Do Single Christians Need a Better Theology of Singleness, or Better Relationship Training?

As two recent books demonstrate, the answer is both—together. (And not only for singles.)
Marriage is on the decline, at least in the United States, but whether you see that as a crisis or an opportunity depends on how you frame ideal life and co…

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Blessed Are the Cobblers, Recyclers, and Thrift-Store Shoppers

In a world awash with excess possessions, we’re called to see landfill-bound items the way God does.
Where do you want your stuff to go when you die? If you’re like most people, as Adam Minter writes in his fascinating book Secondhand: Travels in…

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What Christians Really Think About the Church’s Relationship Advice

New survey research sheds light on how believers navigate the stickier matters of dating and marriage.
Over the years, Christians have produced and read far more books on how relationships and singleness should work than on how these things actually do…

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God Called Me to Quit My Job. But Did I Trust Him Without a Paycheck?

A round-the-world research trip is teaching me the power of God’s provision.
This past May, when I set out on a year-long trip to research singleness around the world, I was confident that I could keep financial disaster and worry at bay. I had modest …

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How to Date When You’re Almost Middle-Aged

As I close in on 40, I’m learning how to live without marriage (even as I desire it).

The older you get, the weirder your prospects for marriage become. At least that’s what a then-single cousin once told me. Those weren’t her exact words, of course, but the gist of what she said was that our odd quirks and habits become more prominent as time passes, and our rough spots get rougher without enough close human friction to sand-smooth them down.

My cousin was probably younger than I am now when she said that and free to date without today’s many online “aids” to romance. But what she said rings true to my current dating experience as someone within spitting range of 40. (I just turned 38.) The men I meet—on websites and apps and in lines for coffee—are shaped by many more experiences and more settled in life than my youthful self ever imagined, and so am I. During the years when I thought I’d marry in my 20s, I assumed I’d figure out a lot of life’s big questions with a spouse. I thought I’d figure out a lot of me in relationship to a husband and probably children.

Instead, I’ve spent the (gulp) two decades since high school facing those questions with God, my church, and good friends. And rather than my identity being shaped by marriage, my identity now dictates the options I have for marriage, if those even remain for me.

Though I’m younger, perhaps, and childless, my situation is not unlike that of Jane Austen’s Lady Susan Vernon, brought to vivid life in Whit Stillman’s uproarious new film Love & Friendship. In the story, adapted from an early Austen novella, Kate Beckinsale plays a merry widow with a very Machiavellian flare for relationships. Much of the movie revolves around her efforts to badger daughter Frederica …

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