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The Epidemic of Male Body Hatred
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The Epidemic of Male Body Hatred

“If I could look like that guy who played Thor, I would be happy.”It’s a common belief among men of our age. Put more honestly, “If I can’t appear confident, sexy, intimidating, competent, and super-human, I’m worthless.”We compare ourselves to others in the gym. We come away from movies wanting to exercise for eight hours. We would rather jump in front of a truck than take our shirts off at the pool. We feel pathetic and small. We look at ourselves in almost every mirror we pass. When alone, we flex — not because we like what we see, but because we don’t. We have spent hundreds of dollars on pre-workout, weight loss, and weight gain supplements. We research the best way to bulk, shred, diet, and binge.Maybe this doesn’t resonate with you. But if it does, you are not alone. We have been fed a lie. I know this lifestyle. It’s a locomotive — and too powerful to be stopped by a single blog. I hope to shed some light on what we’re actually trying to achieve with each rep, each yard, each stabbing “You’re pathetic” we put ourselves through.Aspects of Male Body Hatred Health is not the issue here. There is a huge gap between being healthy and meeting our culture’s ideal of “hot.” And in that space lies any and every resource for a man to hate his body.“A man who hates his body is really searching for love.” A man who hates his body is really searching for love — a fundamentally relational search for intimacy with self in the form of confidence, intimacy with the opposite sex in being sexy, intimacy with the same sex in intimidation or acceptance, intimacy with authority in competency, and ultimately intimacy with God, in appearing worthy. The lie is that performance offers intimacy at all — it is, in fact, its foil. Yet this is the path we choose.A man’s hatred of his body takes place in terms of five relationships because he is searching for intimacy in each of these relationships.1. To our selves, we want to be confident. We want to love ourselves — to look in the mirror and think, “I look amazing.” We look — “I’m fat there, small there, weird there” — and emotionally destroy ourselves. We want confidence. Confidence on the basis of body image relates to intimacy in a very special way. If we are ever rejected, we want the confidence to say, “They are wrong for rejecting me.” We search for self-confidence so that we can temper our experience of rejection if and when it happens.This drive for self-love is driven by self-hate. It is a dialectic of inordinate self-praise at our own progress, and then emotional self-mutilation for our failures. In self-love, we are able to dismiss rejection as misinformed. In self-hate, we are able to preempt rejection with introspection. And we hope to find intimacy at the end — at the six pack.2. To the opposite sex, we want to be sexy. We want women to love us. We want to walk by women, and have them think, “He’s so hot.” We want women to lust after us. We hear women, even Christian women, talk about wanting to marry Channing Tatum or Zac Efron. Whether it’s accurate or not, we buy that even Christian women want a man to have a certain kind of musculature — not “muscly” or “big,” but cut — with lots of angles on every part of the body. We want to be able to seduce, to be “swoonworthy,” to embody the full form that media sells as “sexy.” It’s an obsessive and driving ideal.So, I go out for a run. I get home, and run again. What sort of performance earns the adjective sexy? “Certainly another run. Another set. Am I sexy yet?” We don’t speak it — Christians don’t even talk about it — but it drives us.3. To our peers, we want to be intimidating. We are primally competitive. We want to be the biggest, the most intimidating compared with other men. It can be reduced to “sizing up” another guy, but can have results as broad as “I’m amazing” and “I’m worthless.” We want to know that I could steal this guy’s woman, beat him up, and I want him to know that too. And if I feel like another guy could do that to me, I go to the gym. I purge. I go online. I buy a supplement. And, for many of us, we would simply settle for being accepted as one of the group.4. To our fathers, we want to be competent. “A dad’s disapproving glance is a surefire way to help a man hate his body.” A dad’s disapproving glance is a surefire way to help a man hate his body. When I was 13, my father, in commanding wisdom, patted his traps and said, “Girls like this muscle to be big.” End of story. For the next ten years: supersets of shrugs twice a week at the end of my workouts. We look to older men and feel the need to measure up — to compensate in body what we know we lack in spirit and mind. We want to know, “I can replace you on this earth when you go. I can take the mantle. I’m strong, like you. Please tell me I’m strong, like you?”5. To God, we want to be superhuman. Every male portrayal of God or the godly in art history is jacked. The statue of David. The creation of Adam. Even Jesus has a six pack. A six pack. Vascular. A youthful head of hair. We think, “David must have written Psalm 102 about P90X, because this guy is shredded.” What place does 18% or 25% body fat play in God’s story? And what about the scrawny, the skeletal, the scraggy? Neither quite fit in God’s grand history — at least how art portrays it.And so, men are given the

Five Ways to Build Stronger Relationships
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Five Ways to Build Stronger Relationships

“That used to be nice.”That was the first response when I recently asked a group of men what comes to mind when they thinkabout friendship. Once they entered their upper twenties and thirties, many of them no longer hadclose friendships. We mostly laughed when joking about Jesus’s “miracle” of having twelve close friendsin his thirties.Many factors combine to make friendship difficult for men. Personally, time for friends seems unrealisticin light of work or family responsibilities. Culturally, we don’t have a shared understanding of whatfriendships among men should look like. We also find ourselves connecting more digitally than deeply.We’ve lost a vision for strong, warm, face-to-face and side-by-side male friendship.But God made us for more. He made us in his own image, the image of a triune God who exists incommunal love. Therefore, friendship is not a luxury; it’s a relational necessity. We glorify God byenjoying him and reflecting his relational love with one another. If you are a man who has struggled togo deeper with other men, here are five concrete steps to cultivate deeper friendships.1. Establish rhythms for your relationships. Without rhythms in our lives, the important priorities don’t get done. If we value communing with Godthrough his word and prayer, we form a habit. If we want to exercise consistently, we create a pattern.Here’s a proposal for cultivating friendship: Build it into your schedule. Establish a regular rhythm forcoffee together. Devote a meal each week — say, Monday breakfasts or Wednesday dinners — to sharewith others. Plan to meet up to take walks together. Reserve an extended weekend each year to getaway and enjoy God’s creation together.2. Drop each conversation one notch deeper. Conversations about sports and daily activities are worthwhile. But if that’s all we talk about, it’s likesnorkeling on the surface while missing the deeper wonders of the ocean.But how do we take our conversations deeper?First, ask thoughtful questions. When you’re driving to meet your friend, think about what you want tolearn about him. Think about the main aspects of his life right now — his relationship with the Lord, hisfamily, his work — and ask him about how things are going. When he shares about a challenge, ask howhis internal life (his heart, his disposition toward God) is doing in the midst of this. From there, staycurious and ask more questions.Second, talk about what you’re each reading. Ask how God’s word has convicted or encouraged himrecently. Ask what book he’s recently read that helped him know God or live more faithfully as adisciple. Consider reading through Scripture or a Scripture-saturated book together and meeting to talkabout it.3. Overcome our cultural aversion to expressing affection. “Love one another with brotherly affection” (Romans 12:10). We don’t usually put those last two wordsnext to one another — brotherly feels masculine; affection feels feminine. But there they are together,inviting us to cultivate genuine, non-weird, affectionate brotherhood.We see this affectionate bond with Jonathan and David: “The soul of Jonathan was knit to the soul ofDavid, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul” (1 Samuel 18:1). We see it with Paul and the Ephesianelders: “And there was much weeping on the part of all; they embraced Paul and kissed him” (Acts20:37).Expressing affection feels uncomfortable to men today because our culture has slowly shifted itsunderstanding of masculinity. Rather than combining strength and tenderness, we view manhood asmuscular and aggressive. Our culture has also sexualized love, interpreting affection between men assomething other than friendship. But we can build a better way.4. Oxygenate your friendships with affirmation. What happens without oxygen? We become sluggish and lethargic. This is what relationships feel likewithout affirmation. This may be why some of your relationships feel withered, thin, or tired.Affirmation is relational oxygen. One of the most powerful tools for cultivating true friendship is Romans12:10: “Outdo one another in showing honor.”Men find it hard to give and receive honor and affirmation. It feels uncomfortable at first to tellsomeone why you thank God for him or why you respect him. But only at first. I’ve seen many men work through their initial hesitations and start cultivating a culture of sincere encouragement around them.And I’ve seen the other men flourish because of it.5. Invite friends into what you’re already doing. Our schedules are full and we rush from one thing to the next. We don’t see how we can find time forfriends. But what if you don’t need to open up your schedule? What if you can include friends into theactivities you already do? Here are a few suggestions I’ve seen work:When you plan to watch a sports game or weekly show, find out who else would want to watch it andinvite them to join you.If you exercise a few times each week, do it with a friend.Invite friends or family members to join you for dinner or dessert. If you have young kids, let your guestsparticipate in the bedtime routine and then stay around afterward.If you have young kids, invite someone to join your family at the park.Put a few friends on speed dial and call them on your daily commute home.If you have a home project to complete, invite someone to help you and offer to help him with his.Hope and Help for Forging Friendship Jesus is our greatest model of male friendship. He initiated relationships and he invited men to be withhim (Mark 3:14). He continually asked thought-provoking questions. He loved his disciples withbrotherly affection (John 13:1). He calls us his friends (John 15:13–15). He also gives us the greatprivilege of reflecting and enjoying this kind of true friendship to other men.Maybe as you consider taking these steps, you look ahead with both hope and hesitancy. Maybe youthink back to when you experienced deeper community and think you won’t find that again. Or maybeyou still feel pain from failed attempts at connecting with others. You wonder if forging friendship isharder, even impossible, for you.Before you give up, remember two truths: First, Jesus isn’t just the model for true friendship; he ishimself our truest friend. He

The World Needs More One-Woman Men
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The World Needs More One-Woman Men

The “one-woman man” may seem like an endangered species today. In our over-sexualized and sexually confused society, it’s increasingly rare to come across married men who are truly faithful to their bride — in body, heart, and mind. It may be even more rare to find unmarried men who are on the trajectory for that kind of fidelity to a future wife. Jaws will drop when a handsome, eligible bachelor declares he’s a virgin waiting for the wedding night.Of the fifteen basic qualifications for the office of elder in the local church (1 Timothy 3:1–7), being a one-woman man may be the one that runs most against the grain of our society. We’re relentlessly pushed in precisely the opposite direction. Television, movies, advertising, and just about everything else conditions the twenty-first-century male to approach women as a consumer of many, instead of as a protector and servant of one. The models teach our men to selfishly compromise and take, rather than to passionately cultivate and guard fidelity to one woman. But what’s rare in society is often easier to find, thank God, in biblically faithful churches. The true gospel is explosively powerful, even under such intense pressure from a world like ours. You can be pure. You can detox. You can walk a different path by the power of God’s Spirit, even if that other path was once yours. In the company of others who enjoy deeper pleasures than promiscuity, you can become the one-woman man our world needs.For All Christians Just because being a one-woman man is essential for church leaders does not mean it’s irrelevant for every Christian. The elder qualifications, says D.A. Carson, are remarkable for being unremarkable. What’s demanded of church officers is not academic decoration, world-class intellect, or talents above the common man. Rather, the elders are to be examples of normal, healthy, mature Christianity (1 Peter 5:3). The elder qualifications are the flashpoints of the Christian maturity to which every believer should aspire, and which every Christian, with God’s help, can attain.God never meant for us to relegate one-woman manhood to the leaders. It’s the glorious, serious, joy-filled calling of every follower of Christ. It’s a word for every Christian man (and every Christian woman to be a “one-man woman,” 1 Timothy 5:9). And it’s relevant for married and unmarried men alike.For Husbands and Bachelors Clearly, one-woman man applies to married men. In faithfulness to the marriage covenant, the married man is to be utterly committed in mind, heart, and body to his one wife. Being a one-woman man, then, has implications for where we go, how we interact with other women, what we do with our eyes, where we let our thoughts run, what we look at on our computers and smartphones, and how we watch movies and television.“Long before a man is married he’s either becoming a one-woman man or not.” It’s also relevant for married men in the positive sense, not just the negative. A married Christian must not be a zero-woman man, living as though he isn’t married, neglecting to care adequately for his wife and family. If you’re married, faithfulness to the covenant requires your interests being divided (1 Corinthians 7:35), but only with one woman.Do you have to be married to be a one-woman man? The challenge to be a one-woman man applies not only to married men, but the unmarried as well. Are you a flirt? Do you move flippantly from one dating relationship to another? Do you enjoy the thrill of connecting emotionally with new women without moving with intentionality toward clarity about marriage?Long before marriage, bachelors are setting (and displaying) their trajectory of fidelity. In every season of life and every relationship, however serious, they are preparing themselves to be a one-woman man, or not, by how they engage with and treat the women in their lives.Isn’t It “Husband of One Wife”? Perhaps at this point, you’re feeling the weight of this phrase “one-woman man” both for elder qualification and for Christian manhood in general. Don’t most of our translations read “husband of one wife” in 1 Timothy 3:2 and Titus 1:6? That seems like a simple box to check. It’s either true or it’s not — none of these questions about whether your eyes and mind might be wandering unfaithfully.This may be the most debated of the elder qualifications in 1 Timothy 3:1–7 and Titus 1:5–9. Some say it means that church leaders must be married; others say it means no divorcees; others claim it was designed to weed out polygamists. But one problem, among others, with each of those interpretations is that they make the qualification objective — plainly true or false — rather than subjective like every one of the other fourteen qualifications.The traits for leadership in the local church are brilliantly designed to queue up the plurality of elders to make a decision together about a man’s readiness for ministry. Soberminded, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable — these are subjective categories that require careful thought and evaluation. I believe Paul intended us to read “one-woman man” as needing the same spirit of discernment, not as a black-and-white, no-exceptions rule. Is this man today, through years of tested faithfulness, faithful to his wife with his mind, heart, and body? Is he above reproach in the way he relates with women? Is he manifestly a one-woman man?Ask Yourself Men, ask yourself this question, and be ruthlessly honest: “Am I a one-woman man?” What, if anything, in my life would call this into question? What habits, what relationships, what patterns do I need to bring into the light with trusted brothers, and ask God afresh to make me truly, deeply, gloriously, increasingly a one-woman man?If you’re married, what’s your reputation? Do people think of you — your thoughts, your speech, your actions — as joyfully and ruthlessly faithful to your wife? Or is there some question? Are you known for demonstrating self-control publically and privately for the sake of the purity and fidelity of your

Five Ways to Find Male Friendships
Community, Grooming, Lifestyle, Videos

Five Ways to Find Male Friendships

Guys Need Bros  Five Ways to Find Male Friendships  Article by Bryan Stoudt  Pastor, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania American men are facing a health epidemic. It’s not smoking or obesity. It’s not heart disease. No, the greatest health issue facing American men today is loneliness and isolation. Boston Globe reporter Billy Baker details the all-too-familiar process. As we enter our adult years, work takes up more and more of our time. Then we get married and have kids. After running our homes, trying to stay in shape, and (for Christians) getting involved with the church, we have little time left for friendships with other guys. When we do find a bit of “free time,” it’s hard to leave our wives home alone to change diapers, correct homework, and broker peace deals among the warring children. So, we let our male friendships slide. Baker found that over the past thirty-plus years, study after study has documented the unhappy consequences for our health. Lonely people are far more likely to die during a given period than their socially connected peers — even after accounting for age, gender, and other factors like healthy eating and exercise. In fact, socially isolated people have an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, and the progression of Alzheimer’s.  It gets worse. Another study determined that loneliness matched smoking as a long-term risk factor. In 2015, a massive study from BYU gathered data from 3.5 million people over 35 years, and found that those who are lonely, isolated, or merely living by themselves are 26% to 32% more likely to die prematurely. No matter how you look at it, loneliness is a train wreck for our health. My Story, Your Marriage I was forty and friendless. But this was a crisis at least fifteen years in the making.  For years, my wife had been telling me that I needed other guys in my life.  “Okay, but I already have plenty of friends. We’re always connecting on Facebook and emailing. I’m constantly seeing people at work. When I have something I need to share, I tell you. Besides, after work and our family, there’s nothing left!” After I blew her off, she gave up and started to pray. A few years after this uncomfortable conversation, a respected Christian author challenged us to form close male friendships in a men-only session at a marriage conference. At the time, I knew nothing about the risks isolation posed. Physically, I felt great. But then he drew a connection between our friendships with other men and our marriages.  Now he had my attention.  Letting our friendships with other men fade, he warned, turns our wives into unintentional idols where they become our only true confidante and friend. This is a role God never intended them to fill, and places a tremendous amount of stress on our marriages.  Furthermore, our wives are so involved in our lives that they can’t give us a truly outside perspective. For example, my wife has been giving me some helpful feedback on my parenting. She’s very wise, but when my friend listened, he added something neither one of us had considered. So, not only do man-to-man friendships afford more unfiltered honesty that, practiced with our wives, would hurt or frustrate them, but they also offer help with being a man in a way that wives cannot. God Made Men for Friendship Beyond the benefits for our health and marriages, God made men for friendship. That means we can’t simply opt out. Other men make up for our deficits with their strengths, as when Aaron spoke on Moses’s behalf (Exodus 7:1–2). Male friends also provide encouragement to glorify God in new ways. Or they can help us persevere in difficulty, like when Jonathan “went to David at Horesh, and strengthened his hand in God” (1 Samuel 23:16) when David was running from Saul. Other men can also provide us with a life-giving rebuke we desperately need (Proverbs 27:6). Even Jesus had Peter, James, and John, his own inner circle of male friends.  So, forming close male friendships is absolutely critical to the health of our bodies and marriages, and reflects God’s design for our lives. Key Elements in Male Friendship But these friendships won’t just happen. The following are important elements for developing male friendships. Find your identity in Christ. If we’re going to get close to other men, where they can see our sins and scars, we need to be deeply rooted in Christ — to truly know that “by grace [we] have been saved through faith . . . not a result of works” (Ephesians 2:8–9). When we trust that God accepts us apart from what we do, we’re free to let other men know who we really are. Initiation. God calls men to lead and go first (Genesis 2:18; Ephesians 5:23). Which requires some effort and — the real kicker — the risk of being rejected. It hurts when I reach out to another guy and he takes a week to respond. But remembering that Jesus left heaven to die for our sins gives us courage to take initiative in our own friendships (Hebrews 2:17). Sacrifice. To make room for friendships, we’ll need to say no to some good, but second-best, things. If we have younger kids, it may require some sacrifice from our wives, so it’s important to work this out as a team.  Five Ways to Find (and Deepen) Male Friendships Now that we’ve explored why we need true male friends and considered key elements of friendship, let’s take a look at what we can do about it. Call them “man dates” or (in true male fashion) nothing at all, but spend time with different men and see which relationships have promise. In particular, test the ability to be real and transparent with each other. Instead of looking for the perfect friend, look for a bunch of faithful, imperfect ones. For example, it’s good to have a friend who can encourage you, but also one

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