Missionary Single Issues: The Ticking Clock
Ronald Koteskey
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The
following conversation could take place between two unmarried missionaries who
are not contented with their singleness and know each other very well.
Pat: “I’m beginning to wonder if I’ll ever get married. I’m
already 39 and even if I got married today, I’d be over 60 when my oldest child
finishes college.”
Chris: “That’s nothing. I’m 39 too, and within a few years I may
not even be able to have a child at all, even if I did get married.”
Both Pat and Chris are keenly aware of their ticking biological clocks.
Male and/or Female Issue?
Both men and women get older, so these clocks are issues for both; however,
they tend to be a greater issue for women than for men for three reasons.
- Menopause. Usually
somewhere between 40 and 60 years of age women gradually stop menstruating
and are unable to bear children. This is why Abraham and Sarah both
laughed when God said she would bear a child (Genesis 17:17 and 18:12).
Drastic hormonal changes also occur at this same time. Although
some people talk about male menopause, men may father children into their
80s, and hormonal changes slowly decline all during adulthood with no
drastic changes at any particular age.
- Ratio of single women to single
men. Among long-term missionaries today there are far more
single women than single men. These ratios vary widely by agency,
field, and team, but they often range from 3:1 to 7:1. With so many
more women than men, it is less likely that women will find spouses while
serving in a host culture.
- Genetic birth defects.
Nearly everyone has met someone with Down Syndrome. The incidence of
this defect increases with the age of the mother. At age 30 the chance
is one in 1000, at age 35 the chance is one in 400, at age 40 the chance is
one in 100, and at age 45 the chance is one in 30. Although the
incidence also increases slightly each year with the father’s age, the
increase is trivial compared with the mother’s age.
What is a woman to do if she wants to marry and have children?
Likewise, what is a man to do? Here are several options with some of the
major advantages and disadvantages of each.
Meet someone in the agency
This is often an excellent way to meet a spouse. People serving in the
same agency are likely to have much in common. They usually have a similar
call to service, similar values, similar beliefs, and both want to serve
cross-culturally. All of these similarities, along with many others, are
likely to lead to a strong marriage where both spouses are very happy in their
marriage. Since there are so many more single women than single men, it is
a great advantage for men.
Conversely, this fact is a great disadvantage to single women who want to
marry and have children. For example, suppose an agency has three single
women for every single man. If every single man marries one of the single
women, then two thirds of the single women will remain unmarried. Those
are not very good odds.
Meet a national in the host country
Some single missionaries marry nationals living in the country where they are
serving. The major advantages of this kind of marriage are that both have
a common concern for the culture in which they are living, and often both are
interested in serving God in that country as well. It is especially good
for third culture kids (TCKs) who have grown up in that country or one with a
similar culture.
The disadvantages include the deep cultural differences individuals often
have on some important issues, such as male vs. female roles or honesty vs.
saving-face. These differences may be very difficult to live with.
The single woman may be attracted to the macho male in her host culture but may
not like the way he dominates her after marriage. The single man may be
attracted to the way the woman in his host culture avoids hurting anyone but may
not like her lying to him to save face after marriage.
When children come along, more differences occur.
- Your children may not really know your
parents, their grandparents.
- Family members, such as grandparents and
cousins, may not able to communicate well with your children.
- You may not celebrate your culture’s
holidays and observe its traditions.
- You may have to explain jokes and/or ask
for them to be explained.
- Your children may grow up with a
different set of cultural assumptions than you have.
- You may experience discrimination because
of the ethnicity of your spouse.
- Your children may grow up with gender
roles you do not approve of.
Meet someone in the passport country
When single missionaries marry someone from their passport country, they both
bring the same cultural values they hold on important issues, such as male vs.
female roles or honesty vs. saving-face. When they have children, their
children will then internalize some of these same deeply held values themselves
and have strong ties to their relatives in their passport culture. Of
course they will become TCKs, so they will also internalize some values from the
host culture.
The major disadvantage to marrying someone from back “home” is that person
may not be willing to serve in another culture. Individuals may say that
they are willing to go wherever the single missionary is called, but they may
not want to do so after the marriage takes place. Single missionaries need
to consider how strong their call to serve in another culture is.
Meet someone on E-harmony.com
After many years of teaching psychology, counseling, administration, research
and writing at Fuller Theological Seminary, Neil Clark Warren founded e-harmony
.com. He uses his “29 dimensions of compatibility” to match singles on the
basis of common interests and deeply held values. Millions of singles fill
out the survey, and then they are matched with others who score as being
compatible with them.
The advantage to this is that if the test is correct and everyone tells the
truth about themselves, single missionaries meet people who have many important
things in common with them. Of course, it only matches singles with others
likely to be compatible, and then the couple must spend much time with their
match and with each other’s families. E-harmony is just an introduction.
The disadvantage is that not everyone is honest in what they say when taking
any such instrument. Although many may answer the survey with complete
honesty, some others may bias their answers toward what they would like to be,
toward what they would like in a mate, or just tell outright lies. There
is no way to screen people filling out surveys on-line or even be sure that they
did not have a “friend” fill it out for them. Caution is the best advice.
Remain Single
Both Jesus and Paul advocated remaining single. Jesus gave three
reasons people did not marry and ended by saying that those who could accept it
should do so (Matthew 19: 10-12). In 1 Corinthians 7 Paul made eight
positive statements about remaining single (verses 1, 8, 26-27, 32, 34, 38, and
39-40). Remaining single and contented in your singleness is pleasing to
God, and it is far better than marrying the wrong person.
Likewise, both Jesus and Paul realized that not everyone could live the
single life. When his disciples suggested that it would be better not to
marry, Jesus said that not everyone could accept this (Matthew 19:11).
Paul said that marriage would help people avoid immorality, that people who
could not control themselves and burned with passion, and that a man acting
improperly toward his fiancé should marry (1 Corinthians 7: 2, 9, and 36).
Paul advised Timothy specifically about widows who should and should not
remain single. He said that only widows over 60, faithful to their
husbands and known for their good deeds should be put on the list of widows
cared for by the church (1 Timothy 5:9-10). However, he said that widows
under 60 should not be on the list because their sensual desires would make them
want to marry. Paul said that he counseled these younger widows to marry,
to have children, and to manage their homes (1 Timothy 5:11-15).
There is hope!
Among missionaries who are not contented in singleness, some individuals who
believe their time is running out on the ticking clock may think that marriage
and parenthood is hopeless. However, marriage is always possible, and
parenthood by adoption is always possible. Furthermore, both marriage and
biological parenthood is possible later than many think, though the risks may be
greater.
I
know one woman who spent nearly two decades in cross-cultural service unmarried.
She had never been married, but when she said, "I do," she instantly became
wife, mother, mother-in-law, and grandmother. Most women gradually move
into those roles one at a time over two or three decades. She spent the
first year of her married life back in her passport country adjusting to these
new roles, thankful for the blessings God had given her. There is hope!
I know another couple who met while serving with two different agencies in a
host culture. Though neither had ever married, they dated and married in
their late forties and had twin boys (their own) in their early fifties!
They continue to serve in their host culture as they rear their sons and seek
God’s blessing on their family. There is hope for people who want to marry and
are not contended in their singleness!
Ronald Koteskey is
Member Care Consultant
GO International
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