Despite casual language designed to appeal to Gen Z, the Johnsons are serious about their message. Their goal is to “empower the wise individual to discern God’s calling in marriage and start preparing for relational success when it counts – before they fall in love.” The best time to consider what they define as “a life-giving, lifelong marriage that blesses the world” is prior to being connected to a special someone. BEFORE the love chemicals flood the brain (which inhibits clear thinking), and BEFORE there’s a relationship to defend (which persuades people to ignore wise counsel.)
“Would you like to avoid heartbreak, rejection and regret? Or beyond avoiding bad things, would you like to truly succeed in your dating life? and by ‘succeed,’ I don’t just mean eventually get married, but do so with great memories to look back on and an amazing future to look forward to?” he asks in his recently released Date Like You Know What You’re Doing.
“You simply cannot expect to wing it in your dating life, with no plan and no prudence, and then magically end up in a life-giving, lifelong marriage…. If you’re currently dating, you should be preparing for the goal you hope your dating life will lead to,” he wrote.
The Johnsons cast vision for dating, challenge students to assess their motives and list top 10 dumbest reasons to date. “They (young adults and adolescents) are not really thinking long-term,” Michael said. “About half come from divorced families, others live in homes where their parents are not very happily married. Many young people in the church merely see marriage The church has taught the picture of marriage as the gateway to guilt free sex. We want them to think bigger.”
Michael lists feminism and pornography as two major forces keeping so many people from marriage. He believes the sex drive was supposed to be “the calling card that said, ‘Hey, you need to ready for marriage.’ Now, you don’t even need a person, you just need a phone and your imagination.” He noted men’s focus on career was a killer of marriages in the past. “Now, ironically, women are following the lead of men in the area of career.”