Hello Everyone,
Something I've been thinking about lately... As my fellow singles out there can relate, the dating scene can be rather crazy.
I have participated in two internet dating sites recently, and made the very eye-opening discovery of one person who kept trying to talk to me but eventually confessed that his entire profile, picture, location, age, name, and identity on the site was made up because he "wanted to prove that women were just out for looks." (Yes, the profile he put up was extremely attractive, but he was the one who contacted me and he said the reason he wanted to talk to me is because I was one of the few women who hadn't tried to leave him a message.)
Add to that the fact that he confessed that he was married... I eventually left the site because he kept asking me to talk and while I could have just blocked him, I didn't feel comfortable staying and felt it would have been dishonest to try to "reappear" under another name (besides, I actually put up pictures of MYSELF *cue shock and horror* and of course, he would have just found me again.)
I have talked so some people who do the online dating scene and because of issues like this, form multiple identities online or open more than one account... part of the reason being is because they want to "check up" on the person they are interested in and make sure that person is "being honest" with them.
Now, here's my question: the Bible says we will reap what we sow. If we are sowing seeds of suspicion and doubt in another person's character, how will that come back to us in our own lives?
Is it acceptable to "test" someone else's honesty by compromising your own, or do you see nothing wrong with having multiple online names in order to "test the waters"?
For my own self, I would have a hard time trying to "sift" for dishonesty by doing something that I would find to be dishonest in my own heart, but this is just my opinion. And believe me, I have my own struggles with trust as much as anyone else.
How do we trust God to keep people honest with us?
I talk to God about anything and everything going on in my life--if He is to be my best friend and knows everything about me anyway, I figure I certainly can't hide it. I have received much criticism for this over the years because I will tell God everything--the good, bad, and most especially, the ugly.
The married person who eventually tried to tell me who he really was wrote, "I never intended to tell you all this, but there was just something about you..."
I felt as if God was trying to tell me, "Kim, I know you try your best to be honest with me, and that's why I'm keeping this person honest with you."
What are your thoughts about trusting God to keep people honest with us? (And yes, it can take time. I did not know my husband had left for another girl until well over a year after he divorced me--but the phone rang in the middle of the night, and a friend of mine said, "Kim, you need to know something...")
Or, what do you think we are allowed to do as far as taking the matter into our own hands? After all, we all feel the need to protect ourselves from hurt.
And yes, I know many Christians believe that someone who is divorced can never have another partner or remarry ever again, but please note, that is not the question I'm asking.
Mucho gracias in advance for sharing.
Something I've been thinking about lately... As my fellow singles out there can relate, the dating scene can be rather crazy.
I have participated in two internet dating sites recently, and made the very eye-opening discovery of one person who kept trying to talk to me but eventually confessed that his entire profile, picture, location, age, name, and identity on the site was made up because he "wanted to prove that women were just out for looks." (Yes, the profile he put up was extremely attractive, but he was the one who contacted me and he said the reason he wanted to talk to me is because I was one of the few women who hadn't tried to leave him a message.)
Add to that the fact that he confessed that he was married... I eventually left the site because he kept asking me to talk and while I could have just blocked him, I didn't feel comfortable staying and felt it would have been dishonest to try to "reappear" under another name (besides, I actually put up pictures of MYSELF *cue shock and horror* and of course, he would have just found me again.)
I have talked so some people who do the online dating scene and because of issues like this, form multiple identities online or open more than one account... part of the reason being is because they want to "check up" on the person they are interested in and make sure that person is "being honest" with them.
Now, here's my question: the Bible says we will reap what we sow. If we are sowing seeds of suspicion and doubt in another person's character, how will that come back to us in our own lives?
Is it acceptable to "test" someone else's honesty by compromising your own, or do you see nothing wrong with having multiple online names in order to "test the waters"?
For my own self, I would have a hard time trying to "sift" for dishonesty by doing something that I would find to be dishonest in my own heart, but this is just my opinion. And believe me, I have my own struggles with trust as much as anyone else.
How do we trust God to keep people honest with us?
I talk to God about anything and everything going on in my life--if He is to be my best friend and knows everything about me anyway, I figure I certainly can't hide it. I have received much criticism for this over the years because I will tell God everything--the good, bad, and most especially, the ugly.
The married person who eventually tried to tell me who he really was wrote, "I never intended to tell you all this, but there was just something about you..."
I felt as if God was trying to tell me, "Kim, I know you try your best to be honest with me, and that's why I'm keeping this person honest with you."
What are your thoughts about trusting God to keep people honest with us? (And yes, it can take time. I did not know my husband had left for another girl until well over a year after he divorced me--but the phone rang in the middle of the night, and a friend of mine said, "Kim, you need to know something...")
Or, what do you think we are allowed to do as far as taking the matter into our own hands? After all, we all feel the need to protect ourselves from hurt.
And yes, I know many Christians believe that someone who is divorced can never have another partner or remarry ever again, but please note, that is not the question I'm asking.
Mucho gracias in advance for sharing.