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21 Questions for a Prospective Wife PDF Print E-mail
Written by Douglas Wilson   
Thursday, March 29, 2007 11:28 am

Given the nature of the case, these are not necessarily questions that someone might ever get to ask. A young man is coming to a father because he knows his own intentions, and he is inviting questions. He should be surprised if the young lady's father had no questions. He is asking to be asked; he is asking to be examined. If the father asked him something, and the young man said, "Mind your own business," there is no need to wonder too long about why his suit was denied. But a young lady who is minding her own business is under no obligation whatever to answer any questions that a young man might want to have the answers to. She is especially under no obligation to answer questions like the ones below.

At the same time, these are questions that would be wise for a young man to keep in mind. Some of them can be answered simply by living in the same community with a young lady, some might be known because the families involved are close friends, some might be legitimately inferred from what is generally known, and so on. Some of the questions are very similar to the questions asked of a young male suitor, with changes from second person to third person because of the nature of the case. And some of the questions are completely different.

1. What is her spiritual background? What was her church upbringing like? Did she ever go through a period of spiritual rebellion?

2. When was the last time she read through the entire Bible? The New Testament?

3. Does she attend worship every Lord's Day?

4. What was her upbringing like? Did she grow up in a spiritually healthy family? If there was trouble in the home, is she carrying a significant amount of baggage?

5. Does she have a close relationship with her dad? With her mom?

6. Does she look up to and respect her father? Does respect come easily to her because she has a high view of her father's integrity? Is she secure?

7. Ten years from now, will she think of you in the same respectful way she thinks of her father?

8. Ten years from now, when she is a lot more like her mother, will you take this as a good thing or a bad thing?

9. What is her relationship like with her brothers and sisters?

10. Is she a hard worker? Does she help her mother with the tasks around the house cheerfully? Are necessary chores a source of conflict and quarreling in the home?

11. Not that you should ever have seen it, but what does her bedroom look like? Is it kept up? Decorated nicely? Or is she trying to start a duplication of Edith Schaeffer's ministry . . . D'bris?

12. Does she dress with self-respect and with due respect for others? Do you know more than you ought to about what kind of body she has? Does the whole church congregation know more about what kind of body she has than they ever requested to know? If she dresses provocatively and immodestly (particularly in church contexts), do you understand that this is more probably a manifestation of radical insecurity than it is a manifestation of a lonely sex kitten desperately wanting to make love to a dope like you?

13. Is she cheerful and pleasant in her disposition?

14. Does she love the domestic arts? Is she the kind of person that would make any home that she managed a place where others love to be? In decorating, in cooking, in hospitality . . . is she dedicated to them out of love for God and others?

15. Does she love kids? Does she see child-bearing and child-rearing as a high privilege and calling, or does she see that kind of thing as beneath her? Has feminism gotten to her at all? In this make sure you distinguish feminism getting to her, and irritating machismo types getting to her.

16. What was her GPA in college? Does she believe that women have brains and are called by God to use them? Given that your sons will probably be educated to the same level as their mother, are you willing for that? Whether you intend to homeschool or not, is she educated in such a way that this would be a possibility?

17. Is she financially responsible? Does she shop responsibly? Does she have any problems with credit cards?

18. Is she accustomed to live at a level that you can provide? How would she take it if marriage meant a lower standard of living, even if only for a time?

19. What is the history of her relationship/s with guys? Non-existent? Serial crack-ups? One major devastation three years ago?

20. Does she have any kind of troubled sexual history? Molested when a girl? A patten of promiscuity? This would include a legalistic home that is particularly good at inculcating hang-ups. Paranoid frigidity is not the same thing as secure virginity.

21. Is she attractive to you? Is she attractive for the right reasons and in the right way? In the charm is deceitful department, is her attractiveness driven by an inner beauty and grace? In the anti-gnostic department, do you find yourself wanting to kiss the back of her neck more than you really ought to at this stage of the relationship?



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Last Updated on Thursday, March 29, 2007 11:28 am
 
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lewsta  Thursday, March 29, 2007 6:32 pm
Edith Schaeffer's ministry--D'bris...now THAT one's a howler!!!! Douglas, you rascal, you.
Valerie (Kyriosity)  Friday, March 30, 2007 1:28 am
Ditto to Lewsta. D'bris is one of the funniest things I've read in a long time. Well...funny 'til I think of all the housework I'm behind on!
Charles Baker  Friday, March 30, 2007 2:26 am
So, the questions for a prospective suitor are likely to be asked by a father to the suitor, right? And, the questions for a prospective wife ... (taking into account your introduction) are also sensible for a father to ask of the suitor (or for a suitor to have worked upon understanding himself)?
lewsta  Friday, March 30, 2007 4:58 am
Interesting contrast twixt the two lists...it is implied, or at least fairly widely practiced, that the list targeting the men include some disqualifiers..wrong response, door closed. However, in perusing the list applicable to the ladies being pondered, it seems the list comprises, in the main, talking points and items to be, uhm, worked upon. But that is fine---at long odds, I'd wager the man breaking with her Father has already set his mind/heart to the persual, and so "empirical data" are not likely to significantly deter his projected course (unless, of course, she has no heart for children and he desires a full quiver of them..but he's likely worked that detail out concerning her well in advance of setting his sights on her) At the other hand, her Father should use such a list to vet any prospective suitors to determine their, well, suitability for HIS Princess. Lewsta, who is still chortling over "D'bris".......
Robert Perry  Friday, March 30, 2007 6:19 am
It almost seems that the people who should be most avid to ask these questions are not prospective suitors or fathers-in-law, but rather fathers of their own children. That is, shouldn't we be looking at developing these qualities of good character in our children instead of waiting for them to date and fail "the test"?
Valerie (Kyriosity)  Saturday, March 31, 2007 2:41 pm
lewsta  Saturday, March 31, 2007 4:37 pm
Mr. Perry, one would hope these questions are a sort of reveille--both for those who find themselves involved in the commencement of a courtship situation (to assure the proper sorts of character HAVE, indeed, been well worked into the two putative spouses, and, for those who do not yet find themselves in such position, to begin, now, working toward that so that, when the proper time comes suitable responses will be found, and no deterring surprises, so that the rest may well follow on what the hearts have already, in most cases, decided. But you certainly are correct in that most who see these lists and heed them are not amongst those who most need them.....though a wise paterfamilias will surely apply them to good use should any would-be sons in law come calling in regards their daughters...and, hopefully, his own job will have been well done so that his daughter mightn't have any serious "hidden flaws" to intervene.
lewsta  Saturday, March 31, 2007 4:40 pm
So, Valerie, did you spend some time in New Orleans after that rowdy wench Katrina came calling? Or were those photographs taken in a women's dorm wing during Finals Week?
Valerie (Kyriosity)  Saturday, March 31, 2007 5:47 pm
Never been to New Orleans, but the one year I lived in a dorm I failed every single room inspection.



Truth be told, I got those photos right here in my own house...through Google image search, of course!

lewsta  Sunday, April 01, 2007 10:18 pm
Aw shucks, Valerie, ya dun popped my bubble. Here I thought you'd garnered those images over a period of time by noticing and savouring and preserving scenes you'd actually come across. Well, no matter---your faux dust jacket is a hoot. And I KNEW it was your handiwork well before I had scrolled down sufficiently to see the identity of the posting party.
Valerie (Kyriosity)  Monday, April 02, 2007 1:30 am
Hmmm...that would, indeed, be a strange hobby -- collecting photos of clutter and filth! What's kinda funny is that I've shared this joke with quite a few people over the last few days, and have witnessed the ruffling of more than a few feathers that this sort of thing should be taken into account when evaluating a prospective wife. I, on the other hand, found it rather inspiring and got a lot of housework done this weekend. If only all admonitions were so funny, I'm sure I'd be perfectly sanctified by now!
Robert Perry  Monday, April 02, 2007 6:48 am
Valerie, I was thinking it might have been from your art school experience--I was sure I'd seen something like this in art galleries on a college campus somewhere!
Valerie (Kyriosity)  Monday, April 02, 2007 2:48 pm
Now that you mention it, Robert, I think I did see a few pieces like that in a few shows!



And here's a related article.

KansasJenny  Monday, December 15, 2008 2:07 am
...what do you propose that young Christian women do who don't have fathers or mothers to "grill the suitor?"
tgz  Monday, December 15, 2008 12:32 pm
Questions 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 make some sense, but what about those women who had parents who were not the desirable kind, but despite that managed to become good, loving, Christian women? Women who don't look up to their earthly father because he failed them in grave ways, women who have mothers that they wish they will never turn into, because they were cause of great harm to their families... I know several of them, that despite all that managed to become balanced, loving, caring and Christian women, and I am afraid that they will be looked down as second-class wife material. In fact, I have seen it happen, unfortunately, though fortunately at least one of them has finally found a man who sees who she is and loves her.
Al  Tuesday, June 01, 2010 8:05 pm
This is the most ludicrous advice I have ever heard. All of it. Every question. There are relevant points but they are so tangled up in rampant chauvinism parading as godliness that in the context they cannot be considered valid.

'Does she help her mother with the tasks around the house cheerfully?'

I am a man. Women are not objects. They are our equals. The ridiculous train of thought that you display is not healthy for society let alone the mental health of said 'prospective wife' who has to be subservient to the 'young man'. The more I read this post the more incredibly sad I feel for women in your community.