God has been teaching me some powerful 
		lessons lately, though many of them have been painful. We live in a 
		society, even among Christians, where the prevailing thought is often “I 
		cannot and will not be happy unless I am in a dating (or whatever you 
		call it) relationship with someone.” This is not right, and this must 
		not be a mindset adopted by children of God.
		
		Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think a day goes 
		by where I don’t hurt on some level because I am single. It’s lonely 
		sometimes… but not all the time. God has helped me recently to start 
		focusing on some of the advantages I have right now that I may not have 
		later if, by His grace, I am to be married.
		
		I’ll first acknowledge the struggles that 
		have been particularly deep for me, and then look at some advantages 
		that have helped me overcome these struggles.
		
		The Struggles of Being Single
		
		1. Loneliness
		
		This one is obvious. After proclaiming 
		everything to be good in His creation, God Himself observed that “it is 
		not good that the man should be alone…” (Gen 3:18). God created 
		us with a need for relationship, not only with Himself, but with other 
		humans. And God didn’t just leave man alone; in the rest of the verse He 
		said, “…I will make him a helper fit for him.” God gave us a sense of 
		emptiness, and gave us the opportunity to fill that emptiness with 
		something other than ourselves. Personally, I believe God intentionally 
		delayed in creating woman to show man how much he needed her. We are not 
		here for ourselves.
		
		But the child of God, even a single one, 
		should not be characterized by loneliness. Jesus certainly felt this 
		when He was abandoned at the cross as He cried, “My God, my God, why 
		have You forsaken Me?” (Mt 27:46). In a real sense, He had been 
		left completely alone to bear the immeasurable burden at Calvary. But 
		Jesus also understood that in the midst of feeling abandoned, He was not 
		alone. In John 16:32 He affirmed, “Behold the hour is coming, 
		indeed it has come, when you will be scattered, each to his own home, 
		and will leave me alone. Yet I am not alone, for the Father is with me.” 
		David reminds us that “the LORD is near to the brokenhearted, and saves 
		the crushed in spirit” (Ps 34:18). We are never truly alone if 
		the Lord is with us.
		
		2. Discontentment
		
		Sometimes as a single guy, I feel like I 
		don’t have much direction. I’m just floating, waiting for something to 
		come along and give me purpose. It’s like I’m still waiting for my life 
		to begin. But in reality, not only has life begun, but I’m at a critical 
		stage of life that must not be wasted longing for the next one. There 
		are some days I start to buy into that 
		singleness-and-happiness-cannot-coexist mindset, and those days are 
		usually the most miserable and unproductive ones. Self-pity is the enemy 
		of the Christian. Can you imagine Christ thinking like that?
		
		Paul wasn’t kidding when he said, “Now there 
		is great gain in godliness with contentment, for we brought nothing into 
		the world, and we cannot take anything out of the world” (1 Tim 6:7). 
		Contentment is something that God expects out of His people. When His 
		sheep become restless in the green pastures, not only do they miss out 
		on just how green their surroundings are, but they scorn the tender and 
		infinitely wise care of the Shepherd that is watching over them. Here’s 
		the way to think: “…for I have learned in whatever situation I am to be 
		content. I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound. In any 
		and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and 
		hunger, abundance and need. I can do all things through him who 
		strengthens me” (Php 4:11-13).
		
		3. Jealousy
		
		This is where it gets hard. This is where 
		being single stops being just a self-contained struggle, but starts to 
		erode the unity of the body of Christ. I’ve not been one to think of 
		this as a struggle for me, but recent tests have proven me wrong. I’ll 
		be honest: it’s hard when you attend the weddings of those you’ve 
		previously been really close to—it’s just hard. But there is a calling 
		that we have: “Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep”
		(Rom 12:15). When we can learn to honestly, honestly have joy 
		when our brother or sister receives that which we most deeply 
		desire—that, my brethren, is dying to self. That is taking up your 
		cross. And that is what following Christ is all about.
		
		If you haven’t seen them, you should read 
		Gary Henry’s devotionals surrounding this—it’s the June 11 devotional in 
		his book “Reaching Forward.” You can read it here:
		
		http://wordpoints.com/reachingforward/gods-people-give-thanks-june-11/  
		. I’ve been pricked to the heart about this, and I pray that if this is 
		something you’re struggling with, you will take it seriously and make 
		your heart pure before God and your brethren.
		
		Advantages of Being Single
		
		1. Freedom
		
		From what I’ve heard from my married 
		friends, this is one I’ll appreciate a whole lot more from the other 
		side. As an unattached guy, I can make most of my decisions without a 
		lot of consultation with others. Certainly my decisions affect those 
		around me, and I need to tailor my choices to serve others; but for the 
		most part flying solo I get to call the shots. I can decide to take 
		crazy road trips to Bible studies at the last minute. I can drive into 
		the wee hours of the morning as long as I’ve got my Gatorade and peanut 
		butter crackers. I can fill my schedule with serving the church whenever 
		is most convenient for them. There are many areas of service that are 
		most accessible to those not yet married.
		
		Peter lays out this principle in 1 Peter 
		2:16: “Live as people who are free, not using your freedom as a 
		cover-up for evil, but living as servants of God.” If we have fewer 
		responsibilities to fulfill to a wife or husband, we then have a 
		responsibility to use the time and energy we have to serve the Lord and 
		His people with that zeal. So much energy is wasted wallowing in 
		self-pity and wishing we could hurry up and find someone. How much more 
		effective would we be in the Lord’s service if we saw being single as an 
		opportunity instead of a burden?
		
		2. Focus
		
		There are only so many things we can do at 
		once. If we want to enjoy the wonderful God-given joys of marriage, it’s 
		going to be a huge time investment. To gain one good opportunity, we 
		will have to give up other good opportunities. Paul spoke about these 
		things in 1 Cor 7:32-35. “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… I say this… to secure your undivided attention to the 
		Lord.” It is certainly God’s will for husbands and wives to be taking 
		time for each other and investing in that relationship, but that means 
		less time to be doing other good things in the Lord’s service.
		
		Those who are single have an amazing chance 
		to revel in a kind of unbridled zeal in pursuing the things of the Lord. 
		There is a purity to one’s life consisting primarily of one’s self and 
		the Lord. If you have the opportunity to take advantage of that, don’t 
		take it for granted. Study. Pray. Use the extra hours in your schedule 
		to dig deep roots in the character of the Lord Jesus Christ. Learn to 
		“delight yourself in the Lord” (Ps 37:4). You may not get another 
		chance quite like this after you’re married. And especially after you 
		have kids. You don’t just magically become more devoted to God after you 
		get married, so make sure you’re developing into the kind of married 
		person the Lord wants you to be, even while you’re single.
		
		3. Opportunity to Trust
		
		God has created a world in which both 
		pleasures and pains are a tremendous blessing to the Christian. We are 
		directed to “count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of 
		various kinds, for you know the testing of your faith produces 
		steadfastness” (Jas 1:2-3). Each emptiness, each hour of 
		loneliness, each unfulfilled desire is an opportunity to learn to really 
		trust in God. When we are doing well, like Israel, we so easily and 
		thoughtlessly trust in ourselves. But the more we hurt, the harder we 
		lean on God. And that is when we can say, “when I am weak, then I am 
		strong” (2 Cor 12:10).
		
		Tommy Peeler recently said, “God's love for 
		us is more intense than that of the best parent for a child (Isa 
		49:15; Matt 7:11). Therefore, we can rest assured that the things 
		that God prohibits are not forbidden to keep us from enjoying life, but 
		they are given to prevent us destroying ourselves.” I’ve come to realize 
		that the repeated frustrations in my relationship efforts may not be God 
		trying to punish me or just so I can suffer, but to keep me from 
		self-destructing. I don’t know if He’s guided things like this for that 
		specific purpose (He knows I’m not exactly suave when it comes to these 
		things—I’ve brought enough on myself), but I do know that this is an 
		opportunity to learn to wait on the Lord. It is when I completely let go 
		and give Him my heart that I learn to say, “The Lord is my Shepherd; I 
		shall not want,” and really mean it.
		
		I’m putting this up on Valentine’s Day 
		because I know that this is a day of rejoicing for many and a day of 
		misery for others. I feel like I need to put somewhat of a caveat 
		saying: Um, yeah, I still want to get married. But God has blessed me SO 
		much to be where I am in life right now. I feel more content than I have 
		in a very long time, and I wanted to share some of the things God has 
		used to bring me here in hope that it could help my fellow singles. 
		“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of 
		mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, 
		so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with 
		the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God” (2 Cor 
		1:3-4).
		
		I’ll close with a hymn I wrote over the past 
		few months after going through some of these things.
		
		All My Longing
		
		All my longing is before You,
		
		Lord, You know my heart’s desire.
		
		Faithful Helper, I implore You:
		
		Be my comfort through the fire.
		
		 
		
		When frustrations try to shake me,
		
		Lord, You hear my earnest pleas,
		
		Knowing You will not forsake me,
		
		For You are a God who sees.
		
		 
		
		In Your love You give restriction,
		
		Knowing what will hurt my soul.
		
		It is good to face affliction,
		
		Lord, if You are in control.
		
		 
		
		Keep my heart from cold resentment
		
		When my brother’s cares are freed.
		
		In Your word I find contentment—
		
		You will tend to every need.
		
		 
		
		God, in You my heart is mended,
		
		Trusting You makes darkness light
		
		All my longing will be ended,
		
		Lord, when You are my delight.
		
		 
		
		Ps 38:9; Mt 6:8; Isa 43:2
		
		Ps 94:19; 34:15; Heb 13:5; Gen 16:13
		
		Prov 3:11-12; 1 Pt 5:8; Ps 119:71,75
		
		Gen 4:5-6; 1 Pt 2:1; Php 4:11-13; Mt 6:33
		
		Ps 34:18; Ps 139:11-12; Is 42:16; Ps 37:4
		
		 
		
		No matter where we are in life, may God help 
		us to completely trust Him!