are curious about the latest arrival in their building -- a quiet, nice
looking gentleman who keeps to himself.
Shirley says," Sophie, you know I'm shy. Why don't you go over to him
at the pool and find out a little about him. He looks so lonely."
Sophie agrees, and later that day at the pool, she walks up to him and
says, "Excuse me, mister. I hope I'm not prying, but my friend and I were
wondering why you looked so lonely."
"Of course I'm lonely, he says, "I've spent the past 20 years in
prison."
"You're kidding! What for?"
"For killing my third wife. I strangled her."
"What happened to your second wife?"
"I shot her."
"And, if I may ask, your first wife?"
"We had a fight and she fell off a building."
"Oh my," says Sophie. Then turning to her friend on the other side of
the pool, she yells, "Yoo hoo, Shirley. He's single!"
It worries me when I see single people overly anxious to find a mate.
Perhaps, though, we have contributed to the situation by treating singleness
like it's some sort of disease. Singles often comment that they feel out of
place at church (activities tend to be family-oriented) and feel they are
sometimes regarded as less important than married people. While marriage is
a God-ordained institution, I think we do a disservice by suggesting that
singles are somehow "incomplete" until they find that "certain someone."
The truth is, while Paul held marriage in high regard (Eph. 5), he
preferred being single and recommended it to Christians at Corinth in the
difficult situation they were facing (I Cor. 7). Single Christians have the
opportunity to serve God in ways that married Christians would have
difficulty doing. Of course, the opposite is also true.
So what is the lesson to be learned? Whatever situation you find
yourself in, seek to serve God with all your heart. If you are single, use
your singleness to serve God as best as you can. And if you're married, use
your married status to do the same.
"But as God has distributed to each one, as the Lord has called each
one, so let him walk.....keeping the commandments of God is what matters."
(I Cor. 7:17,19b)
Alan Smith
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