Thursday, February 3, 2011

Flannery Was Right--A Good Man Is Hard To Find

This week, Faith Barista has asked us to share our thoughts on the topic, "What I Wish Someone Told Me About Dating."  This is an edited re-post of an earlier piece I'd written.

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There is a group of beautiful, godly young women in my church who take seriously the words from Titus 2.  These young ladies seek out wisdom from the older women in the congregation, and sometimes I think they mistake my full head of gray hair for wisdom.  Whether because of my hair or the fact that I’ve been married to the beloved Swede for more than twenty-five years, they invited me to meet with them. They wanted to know about male/female relationships and about marriage. Their questions were honest and simple and sweet; they were holy. But I think the unstated question most wanted to ask was this, “How do I find a godly man to marry?”

Were I to have answered that question honestly, I’d have had to have said, “I haven’t got the foggiest idea.”

I certainly couldn’t point them to my own experience because, according to most popular Christian authors writing authoritatively on the subject, I had clearly gone about it all wrong. As a young girl, I knew my King James told me not to be unequally yoked, but I took one look at the young men in my church’s youth group and knew there was nothing for me there. Not that any were interested, mind you. So I dated a few guys in high school about whom, if I stood back far enough and squinted my eyes, I could tell myself that although some may not have actually been Christians, I could see how someday they might be and thus convince myself that I wasn’t truly backslidden.

Then there were the blind dates. I’ve lost count of the times well-intentioned friends tried to fix me up with acquaintances using this description, “You’ll like him. He’s tall.” Having reached the Amazonian height of five-eleven by the sixth grade, it became important to me to find a young man I could look up to. Literally. Even if he had disgusting personal habits or was an axe murder. Just so long as he was tall.

There is a prominent voice in the homeschooling community who articulates a very convincing argument that courtship is God’s only way of finding a spouse. Normally, whenever I hear a speaker or author advocating anything he or she has written as being God’s way of doing anything, I clap my hands over my ears and run screaming from the room. This writer, however, is highly intelligent and puts forward a very compelling argument, and I guess I was seduced into thinking he was smarter than I was. So the first time a young man expressed interest in spending time with our baby girl, the Swede and I resolved to follow this author’s advice as neatly detailed on two pages of his book, including ample white space and margins.

Problem was, the young man and his parents--good people who were also trying to be faithful followers of Christ--hadn’t read the book. They thought we were nuts. And, real life, and particularly male/female relationships tend to be messy and not easily defined by words on two pages of a book, especially with white space and margins. Trust me, the experience wasn’t pretty.

My in-laws celebrated fifty years of marriage this past December, having told their parents they wanted to marry during Dad’s graduate school vacation, two days before Christmas. My grandparents eloped across the Pennsylvania state line. Other godly, intelligent, hard-working, faithful couples I know married while still students and without a job in sight.

So how did I find the beloved Swede? I like to say that he blindsided me. While I was busy scanning the horizon for tall men who weren’t axe murders, he emerged from a group of mutual friends and asked me out. It’s probably closer to the truth to say that God threw him at me, as if to say, “Here. You obviously don’t know what you’re doing. Here is a good, good man--better than you deserve.  My gift to you.”

And I think that really is my answer to those young ladies who were gracious enough to listen to my ramblings about life and relationships and marriage. You don’t find a good man. Sometimes God throws one at you.  Sometimes you trip over him.  Sometimes like Anne Shirley and Gilbert Blythe, he's been there all along.  However you find the love of your life, remember--he’s a gift. And I treasure mine.

And he really, really likes my gray hair.

15 comments:

Amy Sullivan said...

Nancy,
I knew I would like this post just from the title!

I am so thankful God threw a good man at me. Although, I don't learn things easily, so he had to throw the same, sweet guy multiple times.

Brandee Shafer said...

Love it!!!

I did the right guy dirty in college and married the wrong guy three years later. Then I divorced the wrong guy and married the right guy after seeing his face again for the first time in eleven years, which was thirteen years after we'd last dated. But it only took us three months to get married after we reconnected.

Boy, I can be a real idiot. It's a wonder that either God or my husband likes me. But they both love me. Lucky me!

Unknown said...

You know why I love you? Because you don't follow the rules...the ones that people make up, so that you are SURE to color in the lines. You just follow Jesus. Yay!
p.s. I'm writing a book on how to clean your house in a God honoring way. MEep! Just kidding.

SL Burlhis said...

What was it he called you? "Silver haired fox"?
Love it.

Lisa notes... said...

I've read those kinds of books too and thought we'd go that approach with my oldest daughter. But as soon as she went away to college, well, so did our plan. ha. She's done well though, but has learned a few lessons the hard way...

Southern Gal said...

This makes me think of my son. Cause he's had some real heartbreak lately. I'm praying the Lord will blindside him with the one...straight from Him.

I read "the book", too. My daughter bought it. It is a good read and makes sense, but I agree it's not for everyone. Sometimes the Lord allows us to suffer heartache so we can grow closer to him. It's hard to see our children suffer, though. Sorry. I didn't mean to go on. You got me thinking with this post.

Sheryl said...

I want to be part of your group!!! I'm probably too old, but I want to be part. I hope I don't duck when God throws that man at me. Really though, I think with the way things have been going lately, I'll trip over him.

Jodi said...

I was an imperfect girl who married an imperfect boy; but that boy desired to be a godly man. And he most certainly grew into one. Prince Charming isn't born--he grows and develops by God's grace and a wife's encouragement.

Anonymous said...

I'm still standing in the middle of the field waving my arms saying, "I'm open! I'm open! Over here!" lol :)
God's timing is perfect, but sometimes I get antsy.

Kim Turnage said...

Love this, Nancy! God threw me a great one too, though I got cold feet and almost backed out the week of the wedding. Thank God I came to my senses!

Bonnie Gray said...

Oh, I love this post so much!! Probably because we're a lot alike. God had to throw my Hubby into my lap too because I sure didn't know what I was doing. LOL.

And I, too, was one to run out of any proverbial hall of a speaker who was giving me the 1-2-3's of dating from that "good book". Maybe good for some people, but just not realistic for me! ;)

This is a classic Nancy post - just AWESOME. Now, you will have a post to print out or a link to email those young gals who want to take you out for coffee. Send it to them after you order your latte. :)

Thanks for keeping the light on for me, Nancy. So glad you posted this in the jam. Love it when you get a little snarky and godly!

keLi said...

i was doing so good at using the laptop for work only ... and then you put Flannery in my reader.

i love reading about your life, because you laugh through it the way that i hope to do some day -- when laughing won't wake the child who finally went down two hours past nap time. :)

also: how's this irony? God told me that my husband was "the one" on the night that he showed up at a dinner date having read the short story in your title -- because i mentioned, in passing, that it was my favorite. any man who reads for fun -- and listens when i talk -- is a man i could spend a lifetime getting to know. :)

Rhonda Schrock said...

You just crack me up! What a great story. Bottom line, God plans our steps if we don't mess around and get in His way.

Love this.

Grinning and waving,

Rhonda

Unknown said...

I have no idea how I ended up with such grace .
I'm afraid to even think back at some of that.

Michelle DeRusha said...

Oh Nancy, I just love this! And you crack me up, girl. Your honesty -- the tall axe-murderer part especially -- is great. I love your grey hair, too, by the way (probably 'cause I got so much of my own!). Love you!

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