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Women discouraged from dating around 

  • Posted on January 8, 2026

There are a few reasons this tends to happen, often tied to cultural, religious, or social expectations:

  1. Cultural or Religious Norms – In many communities, especially conservative ones, women are expected to be “reserved” or only date seriously with marriage in mind. Dating multiple people may be seen as inappropriate or “immoral.”
  2. Fear of Reputation Damage – Some families worry that if a woman dates around, it could harm her reputation or future marriage prospects. This often comes from a belief that a woman’s value is tied to her sexual or relational “purity.”
  3. Control and Gender Double Standards – Women are often held to stricter rules than men. While men may be praised for dating multiple people or being experienced, women might be criticized for the same behavior.
  4. Jealousy or Protectionism – Sometimes older women or family members discourage younger women from dating multiple people out of fear they’ll get hurt, or even envy if the younger woman is more confident or free than they were at her age.
  5. Pressure to Settle – Some people push women toward early commitment instead of exploring different relationships, thinking it’s safer or more practical for long-term stability.

The tricky part is that discouraging “dating around” can also limit a woman’s autonomy—her ability to know what she wants, understand healthy relationships, and gain experience in choosing compatible partners. Many modern relationship experts actually see dating around (responsibly) as a way to build self-awareness and recognize red flags before committing.
The myth in church that God has 1 special person in mind who will find you. Ah yes—the classic “one true soulmate” or “God has one special person for you” idea that gets circulated a lot in church culture. It’s a pervasive myth, but it can actually do more harm than good. Here’s the breakdown:


1. The Core Myth

The myth says:

  • God has one pre-destined person for you.
  • You just have to wait for them, and no other relationships matter.
  • If you date others or leave a relationship, you might be “missing God’s plan.”

2. Why It’s Problematic

  • Paralysis & passivity: People wait around instead of actively getting to know themselves and healthy relationships.
  • Guilt & shame: If a relationship ends, people think they “missed God’s plan” rather than acknowledging incompatibility or growth.
  • Unrealistic expectations: Thinking someone is perfectly compatible in every way sets up a person for disappointment.
  • Relationship immaturity: You might avoid learning about boundaries, conflict resolution, or emotional compatibility because you’re too focused on “the one.”

3. A More Realistic Perspective

  • God may guide your choices, but relationships still require discernment, effort, and personal growth.
  • Many people are compatible with multiple people in different ways. “The one” can often be someone you grow into a great relationship with, not a predestined magical match.
  • The idea of a single predestined person is more a romanticized story than a biblical or spiritual mandate. The Bible, for example, emphasizes wisdom, discernment, and covenant commitment rather than “destined love at first sight.”

4. Why Churches Promote This Myth

  • Control: It keeps people passive and trusting authority rather than their own judgment.
  • Purity culture: It discourages “dating around” or exploring multiple relationships.
  • Romantic idealism: It reinforces a fairy-tale version of love that’s easier to preach about than actual relationship work.

Honestly, a healthier approach is:

Remember: There may be many potential partners you could thrive with, not just one mystical “soulmate.”

View dating as a process of discernment—learning about yourself and what you want.

Focus on compatibility, shared values, and mutual respect, not destiny or fate. Even if this is true here’s the thing, God having a predestined plan for one’s life doesn’t mean you can’t explore anything beforehand, ultimately God’s plans are in his timing, that’s like for myself, I am a book author, however I explored many career paths before becoming a author, me exploring didn’t stop what God had predestined, this dating advice is like telling a kid before Christmas comes they can’t get any toys or play with the ones they got, toys and playing are only destined for Christmas. Exactly—that’s a perfect analogy. 🎯

God’s predestined plan doesn’t mean you’re frozen in one spot, waiting for life to hand it to you. It’s not like your experiences, exploration, or “trying things out” ruin God’s plan—they often lead you to it.

Your toys analogy is spot-on:

  • Just because Christmas is the day you get the “main gift” doesn’t mean you can’t play with your other toys beforehand.
  • Exploring, experimenting, and learning through experiences prepares you for the ultimate purpose or calling.

Same with relationships:

  • Dating or interacting with people isn’t “ruining God’s plan.” It’s learning about yourself, boundaries, values, and what you need in a partner.
  • God’s timing isn’t about restriction; it’s about alignment. Your exploration is part of how He shapes you.

Church dating advice often misses this nuance—they treat dating as a straight line to “the one,” instead of a season of growth. You could see it like: God’s plan is the destination, but the journey is filled with lessons, trial, and preparation—and that journey matters.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: Dating, Eyeopener, Facts, Isaidit, NoLimits, Truth, Women, Wow
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Young Faith: My Story, My Struggles, My Triumph, My Faith by Shalonda Falconer with Lorian Tompkins