Darwynn, I hear the depth of what you’re saying and you’re right to bring outcomes into the conversation. Results don’t lie. But I want to expand that lens, because when we’re talking about dating “God’s way,” outcomes are not just external they are spiritual, internal, and generational. So the real question isn’t only: What am I attracting? It’s also: Who am I becoming in the process and does that reflect God’s design? Because alignment with God is not purely outcome-based in the worldly sense. It’s covenant-based. Let’s break this down clearly. First, identity comes before attraction. If I don’t know who I am in God, my values, my standards, my discipline, my purpose then what I attract will always be inconsistent. Not because God failed, but because I’m operating without clarity. Many people are dating from wounds, habits, or learned behavior, not identity. Second, we have to acknowledge how we got here. Our dating patterns don’t come out of nowhere. They are shaped by: - What we saw growing up - What was normalized in our family - What we tolerated emotionally - What we were never taught about love, commitment, and boundaries So if someone grew up around instability, lack of commitment, or unhealthy dynamics, those patterns often show up in dating, unless intentionally unlearned. Third, your current dating results are feedback, not just failure or success. If the outcomes don’t match your stated standards, then something is misaligned: - Either the standards are not truly being upheld - Or discernment is being overridden by emotion - Or healing hasn’t fully taken place That’s not condemnation that’s clarity. Fourth, God’s design for relationships is not casual, it’s intentional and covenant-driven.Yes, Scripture says “he who finds a wife finds a good thing,” but that “finding” is not random. It’s the result of: - Spiritual readiness - Emotional maturity - Discipline - Purpose alignment A man doesn’t just “find” a wife, he recognizes her because he is already positioned as a husband in character. The same applies to women, being aligned in identity, not just desire.