Girl Talk Series: The Types of Men you will Encounter in the Dating Process.

Ladies, wisdom calls for discernment, especially when it comes to the men you allow access to your heart, body, and future. The Bible repeatedly warns that relationships shape destiny, character, and spiritual health. Paying attention to the patterns, fruit, and spirit of the man around you is not judgmental—it is biblical self-preservation.

Modern dating, as practiced today, is a relatively new social construct and often lacks biblical structure or accountability. Scripture emphasizes intention, covenant, and purpose rather than emotional experimentation. Without discernment, many women find themselves emotionally depleted by men who were never meant to lead, love, or commit.

Among all the men you may encounter, the rarest is the needle in the haystack—the Godly man. He is uncommon not because God stopped making him, but because discipline, obedience, and integrity are costly. This man embodies godly wisdom not only in his speech but also in his consistent actions.

The Godly man loves as Christ loves the church, sacrificially and responsibly. He understands authority and submission in a biblical sense, meaning he leads with humility and strength, not control. “Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it” (Ephesians 5:25, KJV).

He is understanding yet firm, compassionate yet principled. His godliness is internal before it is external; his faith is not performative but transformative. Like David, he is a man after God’s own heart, striving daily to align his will with the Most High (1 Samuel 13:14, KJV).

This man is intentional. He does not waste time, emotions, or bodies. He keeps himself for marriage, honors boundaries, and values covenant over convenience. “Marriage is honourable in all, and the bed undefiled” (Hebrews 13:4, KJV).

He is also a provider—financially, spiritually, emotionally, and mentally. Scripture states plainly, “If any provide not for his own… he hath denied the faith” (1 Timothy 5:8, KJV). However, this type of man requires something equally rare: a Godly woman prepared to recognize, respect, and walk alongside him.

The most common man encountered in dating culture today is the narcissist. He is charming, confident, and initially intoxicating. He enters your life with love-bombing, excessive compliments, and intense attention designed to create emotional dependency.

Over time, the narcissist reveals his true nature. He is unfaithful, manipulative, and emotionally abusive. He gaslights, deflects responsibility, and slowly erodes a woman’s confidence while feeding his ego. Scripture warns of men who are “lovers of their own selves” (2 Timothy 3:2, KJV).

Another man many women meet is the wanderer. He is polite, respectful, and seemingly kind, but emotionally unavailable. He enjoys your presence without offering direction, vision, or commitment. Though not overtly harmful, his indecision leads to disappointment.

The wanderer disappears when accountability or depth is required. He lacks clarity about you and about himself. “Where there is no vision, the people perish” (Proverbs 29:18, KJV). A man without vision cannot lead a relationship.

The showboat is another dangerous type. He lies about his status, character, intentions, or accomplishments. You are constantly confused because his words and actions never align. Deception is his default language.

Scripture is clear about such men: “A lying tongue hateth those that are afflicted by it” (Proverbs 26:28, KJV). With the showboat, you never truly know who you are dealing with because authenticity is absent.

The religious man presents himself as spiritually impressive. He quotes Scripture fluently, knows religious language, and appears holy on the surface. Yet his life does not reflect obedience, humility, or transformation.

He has information about God but no intimacy with Him. Christ warned of those who “say, Lord, Lord” yet do not do the will of the Father (Matthew 7:21, KJV). Appearance without fruit is spiritual deception.

The whoremonger or fornicator is openly driven by lust. His conversations are sexual, his focus is your body, and his intentions are carnal. He pressures boundaries and treats intimacy as entertainment rather than a covenant.

Scripture speaks sternly on this behavior, declaring that the fornicator sins against his own body (1 Corinthians 6:18, KJV). A man enslaved to lust cannot offer faithful love or spiritual leadership.

Closely related is the non-provider. He lacks ambition, responsibility, and accountability. He avoids work, neglects family obligations, and prioritizes pleasure over purpose. This man drains rather than builds.

The Bible does not romanticize laziness. “He that is slothful in his work is brother to him that is a great waster” (Proverbs 18:9, KJV). A man unwilling to labor cannot sustain a household or honor a woman.

Discernment requires prayer, not desperation. Women are encouraged to seek God before seeking companionship. “In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths” (Proverbs 3:6, KJV). Prayer sharpens perception.

Fasting is also a powerful tool for clarity. Biblically, fasting humbles the soul and heightens spiritual sensitivity. It helps strip away emotional attachment and reveals the truth that feelings may obscure (Isaiah 58:6, KJV).

Pay attention to patterns, not promises. Fruit reveals character over time. “Ye shall know them by their fruits” (Matthew 7:16, KJV). Consistency matters more than charm.

Guard your heart diligently, for relationships influence purpose and peace. “Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life” (Proverbs 4:23, KJV). Wisdom protects future joy.

Ultimately, the goal is not simply to avoid bad men, but to become a woman anchored in God, capable of discernment and discipline. When aligned with the Most High, confusion decreases and clarity increases.

The Godly Man (The Needle in the Haystack)

Who he is
He is authentic, consistent, and intentional. His godliness is internal before it is external. His actions align with Scripture, not just his words. He honors boundaries, keeps himself for marriage, leads with humility, and loves as Christ loves the church. He provides, plans, and pursues with clarity and purpose.

How to recognize him
He is patient, not rushed. He is consistent over time. He prays without performing. He shows discipline in finances, sexuality, and speech. His leadership feels safe, not forced.

How to position yourself for him
Become a Godly woman yourself. Develop prayer discipline, obedience, emotional maturity, and self-respect. This man is not attracted to chaos or compromise. Two cannot walk together unless they agree.


The Narcissist (The Most Common)

Who he is
He is self-centered, manipulative, and emotionally dangerous. He love-bombs early, gives excessive compliments, and moves too fast emotionally. Over time, he becomes critical, dismissive, unfaithful, and mentally draining. He gaslights, deflects blame, and lacks accountability.

How to recognize him
He talks mostly about himself. He rushes intimacy. He avoids responsibility. He makes you question your reality. He has a pattern of broken relationships where everyone else is “the problem.”

How to avoid him
Do not be impressed by charm. Watch how he handles correction and disappointment. Set boundaries early and observe his reaction. Narcissists reveal themselves when they cannot control you.


The Wanderer (Nice but Unavailable)

Who he is
He is polite, respectful, and pleasant, but emotionally absent. He enjoys your presence without offering vision, direction, or commitment. He drifts in and out of your life and disappears when depth is required.

How to recognize him
He avoids defining the relationship. He makes no future plans with you. He is inconsistent in communication. He keeps you emotionally close but relationally distant.

How to avoid him
Ask direct questions early. Require clarity. If he avoids commitment, believe him. Do not invest emotionally where there is no vision.


The Showboat (The Liar and Pretender)

Who he is
He exaggerates or lies about who he is, what he has, and what he intends. His words and actions never align. You feel confused more than secure because authenticity is missing.

How to recognize him
His stories change. He avoids transparency. He performs rather than connects. He resists accountability and hates being questioned.

How to avoid him
Slow everything down. Verify consistency over time. Ask questions and observe behavior. Truth does not fear time or scrutiny.


The Religious Man (Form Without Fruit)

Who he is
He knows Scripture but does not live it. He presents as holy but lacks integrity behind closed doors. His faith is performative, not transformative.

How to recognize him
He quotes Scripture but disrespects boundaries. He talks about God but lacks humility, repentance, or discipline. His private life contradicts his public image.

How to avoid him
Watch his fruit, not his vocabulary. Observe how he treats people when no one is watching. True godliness produces consistent character.


The Whoremonger / Fornicator

Who he is
He is ruled by lust. His conversations are sexual, his focus is your body, and his intentions are physical rather than covenantal. He has a reputation for sleeping around and cannot commit.

How to recognize him
He pushes sexual boundaries early. He constantly sexualizes conversations. He pressures you to compromise. He speaks loosely about past partners.

How to avoid him
Establish firm boundaries immediately. Refuse sexual conversation outside of marriage. Lust-driven men remove themselves when denied access.


The Non-Provider (The Lazy Man)

Who he is
He avoids responsibility. He lacks ambition, discipline, and direction. He does not work consistently and neglects leadership in his life and household.

How to recognize him
He has excuses instead of progress. He avoids work. He lacks goals. He expects others to carry his weight.

How to avoid him
Pay attention to his work ethic. Do not confuse potential with effort. A man unwilling to provide cannot sustain a future.


Final Wisdom for Avoidance

Pray before you attach. Fast when emotions cloud judgment. Watch patterns, not promises. Set boundaries early and keep them. Do not ignore red flags for loneliness. Discernment is protection, not fear.

When you are anchored in God, emotionally disciplined, and clear in your standards, the wrong men lose access—and the right man recognizes you without confusion.

God is not the author of chaos or emotional torment. His design for relationships reflects order, love, and truth. Trust Him to reveal what is hidden and remove what is harmful.

The right man will not require you to abandon your convictions, compromise your body, or question your worth. He will complement your walk with God, not compete with it. When you know who you are in Christ, you recognize who does not belong.


References (KJV)

The Holy Bible, King James Version.
1 Samuel 13:14
Proverbs 3:6; Proverbs 4:23; Proverbs 18:9; Proverbs 26:28; Proverbs 29:18
Isaiah 58:6
Matthew 7:16, 21
1 Corinthians 6:18
Ephesians 5:25
1 Timothy 5:8
Hebrews 13:4


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