“Dr. Lindsay Marsh is a young, inspiring woman with a heart to see young people: teenagers, college students and singles, experience God’s best, and fulfill their destinies, while keeping their own ‘flavor’ as a sold-out believer, who is not ashamed of the gospel. Originally from Shaker Heights, Ohio, Minister Lindsay attended The George Washington University in Washington, D.C. for undergraduate, medical school, and post-graduate training, specializing in anesthesiology.
June 2006 marked the official completion of her residency training in anesthesiology, concluding a long road of intensive training and sacrifice, accomplished only by His grace. She was chosen as an Early Selection Honoree for the School of Medicine, and therefore exempt from taking the national qualifying exam, the MCAT. Yielding to the call of God on her life, she was ordained at the age of 21, became a physician at the age of 25, and began building her first dream home at the age of 27. She openly shares her present triumphs and past struggles of keeping her virginity and living a pure life before God, to provide an example for young believers to follow.
Upon moving to Washington, DC at the age of 18, she connected with her awesome Pastors and mentors Drs. Mike and Dee-Dee Freeman of Spirit of Faith Christian Center, in Temple Hills, M.D. At Spirit of Faith, Minister Lindsay serves as one of her Pastors’ personal assistants and is director of “Word Up!â€, a Christian campus outreach designed to focus on college issues like, sex, Greek life, relationships, and money management. Minister Lindsay and one of her close friends founded “Word Up!†during their sophomore year of college, providing a bible-believing, bible-teaching resource for their peers. GW awarded her with the ‘Excellence in Student Life Award’, a campus honor and scholarship acknowledging outstanding student leadership and service within the campus community.
She is also a leader for S.W.A.T. (Sold-Out Word Activated Teenagers), a radical ministry focused on providing teenagers with real life answers from the Word, to everyday situations, ranging from homosexuality to obedience to parents. She is greatly humbled and appreciative of God’s blessing and favor on her life and accepts the challenge of being a ‘supermodel’ for the kingdom of God. She gives God all the glory and credits her success to Him, her parents and her pastors.” (From the “Worth the Wait” website. Click here to go there)
Related: “Can a Black Man be Abstinent?”
Sphere: Related Content

August 17th, 2007 at 10:01 am
“Worth the Wait”
Are all methods of Sexual Pleasuring off the table, or just penile penetration of the vagina?
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August 17th, 2007 at 6:49 pm
Sex–period.
August 25th, 2008 at 12:01 pm
isn’t it great that we all can have the same right to make a post now and the same right to have it read by others now too?
http://witnessed.wordpress.com/2008/08/25/fundamental-evangelical-and-supposedly-professing-christian-critics/
January 1st, 2009 at 10:55 am
Howdy!
WORDPRESS says that our two blogs (at least our most recent posts) are related, so I came by to check you out–I hope you enjoy my slant on the topic. Please stop by my blog and let me know what you think: Jesus + Compassion.
God bless you!
Cd
June 20th, 2009 at 10:57 am
I haven’t had the chance to read all related blogs and comments, but WHERE in all of the Bible does it address intermediate forms of intimacy, such as (I ask for pardon of the prudish…) breast-play?
And, no, the bit in Ezekiel about having them “bruised” is not anything specific. Nor is what Jesus said about “lust in the heart” because different couples would be able to handle levels of “affection” without either party lusting, especially considering that increasing age would make a difference.
And actually, the commandment against “coveting” was never considered to be about mere attraction, or even dwelling on it. Only if one despised or wished a husband out of the way, etc., would be guilty of coveting the wife. This was the understanding of the people that received the Tanakh, and Jesus said to respect their decisions.
While those who know this sometimes argue that Jesus’ words went further than the anti-coveting command, there is no real evidence of this. Jesus often reiterated what was already taught.
Jay L.