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- FAM:Do Singles Fit in the Church by Carolyn Koons
-
- In the church singleness is misunderstood and often feared. They
- hear comments like, "So you guys are going to a singles' retreat...
- maybe you'll find someone there." Or, "I've got a cousin you should
- meet..."
-
- Most singles can't explain their singleness. Some will flaunt it,
- but most get defensive about it if pressed.
-
- In spite of the lack of information and understanding about singles,
- we are a major portion of the adult population of North America. There
- are 65 million single adults in the U.S. The ratio of married to
- singles has radically changed in our countries. The church must also
- change its approach to singles if it is to reach them.
-
- Those making the biggest impact on our economy today are the
- singles. In the U.S. singles have become a $200 billion per year
- industry. More singles buy homes than married people. They buy little
- coffee-makers or small microwave ovens. Restaurants are geared toward
- them. Television commercials focus on them. You have dating services
- for different aged singles, singles' literature, and cars designed
- specifically for singles.
-
- WHERE IS THE CHURCH?
-
- Where is the church in all this? Is the church aiming to meet the
- needs of singles? Are singles flocking into the churches?
-
- By and large, the majority of evangelical churches don't understand
- singles and singles are not going into those churches. Most churches
- target the "model family" which includes a non-divorced husband and
- wife, two or more children, a working father and a homemaking mother.
- But that family constitutes only 5% of the North American homes. Many
- evangelical groups don't know or understand what has happened in this
- area, so they are missing a major portion of people around them who
- need the Gospel.
-
- People still think that singles make up only 3% of the population as
- was true in the early part of this century. But we now make up 48% of
- the population! We must educate people so singles can find churches
- that understand them, minister to them, and provide areas in which they
- can serve.
-
- SINGLES' STRUGGLES
-
- In a nationwide study singles and married people were asked, "What
- do you feel are the biggest struggles that singles deal with. List
- five."
-
- According to married people, the biggest struggle singles deal with
- is sexuality.
-
- But according to singles, the biggest struggle is to be so often
- left out, socially eliminated, not included.
-
- You see, in the church we have events like family camp, and the
- single doesn't quite fit in. There are couples' banquets and sweetheart
- dinners. There are mother/daughter banquets and father/son events.
- After a church service all the couples get together and go out for
- pie... and where does the single fit?
-
- A single says to the couples heading for the pie shop, "Hey, I want
- to go too. Please invite me."
-
- With their words or tone they reply, "There is a singles group. You
- should join them."
-
- Then the single thinks, "But I don't want to go with the singles. I
- need to be around you married people. In fact, you need to be around
- me, also."
-
- The single wants to feel included. Let's consider a couple who
- regularly attend the young married Sunday School class. Then for some
- terrible reason they get a divorce. After months of grieving the young
- woman comes back to church and gingerly walks into the class she used
- to attend and felt a part of. Someone sits down beside her and after a
- few minutes conversation says, "You know, you'd probably feel more
- comfortable in the singles' class down the hall." She hangs her head
- and shuffles off to a class of people she doesn't know.
-
- In Christian education we love to divide people into their age or
- interest group. I feel that we need to start erasing all those lines
- and little departments we've created. Yes, we need conferences for
- singles, for marrieds, and for the older people. But the church has got
- to start bringing us together again.
-
- The second struggle singles report is developing friendships. They
- go out with someone of the opposite sex and people immediately start
- putting them together. People will ask, "Is something going on between
- you two?"
-
- The single replies, "No, we're just friends." Then comes the
- comment, "Yeah, that's what they all say."
-
- This kind of talk makes it difficult for singles to meet friends.
- Singles don't have family, so they need friends who can be family to
- them.
-
- The third struggle, singles say, is financial pressure. Because they
- don't have two wage earners in the home, many singles must work two
- jobs. Generally, single women have lower wages. And if you consider the
- single parent, the picture becomes grim.
-
- If a woman is married with children, then suffers a divorce, her
- socio-economic status plummets 75% from what it was before. A high
- percentage of single female parents end up on welfare. For the divorced
- male the socio-economic status often rises 75%.
-
- Can local churches help this situation? Perhaps there is an upcoming
- retreat for singles, but many singles can't afford the cost. The
- congregation could establish a scholarship fund to help them attend.
- (Heb 13:3)
-
- The fourth struggle singles report is single parenting. Nearly 25%
- of all households today are single parent homes. Half of all children
- born now will end up in single parent families.
-
- The singles mentioned sexual pressure in fifth place. Of course it
- is there. How does the single, who feels socially eliminated,
- experiences financial pressure and the need for friendly relationships
- meet his or her inter-personal needs? How do they express affection
- while holding to Christian standards?
-
- In most singles groups they do a lot of hugging. They need someone
- to touch them, to let them know they are loved.
-
- WHAT CAN THE CHURCH DO?
-
- First, we've got to redefine our mission. Just because we've in the
- past approached something a certain way doesn't mean that's the way we
- always have to do it. There are a lot of broken people out there. They
- shouldn't have to go to the singles bars, or to the health clubs in an
- attempt to find wholeness. These hurting people need to be put back
- together by the church in the love of Jesus Christ. (Luke 7:34; 1 Cor.
- 6:9-11)
-
- But unforgiving attitudes in the church are often part of the
- problem. The local church can and should be in the ministry of healing
- and wholeness.
-
- Second, the church can create new patterns of ministry. Instead of
- putting people into niches--the youth here, the singles there, the
- senior citizens there--we should erase those dividing lines. Be
- creative and put the church back together! (1 Cor. 12:12-26)
-
- Third, redefine our term "family." Instead of mother/daughter
- banquets, we'll have banquets for which older women can "adopt" a girl.
- Instead of a father/son camp-out, we'll have a camp-out that includes
- every man and every boy.
-
- We can make sure everybody goes into the event equally. "Family"
- should include single parent families, extended families, expanded
- families, step families, blended families, etc. (Rom. 15:5-9)
-
- Fourth, we'll have to break down the barriers between marrieds and
- singles. We often try to keep these groups apart because we watch too
- many romantic soap operas on television. In the Christian community we
- must develop a holy wholeness that allows people to grow together. (1
- Tim. 5:1-2)
-
- Fifth, we must provide opportunities for people to use their gifts,
- and not require that everyone be married. This will free up many
- spiritually gifted singles. Singles are the most untapped resource for
- ministry in the local church.
-
- We've stereotyped singles as irresponsible, so we tend not to put
- them into positions of responsibility. You can make them responsible by
- giving them a task and expecting them to do it. Hang in there with
- them! (Col. 4:17)
-
- Sixth, the church must be a place of refuge for singles. If a person
- has to move, all the singles can help her move. This person needs a car
- fixed, so all the singles get together and repair it. They can take
- care of each other.
-
- Actually, the whole church needs to become a place of refuge in this
- decade. We can form a loving community, taking care of each other,
- working together like an extended family. We need each other. The Lord
- Jesus wants us to care for each other in His fellowship, in His
- community. (John 13:34-35; Gal. 6:9-10)
-
- Finally, the church must develop deep spiritual power in order to
- survive the 90s. Some singles groups start out with the fellowship
- stuff and try to wing it spiritually. That won't work. Start heavy on
- the Bible and scriptural ideas. That will draw singles in, and it will
- build a solid foundation for a singles ministry. (Heb. 5:11-14)
-
- In 1 Corinthians 7:7 Paul said, "I wish that everybody could get
- along without marrying, just as I did." What? I've never heard that
- preached from the pulpit. Paul wished that everyone were single. But
- we're not. To some God gives the gift of being a husband or a wife. And
- that's a gift!
-
- Printed in INTEREST, May 1990. Carolyn Koons, executive director of
- the Institute of Outreach Ministries at Azusa Pacific College, lives in
- Glendora, California. This article is adapted from a singles seminar
- she gave at Decade of Promise.
-