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We Want to Be Pursued!...Continued from page 1

A.J. Kiesling

Crosswalk.com Contributing Writer

She continues: “I think a big part of what attracted me to my current boyfriend is that he actually had the guts to ask me on a date, to make his interest known and to pursue me. After over five years in a church young adult group, he's one of the only ones who have actually asked me out. … I think guys need to buck up and ask girls out and not just rely on maybe seeing a girl at some church group event or whatever. ...”

Pursuit—ah, that’s it really, when it all boils down to the essence. As I scanned the responses from real women in my survey, I heard a repeated longing to be pursued, to be wooed, to be won, in the old-fashioned sense of the word. My own mother’s generation had another phrase for this courtship dance:  “I chased him till he caught me.” Is there a hint of coy flirtation in that phrase? You bet. Is there perhaps an implicit understanding that women have an active role to play in the chasing-and-catching dance? Absolutely. But at its core this archaic statement speaks of what I simply call the longing.

What is it that feeds this longing within women? The source is as ancient as the dawn of time, and the setting is the Garden of Eden. Listen to God’s own words in Genesis:

To the woman [God] said:
“I will greatly multiply your sorrow and your conception;
In pain you shall bring forth children;
Your desire shall be for your husband…”

For me, this spells out—and makes sense of—the deep emotional need within woman that longs for the love of a man, particularly the love of one special man. In essence, woman is afflicted with this desire. Indeed, most women prefer the love of one good man over the attentions of many men.
 
The world may have moved on, become hip and high-tech and politically correct, but the old-fashioned values persist in our very makeup. We can’t get away from who we are as women—created with a longing that goes deep. Some men may enjoy the season of “sowing their wild oats” and jockeying from one woman to the next, but it’s rare to find a woman who actually prefers multiple men to one good one. So it’s all the more frustrating when we see men we like, send signals that we’re interested (eye contact, lively conversation, hair-flipping, flirting, etc.), and they do nothing. The frustration can even send well-meaning and sincerely searching Christian women to other wading pools beyond the one marked “Christian” only.

All this talk about longing to be pursued begs the question:  What does pursuit look like in the modern-day world, the real world we inhabit, not the one Jane Austen lived in?

The Dating Dance

What does pursuit look like in a world where formal pronouncements and calling cards have given way to text messages and MySpace referrals? Though many women long for the old-fashioned protocols, most don’t honestly expect a man to show up on her doorstep in a cold-call appeal for love, bouquet in hand. In fact, it might be a little creepy. From talking to other women, I got the feeling that pursuit of any kind is preferable to a man sending “interested” signals and then never acting on them (excluding stalker tactics).

Content Provided by: http://www.crosswalk.com
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Most Recent User Comments
starthrower68
6/7/2008 10:59 PM
I think the article pinpoints how women feel; I've met someone that I believed to be special but now I'm ready to give up. I'm afraid if I say what I want, I'm going to be seen as needy or desperate. I want this person to pursue me, and he has expressed interest but based on the lack of action, I just don't see the kind of interest for anything to get off the ground. I guess I just need to let it go and God will do with it what he will.
pccrosswalk
5/28/2008 12:22 PM
I would like to point out the danger of focusing on uninhibited. The bible does call on us to have self control, one such example is in the book of Peter. Non-Christian men are operating on worldy values, while on the surface such moves may seem appealing, keep in mind this person is a stranger who knows nothing about your character and at the same time you know nothing about his character. This move is no different from when David saw Bathesheba.

Christian men I implore you not to yield to the pressure of these "sex and the city" worldly values. As men we are the spiritual leaders, so even if the women are calling for us to learn from the bad habits of the world hold your ground and consult God first. Be a man, gain a clear conscience and remember you are pursuing a woman for marriage. If you are shy ask for Godly help from your Pastor(hopefully he doesn't watch sex and the city). If she rejects you pray and turn your focus to God for direction.
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