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The Session: 10 Ways We Unintentionally Make Singles Feel Invisible at Church

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Manage episode 458964225 series 3633826
内容由Tom Russell & Scott Saunders, Tom Russell, and Scott Saunders提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 Tom Russell & Scott Saunders, Tom Russell, and Scott Saunders 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

Being single in today's world is hard. Being single in the church today shouldn't be. But there are ways we make singleness harder than it needs to be in the church today. Tom and Scott examine some ways we do that in this week's episode.

10 Ways We Unintentionally Make Singles Feel Invisible in the Church

By Brenda Rogers, ibelieve.com

I dreaded Sunday; it was my least favorite day of the week. I went to church, but not Bible study because there wasn't a class for me. I sat on the pew alone watching married couples in front of me holding hands. Then I quietly slipped out. After all, I was single.

I was most aware of my singleness when I went to church on Sunday mornings. It was like a sign hung from my neck, tagging me as someone to treat with kid-gloves or to not engage at all.

That was about 10 years ago, and since then, there has been more conversation about singleness in the church. This is good. However, we need to keep this topic in the front of our minds or else we'll miss an entire group of people who need discipling and shepherding just as much as anyone else.

Here are 10 ways we unintentionally make singles feel invisible in the church:

1. Believe They Have Ulterior Motives

After a training session on serving in the children's ministry, I went up to the male speaker to ask a question about what he was teaching us. He was fidgety and short with his answers – obviously uncomfortable. After that awkward interaction, I thought more about it, wondering why he acted that way. Then it hit me – I was a single woman talking to a married man. The room was filled with people, and my question was about the training he presented, but he may have seen me as someone with ulterior motives.

There's no doubt that Christian men and women, single and married, need to be vigilant of snares from the enemy. He is prowling around like a lion waiting to kill, steal, and destroy our families, ministries, and callings. It is prudent and wise to treat interactions with the opposite sex, married or single, differently so that Satan does not get a foothold. However, we cannot operate under the fear that single people always have an ulterior motive when talking to someone of the opposite sex. Single people are not out to find a spouse or steal a spouse no matter the cost. We shouldn't treat them as if they are.

2. Don't Include Them in Sermon Examples

I've sat in church listening to sermons and thought, "What about the people who are single?" I used to be one of those people, and it was disheartening to hear a sermon where the emphasis of all life's struggles centered around being a spouse and parent. When we ignore an entire group of people in our congregations, it shows that we do not see them or understand them.

Pastors and other church leaders, along with the congregation, should make understanding the needs of singles a priority so that they can address their needs in sermons and in other places within the church. This is how we love them. The opportunity is before us to disciple people before they are married so that, by God's grace, they make wise and healthy decisions and build strong marriages and families in the future. To ignore this group of people is a missed opportunity.

Plus, single people can teach married people so much about modern culture that they may not realize in the context of marriage and family. I have found for myself that family life creates a sort of bubble where I become sheltered from issues in the world. Singles can help pop that bubble.

3. Don't Talk to Them Like Adults

Once at a social event, I was the only single woman. As I stood with a group of the women, one of them declared, "We really

To reach Tom Russell, go to https://www.heritagechristiancounselingofmansfield.com.

  continue reading

202集单集

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icon分享
 
Manage episode 458964225 series 3633826
内容由Tom Russell & Scott Saunders, Tom Russell, and Scott Saunders提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 Tom Russell & Scott Saunders, Tom Russell, and Scott Saunders 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

Being single in today's world is hard. Being single in the church today shouldn't be. But there are ways we make singleness harder than it needs to be in the church today. Tom and Scott examine some ways we do that in this week's episode.

10 Ways We Unintentionally Make Singles Feel Invisible in the Church

By Brenda Rogers, ibelieve.com

I dreaded Sunday; it was my least favorite day of the week. I went to church, but not Bible study because there wasn't a class for me. I sat on the pew alone watching married couples in front of me holding hands. Then I quietly slipped out. After all, I was single.

I was most aware of my singleness when I went to church on Sunday mornings. It was like a sign hung from my neck, tagging me as someone to treat with kid-gloves or to not engage at all.

That was about 10 years ago, and since then, there has been more conversation about singleness in the church. This is good. However, we need to keep this topic in the front of our minds or else we'll miss an entire group of people who need discipling and shepherding just as much as anyone else.

Here are 10 ways we unintentionally make singles feel invisible in the church:

1. Believe They Have Ulterior Motives

After a training session on serving in the children's ministry, I went up to the male speaker to ask a question about what he was teaching us. He was fidgety and short with his answers – obviously uncomfortable. After that awkward interaction, I thought more about it, wondering why he acted that way. Then it hit me – I was a single woman talking to a married man. The room was filled with people, and my question was about the training he presented, but he may have seen me as someone with ulterior motives.

There's no doubt that Christian men and women, single and married, need to be vigilant of snares from the enemy. He is prowling around like a lion waiting to kill, steal, and destroy our families, ministries, and callings. It is prudent and wise to treat interactions with the opposite sex, married or single, differently so that Satan does not get a foothold. However, we cannot operate under the fear that single people always have an ulterior motive when talking to someone of the opposite sex. Single people are not out to find a spouse or steal a spouse no matter the cost. We shouldn't treat them as if they are.

2. Don't Include Them in Sermon Examples

I've sat in church listening to sermons and thought, "What about the people who are single?" I used to be one of those people, and it was disheartening to hear a sermon where the emphasis of all life's struggles centered around being a spouse and parent. When we ignore an entire group of people in our congregations, it shows that we do not see them or understand them.

Pastors and other church leaders, along with the congregation, should make understanding the needs of singles a priority so that they can address their needs in sermons and in other places within the church. This is how we love them. The opportunity is before us to disciple people before they are married so that, by God's grace, they make wise and healthy decisions and build strong marriages and families in the future. To ignore this group of people is a missed opportunity.

Plus, single people can teach married people so much about modern culture that they may not realize in the context of marriage and family. I have found for myself that family life creates a sort of bubble where I become sheltered from issues in the world. Singles can help pop that bubble.

3. Don't Talk to Them Like Adults

Once at a social event, I was the only single woman. As I stood with a group of the women, one of them declared, "We really

To reach Tom Russell, go to https://www.heritagechristiancounselingofmansfield.com.

  continue reading

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