Part 1 Isn't there a better way?
Chapter 1.2 So this is love?
Beyond what feels good, back to what is good
Living for myself
My own self-centered approach to romance started young. Even though I grew up in a Christian home, by the time I reached junior high I had embraced a very ungodly attitude towards relationships. I didn't fear God. Despite my parents' diligence and godly example, I was living for sin and my own pleasure.
The older guys on my gymnastics team bragged about the different girls they had slept with. I was mesmerized by their stories. Sin sounded so enticing. With a friend I stole pornographic magazines from a bookstore and pored over them, stoking the fire of my own sinful cravings- I was enslaved to lust, and girls were nothing more than objects to satisfy my desire. One night I snuck out of the house for a prearranged meeting with three girls and made out with each of them one after the other.
Looking back, I'm sickened by these memories, but at the time I only wanted more. The fact that I remained a virgin during those years is, to be honest, a miracle. It had everything to do with God's mercy and nothing to do with any self-control or virtue on my part. I can easily be brought to tears when I think about where I'd be today if God had not chosen to intervene.
God convicted me of my disobedience through a message given by Randy Alcorn at a retreat I attended my freshman year in high school. Randy spoke about heaven. He talked about how Jesus died for my sins. Even though I claimed to be a Christian, as I listened I knew that I wasn't living for God. I had to change.
I repented of my sin right then, and when I got home from the retreat I threw away the pornographic magazines and paid the bookstore for what I'd stolen (I was too embarrassed to tell them in person, but I left a note with the money on the counter). At the time I quit the gymnastics team and got involved with my church's youth group. My next girlfriend was a Christian and we didn't even kiss. I became a student leader and gained a reputation as someone who was serious about his faith. I assumed that my love life was now pleasing to God.
But I still had a lot to learn.
Not Quite Forever
Although I'm grateful for the changes I made then, I now recognize that much of it was superficial. I wasn't sneaking out to meet girls in the middle of the night anymore, but most of my wrong attitudes remained the same. My main concern were still my own gratification and the fun I could gain from the relationship with girls. I liked the way I felt when a girl liked me. I enjoyed the rush I got from flirting or expressing my feelings to a girl. I was still very immature and selfish.
In Church my friends and I played the dating game with passion-more passion, I regret to say, than we gave to worshiping or listening to sermons. During Sunday services we passed notes about who like whom, who was going out with whom, and who had broken up with whom.
During my sophomore year, my involvement in the dating game took a more serious turn. That summer I met Kelly. She had just become a Christian and was new to my church. She was beautiful, blond, and two inches taller than me. But I don't mind. Kelly was popular, and all the guys liked her. Since I was the only guy who had the nerve to talk to her, she ended up liking me. I asked her to be my girlfriend at the youth group water-ski retreat and sealed our new relationship with a kiss.
Kelly was my first serious girlfriend. Everyone in our youth group recognized us as a couple. We celebrated our "anniversary" every month. Finding ways to spend time together and worrying about the current status of our relationship consumed my energy.
Kelly knew me better than anyone else. After my folks were asleep, Kelly and I would spend hours on the phone, often late into the night, taking about everything and nothing in particular. We thought God had made us for each other. We talked about getting married someday. We began expressing our feelings physically. I promised her that I would love her forever.
My parents didn't want me in a serious relationship, but they adored Kelly. They enjoyed the time she spent with the family. Their love for both of us blinded them to the fact that we were headed in a dangerous direction. They had no idea about our sinful physical relationship. I hid that from them. I never lied outright to my mom and dad, but I half-answered questions and tried to put things in a better light.
Like many high school relationships, our romance was premature-too much, too soon. And our struggle against sexual sin was a losing battle. Though we never actually had sex, we were dishonoring God. We were violating each other's purity, and our spiritual lives were stagnant as a result.
After a summer missions trip that kept us apart for two months, I ended the relationship.
"We have to break up," I said to her one night after a movie. We both knew this was coming.
"Is there any chance we can have something in the future?" she asked.
"No," I said , trying to add resolve to my voice. "No, it's over."
We broke up two years after we met. Not quite "forever," as I had promised.
To be continue~~
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