Thank you very much for taking the time to share your story.
I especially wanted to highlight this part -- thanks very much for including it.
I have heard stories of Christian couples who were in solid relationships with someone else before they met the one they believed "God had for them." I specifically remember one story in which the wife said that when she met the guy she eventually married, he was dating someone else, and that "God told him to break up with the other girl."
I have always wondered to what extent this applies. Does God persistently break up already-established couples in order to pair one or the other or both with someone else?
I cannot think of anyone I know, in person, that has a story like this. I have read a few accounts online, probably, along these lines.
My thoughts on this, after meditating on the scripture, coupled with living so much of my life in a country that has a more collectivist culture where parents have a lot more say (veto power at least) in who their children marry is that the US and much of the west has a messed-up dating/courtship culture when compared to scripture. When Dinah fornicated with (or was possibly raped by Shechem), Hamor didn't just have a marriage ceremony performed and show up at Jacob's tent and say, 'These two are married now." Even though they were pagan Canaanites, they still knew for them to be married, her father had to give them in marriage. That is the underlying assumption in marriage passages in the Torah, also, and the New Testament also mentions giving in marriage. Jesus mentioned it, and father's giving virgin's in marriage might be what is addressed toward the end of I Corinthians 7. Until her father gave her in marriage, my wife was just a girlfriend, just a friend I was interested in.
When people date, they may make promises, raise expectations, possibly even hurt feelings. These are the concerns with dating. The Bible says to love thy neighbor, and that needs to carry over into courtship practices. But other than that, a dating relationship is basically nothing. It does not have the status of marriage. In some cases, it is a label a couple of fornicators place on their relationship.
So I wouldn't rule out the possibility of God directing someone to break up with a boyfriend or girlfriend. If there were an realistic expectation to stay together for life, then the couple would marry, not just date.
I think what befuddles me the most is that there seems to be absolutely no consistency as to how believers meet, decide, and receive confirmation to marry someone.
I think of it this way. Paul says, 'If you marry, you have not sinned, and if the virgin marries, she has not sinned....' So as long as there isn't something else in the scenario that is sinful, it is not wrong to marry.
The issues for me were(written from my male perspective):
- Is she married to someone else?
------ Is she divorced (see Matthew 19.)
- Is she a believer?
- Will her father give her to me in marriage?
If all those check out, I cannot say it is a sin to marry. Now if the Lord directed me not to, or if I did not rightly honor the Lord in the decision, I might sin or make a foolish decision.
There are also other issues I considered like her virginity, overall character, common values, looks, personality, mental stability, and how we feel about each other.
Proverbs 3 says to trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not to your own understanding, in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will direct your path. If a Christian follows that route but does not get a vision, dream prophecy or hear any internal direction from the Spirit, but relies on God and trusts God for wisdom and chooses a wife, I don't see a problem with that.
But divorce is rampant and some people have unhappy marriages. I didn't want to end up divorced, so I wanted some 'extras' and prayed a lot about who to marry and wanted some specific direction.
I have a family member who, like you and your future wife, were "prophesied" over and told that they would be missionaries all over the world. They had been together several years, and it seemed very likely they would marry.
Ironically, this part of their "prophecy" was actually a big wedge between the two of them. One did indeed have a heart for worldwide ministry, while the other had only known family-centered, small-town church life, and didn't want to stray very far from home. If they would have married, one would have "fulfilled" the "prophecy", while the other would have been downright miserable, even though it was all in glory to the Lord.
I cannot really comment on what the right decision was. There are prophecies that are directive, and if someone doesn't do it and it doesn't come to pass-- it was a command anyway. And some people just say whatever pops into their head, thinking it is a prophecy.
And if so, does that include married couples as well? Will God tell someone to leave their spouse in order to go and "marry the 'right' person He has for them"? Like you, I tend to think not, because when someone has made the commitment, God expects him or her to honor it, even if it is to the supposed "wrong person."
I'm from a Pentecostal background, and my belief is that prophecy has to line up with the Bible. The Bible teaches against divorce.
There might be some particular cases where it makes sense. Let's say a man married his deceased father's wife, and he got a prophecy against it after he'd done it. Considering I Corinthians 5, that might make sense. Or if two people got so-called 'gay married' to each other, and someone prophesied against that, I don't think we should outright reject such a prophecy.
But if we are talking about a man and woman who did things the right way, marrying someone they were allowed to marry according to scripture, then I do not think we should think in terms of 'You made a mistake. You did not marry the one God had for you. You have to get a divorce and find your soulmate.' There was this guy on YouTube promoting that idea named Doug. He had this idea that Jesus had to tell you who to marry.
So it seems to me to be a curious thing... that apparently, according to some people, God has no problem breaking up unmarried couples to be with other people, but would never do this with an already-married couple (at least, I'm assuming -- I don't personally know for sure.)
A boy-friend girl-friend relationship is basically nothing. Nothing except feelings, maybe promises, possibly a relationship in which two people fornicate. But it isn't marriage.
I suspect there are a lot of people who broke up relationships to honor God. I broke it off with a girl I'd been dating a few weeks because a few hints she dropped indicated to me that I could do anything physically I wanted with her with no resistance on her part. I was in my early 20's, and I did not need the temptation. I also found out she wasn't a virgin. I wanted to marry a virgin, and she didn't 'tick all the boxes' (sorry for putting it that way) on a few other variables. I wasn't ready to marry anyway, so why continue dating? I had gotten to know her a bit and a little about her, and while I liked her as a person and wished her the best, she wasn't for me, so I decided to break it off.
I would imagine there are a lot of people who have broken off a dating relationship because they did not believe it was God's will for them. And there are a lot of Christian mothers and fathers out there praying for their sons and daughters to see that their boyfriend or girlfriend is not a good match.
I hope my wife and I have instilled the idea of the need for parental approval for marriage into our kids. We have a policy of no dating until you are old enough to get married. The teens are learning from home mostly these days. One just started college and his is mostly online. None of them have dated. They did spend just a little time in Asia, and the parental approval thing is strongly a part of their mother's country.
.