How do I control sexual urges so I won't have sex with my girlfriend?

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.
A

AgeofKnowledge

Guest
#41
Then that's a good thing. The Christian who lives within the boundaries God, in His perfect wisdom, designed for humanity's welfare can say with the psalmist:

"The Lord is the portion of my inheritance and my cup;
You support my lot.
The lines have fallen to me in pleasant places;
Indeed, my heritage is beautiful to me."

-Psalm 16:5-9

Sometimes they can be, and then what? :rolleyes:
 
Feb 7, 2015
22,418
413
0
#42
You should consider her God's daughter at this moment, and you should be her brother in Christ...until she is rightfully yours when married. If you want to take her as your wife, then do that. If not, get your damned hands off of her because she's still your Godly sister.......until that changes. Love ya.
This is actually at the crux of one very effective sexual control program. You should be complimented for knowing it so well... truly that awareness came from God.
 
A

atwhatcost

Guest
#43
i'm sorry but that's terrible advice. If you marry simply because you can hardly resist your sexual feelings for her then the odds are that marriage will not last. to many ppl make the mistake of getting married before they are ready and thats why so many marriages end in divorce or worse. Please be careful of the advice you give because if its bad advice and someone takes it it could ruin their lives
I'll tell hubby that. After all, had we heard that advice early enough we'd be celebrating our 35th anniversary last month, instead of in October. We met during the Christmas holidays, became good friends, had our first date in the end of February, I told him I loved him March 5th, he told me he loved me March 7th, (he had to think it over lol), knew we would mary beofre the end of that week, got engaged in April, didn't follow that passage and regret that, but waited for my brother (who was engaged a year earlier but wouldn't get married until that September), instead of doing what we were meant to do -- get married quickly, because we burned.

The person asking is already planning to marry. He's just waiting around for no particular reason, as if "financially ready" is a reason to delay. Funny thing. That brother waited to get married after living together with his now-ex. That marriage didn't last. No God in it. My Dad decided it was okay to marry a younger woman, because he didn't have problems with me marrying an older man. (His ex is a month older than hubby.) His marriage didn't include God either. It didn't last. (Two more wonderful siblings out of it, so not saying everything went bad.)

We new all along the three of us were getting married, and God has ultimate say over it and us. We should have been married.

If you know it, you know it. If you're not sure, stop the relationship. If you can't stand being without the other and the feeling is mutual, get married. If you can stand it, then you know that wasn't the one (if there is a one.) Finances, circumstances, and all that other stuff that piles up in life will pile up anyway. Better to share the burden. Or, if you don't need to, don't, (like Paul also said.) The really important things are:
1. God first. (Also means should be same beliefs.)
2. Like the person for who they are, not who you can make them become.
3. Best friends.
4. Marriage is not a competition. It's a partnership. Don't aim for 50/50 or you'll fall short. Aim for 90/90 and you might hit 50/50.

Not spending alone times means you don't get to know future spouse well, except in relationship with others.

Funny. I covered all this in my first answer, (Marry if you burn.) Somehow it becomes more acceptable after finding out that I've been married, in love, and in seriously really-like to the same guy since 1980 -- from the time we first went out to the time we married. What worked was God's approval, not advice. That last part is why so many marriage don't work out.
 
A

atwhatcost

Guest
#44

A trick to COOL your sexual urges.


100% guaranteed to work...
if it doesn't kill you.



[video=youtube;DGno9f05EF0]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DGno9f05EF0[/video]
Really cold doesn't work. (Been there. Youth won out. lol)
 
Feb 7, 2015
22,418
413
0
#45
I'll tell hubby that. After all, had we heard that advice early enough we'd be celebrating our 35th anniversary last month, instead of in October. We met during the Christmas holidays, became good friends, had our first date in the end of February, I told him I loved him March 5th, he told me he loved me March 7th, (he had to think it over lol), knew we would mary beofre the end of that week, got engaged in April, didn't follow that passage and regret that, but waited for my brother (who was engaged a year earlier but wouldn't get married until that September), instead of doing what we were meant to do -- get married quickly, because we burned.

The person asking is already planning to marry. He's just waiting around for no particular reason, as if "financially ready" is a reason to delay. Funny thing. That brother waited to get married after living together with his now-ex. That marriage didn't last. No God in it. My Dad decided it was okay to marry a younger woman, because he didn't have problems with me marrying an older man. (His ex is a month older than hubby.) His marriage didn't include God either. It didn't last. (Two more wonderful siblings out of it, so not saying everything went bad.)

We new all along the three of us were getting married, and God has ultimate say over it and us. We should have been married.

If you know it, you know it. If you're not sure, stop the relationship. If you can't stand being without the other and the feeling is mutual, get married. If you can stand it, then you know that wasn't the one (if there is a one.) Finances, circumstances, and all that other stuff that piles up in life will pile up anyway. Better to share the burden. Or, if you don't need to, don't, (like Paul also said.) The really important things are:
1. God first. (Also means should be same beliefs.)
2. Like the person for who they are, not who you can make them become.
3. Best friends.
4. Marriage is not a competition. It's a partnership. Don't aim for 50/50 or you'll fall short. Aim for 90/90 and you might hit 50/50.

Not spending alone times means you don't get to know future spouse well, except in relationship with others.

Funny. I covered all this in my first answer, (Marry if you burn.) Somehow it becomes more acceptable after finding out that I've been married, in love, and in seriously really-like to the same guy since 1980 -- from the time we first went out to the time we married. What worked was God's approval, not advice. That last part is why so many marriage don't work out.
I would only dispute one thing... I think it should be 90/10%. Give 90%, expect 10%.
 
A

atwhatcost

Guest
#46
I would only dispute one thing... I think it should be 90/10%. Give 90%, expect 10%.
Are you the one who only has to put in 10% of the effort? Good deal in that case, but spouse will recent that soon. ;)
 
E

Elijah19

Guest
#47
Just marry her anyway! What's the problem? You don't need to pay for a lot to stick together.
 
K

Kaycie

Guest
#48
Go down to the courthouse and marry her in secret, then have a wedding later. People won't know you married in secret, nor that you lived as a married couple in secret. That way you can plan for stuff on the surface and still be right with God.