Hey Everyone,
This is going to be an even longer post that what I normally write, so if you can, stick with me for a while. It's going to be so long, in fact, that apparently it's too long for the system and I am going to have to break it up into two posts, so here we go.
A friend shared this post from a Christian wife who gave this advice to singles:
"Singleness is not a gift. Celibacy is. If you have no sex drive, you have the gift of celibacy and can choose to remain single for the Lord and His work. If you have a sex drive, get married; for it is better to marry than to burn. Most people don't have the gift of celibacy."
I'm a woman who has been single for a very long time (about 20 years,) and like most Christian singles, have been given the "for it is better to marry than to burn with passion" (1 Corinthians 7:9) so often that I'm sure if we counted them all up and got a dollar for each time, we could probably all retire.
Please note that i am NOT AT ALL trying to refute what the Bible says. Rather, I am always troubled as to why we are given such an incomplete answer.
My immediate reaction after reading this married woman's advice was:
1. "If you have a sex drive, get married." This makes marriage sound like a bag of potato chips you simply pick out and just throw into your cart at the grocery store and go home. Singles are told to get married as the supposed quick, easy solution to a sex drive, and yet at the same time, we are also told that we must be ever so careful in choosing a marriage partner. It gives off a very conflicting message: "Get married. Simple as that. But wait, hold your horses! Don't rush into anything! Take your time! Wait for God to direct your steps!" And I'm certainly not saying this isn't Godly advice.
But the thing is, single people are pretty much told to hurry up and get married before they sin. And on the other hand, if anything goes wrong, they will then immediately be blamed for not being prayerful or particular enough and choosing the wrong person.
2. Again, I'm not trying to say that this advice is somehow not Biblical. It most certainly is. BUT, it gets recited as of it's on auto tune in every Christian circle while at the same time completely ignoring that:
A. A plethora of Christian marriages are broken because of porn and sex addictions. Apparently, marriage doesn't cure this, but no one tells us how to prevent it or even talks about it until the marriage is crumbling or already destroyed. But yet, marriage is somehow the ultimate answer to a sex drive.
B. If I could get away with it (but I won't even try out of respect for this site and the fact that we have young people here,) I would love to make a poll asking married people if they're having the fantasy sex, as often as they want, in the exact ways they wanted when they were single and dreaming of having a spouse and "spiritually legal" way to have sex.
And if it isn't everything they thought it would be, how close is it? Or not? Because if this is the case, I'm hoping for and expecting married people to also tell singles how to buckle up for the truth: that there will be a lot of disappointment, and, after committing, you are going to have to learn to find the continues grace to deal with that for the rest of your life.
C. Simplistic statements like this ignore the plight of single parents and those who are divorced and widowed. Is it to be expected that a divorced or widowed person, or even someone who has sinned but repented and is now waiting again for marriage can somehow automatically erase their sex drive? Because these factors often make the search even more complicated, and it can't be dismissed by saying, "You don't have the gift of singleness if you have a sex drive." Why is it that so many fail to realize that singleness in itself is often a condition that is not chosen by that person?
This is why I personally don't buy that "not having a sex drive" is the only qualification for a life of singleness. I think there are plenty of Christian singles -- at least, I think I've met some of them -- who do indeed have one, but since they haven't met the right person, are able to set it aside for the life God currently has for them. And some people, not all, but some, are able to do that for a lifetime.
Likewise, what about married people who don't have a sex drive? Because there are people in marriages who don't have or lost their sex drive, and I would guess it's not making for a very happy marriage.
If singles are always spoken to like idiots and told to just get married (as if we can't think of that ourselves,) why aren't the married people who give us that advice, like this particular woman, talking about what happens when people who WANT to have sex -- but ARE ALREADY MARRIED -- but sex is not available to them. How are they coping and what are they doing to learn to live with it?
I am certainly no expert in anything in this life, but I've spent about 20 years being single and following, living with, or close by older married (or widowed) relatives. After spending so much time around those who are my parents' and grandparents' ages, I've seen a lot of things that have affected or just plain killed off many married couple's sex drives (but usually just for one person at a time,) such as:
* Pregnancy; caring for kids; miscarriage; losing a child.
* Loss of sex drive or loss of ability to have sex due to medical conditions like cancer, dementia, surgeries, etc. I've also read several articles and watched documentaries about younger and younger men losing some of their physical ability to have sex and having to rely on Viagra as early as in their 20's and 30's -- which is both expensive and detrimental to their health.
* Loss of interest in a marriage partner for sex due to porn, or a desire for things their spouse doesn't like that was discovered through porn.
* Growing apart over time and no longer thinking of their spouse in a romantic way.
* Some couples aren't even living together anymore because of medical conditions -- for example, one spouse has to live in a nursing home.
And it has also been my observation that most times, it's just one person who loses their sex drive at a time, leaving the other one very wanting and feeling very neglected. But they're married. So what do they do now? How do they learn to live with this? And why aren't singles told the truth -- that marriage does not equal getting a lifelong, steady availability of sex, so get used to going without it -- even you've done the exact thing you were told to do.
(Continued
This is going to be an even longer post that what I normally write, so if you can, stick with me for a while. It's going to be so long, in fact, that apparently it's too long for the system and I am going to have to break it up into two posts, so here we go.
A friend shared this post from a Christian wife who gave this advice to singles:
"Singleness is not a gift. Celibacy is. If you have no sex drive, you have the gift of celibacy and can choose to remain single for the Lord and His work. If you have a sex drive, get married; for it is better to marry than to burn. Most people don't have the gift of celibacy."
I'm a woman who has been single for a very long time (about 20 years,) and like most Christian singles, have been given the "for it is better to marry than to burn with passion" (1 Corinthians 7:9) so often that I'm sure if we counted them all up and got a dollar for each time, we could probably all retire.
Please note that i am NOT AT ALL trying to refute what the Bible says. Rather, I am always troubled as to why we are given such an incomplete answer.
My immediate reaction after reading this married woman's advice was:
1. "If you have a sex drive, get married." This makes marriage sound like a bag of potato chips you simply pick out and just throw into your cart at the grocery store and go home. Singles are told to get married as the supposed quick, easy solution to a sex drive, and yet at the same time, we are also told that we must be ever so careful in choosing a marriage partner. It gives off a very conflicting message: "Get married. Simple as that. But wait, hold your horses! Don't rush into anything! Take your time! Wait for God to direct your steps!" And I'm certainly not saying this isn't Godly advice.
But the thing is, single people are pretty much told to hurry up and get married before they sin. And on the other hand, if anything goes wrong, they will then immediately be blamed for not being prayerful or particular enough and choosing the wrong person.
2. Again, I'm not trying to say that this advice is somehow not Biblical. It most certainly is. BUT, it gets recited as of it's on auto tune in every Christian circle while at the same time completely ignoring that:
A. A plethora of Christian marriages are broken because of porn and sex addictions. Apparently, marriage doesn't cure this, but no one tells us how to prevent it or even talks about it until the marriage is crumbling or already destroyed. But yet, marriage is somehow the ultimate answer to a sex drive.
B. If I could get away with it (but I won't even try out of respect for this site and the fact that we have young people here,) I would love to make a poll asking married people if they're having the fantasy sex, as often as they want, in the exact ways they wanted when they were single and dreaming of having a spouse and "spiritually legal" way to have sex.
And if it isn't everything they thought it would be, how close is it? Or not? Because if this is the case, I'm hoping for and expecting married people to also tell singles how to buckle up for the truth: that there will be a lot of disappointment, and, after committing, you are going to have to learn to find the continues grace to deal with that for the rest of your life.
C. Simplistic statements like this ignore the plight of single parents and those who are divorced and widowed. Is it to be expected that a divorced or widowed person, or even someone who has sinned but repented and is now waiting again for marriage can somehow automatically erase their sex drive? Because these factors often make the search even more complicated, and it can't be dismissed by saying, "You don't have the gift of singleness if you have a sex drive." Why is it that so many fail to realize that singleness in itself is often a condition that is not chosen by that person?
This is why I personally don't buy that "not having a sex drive" is the only qualification for a life of singleness. I think there are plenty of Christian singles -- at least, I think I've met some of them -- who do indeed have one, but since they haven't met the right person, are able to set it aside for the life God currently has for them. And some people, not all, but some, are able to do that for a lifetime.
Likewise, what about married people who don't have a sex drive? Because there are people in marriages who don't have or lost their sex drive, and I would guess it's not making for a very happy marriage.
If singles are always spoken to like idiots and told to just get married (as if we can't think of that ourselves,) why aren't the married people who give us that advice, like this particular woman, talking about what happens when people who WANT to have sex -- but ARE ALREADY MARRIED -- but sex is not available to them. How are they coping and what are they doing to learn to live with it?
I am certainly no expert in anything in this life, but I've spent about 20 years being single and following, living with, or close by older married (or widowed) relatives. After spending so much time around those who are my parents' and grandparents' ages, I've seen a lot of things that have affected or just plain killed off many married couple's sex drives (but usually just for one person at a time,) such as:
* Pregnancy; caring for kids; miscarriage; losing a child.
* Loss of sex drive or loss of ability to have sex due to medical conditions like cancer, dementia, surgeries, etc. I've also read several articles and watched documentaries about younger and younger men losing some of their physical ability to have sex and having to rely on Viagra as early as in their 20's and 30's -- which is both expensive and detrimental to their health.
* Loss of interest in a marriage partner for sex due to porn, or a desire for things their spouse doesn't like that was discovered through porn.
* Growing apart over time and no longer thinking of their spouse in a romantic way.
* Some couples aren't even living together anymore because of medical conditions -- for example, one spouse has to live in a nursing home.
And it has also been my observation that most times, it's just one person who loses their sex drive at a time, leaving the other one very wanting and feeling very neglected. But they're married. So what do they do now? How do they learn to live with this? And why aren't singles told the truth -- that marriage does not equal getting a lifelong, steady availability of sex, so get used to going without it -- even you've done the exact thing you were told to do.
(Continued
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