Here are some helpful posts for singles:
Will I Be Single Forever? – Stephen Witmer (DG)
5 Tips for Maximizing Your Singleness – Marshall Segal (Crossway)
What Is the Gift of Singleness? – Tim Challies
Here are some helpful posts for singles:
Will I Be Single Forever? – Stephen Witmer (DG)
5 Tips for Maximizing Your Singleness – Marshall Segal (Crossway)
What Is the Gift of Singleness? – Tim Challies
Jesus ascended into heaven where he still acts and still speaks through his followers, through his church. But how do we know what he wants us to do? How do we know what he wants us to say? In the last post we said that part of the answer was the Word. Another part of the answer is through prayer.
In Acts 1:15-26, the disciples are guided by the Word to replace Judas. They find two men that fit the necessary requirements for an apostle – they had to be with Jesus during his ministry, and especially be eye-witnesses to his resurrection. Having determined the possibilities, the disciples then pray for direction.
They pray to the Lord. In the context of Acts, Jesus is often referred to as Lord. And so it is possible that we should understand the disciples as praying to Jesus. As the Head of the church, it would make sense for them to seek his direction. As the one who chose the original twelve disciples, it would make sense for them to speak to him about his chosen replacement of Judas.
And so we ought to seek direction from Jesus in prayer. Our churches need to pray together seeking his direction in how he wants us to apply his Word in our specific situations. We will look at three specific applications tomorrow.
We have been considering the single life. In the New Covenant that Jesus ushered in, it is good to be single. Yes, there are challenges to be overcome, but there are real benefits too. Yet as we consider singleness, it is good to remember that life is not ultimately about being single or married. Life is about serving the King and seeking to advance his kingdom.
In Matthew 19:10-12, Jesus says that some people remain single for the kingdom of God. Have you ever considered that possibility? There are places singles can go and things singles can do that married people simply can’t. Perhaps God would call you to go to a place that would be too dangerous to bring a family, but you could go alone. Or perhaps God would call you to a place where the logistics of bring a family would be impossible, but you could go alone.
Think of Paul. He traveled all over the Roman Empire preaching the gospel. As he travelled he was beaten, whipped, stoned, imprisoned, and thrown out of town. Now imagine Paul married. Would he have taken the risks he did knowing he was responsible to provide for a family? Could he have financially afforded to travel all over the Empire with a family? And just imagine him on the road with a three year old on his sore back (from the many lashes) and his five year old walking next to him hand in hand. “Dad, my legs are sore. Are we there yet?” Meanwhile his wife a few paces behind with the baby calls out, “Paul, we need to stop to feed the baby.” Paul simply could not have accomplished all of God’s purpose for him if he had married.
Or consider Charles Wesley. As a single adult he travelled all over England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland preaching the gospel. In his 40s he married. For a few years he tried to keep up his travels with wife and eventually child in tow, but it proved too difficult. So he settled down to carry out the ministry in one area. He simply could not do as a married man what he could do as a single adult. Both stages of his ministry were important, but the point here is that some things are better done as a single person.
So the question is, what is God calling you to do? What purpose does he have for you in advancing his kingdom? You may be able to do it better as a single person. Then again, perhaps you can do it better as a married person. Either way, the focus must be on the kingdom. Singleness or marriage are secondary.
This is especially important for single people to hear. Too often, singleness is viewed as simply a time to seek a spouse. I’m suggesting that you invest your singleness in something much greater – God’s kingdom. If you find a spouse along the way and marriage fits with God’s plan for you – fine. If not, keep serving. The focus of the single life should not be searching for a spouse, but serving the King. God’s purpose for you is much greater than the possibility of marriage.
Oh, that singles would approach their singleness as an opportunity to serve the Lord! Oh that married people would use their marriages as opportunities to serve the Lord! Oh that together we would seek first the kingdom of God!
So far we have noted that it is good to be single, yet there are some challenges. Today we want to consider two benefits.
Benefit #1 – Simplicity
Single people can focus their time and energy in one direction, whether that be school, career, or some other pursuit. They have more freedom to take opportunities that come along. It is easier to move from one place to another. Family complicates things. Our focus is torn in different directions. Time is divided. Responsibilities increase. It is harder to provide for a family than one person. It is harder to take opportunities, and harder to move. Married folks have worldly troubles or tribulations that single people never have ( I Corinthians 7:28). Not that family is bad, but it does complicate life. Both singleness and marriage have benefits, and one benefit of singleness is simplicity.
Benefit #2 – Undivided Attention
This benefit is directly related to the first, but moves in a specific direction. Paul writes in I Corinthians 7:32-35:
I want you to be free from anxieties. The unmarried man is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord. But the married man is anxious about worldly things, how to please his wife, and his interests are divided. And the unmarried or betrothed woman is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to be holy in body and spirit. But the married woman is anxious about worldly things, how to please her husband. I say this for your own benefit, not to lay any restraint upon you, but to promote good order and to secure your undivided devotion to the Lord.
In marriage, much attention must be given to my spouse – his/her needs, wants, and concerns. The single person can focus solely on God. Now certainly in loving family we can show love to God, and in serving family we can serve God. But the married person’s attention is still divided.
In the passage above, Paul uses the same phrase three times with three different objects: “how to please” followed by “the Lord,” his wife,” and “her husband.” Married people can easily replace the Lord with wife or husband. This of course is idolatry. This does not have to happen, but the temptation is there – a temptation single people simply don’t have.
While Paul envisions (and assumedly enjoys) this benefit of undivided attention to God for single people, I fear that it is rather rare today. Too many single people find any number of other things to distract themselves from undivided attention to God. And many dream of that perfect spouse who will fulfill all their needs; that is, they have turned their dreamed-of-spouse into an idol.
But Paul challenges singles to something better. With the simplicity and undivided attention possible with the single life, Paul challenges singles to devote their lives to God. Instead of living a distracted life, focus on serving him. Instead of pining for someone, hunger and thirst more for God.
The greatest benefits of singleness is the simplicity that makes undivided attention to God possible. If you are single, embrace this benefit with everything you have. Focus on God. Seek him. Serve him. Love him. Live for him.
In keeping with our theme this week, here are some good articles about the single life:
Tim Keller reminds us that singleness is a good Biblical option in a world that either trivializes or idolizes family.
Brooks Waldron considers the meaning of singleness.
Finally, Dave Egner has a booklet in pdf format you can read online that explodes myths, considers Scriptures, and addresses issues related to the single life. Highly recommended for singles and indeed anyone in the church.
Next week, we’ll continue looking at the single life as we consider benefits, as well as the right focus.
It is good to be single, but there are challenges. One challenge is self-control, which we considered yesterday. Another challenge is loneliness.
Challenge #2 – Loneliness
This is a huge challenge for many singles. I was single for eight years, and it was a challenge to me. However, it would be good to begin with the realization that marriage is not the cure for loneliness. There are many lonely married people. Even in good marriages, your spouse will not meet all your relational needs. Guys need guy comaraderie. Ladies need girl friends. Men and women are built differently, and we need friends of the same gender. Put bluntly, a spouse is not God – a spouse simply cannot meet all your needs. Now certainly a spouse can help with this challenge, but so can friends. To address the challenge of loneliness, we need community – we need family.
As Barry Danylak points out in his book Redeeming Singleness, physical offspring was of high priority in the Old Testament. And so the physical family was of central importance. But starting with the prophets who forsaw the New Covenant, and especially in the New Testament, the focus shifts to spiritual offspring, to making disciples (Isaiah 53:10, 54:1, Galatians 4:19, Matthew 28:19-20, etc.). And so in the New Testament a spiritual family becomes the focus; that is, the church.
Whether single or married, God has provided us with a new family. God has adopted us as his children. In Christ, we are brothers and sisters. Jesus points us to this new family. Consider for instance, Matthew 12:46-50:
While he was still speaking to the people, behold, his mother and his brothers stood outside, asking to speak to him. But he replied to the man who told him, “Who is my mother, and who are my brothers?” And stretching out his hand toward his disciples, he said, “Here are my mother and my brothers! For whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother.”
Jesus tells us that his disciples are his new family. Those who believe in and follow Jesus have become a new family. Or consider Jesus’ words in Mark 10:29-30:
Jesus said, “Truly, I say to you, there is no one who has left house or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or lands, for my sake and for the gospel, who will not receive a hundredfold now in this time, houses and brothers and sisters and mothers and children and lands, with persecutions, and in the age to come eternal life.
If we leave our physical family behind, how do we gain a family a hundredfold? We gain a spiritual family – God’s church. And how should we treat one another in the church? Consider Pauls’ words in I Timothy 5:1-2:
Do not rebuke an older man but encourage him as you would a father, younger men as brothers, 2 older women as mothers, younger women as sisters, in all purity.
The church is a family and we should treat one another as family.
To address loneliness, we need community, we need family. And God has provided us with a new family. Singles don’t need to marry to find family, they already have a family in the church. If the church is functioning right, singles can find the community they need in their church family. “If” of course is the big word here. How many of our churches are functioning as a family?
What singles need is not be split off into a singles group; they need their church family. They need the church to be the family God designed it to be. That means we care for each other and serve one another. It means we get together during the week for meals and activities. I’m not talking about church programs here, but people just getting together as family. It means we invite people over to our homes, and visit in other people’s homes. It means we call each other on the phone, e-mail each other, maybe use Facebook. It means we make sure no one is alone on holidays. It means we celebrate each other’s birthdays. It means we break free from the individualism of our culture. It means married folks realize that the church is a family, and that they have obligations to this family as well as their physical one. It means we act like family.
This is one of my dreams for the church I pastor – that we would act like the family we are. That singles and married folks alike would be attracted to our church because they find in it a family. By God’s grace, we are moving in this direction, though we have a long ways to go as well. What about your church? Don’t grumble that your church isn’t like that. Be the catalyst to change things. Start inviting people to your home. Make sure no one is alone on holidays. Celebrate birthdays. Start to treat your church as family.
Loneliness is a real challenge for singles, and married people too. God designed the church to be the family we need. Let’s seek to be that family!
It is good to be single, but there are challenges. Of course there are challenges to being married too. Challenges do not negate the goodness of either singleness or marriage. Let me address two challenges of the single life – one in this post, and one in the next.
Challenge #1 – Self-Control
We live in a sex-crazed culture that no longer believes sex must be reserved for marriage. Paul faced a similar situation with the Corinthian church. And he was very clear, that Christians had to be different:
Flee from sexual immorality. Every other sin a person commits is outside the body, but the sexually immoral person sins against his own body. Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body. – I Corinthians 6:18-20
To the unmarried and the widows I say that it is good for them to remain single as I am. But if they cannot exercise self-control, they should marry. For it is better to marry than to burn with passion. – I Corinthians 7:8-9
If anyone thinks that he is not behaving properly toward his betrothed, if his passions are strong, and it has to be, let him do as he wishes: let them marry—it is no sin. But whoever is firmly established in his heart, being under no necessity but having his desire under control, and has determined this in his heart, to keep her as his betrothed, he will do well. – I Corinthians 7:36-37
Sex is reserved for marriage. If you cannot exercise self-control, you should marry. This is the only imperative requiring marriage in the New Testament. And yet, verse 37 makes it clear that self-control is possible even in a close relationship. In opposition to much of our culture, we must reject the notion that we are mere animals who can’t help ourselves. We are image-bearers of God. And as Christians, we have the Holy Spirit living inside of us to empower us. We must act like it!
Our world of course does not make this easy. We must vigilantly guard our eyes and our thoughts (married folks must do this too). We must embrace the truth that there is more to life than romance and sex. (Is not our world’s pre-occupation with sex a clear sign of its sickness?) If we enter a relationship, we ought to keep it non-physical. The Song of Solomon gives great advice to this end for single people:
I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem, by the gazelles or the does of the field,
that you not stir up or awaken love until it pleases. – Song of Solomon 2:7
Simply put, don’t do things that stir up feelings that you cannot satisfy. When I was a teen, all I heard was don’t have sex. But the Bible tells us not do things that will awaken those desires. I wonder how many single people struggle or live defeated lives simply because they are unaware of the Bible’s instruction here or have chosen to reject it. Don’t awaken desires you can’t fulfill.
So the first challenge is self-control. And it is a real challenge. But by vigilantly guarding your eyes, thoughts, and desires, with the truth of God’s Word and the power of the Spirit, you can victoriously face this challenge. It need not define you. There is much more to life than this. It really is good to be single.
It is good to be single.
As Barry Danylak explores in his book, Redeeming Singleness, people in the Old Testament had to marry to have physical offspring. Offspring was necessary for the coming Messiah, and was closely linked to blessings. But now the Messiah has come, and our blessings are found in him. Marriage is no longer necessary. We have the option to remain single, and it is a good option.
Paul writes in I Corinthians 7:8 – “To the unmarried and the widows I say that it is good for them to remain single as I am.” It is good to remain single like Paul. Jesus too, the only perfect human being, was single. It is good to be single.
Of course it is also good to marry. Paul writes in verses 27-28 – “Are you bound to a wife? Do not seek to be free. Are you free from a wife? Do not seek a wife. But if you do marry, you have not sinned, and if a betrothed woman marries, she has not sinned.” It is okay to be married. It is okay to be single. Both are good options.
We all need to hear this, for the following reasons:
It is good to be single. Yes, there are some challenges (married folks have challenges too), but there are also some benefits. We will look at these in upcoming posts….
Redeeming Singleness – Barry Danylak
Redeeming Singleness by Barry Danylak is not your usual book on singleness. It is not about dating, nor is it even focused on bringing out principles for living the single life. Rather it offers a tour through the Bible’s teaching on singleness.
Starting in Genesis, he shows how physical offspring, and hence marriage, were of highest importance in the Old Testament. Physical offspring was a mark of God’s blessing, and necessary to preserve one’s inheritance and name. Through physical offspring would come the Messiah. You did not want to be single in the Old Testament.
But everything changes in Jesus. The Messiah has come. Our eternal inheritance and name are found in Jesus. The mark of blessing is not having offspring, but being adopted as God’s offspring. And the focus has moved from physical offspring to spiritual offspring. Now, it is okay to be single. Indeed, following Jesus and Paul, it is good to be single.
These are the strands Danylak traces through the pages of Scripture. He closes by exploring Paul’s sustained discussion of singleness in I Corinthians 6-7, and what that means for singles today.
By connecting the dots of the Scripture’s teachings on singleness, new insights are gained. Many books simply re-clothe familiar truths, but I found myself actually learning again and again. I used his biblical study as the basis of a two week sermon series, and saw the same learning going on in the eyes of the congregation. His study has become foundational in my thinking on singleness, and will influence directly and indirectly my future posts this week on singleness based on those sermons. Highly recommended for pastors, any who minister to single adults, and anyone who is single.