Prayer request time at my small group last night, my brother's life choices, and now some posts here as well have got me wondering about when is it incorrect or irresponsible of us to advise someone to leave a less than ideal long term relationship.
For example, a couple years ago my brother moved in with a gal who has 5 kids and really is the type of person who is so terrified of being alone that she's been in bad relationships rather than being single. His presence has done that family a lot of good and given them much needed stability, but it has also eaten up a lot of his time, finances, and energy. I still can't see the attraction, but I do realize that they depend on him financially as well as just for the general organized running of the household. And so even though I don't think she's a great choice to be in a relationship with and I certainly don't approve of living together before marriage, I also don't think he would be treating her right or doing the right thing to just up and leave because he decided for whatever reason that he'd had enough and couldn't do this anymore even though they're not officially married and he has no legal obligation to stay or give them a dime.
And it's got me thinking while I know that living and sleeping together outside of marriage are sinful (and can lead to all kinds of messes); I also know that there are many people who do so and in their process of coming to know the Lord, they will have to struggle with the implications and costs of that decision and what that would mean for their relationship going forward. And they'll be looking to those of us within the church to give them wise Godly counsel as they work through such things. And I would like to have more answers to give than I have and sometimes I'd just like to see discussion of such things among believers extend a little farther than "God said it's wrong so you must stop" without offering any support to help people actually transition into obedience.
So throw out your thoughts. When is a relationship to legit to just quit on it because things are hard? How do we conceptualize the level of commitment appropriate to a relationship in it's various stages? How do we help people help each other become better instead of just dismissing people's struggles as lack of faith or commitment or character?
For example, a couple years ago my brother moved in with a gal who has 5 kids and really is the type of person who is so terrified of being alone that she's been in bad relationships rather than being single. His presence has done that family a lot of good and given them much needed stability, but it has also eaten up a lot of his time, finances, and energy. I still can't see the attraction, but I do realize that they depend on him financially as well as just for the general organized running of the household. And so even though I don't think she's a great choice to be in a relationship with and I certainly don't approve of living together before marriage, I also don't think he would be treating her right or doing the right thing to just up and leave because he decided for whatever reason that he'd had enough and couldn't do this anymore even though they're not officially married and he has no legal obligation to stay or give them a dime.
And it's got me thinking while I know that living and sleeping together outside of marriage are sinful (and can lead to all kinds of messes); I also know that there are many people who do so and in their process of coming to know the Lord, they will have to struggle with the implications and costs of that decision and what that would mean for their relationship going forward. And they'll be looking to those of us within the church to give them wise Godly counsel as they work through such things. And I would like to have more answers to give than I have and sometimes I'd just like to see discussion of such things among believers extend a little farther than "God said it's wrong so you must stop" without offering any support to help people actually transition into obedience.
So throw out your thoughts. When is a relationship to legit to just quit on it because things are hard? How do we conceptualize the level of commitment appropriate to a relationship in it's various stages? How do we help people help each other become better instead of just dismissing people's struggles as lack of faith or commitment or character?
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