aribell
formerly nicola.kirwan
What I found issue with is that, with the sheer mention of desire to marriage, many in this thread jumped to conclusions about the overall contentment of those who desire marriage. It was almost as though they imagined a depressed and desperate person who's only focus in life was securing a man in matrimony. I found it short-sighted and jumpy. When some individual religious preferences explaining how they viewed single women who desire marriage took over their posts in a spirit of self-righteousness, it shifted the focus of the OP's original.
Hmm...I do think that's how the discussion was interpreted, but I think that was probably more a misunderstanding of the points that were being made. I think that desires can be tricky things spiritually. That isn't to say that they're illegitimate or bad necessarily, just that they don't automatically get a free pass or the Lord's stamp of approval. It seemed that in this discussion those who liked the original prayer were trying to say that all our desires must be submitted to the Lord first, and explicitly, and that sometimes, in spite of what we say we want He calls us down a different road. But I don't think we have to fear this, since whenever the Lord calls us to something different we usually end up seeing that that was the better path anyway, though we might have wanted something different at first. Not trying to revive the argument, just trying to summarize.
As far as contentment is concerned, I think I would say that "busyness" is not contentment and that lot of single women do struggle with genuine contentment whether they lead active lives or not (sometimes especially when they lead active and productive lives...and that's why I started thinking more about the nature of godly contentment, and ended up settling with Paul's "I know how to be abased and I know how to abound," meaning that I am not "affected" by being either single or married. In either state I will seek to love God and others, and insofar as I desire marriage, I desire it as a way to love God and others; but the purpose, whether single or married, doesn't change.
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