(from the room)
I have a question.
So, let's say you're single
and that's been a struggle for you
and suddenly the Lord's
brought you out of it.
Then, the Lord brings you a spouse.
Before you get married,
is that something you
should be up front with
and say that had been a struggle with you
before going into the marriage
so your wife can maybe
be more understanding?
Tim: Well, I think in the church,
I would say this.
I would say that if you're a father,
you should be putting the question
to any young man that wants
to marry your daughter.
If you are a young lady,
if you're not going to
put the question to them,
you should have your pastors
put the question to them
or your dad put the question to them.
Yes. Why?
Because you have characteristics
like the Proverbs 31 woman.
You have characteristics of a godly woman.
Guys, that's there on purpose.
So that you can look at it
and try to find a woman that's like that.
Same thing.
You have qualities of godly young men
displayed to you ladies in Scripture.
What kind of husband do you want?
Do you want one that bears resemblance?
Then you need to be getting
to know one another.
I recently heard Paul Washer do a message.
He did a message based
on 1 Thessalonians 4 -
sanctification, specifically
concerning sexual purity.
And he made the statement that
if you are failing with sexual purity,
you're not even at the first rung
of spiritual maturity.
And so here's the thing,
what I would want to see is
is God doing something
in the life of that young man
where there is a marked victory?
I'm not looking for perfection.
Look, when God saves a young man -
young women too -
the battle for sexual purity,
it can be savage.
It can be incredibly intense battle
with the desires of
the flesh in that area.
But what I'd be looking for is this:
is there evidence that the Spirit of God
is real in that guy's life
and that there is some kind of progress,
there is some kind of victory
that they are getting to the place
where they're going weeks and months
and years without failure.
Because if there are
constant regular falls,
I am absolutely convinced
you cannot live that way -
you can't live that way for too long
and be a genuine Christian.
But you cannot live that way
and think that the Spirit is
not going to be grieved.
And it says something about
where a man's character is at,
and so I think those
questions need to be asked.
And what's happening more and more
is I am asking young men very pointedly -
like I want to know space between falls.
I want to know the details
because I want to see what God does
in men's lives.
And I think in this very area
it's a tell-tale sign.
And if somebody's just living
in fairly perpetual failure,
no way are they going to
marry one of my daughters.
And as a pastor in the church,
I would tell a woman,
if there is not some
indication of victory here,
stay away from him.
You do not want to go there.
(incomplete thought)
Yes, I think there needs
to be transparency
at this point.
Now look, I think too, if we're faithful
(incomplete thought).
I mean, just today,
I was reading 1 Corinthians,
and I got all the way to like chapter 10.
So I read 1 Corinthians 7 today.
And you know, there is a place -
obviously, there is a place
for somebody to get married
for the sake of sexual temptation.
I mean, I would say this,
as a young man,
you need to strive for purity.
If the battle is intense, get married.
But look, if you're a Christian,
by the Spirit, strive to put to death
the deeds of the body
and get married.
That seems to be very biblical.
Rather, it's better to marry than to burn.
And I think finding a
wife is a good thing,
but you need to be
the caliber of young man
that a godly young lady is
going to want to marry,
because if your life is sloppy
and full of failure and defeat,
you shouldn't expect that you're ready
to get married.
You shouldn't.
That is not putting too high a standard
to expect that you're striving
to walk before the Lord
and that there is evidence of victory
in the life.