- Jun 14, 2004
- 4,203
- 2,130
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
I like my new church. More than that, I respect the members of my new church. It isn't over the top or unnecessarily demonstrative, but there is a strong but quiet faith which is so unique compared to the previous "megachurch" I used to attend.
One ongoing issue however is one of married women flirting with me. There aren't many single young women who attend, if any, and I've come to accept that. I feel a little "guilty" when ignoring women are overtly flirting. Normally, I am friendly to everyone but I want to set appropriate boundaries, especially at church, but not quite sure how to do that with flirty married women.
I suppose I could just "go along with it" but that wouldn't feel right to me. But if I'm somewhat cold and distant that doesn't feel "right" either. I think the easiest solution is simply to avoid them whenever possible and simply be polite but avoid extended conversations otherwise when interaction is necessary. What do you think?
Others have covered that you might be misinterpreting, and I agree with them, but let's for a second assume she is actually flirting with you. Let's also assume it is only flirting, meaning she isn't hoping to act on anything beyond that. There is a path between the two you mentioned (go along with it or avoid whenever possible) that serves well in lots of situations.
First, make sure you are clear on the person, the follower of Christ, you strive to be. When you are clear on that, commit to taking actions that are in full integrity with the person you are striving to be. Second, train yourself in every situation with women to recognize and respond to them as fellow believers made in the image of God, just as you are.
Much of the past training in the church, which had good intentions, taught men to resist temptation and stay out of trouble by avoiding women either entirely or partially. This had a couple of unintended effects. One is that it trains men to see women as primarily something other than siblings in Christ. Instead they become objects of risk to be avoided. That leads to the another unintended effect, in that is doesn't train men to deal with our own hearts and minds and actions in avoiding temptation or improper situations, but instead trains us to minimize someone else by transferring the solution to our sin nature from ourselves to them.
You are responsible for your actions, not hers. She is responsible for her actions, not yours. If you act in ways that align with the integrity of who you strive to be, while treating her as an equal sibling made in the image of God, then you how you respond will neither provide positive reinforcement of her flirting nor will it deprive you or her from engaging appropriately in any ministry or fellowship at your church. Sounds simple, and I realize doing that perfectly doesn't always happen, but it is a path that can be learned with experience and reading the situation.
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