Cultural Singleness vs. Christian Singleness
Define the Term
What Christians mean by singleness is often very different to what our secular friends mean by singleness. Basically, in our culture today, if you’re not a Christian and you’re single it's seen as a great thing because you are free, unattached, and uncommitted. You don’t have the entanglements and restraints of a marriage or a long-term relationship. You’re free to–in our culture—sexually experiment, have multiple partners, do what you want.
Whereas for the Christian, we believe the Bible teaches us that you shouldn’t be having sex outside of marriage. For us, being unmarried doesn’t just mean we’re uncommitted, but that we are actually called to be celibate. It’s a very different prospect if you’re single as a Christian than if you’re someone who is single who isn’t a Christian.
7 Myths about Singleness
Sam Allberry
This book responds to 7 common misconceptions about singleness, helping everyone—married and unmarried alike—value the unique opportunities that singleness affords to contribute to the flourishing of the church as a whole.
A Stigma
Therefore in our culture there’s quite a stigma attached to the kind of lifestyle single Christians lead. Not being sexually involved means, at best, you are seen as very strange, and at worst, you are seen as leading a lifestyle that is not healthy for you—it’s harmful, as if you’re repressing something that you ought to be cultivating, expressing, and enjoying.
So, by those terms, you’re almost leading a subhuman life, or a diminished life. The prospects of what it means to be single are very different inside and outside of the Christian faith. This can add a certain level of difficulty for the Christian because they’ve got to be very countercultural in order to be faithful to Jesus as someone who is single.
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