If you have ever used dating
columns in newspapers or online dating of some kind, which I have, you may know
of the excitement at the idea you might meet someone without a great deal of
effort and that a friendship might lead to something more, and then the
disappointment when things don’t turn out right for some reason, whatever that
reason might be. Been there, seen the film, wore the t-shirt and writing the
blog sob story on it now, too! The strange thing is, although there is humour
in many of the experiences most of us have had on the dating scene, finding
love, finding a soulmate, is actually a very serious business indeed. And, when
it doesn’t go as planned, it seems to cause a lot of frustration, a lot of soul
searching, a lot of sadness and even pain. To fail in this area is very
painful, and I think many men and women who have been unlucky in love a number
of times start to feel they will never meet anyone, either because they
have had a number of bad relationships or even because they have tried to have
a number of bad relationships, and failed! Speaking purely from a Christian
sense now, the world of love, dating and romance can be as secular and empty of
God’s purpose as anything else can be without asking God into it. God is the
Lord of your love life as well as your life, is what I’m saying, or should be!
Before really living as a Christian since I was about thirty, I sought casual
relationships when going out drinking with my mates, even though deep down
after having analysed this I was really looking for a true romantic emotional
connection and not brief encounters, which most of them were. As my pastor
would say, and he is a good bloke, I had my priorities all wrong. The ulterior
motives of most people on a night out involving alcohol, men and women both,
tends to be more earthly than spiritual certainly when people are drinking and
usually won’t end well, even when at the back of people’s minds there is a
desire to make a real connection, rather than a casual and meaningless
encounter of some kind. There seem to be so many Christians, and I have met a
number them, and have been one myself, who think that Christian faith and
exercising that faith is basically just going to church, being morally minded,
being a respectable person and not a great deal more. You tell people even in
churches to pray before making big decisions and they sometimes look at you a
little strangely, or you just tell them to ask God into important decisions,
and it has as if you have asked something strange. In many cases, and I can be
accused of this only too well, God seems to be the last consideration and last
priority, when He should be our first priority.
Jesus, the Bridegroom?
The idea that Jesus is the
bridegroom and the church, basically the worldwide group of people who call
Jesus Christ their Lord, is the bride is a biblical one. I haven’t really given
that analogy a great deal of thought before, but in the light of romance, love
and relationships, it begins to make a sense. Christianity is far less
religion, and far far more about relationship, relationship with God,
relationship with other Christians and a relationship with a disbelieving
world, too. God’s love is pro-active, warm, compassionate, nurturing,
redeeming, forgiving, conciliatory, and ultimately His first real priority in
our lives, perhaps after straitening us out, is to have a personal and intimate
relationship, a close friendship, with all true Christians on a daily and
ongoing basis. That’s a lifelong, and beyond, relationship that has little to
do with formal and traditional Christianity. It’s what God wants for us, to
walk with Him and consider Him, as we say in Liverpool, our ‘best mate’, our
best friend, confidant, guide, healer and much much more. A marriage is meant
to be for life and never to be taken lightly, on either party, and God never
takes a relationship He initiates with us lightly, either, even when many
Christians do. I know I did. This tells me that God will love us passionately
even when we don’t want to know, quite frankly, even if God has to bring us
back to Him through discipline, chastisement or even some kind of suffering,
that may stop us in our tracks until we start calling on God again. We don’t
choose Him, He chooses us! I may add, having a calling on your life from God is
not necessarily to be a vicar or reverend or priest, nor do you need to have a
theology degree or anything like that, it is to live as a Christian, obey God
and make Him the first priority in your life. Every human being was created by
God, therefore we are all His children ultimately. In the end, there are either
Christians, and people who have a potential to be Christians. I’m not going to get into arguments about
Calvinism, Universalism, Antinomianism, Arminianism and many other views of
Christianity, because I can’t be bothered! More seriously, I’ve heard
articulate arguments for and against a number of theological arguments, and
they are not particularly too deep or difficult to grasp, but I don’t know what
to believe. Some people say God calls some to serve Him, but not all, and other
arguments say that everyone gets called, but not everyone answers, and there
are similar arguments along those lines. I personally just don’t know, I let
God sort it all out. As God loves us, so we are to love others. So the analogy
of bridegroom and bride is more than just symbolism, it talks about a serious
relationship based on a deepening and growing mutual love, a partnership that
is to be taken absolutely seriously on both sides, a ‘marriage covenant’ if you
like that we as Christians make with Jesus, one that is based on love,
relationship and partnership. That’s absolutely nothing like cold, sterile
religion, and far from the Christianity many outside the faith, and even some
Christians think is Christianity either, is it?
God wants to be loved for who He
is. Don’t we all?!
Many men have seen that in order to
find a woman and get her to fall in love with him and get married and all the
rest of it, he must win her heart. So far, so good. But love, romance, and
marriage seems to be cluttered and muddied with so many other things that have
little if anything to do with love, particularly when a man, and it is more
likely to refer to men in this case, has to be wealthy, or have a good job,
nice house and a flashy car to be attractive to some women, but obviously not
all. It is being wanted, maybe even loved, for what someone has rather than who
they are. Any relationship based on such a contract will fail eventually, or
will be dysfunctional to some degree. In the same way, I think many attractive
women want to be loved for who they are and not just for their beauty. We are
all really searching for something deeper than skin deep attraction or a
romance based on something peripheral or ultimately ephemeral. We want to be
loved for who we are, like our families love us, or should. God loves us
unconditionally, and our love in all cases should try to be the same. I don’t
think it is possible for any human to love in such a way, but when we
understand that love is meant to be selfless, focussed away from ourselves and
on others, and that our love should be for God and for human beings and not for
material things or experiences or sensory pleasures. Not easy in a world filled
with all kinds of attractions and distraction. But I know that when I start to
rest in God’s peace, and make time for Him, and even sit in silence with the
television off for some part of the evening and just meditate on God and His
mercy and compassion and His many promises for my life, particularly the peace
that passes understanding, I begin to see that the peace that the world cannot
give, but only God can, is one of the most precious gifts God can give us,
apart from the material blessings He can and will give us. You can enjoy what
little you might have when you have inner peace, but without that peace all the
best things money can buy will not bring anything that comes anywhere near
close. Peace is its own reward, and, sometimes, it’s just nice to be loved for
who we are.
Looking For a soulmate?
Well,
I guess we all are, but not to digress, when we are looking for the perfect
person, the soulmate who will compliment us in every way, we tend to focus
solely on them, and we all have a tendency to want perfection in someone else,
and then get angry or disappointed or feel let down in some way when Miss, or
Mr, Perfect doesn’t quite live up to our expectations. We all seem to forget,
usually without really thinking about it, that it takes two to tango, it really
does take two to dance perfectly in step, and in this case focussing too much
on every person you think might be the ‘One’ is the first mistake we make in
finding love. In the desperate search for our ‘soulmate’, by looking earnestly
but in a rather distracted fashion wherever we go for him/her/other, we are
looking too much at other people, we are losing some of our peace and we are
not really thinking about what we can offer someone else. In this case, I
believe that we need to focus on ourselves, what we offer someone else, and
perhaps obviously what we are looking for in a relationship. This means asking
God into it, and praying about it. You may also consider the fact that as you
are looking for a soulmate, so are many other people. And I suspect that many
of them are putting the onus on the other person to be perfect, and not
reflecting on themselves. Quite simply, and to cut a long story short, if you
are looking for your soulmate, you need to be the soulmate someone else is looking
for. This means that learning to be patient while you wait, learning to relax
and enjoy your singleness even, and being the person you really want to be is
vital. I don’t know about you, but I have spent large chunks of my life
pretending to be someone else, or living up to someone else’s expectations of
me (when they probably couldn’t give a toss anyway) when now I want to be the
person God wants me to be, and really find out who I am. I just want to be
loved for who I am. Don’t we all?
Great post, yet again.
ReplyDeleteI also don't bother with the calvanism, universalisn etc etc. Over on facebook I have seen people really debate endlessly on that stuff, all of it really is unecessary and the word of God told us to avoid those idle babblings and things falsely called knowledge. I've noticed most of the persons caught up in that stuff are prideful and are obsessed with disputing over words. It's actually one of the things that annoy me, those stupid debates on such things.
Great points about our relationship with God. Another great read. :-)
Thanks Knowlesy!! ;~)
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