Christians and Online Dating: 3 Things to Consider
Online dating. Some blame it for the most ridiculous, awkward moments of their lives. Others have a spouse because they gave it a shot. Commercials claim it鈥檚 the best way to meet singles. And YouTube parodies and newsreels highlight every possible way it can go wrong.
So, should you try online dating? After months of asking myself that same question, I decided to try it out for about half a year. Here are a few things I wish I would have thought about before diving into the quirky complexity that is online dating.
1. Know the Basics
If you鈥檝e never tried online dating before, the closest equivalent that I can give is job hunting, oddly enough. You create a profile (i.e., r茅sum茅), you publish it on the dating site (i.e., job board), and you wait for someone to notice and give you a wink, poke, smile, etc. (i.e., job interview request). Meanwhile, you search through other profiles (i.e., prospects) looking for potential matches. If that sounds a little strange to you, yes, it absolutely is. Online dating is the twenty-first century鈥檚 hybrid of more conventional dating approaches.
My biggest piece of advice is to keep in mind that beyond all the buttons, the swiping, and the personality profiles, this involves real people. Be shrewd. Be careful. Our actions in this virtual space can have real implications for both them and you.
Not everyone on dating sites or apps recognizes this, and some have less-than-honorable intentions, as you probably know. Not everyone operates by the same set of rules either. One of the biggest debates I had was whether it鈥檚 okay to talk to more than one person at a time. It can be more efficient to communicate with multiple people at once as you try to find the 鈥渞ight one,鈥 and it seems like a fairly common thing to do. But at the same time, it can feel a little underhanded and cause awkward moments or hurt feelings if someone you鈥檝e been communicating with suddenly starts to ignore you while moving forward getting to know somebody else.
Similarly, it won鈥檛 take much online dating to discover that some people just won鈥檛 respond to you. More than once, it seemed like I鈥檇 found a really great person with a lot of the same interests. I鈥檇 send a message. I鈥檇 wait and wait and . . . nothing. A little discouraging, but a clear sign that it was time to move on. Cue the 鈥渕ore fish in the sea鈥 clich茅s.
One last thing you should be aware of: 鈥淐hristian鈥 can mean a lot of different things. I鈥檝e found faithful, devout Christians on both Christian-targeted online dating platforms as well as non-Christian ones. But it鈥檚 best to proceed with caution. Don鈥檛 wait too long before asking what the person鈥檚 faith looks like on a practical level.
2. Consider Your Compatibility
When it comes to dating, online or in person, compatibility is a hot-button term. But many people never actually consider whether they鈥檙e compatible with the dating approach they鈥檙e trying. So before you pay for an online dating service, ask yourself questions like these (you just might end up saving yourself some time, money, and frustration):
How do you typically connect with people? Do you need a lot of face-to-face interaction before you feel like you really know someone, or do you think messaging or texting is enough, at least to start things off? What鈥檚 your personality type (yes, I have seen Myers-Briggs types occasionally referenced on profiles)? How could that benefit you or hold you back if you try online dating?
Overall, online dating seemed to fit my personality well. As an introvert, I was able to start getting to know people without the added pressure and uncertainty of a blind date or first date with little to no conversation ahead of time (#istheresomethinginmyteeth?). Online dating also supported my tendency to internally process things. I could receive a message, take time to reflect, and then respond instead of having just a few seconds to answer during a face-to-face conversation. This was especially helpful with deeper, more complicated subjects.
However, online dating had its cons too. Though it helped me feel more comfortable initiating conversations, I think I relied on that a little too much compared to talking with someone in person. And when people would randomly stop talking to me or ignore my message, I definitely took that more personally than I should have. That鈥檚 just part of online dating.
3. Be Realistic
If you can glean anything from all the starkly different opinions out there, it鈥檚 that online dating isn鈥檛 for everyone. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn鈥檛. Don鈥檛 pin all your hopes and dreams on this one medium to find your 鈥渟oul mate.鈥 God can be extremely resourceful and creative when it comes to this kind of thing. My parents鈥攚hen they least expected it, when they鈥檇 pretty much given up on dating鈥攆irst met after being set up by a nurse at a clinic, of all places.
Also, keep in mind that online dating, more than anything else, is an on-ramp for you to begin connecting with people. Though it can help remove some of the squirmy, palm-sweating awkwardness of first dates, it鈥檚 probably not going to get rid of all of that. And tools like personality profiles and compatibility tests can only go so far. Just because a test says you鈥檙e 100 percent compatible with someone, that doesn鈥檛 guarantee you鈥檒l be able to stand being in the same room together for more than five minutes. Online dating can never replace face-to-face interaction.
That said, the timing of meeting someone for the first time is important. For me, meeting after only a couple days was not a good idea, especially when it was last-minute, on Black Friday, when I only had a T-shirt and hadn鈥檛 shaved (#guylogic #whatwasIthinking???). Waiting too long, as in several months, to meet can be a problem too. Texts and messages give you a limited perspective of a person at best, and you run the risk of starting to invest too much of yourself in a relationship with someone you鈥檝e never met. Once again, I had to learn this the hard way.
Obviously, there are a lot of things worth considering before hitting that 鈥淪ign Up鈥 button. Here鈥檚 one last thing鈥攂y far the most important, though. reminds us that if we acknowledge God in all our ways, he will guide us. That includes online dating. All the human advice, all the thought and reflection in the world, cannot compare with the wisdom of the One whose timing is always perfect and who knows you better than you know yourself. Seek the Lord first, and seek him often, in this and in all things.



