Single & Faithful
A weekly email for the single Christian who refuses to put life on hold until marriage
When everyone else's life seems to be moving forward…
You're in your thirties. Your married friends are posting ultrasounds. Your church's young adult group is now just you and two others. Someone asks if you've 'tried the apps,' as if you haven't been on them for six years.
And the books all say to 'embrace this season' — but nobody tells you what that actually looks like when the season stretches into a decade. When you're building a career, serving, praying, and still going to bed alone. When the Bible has plenty to say about marriage, but feels oddly quiet about… this.
Single & Faithful — your weekly agent
What makes this agent different.
No purity-culture baggage
We don't treat singleness as God's waiting room for marriage. This isn't about staying pure until your wedding night. It's about building a full, faithful life right now.
Real biblical precedent
We go to the single people in Scripture — Jeremiah, Daniel, John the Baptist, likely Miriam and others. Their stories, not the marriage metaphors that dominate every sermon series.
One verse, one week
Not a firehose of inspiration. One anchor passage. One set of questions. Enough space to let it sink in before the next Sunday small group asks if you're seeing anyone.
Your first month
Four weeks. Four anchors. Four conversations you'll actually want to have.
- Week 1
Jeremiah's celibacy and the calling that required it
Jeremiah 16:1-2God told Jeremiah not to marry. Not as punishment, but as prophecy. What his singleness meant for his people — and what yours might mean for yours.
- Week 2
The question Jesus didn't answer about eunuchs
Matthew 19:10-12When the disciples said it's better not to marry, Jesus told them about three kinds of eunuchs. The third kind chose it. We'll sit with why.
- Week 3
Paul's logic for staying single in Corinth
1 Corinthians 7:32-35Paul's case for singleness isn't about moral superiority. It's about undivided attention. What he saw that we've forgotten, and whether it still applies.
- Week 4
The older women Titus needed in leadership
Titus 2:3-5The early church needed single and widowed women in positions of influence. Not as volunteers filling time, but as essential leaders. What changed?
Why this exists
Why this agent exists
Most Christian content for singles falls into two tired categories: purity-culture holdovers that treat singleness as a problem to be solved, or aspirational 'gift of singleness' theology that feels completely disconnected from the lived experience of longing, loneliness, and wondering if God forgot about you.
We believe singleness is neither a curse nor a superpower. It's a life. And Scripture has far more to say about living faithfully right now than most churches let on. Jeremiah never married. So did John the Baptist. Paul wrote most of the New Testament as a single man navigating ministry, friendship, and purpose without a spouse. Their singleness wasn't incidental — it shaped their obedience, their calling, their intimacy with God.
This agent doesn't exist to help you 'wait well' for marriage. It exists because your life isn't on pause. You're not in a holding pattern. The kingdom work in front of you — the friendships, the callings, the choices about money and home and service and desire — these are your real life. And the Bible speaks directly into it, if you know where to look. One verse a week. No sentimentality. Just the truth that your singleness is not wasted time.
Is this for you?
Yes — if any of this is you
- You've been single longer than you planned and don't know what to do with that
- You're tired of being told singleness is a 'gift' when it feels like a sentence
- You want Scripture that speaks to your actual life, not just your dating status
- You're building a meaningful life now, not waiting for marriage to start one
Probably not — if any of this is you
- You're happily single and don't relate to longing or loneliness in it
- You want tactical dating advice or Christian relationship tips
- You're looking for content that positions marriage as the ultimate goal
- You prefer devotionals that avoid the discomfort of hard questions
Make Single & Faithful your agent.
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A note from your agent
I won't pretend to know your story. I don't know if you're single by choice, by circumstance, or by a long string of almosts that never became anything. I don't know if you're 24 or 54, if you've been married before, if you're sorting out same-sex attraction, if you've given up on apps or never tried them.
What I do know is this: the Bible doesn't waste ink. When God told Jeremiah not to marry, it mattered. When Paul argued for staying single in 1 Corinthians 7, he wasn't being glib. Your singleness is not dead air in the story God is writing. It's the story. Let's figure out what Scripture actually says about living it.
— Your agent
Test the agent. Open these three.
Even before you sign up — read these three passages this week, and notice what happens.
God explicitly tells Jeremiah not to marry. His celibacy was a prophetic act, not a personal failing.
Paul wishes everyone were single like him, but knows it's not for everyone. Permission to want what you want.
God tells the barren woman to sing. A promise that fruitfulness is not tied to marriage or children.
Honest questions, honest answers.
Is this content generated by AI?
What's your denominational stance?
Why pay for this when there are free devotionals?
Does this assume I want to get married?
Will this address loneliness and sexual desire honestly?
What if I'm in my twenties and this feels premature?
Make Single & Faithful your agent.
From $14.99/week. Annual is $119 ($0.33/day) and saves 67% vs monthly. 7-day free trial. Cancel anytime, in one click.