeymoon to find out that he’s a boozer. Never marry a man who
refuses to get help for his addiction. Insist that he get professional help and
walk away. And don’t get into a codependent relationship in which he claims he
needs you to stay sober. You can’t fix him.
6. The bum. I have a female friend who realized
after she married her boyfriend that he had no plans to find steady work. He
had devised a great strategy: He stayed home all day and played video games
while his professional wife worked and paid all the bills. The apostle Paul
told the Thessalonians, “If anyone is not willing to work, then he is not to
eat, either” (2 Thess. 3:10). The same rule applies here: If a man is not
willing to work, he doesn’t deserve to marry you.
7. The narcissist. I sincerely hope you can find a guy
who is handsome. But be careful: If your boyfriend spends six hours a day at
the gym and regularly posts closeups of his biceps on Facebook, you have a
problem. Do not fall for a self-absorbed guy. He might be cute, but a man who
is infatuated with his appearance and his own needs will never be able to love
you sacrificially, like Christ loves the church (Eph. 5:25). The man who is
always looking at himself in the mirror will never notice you.
8. The abuser. Men with abusive tendencies can’t
control their anger when it boils over. If the guy you are dating has a
tendency to fly off the handle, either at you or others, don’t be tempted to
rationalize his behavior. He has a problem, and if you marry him you will have
to navigate his minefield every day to avoid triggering another outburst. Angry
men hurt women—verbally and sometimes physically. Find a man who is gentle.
9. The man-child. Call me old-fashioned, but I’m
suspicious of a guy who still lives with his parents at age 35. If his mother
is still doing his cooking, cleaning and ironing at that age, you can be sure
he’s stuck in an emotional time warp. You are asking for trouble if you think
you can be a wife to a guy who hasn’t grown up. Back away and, as a friend,
encourage him to find a mentor who can help him mature.
10. The control freak. Some Christian guys today believe
marriage is about male superiority. They may quote Scripture and sound
super-spiritual, but behind the façade of husbandly authority is deep
insecurity and pride that can morph into spiritual abuse. First Peter 3:7
commands husbands to treat their wives as equals. If the man you are dating
talks down to you, makes demeaning comments about women or seems to squelch
your spiritual gifts, back away now. He is on a power trip. Women who marry
religious control freaks often end up in a nightmare of depression.
If you are a woman of God,
don’t sell your spiritual birthright by marrying a guy who doesn’t deserve you.
Your smartest decision in life is to wait for a man who is sold out to Jesus.
Also,
no matter how desperate a God-fearing Christian man is to marry, she must stay away from the following women:
1. The unbeliever. In last week’s column, I reminded
women that the Bible is absolutely clear on this point: Christians should not
marry unbelievers. Second Corinthians 6:14 says, “Do not be bound together with
unbelievers; for what partnership have righteousness and lawlessness, or what
fellowship has light with darkness?” (NASB). Apart from your decision to follow
Christ, marriage is the single most important decision you will ever make.
Don’t blow it by ignoring the obvious. You need a wife who loves Jesus more
than she loves you. Put spiritual maturity at the top of your list of qualities
you want in a wife.
2. The material girl. One
young friend of mine was engaged to a girl from a rich family. He saved up
money for months to buy a ring, but when he proposed she told him he needed to
go back to the jewelry store to buy a bigger diamond. She pushed her fiance to
go into debt for a ring that fit her expectations. She wanted a Tiffany’s
lifestyle on his Wal-Mart budget. I warned my friend that he was stepping into
serious trouble. Unless you want to live in debt for the rest of your life, do
not marry a girl who has dollar signs in her eyes and eight credit cards in her
Gucci purse.
3. The diva. Some
macho guys like to throw their weight around and pretend they are superior to
women. Divas are the female version of this nightmare. They think the world
revolves around them, and they don’t think twice about hurting somebody else to
prove their point. Their words are harsh and their finger-snapping demands are
unreasonable. Some of these women might end up in leadership positions at
church, but don’t be fooled by their super-spiritual talk. Real leaders are
humble. If you don’t see Christlike humility in the woman you are dating, back
away from her and keep looking.
4. The Delilah. Remember
Samson? He was anointed by God with superhuman strength, but he lost his power
when a seductive woman figured out his secret and gave her man the world’s most
famous haircut. Like Delilah, a woman who hasn’t yielded her sexuality to God
will blind you with her charms, break your heart and snip your anointing off.
If the “Christian” woman you met at church dresses provocatively, flirts with
other guys, posts sexually inappropriate comments on Facebook or tells you
she’s OK with sex before marriage, get out of that relationship before she
traps you.
5. The contentious woman. A young man told me recently that he
dated a girl who had serious resentment in her heart because of past hurts.
“Before I would propose, I told my fiancee she had to deal with this,” he
explained. “It would have been a deal-breaker, but there was a powerful
breakthrough and now we are engaged.” This guy realized that unresolved
bitterness can ruin a marriage. Proverbs 21:9 says, “It is better to live in a
corner of a roof than in a house shared with a contentious woman.” If the woman
you are dating is seething with anger and unforgiveness, your life together
will be ruined by arguing, door-slamming and endless drama. Insist that she get
prayer and counseling.
6. The controller. Marriage
is a 50/50 partnership, and the only way it works is when both husband and wife
practice mutual submission according to Ephesians 5:21. Just as some guys think
they can run a marriage like a dictatorship, some women try to manipulate
decisions to get their way. This is why premarital counseling is so important!
You don’t want to wait until you’ve been married for two weeks to find out that
your wife doesn’t trust you and wants to call all the shots.
7. The mama’s girl. It’s
normal for a new wife to call her mom regularly for advice and support. It is not normal for her to talk to her mother
five times a day about every detail of her marriage, including her sex life.
That’s weird. Yet I have counseled guys whose wives allowed their mothers (or
fathers) total control of their marriages. Genesis 2:24 says a man is to leave
his parents and cleave to his wife. Parents should stay in the background of
their children’s marriages. If your girlfriend hasn’t cut the apron strings,
proceed with caution.
8. The addict. So
many people in the church today have not been properly discipled. Many still
struggle with various types of addictions—to alcohol, illegal drugs,
prescription medicines or pornography—either because we don’t confront these
sins from the pulpit or we don’t offer enough compassionate support to
strugglers. Jesus can completely set a person free from these habits, but you
don’t want to wait until you’re married to find out your wife isn’t sober. You
may still be called to be married, but it is not wise to tie the knot until
your girlfriend faces her issues head-on.
Your
best rule to follow in choosing a wife is found in Proverbs 31:30: “Charm is
deceitful and beauty is vain, but a woman who fears the Lord, she shall be
praised.” Look past the outward qualities that the world says are important,
and look at the heart.
1 comment:
I really enjoyed your article! You had a great amount of very sound advice that men and women would be wise to heed when choosing a spouse. I am a firm believer that the family is central to God's plan, and that it is the most important unit in our society and we should protect it. Here is a link for another really good article, written by and author that had some difficult times in the beginning of her marriage, and received help from God. http://goo.gl/EEm8iE
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