We often hear single Christians say I'm waiting on the spouse God is preparing for me. What does this imply? A prearranged marriage by Christian elders? A spouse that seems to supernaturally fall into your life? Does this eliminate dating as in God will send that individual within His timing?
I personally believe it is a mix of God's sovereignty, free will of the human, and relationship between God and human.
Basically, date with God's guidance.
I hadn't seen this post, but I posted a thread in the Bible study section on how to make decisions.
I think someone could find a spouse through the Spirit speaking to the person, or there could be a supernatural answer to prayer-- like with Isaac and Rebecca. I do not believe someone must get spectacular supernatural guidance to get married. It might be wise to pray for such guidance. We can also pray for wisdom and believe God to give it to us.
An important thing for getting married and choosing a spouse is to do so Biblically. In the Bible, father's gave their daughters in marriage. This is clear of virgins in the Old Testament, and Paul even mentions giving the virgin in marriage. But he says that a widow may marry whomsoever she wills, but only in the Lord.
He did not say the widow had to have a vision of the man she would marry, but whosoever she wills. if you don't get specific direction, you have freedom to make decisions, but it is wise to pray for wisdom.
I remember in Sunday school when I was a child that a teacher said he believed that for every man there was just 'Eve' out there, one match for him. I don't think that's right because widows and widowers are allowed to marry. If there were one spouse out there for every person, then it does not make sense that widows and widowers can remarry. Let's say a man marries a woman and she dies in childbirth... as happened so often in previous centuries. Two years later he marries a woman who was alive when his wife was still alive. That's allowed, so it is not the case that there is one man for each woman and vice versa.
As for dating, we have a pretty-messed up courtship culture in the west that has degenerated since times past. US culture, much of it, grew out of English culture. The Jane Austen novels of the early 1800s show some of the courtship customs back then. Young men and women were chaperoned. People would open up their homes for balls or playing the piano and singing on Sunday afternoon. Singles would go to these events and talk with each other. At some point, a man might declare his intentions with a woman. If she agreed, he would ask her father. I read that a woman in the 1800's might meet with various suitors in her home who would drop by. One might make a proposal for marriage and the family would consider it. In the early 1900's, spouses met through networks of friends and relatives.
I also read that the concept of the one 'boyfriend' was developed in the early 20th century and promoted by women's magazines. The boyfriend grew to be someone who could fulfill the emotional needs a woman got from having a husband, decreasing the need for marriage. Eventually, for many, the boyfriend became a full-fledged sexual partner without marriage. We see a lot of that. if two people are dating, other people just assume they are having sex. That's actually insulting, but it's a common assumption based on the way many people behave. There are people who will just date for entertainment with no desire to marry at all. Some men and women will waste months or years of courtship time and emotional investment. IMO, it makes sense to get the marriage objective out on the table early in the dating process to scare off those who have no interest at all, not too aggressively of course. If a new dating partner has no interest in marriage, just sex, and the person they are dating is clear on wanting to marry and no chance of sex outside of marriage, it might deter the timewaster from continuing the dating relationship.