By
Elizabeth Froh
I
am a single woman working on my MA degree with the hope of becoming a deaconess
in the Lutheran church. Being an unwed woman at this time has some advantages,
as I am able to go wherever the church decides to send me and I only have to
consider myself in the move. However, the unwed life does have its own burdens.
When most people think of the temptations that assail a single person, the most
expected, perhaps even anticipated, response to the question of temptation for
a single Christian is the temptation of sexual lust. Yes, it is a temptation; a
rather strong temptation at times.
However,
perhaps owing to my age, sexual temptation is not the biggest battle in my life
(I am not going to tell you my age - I am not ashamed of it - but I do not wish
the reader to bog down in that mire of, “You’re too young/old to say/think/feel
that way”). I am at a time in my life when I generally receive one of two looks
from people who find out my true age. Astonishment: some people are
flabbergasted when they find out they are five to ten years off in their
assumption of my age (I admit to enjoyment of this reaction). Pity: The look I
am not fond of (especially since I see no reason for it), received from people
who are basing their view on the assumption that someone my age, especially a
woman, should be married with children and/or have a fabulous career. I have
none of the above. I have always wanted to be a wife and a mother (and I had
always thought that I would be by now), and I am working on becoming a deaconess.
However, those are not vocations I currently have (please note, that while pity
is not necessarily welcome, commiseration, if you are a close friend, is fine.)
This leads me to my own personal main temptation: Despair. It’s a nasty word, and it can lead to some very serious repercussions, both physical and spiritual.
I
will be honest: I have not dated a man in over a decade. That is not to say
that I have not gone on a date, but rather, that I have not been in a serious,
committed relationship in the past ten years. Putting myself through school
(undergraduate and now graduate) has taken priority. In some ways time does not
seem to have moved much, and in other ways it seems to have flown by me so fast
that there is nothing at all for me to grasp onto. And somewhere in this great
paradox, despair slipped in because of the unfulfilled ideas I have held since
childhood about who and where I would be by now (which, when you are eight
years old seems ancient).
There
are moments when I wonder why I am not married with a family. I love children
and want the vocation of wife and mother. Why do I not have either one? Why
doesn’t God send someone that I can spend my life with?
Doubts
begin to creep into my mind and make themselves at home. Not only do I question
my own worth, I question God. Is He really there? Doesn’t He care about me?
Despair rears it venomous head, fangs bared, ready to strike for the kill. Why
am I not the way I imagined that I would be? Is something wrong with me?
But,
wait! I am a baptized child of God. This is Satan, my age-old nemesis, seeking
to tear me away from the One who loves me most. The One who so loves me, that
He died for me, taking on all my sin and shame so that I will not suffer
endless torment. “Breathe. Take a break. Step back from yourself.” These are
all things I tell myself.
“Despair,
you will not triumph over me,” I cry. “Get behind me, Satan.” And then I do
something smart. I open my Bible. I read the book of Job. Where was I when God
created the world? Indeed, there are great words of comfort to find here. Along
with Job, God puts me in my place. The place He Himself designed for me. I am
not the first person to feel despair. Unfortunately, I will not be the last.
I
know that God has a plan for me. He wants me to come to Him in prayer, with all
my requests (big and small). There is nothing wrong with asking that if it is
His will, God would send a prospective husband into my life. But I also
recognize that being a single woman is a God-given vocation, just as being a
wife or mother is. Being single is a vocational blessing from God to me. He has
a plan for me.
Despair
is my biggest temptation as a single woman. By God’s grace, though, despair
will not triumph over me. I will continue to live my life as a forgiven and redeemed
child of God. A sinful, fallen woman so loved that she was died for. All her
despair and shame taken from her and nailed on a cross. Puts things in
perspective, doesn’t it?
Elizabeth Froh is a deaconess student at Concordia Theological Seminary, and is currently awaiting her internship with no clue as to where that will be. When not writing, she can often be found curled up with a book (a Terry Pratchett novel being the most recent), singing (she is currently working on a piece by Mozart and one by Torelli), exercising (Les Mills Combat is fantastic!), or cooking (a girl’s got to eat.) A California - San Francisco Bay Area native, she thinks snow is something to visit and is best left in the mountains where it belongs. Because of this, she thinks she’ll probably be sent to Alaska for internship.
Title Image: "Woman at the Window" by Caspar David Friedrich,, 1822
Despair is not my default setting, nor is it something
that I often struggle with. Yet I have been tempted by despair in the past and probably will again at some future time. But God is good. He
continuously forgives me; daily showering me with His blessings.
***
Elizabeth Froh is a deaconess student at Concordia Theological Seminary, and is currently awaiting her internship with no clue as to where that will be. When not writing, she can often be found curled up with a book (a Terry Pratchett novel being the most recent), singing (she is currently working on a piece by Mozart and one by Torelli), exercising (Les Mills Combat is fantastic!), or cooking (a girl’s got to eat.) A California - San Francisco Bay Area native, she thinks snow is something to visit and is best left in the mountains where it belongs. Because of this, she thinks she’ll probably be sent to Alaska for internship.
When you were a teen, were you warned of this possibility of feeling despair due to singleness?
ReplyDeleteWere you assured by parents, teachers, peers, family, church family, etc., that they believed it a 'success' to marry and start a family straight out of high school instead of pursuing education?
Hi Read It,
DeleteI think you may be misinterpreting part of Elizabeth's article. She talks about how women her age are "expected" to be married AND/or to have achieved a fabulous career. She isn't talking about marriage vs. education, but about not having the life that people (including her past self) might expect. That can be discouraging for anyone, married or single, don't you think?