5 Questions a Girl Should Ask Herself

Last week, I wrote a post about 5 questions a girl should ask about her date. I was blown away by the response. Perhaps I shouldn’t have been; after all, who you are in a relationship with is one of the biggest decisions you make. However, as a sweet friend pointed out, asking questions about the guy you’re dating is only half of the equation.  It’s also important that the person asking the questions is the type of person she should be. So, as a follow-up, here are 5 questions a girl should ask herself before she dates.

1) Do I truly love God?  – If a girl is seeking a guy who truly loves God, who makes God their number one priority, than it’s important that she share this allegiance. Before you can be ready to be in a Christ-centered, godly relationship, it’s important that Christ is the center of your own life. After all, it’s way too easy for girls to put their relationship with a guy before their relationship with Christ. Even when the girl is a committed Christian, she is probably going to battle this temptation. If she’s not already 100% invested in her relationship with God, it’s going to be a temptation that’s exceedingly difficult to resist. Love God first. If you know you don’t right now, don’t get in a relationship that’s going to compete for that priority position. Who you date is a critical decision, but putting God in His proper place in your life is the most important decision you’ll ever make.

2) Am I willing to trust?As I wrote previously, it’s important to look for a guy that you can trust, because their decision will inevitably end up affecting your life. However, it’s important to realize that you have to be willing to trust in order to make that relationship work. It’s hard in a world where we are often taught that we can have it all, be it all, and sustain it all, all by ourselves. Not only is this diametrically opposed to the truths of Christianity which demonstrate that every good gift comes from God (and therefore is not of our own doing), but if we’re living under this pretense, we are not ready to be in a relationship where we are aligning our lives with another. After all, if you want to do everything on your own based on your own wisdom and your own abilities, what’s the purpose of sharing your life with someone else? If you aren’t willing to trust another person, if you aren’t willing to walk the same road together, than it would be better, for both of your sakes, to walk it alone.

3) Am I willing to sacrifice? – Now I’m sure when some people read this, they immediately think of the other dreaded “s” word, “submit.” However, regardless of your view’s on the biblical concept of submission, I’ve never seen a healthy relationship that didn’t require some sacrifice, on both parties’ behalf.  When two people are doing life together, they are not going to always agree on what direction their life should take. At times, you are going to have to sacrifice what you want, in order for the good of the relationship. You’re going to have to give up your rights to “mine” for the sake of “ours.” If you are not at the point of your life where you are already willing to make sacrifices – where you are wiling to stay up late to help a needy friend, where you are willing to do your brother’s chores just because you know it would bless him, where you’re willing to serve at church because you know that’s what God has called you to do – than you aren’t ready to be in a marriage. After all, to think that the willingness to sacrifice will magically appear the day you fall in love is nothing more than a fairytale. Short-term infatuation may prompt it at the beginning, but the warm fuzzies will quickly dissipate in the messiness of life. If you aren’t already wiling to give of yourself for the sake of another, than you aren’t going to be willing to do it in your relationship.  And you need to sacrifice in order to make a relationship work.

4) Do I show respect? – Perhaps after the word “submit” no other word is more improperly maligned in conversations about godly relationships as the word “respect.” This is probably because this word is found in the same challenging passage (Ephesians 5). However, again, regardless of the discussion regarding what this means about leadership in marriage, it’s important to recognize that healthy marriages exhibit respect – respect for the person’s feelings, ideas, and priorities. However, the question here isn’t whether or not you can respect your one-day husband, it’s whether you are already exhibiting respect in your life.  Do you show respect to your parents, your teachers or your boss? Do you treat those with problems as worthy of respect, even when they can’t give you anything in return? Is your respect contingent on someone conforming to your desires, or do you show deference to people because, regardless of whether you agree with them, you know that as God’s creations they deserve it? If you don’t, then again, we have to recognize that there’s no magic switch once we’re in a relationship that’s going to suddenly bring about this character trait in our lives. Showing respect to others now helps prepare us to build a relationship that exhibits it later.

5) Am I willing to accept the responsibility? – We tend to think of marriage as being about the two people who take the vows, however, as I have written about previously, for the Christian, this is simply not true. Marriage is the picture that God chooses to use to represent the relationship between Christ and the church. Therefore, marriage is not only about my relationship with my spouse, but my marriage is one of the ways that I bear witness to Who God is, and what He has done for me. If I am not willing to accept this responsibility, to realize that part of the eternal evaluation of my marriage will be the extent to which it brought God honor and accurately displayed Him to the people who were outside of the relational covenant, than as a Christian, I have no business getting married. I must be willing to accept that calling before I pursue a relationship, because God tells us this is the type of romantic relationship that honors Him.

It’s easy to have a checklist of the list of things we want in a guy, but let let us make sure that if God grants us a godly man that loves Him, cherishes us, and whom we can trust, that we are the type of girl who could be considered worthy of such a man.

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5 Questions A Girl Should Ask

Recently, I read this article about questions that every guy should ask about his date.  It got me thinking – what are the questions every girl should ask? Here are five:

1) Does he truly love God? – Just like the author of the article states, this means more than just finding someone at church. There’s a difference between someone who says that they are a Christian, and someone who is a Christian. If “Christian” is a label and not a lifestyle than that is not someone who truly loves God. You need to ask – “Is God their number one priority – even over me?” This is critical for a lasting relationship that reflects God’s design.

2) Do I trust him? – And to really expand on that question, it’s “Do I trust him…with my life?” I had a friend who knew that she trusted her one-day husband because she would fall asleep in the car while he was driving. This was an indication to her that this was someone who she could trust her life with.  A relationship where you are constantly questioning the other person’s decision, isn’t a relationship that’s worth being in. You need to ask yourself “Would I want this person to make decisions about my life?” Because sooner or later, their decisions will affect your life.

3) Does he cherish me? – It’s easy these days to talk about love. The problem is that we say we love everything from peanut butter and jelly sandwiches to the person that we’re married to. Because the definition of love has become so convoluted, I like to use the word cherish. Does the guy treasure you? Is he looking after your best interests? Does he care about you enough to tell you when you’re making a mistake or does he just let you do it? Your guy should want to protect you, to keep you from harm, because he recognizes that a woman who loves God is more precious than a rare jewel.

4) Where is he going? …and do I want to go there? Everyone is going somewhere. If you’re going to be in a relationship with this guy, than you’ll end up on the same path that he is. Is that a path you want to be on? We tend to think that those things will work themselves out as we are in a relationship, but they rarely do. If someone is walking a path (or if they aren’t walking anywhere), that says something about who that person is. Recognize that how he lives his life will inevitably influenced how your life is lived. Is he heading in a direction that you want to head?

5) Do I want to change him? – If you enter a relationship thinking “this is a great guy, except for X,Y, and Z”  – you have to wonder is that really the guy for you? People will change as relationships grow and time passes on, but if you’re starting a relationship with the idea that you want the person to be someone other than he is, than why don’t you find the guy that you want him to be instead? It’d be better to be like the movie Jerry Maguire in which Renee Zellweger’s character says about Jerry, “I love him for the man that he is and the man he wants to become.” It’s good for a guy to want to grow, and you should encourage that. But at the same time, you need to love him for who he is now, not the person you’re hoping to mold him into being.

I often tell people that, after my salvation in Christ, my husband is the best thing to happen to me.  While there are many reasons for this, a lot of them have to do with the fact that our relationship had the right answers to the above questions. I hope that more relationships can say the same.

What do you think? What other questions should you ask about your date?

 

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