A Single’s Response To A Pastor’s Apology To The Single Community

prayer-closeI just read an interesting blog post
in which a pastor apologizes to the
single community.

Some of the things Pastor John
Pavlovitz mention include:

You need to know that you are
valued and treasured and
appreciated, even when we have
failed to let you know.

You are The Church.

You are not second class Christians.

You are not inferior members of our communities.

You are not worth less than those who have found married life
reality.

Your singleness is not a temporary affliction that you need to be
healed of, or a sad fate you need to be rescued from.

It is not a sign that your faith is suspect or that your prayers are
not earnest or that your goodness is at all in doubt.

and so much more.

I believe this post is powerful as I, myself, am a single over 35, and I
also minister to singles of different ages and can see how some can
feel inferior by members of church communities who provide a
“You poor thing” type attitude once they discover one’s age and
single status.

I especially like when he says, “It is not a sign that your faith is
suspect or that your prayers are not earnest or that your goodness is
at all in doubt” 
This rings true in most mega church communities where
so much emphasis is on faith that if you feel you don’t have something in

life by a certain timeline or deadline (i.e. if you’re single and over 40)
then something must obviously be wrong with you and/or your faith – without
considering the possibility that maybe you’re still single for a reason and that
marriage is simply a shift in one’s season, not to be dictated by man’s
timetable but God’s.

For example, I remember when a single young lady over 35 told me that her
then pastor’s wife (aka “First lady”) asked her if she was dating anyone and
the young lady’s response was, “No.” As soon as she said that the pastor’s wife
proceeded to tell the young lady that she needs to ‘press harder,’ in other words she
needed to pray harder for a spouse, thus indicating that somewhere in the young lady’s
prayer closet, as she prayed and asked God for a husband, she was lacking.

Either God wasn’t hearing her, or she wasn’t praying hard enough.

I’ve also sat in meetings with singles in which they were told over the pulpit
that one of the reasons they’re still single is because of sin in their lives.  How many
people do you know who sin, shack up and still end up getting married?
They sinned, yet they got married – with sin in their lives. Not condoning sin, but
simply pointing out some of the assumptions and judgements that some singles have
to be confronted with.

Marriage is a choice.

In most cases singleness is a choice as well, but it’s not up to us
as a Christian community to try and dissect one’s personal life or lump everyone
into categories or deem one marital status as more superior than the other.  When
this is done you end up with more people marrying for the wrong reasons while
giving an appearance of what many deem as “God’s graduation” while not really putting
in the right amount of time to really get to know if the person you’re dating is truly God’s
best for you.  Some are in such a rush to get over to the “married people’s club” that they
ignore red flags in their significant other because they covet the “other side.”  Paul says
in Philippians 4:11, Not that I speak in respect of want: for I have learned, in whatsoever
state I am, therewith to be content.  So whether you’re single or married as long as
you’re doing what God has called you to do in order help someone and to bring others
to Christ…whether you do it while

single or married God still sees as valuable and precious in His sight.

So I appreciate what John Pavlovitz is attempting to explain.

An apology is definitely a nice start and a nice gesture, however
let’s take it one step further and simply not judge someone else or make baseless
assumptions about someone else because of their marital status and let’s simply
enjoy our journeys, appreciate our different seasons while realizing that we are
all valuable members of the body of Christ and that we’re all one in God’s sight.

There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither
male nor female: for
ye are all one in Christ Jesus. Galatians 3:28
Your thoughts?

Also, check out John’s complete blog post here:
http://johnpavlovitz.com/2015/05/14/a-pastors-apology-to-the-single-community/

 

Kim Brooks, author of bestselling novels, She That Findeth, He\'s Fine...But is He Saved? and more. www.kimontheweb.com

Single, Saved and Celibate

Being celibate is the new black.

Whether its actress, Kendra Johnson who plays Linda, from Tyler Perry’s sitcom, Love Thy
Neighbor,
informing her online date that she’s celibate, or actress, Meagan Good, sharing
how she and her husband, Hollywood executive, DeVon Franklin, were abstinent with
each other until marriage – more women are choosing to hold on to the cookie, but for
more than 90 days – they’re holding on to it until he puts a ring on it and the two say, “I do.”

But in the meantime, with media claiming it to be so “hard” for a single black woman to settle
down with a good man, what’s a single girl with standards to do?

Is it realistic to date someone several weekends in a row while the maintaining no expectation
of physical dessert after dinner?

Not only is it realistic, it’s also best in order to maintain one’s dignity, spiritual grounding and peace.

Choosing to be abstinent until marriage is not a death sentence, it’s actually a proclamation of
freedom – freedom from settling for less than God’s best and freedom from all the emotional
complications and drama that accompanies sex before marriage.

The key to maintaining your standards while dating is to make sure you date someone who holds
similar standards as you.

Let your date know, up front, that you’re abstinent until marriage.

If he tests you along the way, maintain your stance and back away if you have to – he’ll respect
you even more for it.

Men respect women with standards.

If a man has to work in order to win your love, which includes his working to keep his hands
off you, then if he’s really into you he’ll respect your desire and will do whatever it takes in
order to keep you.

A man who is out to get some and that’s it, with no plans of a future with you, will try you
and once he sees he can’t get any – he’s on to the next one.

So don’t get offended if, during your quest to remain set apart, that many fall off along the way.
They weren’t yours to begin with because the one God has for you, is for you and he’ll not only
respect your decision to wait he’ll also value you the more for it and would also want to wait, too.

Can two walk together, except they be agreed? Amos 3:3

 

kendrajohnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Actress, Kendra Johnson of “Love Thy Neighbor”

Kim Brooks, author of bestselling novels, She That Findeth, He\'s Fine...But is He Saved? and more. www.kimontheweb.com

The Word Network interview with Bishop Bloomer

The following is the clip from my interview with Bishop Bloomer on his Rejoice in the Word show.  Check it out and be blessed (also leave your comments below)

 

 

Click here for our eStore

 

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Kim Brooks, author of bestselling novels, She That Findeth, He\'s Fine...But is He Saved? and more. www.kimontheweb.com

Should I Be Debt Free Before Dating or Marriage?

outofdebtgirl

It’s often been said that before you enter a serious
dating relationship, and definitely before you even
consider marriage that you must first be totally
out of debt.

It’s better to be an asset than a liability in a
relationship, right?

Well, my friend and colleague, Black Enterprises contributor
and author, Dorethia Conner Kelly, begs to differ.

 

Dorethia feels it’s okay to have some debt if married, and that while
married you and your partner can work together more effectively
to pay off your debt that much quicker.

However, she does agree that, ideally, it’s best to be as
debt free as possible while single, and that now is the perfect
time to use this time to go ahead and tackle that debt to get
rid of it as much as you can – because once you’re
out of debt you can work on your next goal; building wealth.

I’m excited because today marks the official launch of Dorethia’s
first book, #MoneyChat The Book which is titled after her weekly
twitter cast on Mondays. For years, as the president of Conner
Financial Coaching, LLC Dorethia has offered tons of advice
and helped plenty people not only get out of debt but get off
to a great start toward a financially rewarding and secure future.

If one of your New Year’s goals is to do better with your finances
(which it should be) then purchase or download your copy of this
new book and read it as the principles mentioned (plus she gives
tons of free websites to help you manage your money) can be
applied immediately after reading it.

Download or order it now, and enjoy
(your future hubby will thank you for it 😉

Here’s the link to get it:

http://www.amazon.com/MoneyChat-BOOK-Successfully-Financial-Security-ebook/dp/B00TIVG1IW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1424135415&sr=8-1&keywords=moneychat+the+book 

In case you missed my 30 minute podcast interview with Mrs. Conner Kelly, you can listen to it here now:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/kimbrooks/2015/02/11/money-chat-with-author-dorethia-conner-kelly

Kim Brooks, author of bestselling novels, She That Findeth, He\'s Fine...But is He Saved? and more. www.kimontheweb.com