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Do you believe in “The One”?

Cormack

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Do you believe in ideas like “The One,” that single special person who’s been prepared by God for you.

Is the idea childish Disney twaddle infiltrating the church, or does the belief in that one special person seem natural, since Eve was made for Adam and Adam gave up part of himself for Eve.

What’s your theory on one true love and soul mate culture?
 

RileyG

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Nah. Some people are meant to be single. Love is a two-way street. So, in my opinion, absolutely not.
 
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ReesePiece23

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It depends entirely on the individual to be honest. "The one" - as a concept, doesn't suit everybody. That's why the world is full of abstraction, variation and anomaly. It's in essence, the entire point of going through all of this.

I'm getting closer in my own journey towards saying "yes, there is one" but that's only because I've arrived at that point in my life where I'm capable of it. Me five years ago? Not a chance, I was too busy "like, finding myself ya? Y'know what I mean?"

I've found myself now, probably twenty times over. I've done enough of that for all of us.
 
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timothyu

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From personal experience I can say yes but only in that we perhaps are meant to fulfil a mission which will serve the both in following a path meant for each in this life. Some paths seem meant to collide. This of course does not mean a happy ending, as reality dictates there are no happy endings, and some come sooner than later. There comes a point where we must also learn to live alone, deal with ourselves and find happiness in ourselves as we ourselves are the only one we can depend on. It takes the sring away when others fail us. There is no foundation in depending on others to complete ourselves, but yes it does make for companionship. Each person we meet is an adventure.
 
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Sketcher

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Nope.

Not every man or woman is promised a spouse in Scripture (i.e. Jeremiah). And when there is a match from God, sometimes it is not in the form of a blessing (i.e. Hosea). Furthermore, widows and widowers are allowed to marry explicitly, so if such a person has two good marriages, that person would have two, not one.

If people have free will and if "soulmates" is a thing, then unless God has strong intentions otherwise, people can mess it up. Alice was meant for Bob, but she was an idiot and married Charlie instead. David was meant for Erin, but he died in an accident because George decided to drive drunk. Harry was going to be meant for an unnamed girl but she got aborted. Does that mean that God is going back to the drawing board for Bob, Erin, and Harry? He did make them in very specific ways.

Ultimately, I think the people who talk about this project their urgency to get married onto God. They want to meet their future spouse so much, that they comfort themselves with the hope of a God-picked soulmate. However, God loves us, but he seems to not care about our temporal happiness as much as we do. Meeting a good future spouse is important to you, but is your meeting your spouse really closer to the heart of God than the plight of believing children in a war zone? I suspect not.
 
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Saucy

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I don't know honestly. I have hope God has someone for me. I don't believe meeting that special someone will be a complete coincidence outside of the will or plan of God. But His plan might also be for me to remain single. I hope not, as I have a strong desire for marriage and kids, but I submit myself entirely to His will.
 
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timewerx

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Do you believe in ideas like “The One,” that single special person who’s been prepared by God for you.

I actually do. I think NOT finding "the one" is the one of the reasons behind 50% of divorces and unhappy marriage. Note, I'm merely saying one of the reasons, NOT, the "only" reason for failed marriage.

But realistically, speaking, finding "the one" is next to impossible in this world.

It's just mathematically impossible for more than a few. And what I mean by "few" means a small % of the world's population.

One of the basic ingredients for this undertaking is financial freedom and only a small % of the world's population has it.

However, I am thankful to be single in this generation. I've been observing how times have changed. People have become a lot meaner, colder, and a lot more materialistic.
 
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Cormack

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There comes a point where we must also learn to live alone, deal with ourselves and find happiness in ourselves as we ourselves are the only one we can depend on. It takes the sring away when others fail us.

Don’t you think that on balance a couple that’s been together in 50 years can say that life’s about depending on other people?

If the majority of someone’s life is more than just peppered with support, acceptance and love from their other half, hasn’t that person found both a source of happiness and dependability outside of themselves.

Seems to me that many women (and even some men) find dependability their entire life. They’ve found someone who is prepared to broad shoulder the cost of living for the whole marriage. What do you think?

In the same way I believe in traffic accidents.

Because bad things happen? :tearsofjoy:

I actually do. I think NOT finding "the one" is the one of the reasons behind 50% of divorces and unhappy marriage. Note, I'm merely saying one of the reasons, NOT, the "only" reason for failed marriage.

That’s interesting since the vast majority of divorces are instigated by dissatisfied wives. Does that mean hope springs eternal has actually lead to lots of broken homes? Maybe dissatisfaction at the perceived idea of not having found “the one” causes lots of hurt.

What do y’all think?
 
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ReesePiece23

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God loves us, but he seems to not care about our temporal happiness as much as we do.

Pessimistically speaking, the devil does seem to be enjoying a very successful run lately. Even in the faces of normal civilians, I'm seeing an absence of life and vitality.
 
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Cute Peonies

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Some paths seem meant to collide.

This!

Do you believe in ideas like “The One,” that single special person who’s been prepared by God for you.

Yes I believe that God prepared someone for me. I know that He will bring us together at the right time. Zero doubt on that. And I really hope he's praying for us as much as I do, even if we don't know each other yet.
 
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timewerx

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That’s interesting since the vast majority of divorces are instigated by dissatisfied wives. Does that mean hope springs eternal has actually lead to lots of broken homes? Maybe dissatisfaction at the perceived idea of not having found “the one” causes lots of hurt.

What do y’all think?

Good point. I mentioned "The One" being one of the reasons.

One other reason is the toxic culture of certain kinds of "friendships" that people find themselves trapped in.

That kind of toxic culture where you compete against your other friends in terms of "success". Which one has the most successful career, most successful husband, most successful kids, etc, etc.... This is why "worldly success" is often said to be "getting ahead" because the point is to get ahead of someone else, someone you know, someone close so you can feel good about yourself.

The wife can feel embarrassed to her friends if her husband isn't measuring up to her friend's husbands' successes even despite the fact, they're already quite financially stable.

It can be major source of disputes, fighting between married couples. Many say it's money, statistical studies say unmet/high expectations. Indeed "measuring up" does involve money in it and also "high expectations".

I can only say, perhaps, one way to have a happy marriage (and as a matter of fact, be happy and content in any situation, even single) is very carefully choose your friends. Avoid especially those who shows contempt, disgust for the poor, those who avoid mingling with anyone with cheap clothes. I'm actually very serious!
 
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timothyu

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Seems to me that many women (and even some men) find dependability their entire life. They’ve found someone who is prepared to broad shoulder the cost of living for the whole marriage. What do you think?
There is a difference between a practical solution and an emotional one. Relying on another is merely a crutch and at some point that crutch may break. Women also live longer than men as a rule. Is their relationship based on material things in the end?
 
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Niels

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I don't know. The idea of "the one", as Hollywood portrays it, seems to be at odds with the notion of free will. Although I think God sometimes nudges people together, whether through circumstance or temperament, it's still our choice to make.

If God knows what our choices will be ahead of time, "the one" may be a real thing in a way. However, given the sorry state of many relationships these days, it's possible that somebody's "the one" may in fact be a terrible match for them. As I plan to marry only one woman, hopefully she'll be a good one. I'd rather have that than "the five" or something along those lines. Which to me would mean 4 too many failed relationships.

Lets say that there are 15,000 genuinely compatible women out there for me to choose from. If I don't meet them, or meet them at the wrong time, then it's a moot point.

When I run the numbers, the percentages of women who have the right kind of temperament, proximity, subjective attractiveness, shared values, sufficiently similar ways of relating, etc. there are days when I'd be surprised if even one highly compatible individual exists. For superficial flings and whatnot, there are probably too many to count, but that's cold comfort to somebody who doesn't look for flings.
 
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bèlla

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That kind of toxic culture where you compete against your other friends in terms of "success". Which one has the most successful career, most successful husband, most successful kids, etc, etc.

There’s a lot of comparison in relationships. More than many suspect. ‘Good news’ is a double-edged sword. It fosters competition, jealousy, etc. Oftentimes the things we take for granted are irritants. They’re seething and you’re clueless. Oneupmanship is overt in some connections. But not in the majority. You’ll find it everywhere. Even the church.

The wife can feel embarrassed to her friends if her husband isn't measuring up to her friend's husbands' successes even despite the fact, they're already quite financially stable.

I’ve heard it from both. She nudges him to do more or take on more responsibility. Some are brazen and admit the person they’ve compared him to. He’s guilty of the same and prods her behavior and appearance. Both are chasing ideals within the union and haven’t developed contentment with their choice. They’re after something better.

I’m not opposed to helping someone improve or overcome a challenge. But there’s a difference between tweaking and a teardown.

I can only say, perhaps, one way to have a happy marriage (and as a matter of fact, be happy and content in any situation, even single) is very carefully choose your friends.

This may sound countercultural but I think a lot of this is the result of oversharing. The want to be heard, understood, and validated inspires conversation. But little thought is given to the audience. Oftentimes they’re talking with people in similar situations or worse. They haven’t found a solution but their advice is trustworthy because you’re friends.

That’s how problems run in groups. They’re struggling with the same issues and it never dawns on them to try a different source. It’s like blindfolding a man and trying to hit a target. But the target is you. Why would you subject yourself to that?

Observation is the remedy. We need to spend more time listening and confirming our impressions with the Lord. Because the truth comes out. You’ll see beyond the image.

We seek agreement in the natural and that’s the problem. When you sift through the spirit there’s a different barometer. It’s not easily swayed or impressed. What prevents them from doing so is the want for acceptance.

Because we want to be accepted we compromise our relationships, counsel, and all that matters. The fruit of our decisions is the rut, stronghold, closed doors, and other things we’re unable to conquer.
 
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