Thing is I've noticed that the church bemoans how sexualized our society has become, and it makes me want to say to them, "You do the exact same thing, just in a different way." That being constantly putting marriage and the nuclear family on a pedestal.
Must every pastor be married? If so, then Jesus and Paul themselves would not be allowed such a position.
Can men and women truly not be friends, especially if they are married? I understand the need to maintain boundaries, but the irony is that in making both genders fear each other rather than teaching them to respect the other as human beings, we've put them more at risk.
I also get the importance of sex and keeping it in marriage. But are marriage and sex needed to be fully human? If this mystical union of body and soul is such a great and universal thing, why restrict it to married people? Why rob everyone else of this joy of joys? Sure, friends are decent, but the real relationship goal is with one's spouse.
Does this all sound familiar? If we church people keep talking like this, we ultimately will not be much different from the sexualized society we stress over. It's no wonder porn use is rampant and singleness and especially lifelong celibacy now feel like a death sentence. If that's so, what do we have to say to the never married, divorced, the widowed, and especially those who experience same-sex attraction?
For that matter, married people have much to learn from singles/celibates as the other way around. For example, what if something happens to your spouse and it becomes physically impossible to have sex with them? What do you do then?
I'm so glad you pointed all of this out. It's a unique and totally valid perspective, and one that I think I've felt but have never quite been able to articulate. I really wish there was a way of sharing this with church leadership. I don't think they realize what they're doing. But in much the same way that secular society presents being in a relationship as the epitome of life, so does the church.
In secular spaces, obtaining a relationship seems to say "You're desirable, you're valuable, you're worth something to someone and therefore a valid human" and in church it says virtually the same thing in an ostensibly more holy way: "Now your life has REALLY begun. You were worth virtually nothing to anyone but Christ (who always loves you!!) before you had a mate, as far as we could tell but now you have someone tangible to vouch for you. Praise God your season of being a being an incomplete person -- er, singleness -- is over! ...Not that marriage and kids complete you! ...but we all definitely (tacitly) take you more seriously now."
Rarely does anyone in a leadership position in church take the time to speak on the shamelessness, on the virtues, on the benefits, on the joys of singleness. And moreover on the fact that people can't just up and *decide* to not be single! Lol! Not if they're seeking the Lord's will for a mate, anyway. It's as if some churches take it for granted that once you hit 30, you either are definitely married, or you just spontaneously combust and your particles float off into the ether, i.e., if you haven't figured it out by then, you're a lost cause so who cares. There isn't a space for you otherwise because you shouldn't need one! Lol. Least that's the impression I get.
Point being, to the OP, I also sometimes feel like I don't quite belong anywhere. At least before I hit 30, I felt welcome in the "young singles" groups. Now I feel as if I'm judged for "still" being there, and frankly, my interests and thoughts don't align with those of most of the constituents -- instagram, brows on fleek, fortnight, whatever. But with the people closer to my own age, there also doesn't seem to be a comfortable space for me because I just as much can't relate to their topics du jour! -- daycare, lawn upkeep, throw pillow patterns, whatever. I'm simultaneously at the wrong stage and the wrong age to feel really comfortable anywhere.
Pardon the rant. I'm not actually as sour as I sound about it, but I can definitely understand feeling a bit "on the outside looking in". Makes me sad sometimes, but I know that our God is El Roi, God Who Sees Me. And He sees you too, friend. When it seems like we're total outcasts and inadvertent iconoclasts, misunderstood by many, not fully welcome anywhere, He understands completely (Hebrews 4:15-16), and has a spacious place for us to occupy (Job 30:15-16, Psalm 18:19) where we don't have to be preoccupied with such trivialities and can occupy and delight ourselves with His presence.
We just have to choose (it's a choice!!) to fix our eyes on Him and not fixate (that is, to obsess with and have an unhealthy amount of focus) on the *preoccupations of the world, which, however much of a blessing they may be, and in spite of the fact that they are designed and intended by God to bring us joy and Him glory, ultimately, marriage and sex *are (Matthew 22:30). -- Natural! And good if and when God blesses you with them -- together, obviously, and not one in isolation from the other -- but in terms on eternity, in terms of the work God has planned for us to do to make Him known, (which is really the only reason any of us are here-- though he is indeed a good Father and delights to see us happy, our happiness isn't actually the point, is it...), romantic relationships are pretty ornamental.
So pretty much, don't worry about what anyone else thinks of you. I think your question was partially asked just out of idle curiosity, but in case there was more to it than that, there need not be. The people that see you as the world sees you don't matter anyway. The people who see, think, feel and perceive as the Lord does -- those are the ones you want to surround yourself with and invest in. Kick the dust off your heels when it comes to the rest. Just worry about impressing your Savior. He'll take care of the rest.