Check out the featured post here: https://www.ibelieve.com/relationships/when-your-ideas-of-love-were-all-wrong.html
#RelationshipGoals
At the age of twenty-two, I not so fondly recall lying face-down on my hardwood floor, pounding my fists and crying as I cried out to the Lord.
After countless failed and initiated likings of the boy next door phenomenon, I was fed up with wanting to be in a romantic relationship but never having anyone return the feelings.
I felt the Holy Spirit prompt in my heart, why do you try to compare love to what you know is a fake imitation? And through a process of surrender, I handed over my love life (or lack thereof). Two weeks later, I met my first and only boyfriend I still have to this day. And the funny thing is, I never initiated or saw it coming. When I met him, I said, God, I’m focusing on you right now and not thinking about a relationship.
Almost four years later, I realize my thinking before handing my love life over to God was highly flawed.
Perhaps it’s because society has misconstrued love for infatuation. It has replaced what the Bible says about relationships with perceptions of Instagram filters, #relationshipgoals, and seemingly perfect dates. It speaks the belief that if we don’t feel butterflies, have the Hallmark version of our prince riding in on a white horse, or present a boyfriend/girlfriend mentality found in the inner pages of Cosmo, then we’ve done something wrong. We begin to question why our love is different, why it hasn’t happened yet, why it doesn’t appear like everyone else’s, and why it isn’t like the movies.
Until my twenties, I remember when I used to dream of being in a relationship. How doing the cute things everyone posts on social media would make me feel. I pondered what it would be like to finally change my status on Facebook from “single” to “in a relationship” and how everyone would react. I lusted after the feelings I would get to finally have someone during Christmas when it seems that loneliness is at its finest.
But then I began to realize that not only were these thoughts vain in who I was/am and what I eventually wanted to enter into with another person, but they also gave me a vain and distorted view of what I should accept/receive/allow from them.
Quickly, God began to speak to my heart that before I would ever enter a relationship or grow within one (friendships included here, friends), I needed to understand what He and His Word said about them. I needed to exchange my cloudy mirror of relationships for a brand-new transaction of what God says about this love.
Because although I’d written a lot about love before this time, I never came close to fully understanding it. And it was not until I concluded that throughout my singleness, in praying for a future spouse, I may have had the idea of love all wrong.
At first, my intentions in longing were not wrong. I wanted them to love Jesus more than me, be taller, attractive, love working out, serving others, etc., but what I should have understood before all of those things was the “why?”.
Why should I be in a relationship? What does the Bible tell me about this kind of love (and not my friend’s comparative love life, social media’s presentation, or even my family’s expectations and feelings of remorse for my impatience, but I stated patient waiting)? Why do I want to be in a relationship? Is this something God wants for me?
As I began seeking answers to these questions, I created an openness within myself. A vulnerability (openness), freedom, Christ-like mentality, and surrender to receive whatever the Lord had in-store regardless of the outcome.
Open, in the sense that when someone came along and didn’t check all the boxes (the ones that weren’t mandatory), I would give them a chance. Just because a person doesn’t meet the worldly standards of what everyone else says is right or fits their bill of love, we need to analyze if they replicate Christ’s.
Freeing, I now know I do not need a relationship to complete or define me. Before Adam’s relationship with Eve in the Bible, God had already given him a place, purpose, provision, identity, and parameters- all before it was “not good for man to be alone.”
Adapting a Christ-like mentality, I know no relationship I ever enter into will be perfect or like what the Disney movies tell me. As I continue to date, I fully recognize that my boyfriend and I have flaws, but God never asked for perfect people. He asked us to love broken ones that will not easily break in a cord of three strands. As dating partners struggle, we must learn not to judge someone just because they sin differently from us. But through sharing our vulnerabilities, we trust God to strengthen us in the process.
Today, even on the complex and off days where the relationship doesn’t seem right, I fight against the world that tells me “maybe he isn’t the one” and listen to my Father above who can give me that command if that’s His will to do so.
Today, as small arguments come, I have the wisdom of God not to base the sum of my relationship on a silly matter that weighs so much less than the total of all the good memories we have shared.
Today, I am learning to understand that just because every day isn’t sunshine, fun, and rainbows, I will know that even God, too, got frustrated with His people, but He loved them anyway.
To my relationships present, past, and future, know that I am still working on this, but that I firmly believe and owe you these things:
· A love that sees the purpose of entering a romantic setting not for satisfying my own needs, but for being a helpmate to bring one another closer to each other and Christ.
· A trust that takes the risk of love even if it isn’t foolproof to work out, because who knows if a man will succeed other than the one who created him?
· A faith that places God above you (yes, even you) and helps you place God above me, (yes even me).
· A hope that knows even when the bad times come, you don’t give up. After all, just because something has a ding in it doesn’t mean you throw it away. We all have things we have to grow through together, and that’s part of the loving process.
And how does God define these relationships? These friendships and pursuits of the ones we want to become the most intimate? The goals and statues we wish, ask, pray, might I even say beg to have?
He reminds us that His Love must be enough first, and then everything will fall into place.
We were not created to be alone. We were created for community, but when it comes to relationships and what God thinks, I believe he tells us two things:
1)Only when Jesus is the first and most important relationship in our lives can we be granted access to any relationship with others.
This is not to say that He withholds any good thing from us, because we know that He “withholds no good thing” (Psalm 84:11), but it is to reiterate the point that until we and our identity are found in Christ alone, we will be looking to mere men to fill a gap that only He can satisfy.
2)Once we have this personal and intimate relationship with Christ, we must never lose sight of it, even when we enter into relationships with others.
Whether it is a friendship, romance, or business partner, relationships are imperative to our growth as Christians, but they are gifts from God. We must honor Christ first.
So what do healthy relationships look like compared to the worldly definition of these status updates and Snapchat streaks of romance?
Godly love looks like putting God first even when it means disappointing or placing your significant other on hold to focus on God. It looks like not confusing worshiping God with worshiping your partner and instead learning to worship God while you love your neighbor as yourself (and not the other way around).
Christ-like dating looks like the Biblical definition of marriage. The two become one not because a husband is greater than the wife and the wife owes him that, but because they have mutual love, honor, and respect to grow closer to God as they bring out their best interests. It is willing to give everything for that person not because you feel the love of butterflies, but because you feel the love and compassion God provided for you on the cross now poured out for you to lay down for that other person.
Although I can say that the words “dating” and “romance” are not found explicitly by that search in the Bible (trust me, I’ve tried), I can tell you that God does desire for you to enter into these things when and if it is the right time for you.
Just because most of my close friends are married doesn’t mean that I need to freak out because I’m not.
Just because you’re still single after 25 years and everyone in your family looks at you like you’re crazy doesn’t mean that you won’t ever be in a relationship.
Just because you don’t know what you’re doing in your first relationship when it comes doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong if it looks comparatively different to the outside world. That’s a good sign that it looks more like Christ and a lot less like the fake perceptions of the pleasures and lusts that Netflix and chill first dates tend to give off.
Genuine relationships are made up of learning to look past their sins and not seeing them as more significant than your own (this is not a cop-out to excuse inexcusable behavior or abuse, though by any means). When you are upset, they look like sharing with your friend, spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend because you value authenticity and honesty over hurting someone’s feelings!
#RelationshipGoals reveal that at the center of any core relationship, Jesus must be found intimately and separately. And at their completion, they involve the willfully giving away of oneself at the detriment, love, and honor of another person.
Just as Christ gave His body for us, that alone demonstrates how we should partake in relationships of any sort with others.
True #relationshipgoals are found within the heavenly realm of who God says they are with and what they consist of when He says it’s time to fulfill them.
Agape, Amber
The Comments
Chris Lindley
I married a girl of another religion. My mother warned me. Being “only” 27 I thought I knew what I was doing. Not sure the religion turned out to be the real problem. She was 7 years younger and after 2 daughters and 7 years of marriage she found someone more flamboyant and with more money. She left me the house and the kids. The girls are doing fine and gave me a granddaughter and a grandson. I kept busy raising my daughters and never dated again. I realized that I could never trust a women ever again. I just turned 71 and am retired. I often ponder what I did wrong, I could never go through that kind of pain ever again, so I gave up. I do enjoy being alone, so it seemed far easier than reliving the horrors of a relationship. I don’t have many regrets and never wanted to increase that number. It is possible to have a happy life alone, even though most people cannot imagine it.
ambernginter
> Chris LindleyChris, I am so sorry to hear of your situation and just said a prayer for you. I am so sorry to hear that you had to walk through such a difficult marriage, but I commend you for your faithfulness to the Lord in the matter and noting that it is still possible for you to live a happy life alone. Though you may be alone maritally, know that the Lord is with you eternally. You are already complete and whole. May he comfort you as you continue to live the life He has planned for you to the fullest.