Question by : Do you believe as a Christian , ideally, young people should have?
sex outside marriage. Do you believe it is ok to have a sense of humor
to laugh or joke with females in private when you all seem to have the same problem…being pretty much alone, poor?
I lived in very poor circumstances for a long time, in very poor housing. After I moved, someone said they thought the young people would be going into that house and making love. I was shocked when they thought it was
absolutely the worst thing in the world that I, and older woman, wanted to meet a nice man, date and remarry, not hve sex outside marriage or sleep around, but decently and in order.. I do not believe in having
sex outside marriage. I also do not think reading a book with sex in it is as bad as having sex with someone you ar enot married to, or another, because it does not involve r another human being. I do not read sexually explicit material, or watch it. I am speaking of my beliefs and asking the opinion of other
Christian Conservative “Fundamentalist Females. I have had nothing but filth and vulgarity and maltreatment from most men since I became alone 25 years ago, every where I moved to, from the same group of people. There must have been money in it for someone to go to such lengths of hatred to keep on harassing me like that…and it was the same people, same group, same M.O.
I do not believe in marrying for sex or only if it is good, or trying it out. What if something happens and one of them cannot have sex. Are they going to divorce. I do not think that waiting for marriage is being manipulative either.
I think GOD meant for women and men to wait for marrige.
I realize I am not going to date and marry. It is not going to happen.

I was wondering if other CHRISTIAN Conservative Fundamentalist FEMALES and males can share their views. I do not go around talking of sex in front of strange men. I have been treated horribly since being alone…this has gone on 25 years. I began by trying to go to Church and find CHristian singles as a
CHristian woman who had been married 20 years. I believed and believe I was eligible to remarry. I was so slandered, defamed, it was not possible. then I could never get any where that it was possible. Now I am old, fat, ugly and not well.

I wonder if the entire Christian Marriage “arena” has changed in the Christian community, was bad enough before. . Seems like to be that, an arena…of fighting, mud slinging, slander, defamation, degradation. People come into your home and insult you, strangers, workers can insult you, people you never knew. That is what I have experienced. FORGET IT. I have come to the conclusion all men are the same…when they get around a woman they do not know they are vulgar. It has nothing to do with their makeup. I dress conservatively, I do not dress indecently and my makeup is modest. I am older, and overweight. That is no excuse, nothing, absolutely nothing excuses men for talking to, acting like that toward women, they do it because that is what is in their hearts. Except for the past four years, I have been in good health for the past 25 years. I have not been intimate for 25 yrs. It has not been a problem. My husband and I did not divorce over sex, that was the least of it.

Best answer:

Answer by Angry Candy
I think sex before marriage is a terrible idea. If the relationship is based only on sex, it is a pointless relationship. Most people don’t get to know each other as a person anymore. It’s like they just pass each other around like a bong in a basement.

Add your own answer in the comments!

Breathe Live (christian drama)

The final moments of two Christians lives imprisoned for sharing their faith. Do you have the faith to die for Christ?
Video Rating: 4 / 5

I just love Christian, I think he like Selena:) Please, rate and comment:* twitition.com song:Deep by Binocular program:sony vegas 10 OMG! Christian favorited and post it on his twitter! I’m sooo happy!! love ya, littleman:* 7/01/11
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Nice Christian Singles photos

Some cool Christian Singles images:


Christian Singles

Image by Jule_Berlin
This is on the way to Finisterre. The black and brown hills in the back have been burning until just a few days before I got there. That made it a pretty strange experience. Sometimes everything looked "normal" and then you had to walk for hours through burned forests. everything still smelled like a big ashtray. It’s sad that such beautiful landscapes are destroyed by fire every year. some by accident, some because of really stupid people…

Als Jakobsweg (span. Camino de Santiago) wird der Pilgerweg zum Grab des Apostels Jakobus in Santiago de Compostela in Spanien bezeichnet. Darunter wird in erster Linie der sog. Camino Francés verstanden, jene hochmittelalterliche Hauptverkehrsachse Nordspaniens, die von den Pyrenäen zum Jakobsgrab reicht und dabei die Königsstädte Jaca, Pamplona, Estella, Burgos und León miteinander verbindet. Die Entstehung dieser Route fällt in ihrem auch heute begangenen Verlauf in die erste Hälfte des 11. Jahrhunderts.

Ein Pilgerführer des 12. Jahrhunderts, der im Liber Sancti Jacobi, der Hauptquelle zur Jakobusverehrung im Hochmittelalter, enthalten ist, nennt für den französischen Raum vier weitere Wege, die sich im Umfeld der Pyrenäen zu einem Strang vereinigen. Nach der Wiederbelebung der Pilgerfahrt nach Santiago de Compostela in den 1970er und 1980er Jahren wurde der spanische Hauptweg 1993 in das UNESCO-Welterbe aufgenommen. 1998 erhielten auch die vier im Liber Sancti Jacobi beschriebenen französischen Wege diesen Titel. Zuvor schon hatte der Europarat im Jahre 1987 die Wege der Jakobspilger in ganz Europa zur europäischen Kulturroute erhoben und ihre Identifizierung empfohlen.

The Way of St. James or St. James’ Way, often known by its Spanish name, el Camino de Santiago, is the pilgrimage to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia in northwestern Spain, where legend has it that the remains of the apostle, Saint James the Great, are buried.
The Way of St James has existed for over a thousand years. It was one of the most important Christian pilgrimages during medieval times. It was considered one of three pilgrimages on which a plenary indulgence could be earned;[citation needed] the others are the Via Francigena to Rome and the pilgrimage to Jerusalem.

Legend holds that St. James’s remains were carried by boat from Jerusalem to northern Spain where they were buried on the site of what is now the city of Santiago de Compostela. There are some, however, who claim that the bodily remains at Santiago belong to Priscillian, the fourth-century Galician leader of an ascetic Christian sect, Priscillianism, who was one of the first Christian heretics to be executed.

There is not a single route; the Way can take one of any number of pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela. However a few of the routes are considered main ones. Santiago is such an important pilgrimage destination because it is considered the burial site of the apostle, James the Great. During the Middle Ages, the route was highly travelled. However, the Black Plague, the Protestant Reformation and political unrest in 16th- century Europe resulted in its decline. By the 1980s, only a few pilgrims arrived in Santiago annually. However, since then, the route has attracted a growing number of modern-day pilgrims from around the globe. The route was declared the first European Cultural Route by the Council of Europe in October 1987; it was also named one of UNESCO’s World Heritage Sites in 1993.

Seville Cathedral – Chapel of Santa María de Jesús
Christian Singles

Image by Messiah Divine
The Cathedral of Seville, formally Catedral de Santa María de la Sede (Cathedral of Saint Mary of the See) was begun in 1402, with construction continuing into the 16th century.

It is the largest of all Roman Catholic cathedrals (Saint Peter’s Basilica not being a cathedral) and also the largest Medieval Gothic religious building, in terms of both area and volume. It is 76 by 115 meters, and was built to cover the land previously occupied by the Almohad Mosque. Its central nave rises to an awesome 42 metres and even the side chapels seem tall enough to contain an ordinary church. Its main altarpiece is considered the largest in the Christian world.

The interior, with the longest nave in Spain, is lavishly decorated, with a large quantity of gold evident. In the main body of the cathedral only the great box like structure of the coro stands out, filling the central portion of the nave. This opens onto the Capilla Mayor, dominated by a vast Gothic retablo of 45 carved scenes from the life of Christ. The lifetime’s work of a single craftsman, Pierre Dancart, this is the ultimate masterpiece of the cathedral – the largest and richest altarpiece in the world and one of the finest examples of Gothic woodcarving anywhere.

The Cathedral also has a large collection of religious jewelry items, paintings and sculptures, along with the tomb of Christopher Columbus.

The builders reused some columns and elements from the mosque, and most famously the Giralda, originally a minaret, was converted into a bell tower. It is topped with a statue representing Faith. The Giralda is the city’s most famous symbol. – from Wikipedia


Christian Singles

Image by Jule_Berlin
it’s just a ghost train station. this is in Spain but really close to the border of france. this has been once been one of the three biggest train stations in europe. just in the middle of nowhere. a village developed around it called Canfranc Estacion which lies on the Camino de Santiago as well. A bit further down the road is Canfranc Pueblo, the old village.
Now the train station is just used by a few regional trains

Als Jakobsweg (span. Camino de Santiago) wird der Pilgerweg zum Grab des Apostels Jakobus in Santiago de Compostela in Spanien bezeichnet. Darunter wird in erster Linie der sog. Camino Francés verstanden, jene hochmittelalterliche Hauptverkehrsachse Nordspaniens, die von den Pyrenäen zum Jakobsgrab reicht und dabei die Königsstädte Jaca, Pamplona, Estella, Burgos und León miteinander verbindet. Die Entstehung dieser Route fällt in ihrem auch heute begangenen Verlauf in die erste Hälfte des 11. Jahrhunderts.

Ein Pilgerführer des 12. Jahrhunderts, der im Liber Sancti Jacobi, der Hauptquelle zur Jakobusverehrung im Hochmittelalter, enthalten ist, nennt für den französischen Raum vier weitere Wege, die sich im Umfeld der Pyrenäen zu einem Strang vereinigen. Nach der Wiederbelebung der Pilgerfahrt nach Santiago de Compostela in den 1970er und 1980er Jahren wurde der spanische Hauptweg 1993 in das UNESCO-Welterbe aufgenommen. 1998 erhielten auch die vier im Liber Sancti Jacobi beschriebenen französischen Wege diesen Titel. Zuvor schon hatte der Europarat im Jahre 1987 die Wege der Jakobspilger in ganz Europa zur europäischen Kulturroute erhoben und ihre Identifizierung empfohlen.

The Way of St. James or St. James’ Way, often known by its Spanish name, el Camino de Santiago, is the pilgrimage to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia in northwestern Spain, where legend has it that the remains of the apostle, Saint James the Great, are buried.
The Way of St James has existed for over a thousand years. It was one of the most important Christian pilgrimages during medieval times. It was considered one of three pilgrimages on which a plenary indulgence could be earned;[citation needed] the others are the Via Francigena to Rome and the pilgrimage to Jerusalem.

Legend holds that St. James’s remains were carried by boat from Jerusalem to northern Spain where they were buried on the site of what is now the city of Santiago de Compostela. There are some, however, who claim that the bodily remains at Santiago belong to Priscillian, the fourth-century Galician leader of an ascetic Christian sect, Priscillianism, who was one of the first Christian heretics to be executed.

There is not a single route; the Way can take one of any number of pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela. However a few of the routes are considered main ones. Santiago is such an important pilgrimage destination because it is considered the burial site of the apostle, James the Great. During the Middle Ages, the route was highly travelled. However, the Black Plague, the Protestant Reformation and political unrest in 16th- century Europe resulted in its decline. By the 1980s, only a few pilgrims arrived in Santiago annually. However, since then, the route has attracted a growing number of modern-day pilgrims from around the globe. The route was declared the first European Cultural Route by the Council of Europe in October 1987; it was also named one of UNESCO’s World Heritage Sites in 1993.

Q&A: Christian Dating?

Question by Marky Marc: Christian Dating?
Would you prefer your significant other to be a Christian?

Best answer:

Answer by lucky
I would date people who aren’t christian, but when I get around the age i want to get married, then I’ll try to find someone who is a christian.

What do you think? Answer below!

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