And this is why Christians hide their struggles. Everything is a sin. So now if you're single and have a desire for sex you're a selfish sinner. Sounds very much like what you'd expect to hear a pharisee say.
Yep, you're right on cue....I wondered when someone would come in and tell everyone that it is perfectly fine to just do whatever we want regardless of what scripture says.
No one has condemned anyone here on this thread.
What do you have against using scripture to deal with issues like this?
Seriously you need to check yourself....just saying
Actually, your response is precisely what I'd expect from someone who isn't a Christian.
I just wanted to say something in defense of
@Subhumanoidal's post.
Sub is not at all saying that it's perfectly fine for people to do whatever they want. His posting history shows that he has a very strong moral code, and what he does understand very well is how things are often handled in the church. His posts like this are a satire of these observations.
I nod my head right along with them because of all the times I've run across attitudes like this in church circles as well.
I'm just going to cut to the chase with a few examples of how adherence to no sex before marriage seems to run into some serious problems that need to be addressed but WITHOUT changing the rules that sex needs to be contained within marriage.
Let me give you 3 examples from real women in real Christian marriages (2 I knew personally; 1 is from an article I read):
1. A woman who "did everything right" and saved herself for what she thought would be her loving Christian husband (if I remember right, he had waited as well.) Her husband, for whatever reason, had a very aggressive sexual style. He didn't like being loving or sweet or caring. He only liked it when he was basically throwing her around, leaving her feeling sexually assaulted every time.
He was unwilling to go to counseling, as he didn't think he was doing anything wrong -- his style was his style. He had done everything God had asked of him by waiting for marriage, and he now felt he had a right to live out his sex life the way he wanted.
She eventually divorced him, and of course, faced complete condemnation from the church. I understand the passages that were used to "discipline" her and tell her she was committing a terrible sin, but most especially in cases like this, I can't judge the abuse someone else is going through, or what course of action they should take.
2. Similarly, I knew another woman whose man liked to choke her during sex. He wasn't into kissing or cuddling or affection. Rather, he liked seeing her beg and plead for mercy. He had lived a rough life, and had a sexual attraction to violence --it's the only thing that turned him on.
Fortunately, she eventually got away from him. But not without several beatings in the process.
3. A woman whose husband always gets what he wants from sex, then immediately rolls over and falls asleep. He never asks or cares if anything is working for her or not-- he says that as the man, he's the head of the household, and he has the right to lead their life in this area. After all, she is the Godly wife, and her role and Godly duty is to submit.
I apologize that all my examples are of women, because I am NOT AT ALL trying to peg men as always being at fault. However, I'm listing these stories because as a woman, obviously, it's other women who talk to me about their lives. I have had guy friends who have had just as many problems in their relationships as well.
These are the kinds of things people have been talking to me about my entire life, and this is why I've always had such a sorrowful cry out to God as to why there isn't more REAL help for people trapped in these loveless, abusive situations. I know everyone will say to go to counseling, and as much as I dole that advice out myself, I don't know many people whose lives were actually changed or improved because of it.
@Live4Him -- I know you always ask the question of whether or not someone has looked at porn and of course, it's a perfectly valid question.
But I think the real question has turned into, "Have you ever seen anything that gave you improper sexual thoughts, how did it affect you, and what are you doing to cope with the results?" I would argue today that EVERYONE has had that experience. I've had people try to get me into watching shows like Game of Thrones and Vikings, and after about 10 minutes of watching, I was just like, how can anyone not be affected by this. I am NOT condemning anyone who does watch, I'm just saying, I knew right away that I couldn't.
Even though I'm a girl, I've always loved super heroes and cartoons, and I was in a store a few years ago and happened to page through a few comics. One of the pages had an ad featuring a woman with a food product that I can't even describe because it was so painfully graphic. Not to mention the drawings in the comic books themselves -- and this is all being marketed to boys who are in their formative years of physical, emotional, and spiritual growth.
I've had to cancel subscriptions to women's magazines because the ads alone (don't even mention the photo stories) were grating away at my conscience. And I am by no means someone who is perfect at filtering out every little image we're being bombarded with on a daily basis -- I just know God has made me more sensitive to more things over the years.
My point is, I think EVERYONE these days sees some sort of version of porn regularly just because of the nature of our modern culture. According to articles I've read, the shows they feature every single day on prime time "family television" would have been considered hardcore, rated X, "black market" porn in the 1950's, so you can imagine what effect it's having. I would argue that absolutely no one is exempt, which is exactly why these conversations are so important.
At any rate, I just wanted to say that I relate to a lot of
@Subhumanoidal's posts like this because they perfectly showcase what I have observed my whole life within the church -- people suffering from seriously harmful everyday occurrences that they are then shamed into silence over, because no one wants to hear about the real problems that are going on (probably because no one has any real, practical answers to give.)
In my experience, all people want to hear is how much you love God and how you're at peace with everything in your life because of that, and any deviation from the "magic formula" will result in swift, though sometimes subtle, condemnation and unspoken excommunication.
And so, I would be willing to be that the good majority of people put on their Sunday morning (or Sabbath Day) masks and carry on, always being obliged to only give the religious audiences the incredibly spiritual testimonies they want to hear, and refuse to acknowledge anything else.
Because if you do, it's all your own fault because you don't have enough faith, you're not believing hard enough, you're not praying enough, you don't know enough Scripture, and you're not following the rules closely enough, because if you did, you'd have the same perfect testimony as they proclaim to have.
Any other answer deems you a "non-Christian," "not really saved," "someone who doesn't really love Jesus," or, another popular put-down, "It must be terrible to be such an unbeliever as you -- no wonder you're suffering."