The straights are at it again.
Over the weekend, singer Ciara caused an internet stir when she posted on Instagram a clip from a sermon by Houstonâs Lakewood megachurch pastor John Gray telling single women why theyâre not married.
Suggested Reading
âToo many women want to be married but youâre walking in the spirit of âgirlfriend,ââ Pastor Gray said.
After playfully imitating the pain of women who come to him upset because theyâve been doing everything ârightâ but still arenât married, he blamed Scripture for this advice he gave:
âHereâs what the Scripture says: He that finds a wife finds a good thing. … Youâre not a wife when I marry you, youâre a wife when I find you,â he said, adding his own interpretation to Proverbs 18:22.
âA âwifeâ is not the presence of a ring, itâs the presence of your character,â he said. âAsk the Lord to deliver you from that spirit [of âgirlfriendâ], and carry yourself like youâre already taken, and I promise you, when you carry yourself like a wife, a husband will find you.â
Sweet Jesus.
Ciara rightfully got dragged for sharing this video and adding the caption, â#LevelUp,â at that. If she didnât know that itâs bad form to shame single women for not being marriedâlike she herself was only a few years agoâand to suggest that being married is on a higher plane of existence, she learned Sunday.
And there is still a conversation to be had about women internalizing and perpetuating sexism. But since CiCi went on to explain on Instagram that what she meant by â#LevelUpâ was that it came not in the form of a husband but in the form of finding self-love in God (sure, Jan!), Iâll save that convo for another day.
Menâand especially pastorsâwe need to talk.
First, let me say, from my interactions with Pastor Gray, heâs a very nice man. But this excerpt is layers of wrong and dangerous.
Marriage may very well be special to the individual people who are in it, but it is not an inherently special institution to aspire to, or one that someone âdeserves.â
text
If women are out here crying about something that is causing them a very deep painâfeeling invisible, unworthy of romantic loveâmocking that pain is cruel. Manipulating it is worse.
There is no such thing as having the âspirit of a girlfriend,â or carrying yourself âlike a wife.â Itâs just another iteration of the sexist dichotomy and hierarchy of women, the same tired Madonna-whore complex: the good kind of woman vs. the bad kind.
Isnât it fascinating how the book of Proverbs, written by a man who âfoundâ 700 wives and 300 concubinesâthe Steve Harvey of marriage advice, in his dayâis still being used thousands of years later to make women feel like theyâre only one of two kinds of women: the virtuous, worthy âwifeâ or the unworthy and âunwifeableâ?
If no âhusbandâ has âfoundâ a woman yetâassuming that she wants to be foundâitâs not because churches donât intentionally create the kind of men who value an actual equal partnership over subjugation; itâs not because there are statistically more black women with higher levels of education and income than their male counterparts, which can cause issues in pairing off; itâs not because some women do not desire marriage at all or do not desire marriage to a man; itâs not because a womanâs life might have more purpose beyond being married (surprise!).
No, it must be a reflection of a womanâs character, something sheâs doing wrong.
That is a sick thing to tell a woman who already feels unworthy and unlovable. It is vile that even the church where she worships tells her that itâs right to let the way men are treating her determine her worth and to suggest that God is cool with that.
Thatâs the implication given when a woman is âpromisedâ that a âhusband will find youâ as soon as she changes her ways and deserves to be found.
Be for real.
Even married husbands have no problem âfindingâ single women (and it has nothing to do with a womanâs âspiritâ). So letâs stop pretending that married people are some elevated and virtuous class of worthy people.
Instead, let me remind cisgender, heterosexual people that getting married is neither difficult nor an accomplishment. Ask Britney Spears and that random dude she married at a Vegas drive-thru in the early aughts. Itâs just another in a series of life choices that people make.
Marriage may very well be special to the individual people who are in it, but it is not an inherently special institution to aspire to, or one that someone âdeserves.â The many different kinds of marriages in the Bible attest to this (and the least âspecialâ kind is the one where if you rape her, you buy her).
Jesus never married, and the apostles Paul and Peter both ditched their wives to #LevelUp and focus solely on spreading the good news of Jesus. So, whatâs the truth about marriage for a Christian?
The truth is, singleness is not a woman disease that a husband cures. Itâs not a holding pattern or a phase until youâve fixed all your damage and become lovable enough to ascend to a higher status. How does that message even square with Christâs message of our inherent worth by birthright? It doesnât.
After all, Jesus, a revolutionary, lived to dismantle hierarchies and elevated women to positions of authority and agency beyond what their misogynistic cultures would allow or encourage. When are these pastors going to follow suit?
How about now. The next time a woman comes crying about why she isnât married yet, pastors can tell her the truth. That God created her with her own agency and her own purpose that goes beyond whoever she might marry and whatever children she might have. Equip her to break a toxic cycle of looking for male approval as a sign of her worthiness. Affirm her desire for romantic and sexual love, and also show her how to value her platonic relationships as much as she would value any romantic ones. Equip her to go find her purpose.
And to ensure that patriarchal societal barriers donât get in the way of a woman becoming who God created her to be, teach men to value women as full people with their own agency and purpose outside of men. Deconstruct the dangerous complementarian myth that women exist to be helpmates and mules for whatever man deems them âvaluableâ enough. Teach men that they do not have the right to define any womanâs value and that marriage with them is not a prize to win but simply a negotiation of terms. Tell them to sit down, be humble.
Because men have never faced and will never face the societal pressure women historically have faced to be married. Unlike women, men have never had their literal value inextricably linked to their marital status. Women, since time immemorial, were seen as literally worthless and discarded if their fathers couldnât marry them off, and then again if they couldnât bear children for their husbands.
That fear of not being good enough for marriageâthe one thing that could give women a potentially âsecureâ life in a patriarchal, oppressive worldâhas been passed down to women from generation to generation. This is not your history, men. So why are you talking?
Timeâs up on those days.
If youâre not helping to dismantle patriarchal oppression of women and nonbinary people, at least get out of our way. And you can start by leaving your advice for women on how to become âwivesâ right where Ciara left that mumbling rapperâin the past.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.