What this thread is not about: Lust
What this thread does not need: A barrage of scriptures about lust
Pointing out what people should have/should not have done. Don't beat people for their pasts, but deal with their struggles in the present. Show some compassion and put away your pharisee hat for once.
...hmph.
Hopefully this thread doesn't get closed or trolled as i think its a valid discussion.
As Christian singles it seems every time anything about sex is brought up, its lustful thoughts. Which is a major problem, i get it. But not all desires are bound in lust. Being married doesn't mean you can't lust, and being single doesn't mean desire is always lust.
I admit, i have not always had pure relationships. I have been in relationships where sex was involved. Serious relationships. So my question is, for those who have been married, or relationships similar to mine, how much does that desire for a spiritually and emotionally healthy sex life play into your wanting to get married? At 38 and never married i've never experienced it fully. I enjoyed the closeness and bond in previous relationships, but there was still that gnaw in the back of my mind that it wasn't right.
And now, i struggle with that desire and it can sometimes play a big part in my wanting to be married. As i'm nearing an age where its not uncommon for men to begin slowing down in those areas, it just makes it that much more urgent, at times, to want to enjoy it all.
And for those of you who know what i'm getting at, how do you cope with those feelings when they show? Sometimes this is major source of my loneliness.
Apologies for not having a relationship
exactly similar as you've described (and still answering) but, the desire for a spiritually and emotionally healthy sex life plays a MAJOR role in my desire to want to get married (take this from the resident bible-thumper). And you're right it's not always lust. My body is looking for its natural resolution; the intimacy; the physical oneness.
The closeness and bond you experienced is natural...that's what's supposed to happen; that's what you're supposed to feel. The only thing you were lacking in the equation was the spiritual "good standing" under God (i.e. marriage). That's all. But your body knows no different from then to now.
Your body doesn't know you weren't married because physically...biologically...you were. You DID "marry", and your body is now needing that union because once you marry you can't
unmarry. You see what I mean? You can't "undo" that unifying physical experience.
This is why it's also difficult for those who were once married but are now divorced...because marriage happens on two levels: spiritual and physical. Spiritual marriage is when God is a witness. Physical marriage is sexual union (as consummation of the spiritual). So divorcees also yearn for physical union from time to time because of the same reason; a body that was once joined can't be "unjoined" as an action. The body can't forget it.
[I often go into detail like this because solutions to problems are often found when the problem is disassembled into it's pieces.]
If marriage isn't an option for you, some ways of coping are what I think persNickety was getting at: Sexual Sublimation (although I'm no longer a fan of the word). Converting your emotions into useful actions instead of letting them fester. Weight Lifting, Building stuff (if that's a skill), designing apps (if that's a skill)...while I'm not exactly in your situation, these things help me. But to get closer to your emotion; maybe meet and becoming friends with people who are new widows or widowers (regardless of their age) who experience a loneliness even worse than yours; save them from their loneliness. Give what you need. "
Give and you will receive", that's a promise from God. Just some ideas.
But I wonder...not to get into your personal life, but you seem pretty experienced in establishing relationships with people (though some weren't pure). So could you simply do everything you did before (in nurturing a pure relationship) with a Christian woman - in all the ways you know how - except add marriage to the equation as a preliminary step to physical intimacy? What barriers exist? Is it tradition/culture that's getting in the way of marriage (i.e. "
well married people must live in the same house, get joint accounts, cars, etc...etc")? Because the only thing you were lacking before was your good standing with God (marriage covenant). That's it. And what society thinks married people
should do doesn't really matter, only what God thinks matters. We aren't to
"conform to this world" anyway because it doesn't know what the heck it's doing.
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I'm just spit-balling but maybe that's an idea for many of us; is that what's stopping many of us from getting married? Because we're trying to line up with what society traditionally expects married people to do (same house, same bank account, everything under one name, etc.) and so the costs outweigh the benefits for both the men and women? Because it seems at times that non-married couples (who don't share everything) can be more faithful to each other than married couples. Marriage is simply (but profoundly) a promise under God to trust, honor and be faithful to one's spouse, with witnesses confirming that promise...after that, why does anything else in their situation need to change sooner than either wants or needs it to?