A lot of good men and good women are still single, and it isn't always because they can't find someone. Sometimes it's because anger, arrogance, attitude, and cognitive dissonance have quietly become third parties in every relationship.
Let's be honest. Being a good person doesn't automatically make someone a good partner.
Anger has ended more relationships than incompatibility ever could. Some people are carrying wounds from childhood, past relationships, divorce, betrayal, rejection, or disappointment. Instead of healing, they bring that pain into every new connection. Every disagreement becomes a battle. Every mistake becomes an offense. Every difficult conversation feels like an attack.
The Bible says, "Human anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires" (James 1:20). Uncontrolled anger can destroy what God is trying to build.
Then there's arrogance.
Arrogance convinces people they are always right, never wrong, and never need to change. It keeps people from apologizing, listening, compromising, or receiving correction. Some people want grace for themselves but perfection from everyone else.
Scripture reminds us, "God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble" (James 4:6). Relationships thrive in humility because humility leaves room for growth.
Then we have attitude.
Not confidence. Not standards. Attitude.
An attitude that assumes the worst. An attitude that is constantly defensive, combative, dismissive, disrespectful, or impossible to please. Some people have become so accustomed to protecting themselves that they no longer know how to connect with others.
Proverbs 15:1 says, "A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger." The spirit we bring into a relationship often determines the atmosphere that follows.
And then there's cognitive dissonance.
That's when someone's actions don't match their words, but they convince themselves everything is fine.
People say they want a godly husband or wife but reject anyone who doesn't fit a fantasy. They say they want peace but constantly create conflict. They say they want commitment but avoid vulnerability. They pray for healthy relationships while holding onto unhealthy habits.
The Bible warns us not to merely hear God's Word but to do what it says (James 1:22). Real growth requires honesty with ourselves.
The truth is that many good men and women aren't single because they're unattractive, unsuccessful, or undesirable. They're single because there are still areas of their character that God is refining.
The good news is that God doesn't call us to perfection. He calls us to transformation.
When anger becomes forgiveness, arrogance becomes humility, attitude becomes wisdom, and self-deception becomes self-awareness, relationships become healthier and stronger.
Sometimes the greatest obstacle to the relationship we're praying for isn't the people we're meeting.
Sometimes it's the person staring back at us in the mirror.
That's not condemnation. That's an invitation to grow.


































































