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Sex and the Christian Marriage

Betsy St. Amant

Contributing Writer

I’ve been married for almost three years now, and finally, I no longer blush bright red when the word “sex” is mentioned out loud.

It’s more of a faint pink tinge.

Growing up, sex wasn’t talked about very much. Not at home, not with family, and certainly not in church! There, the very mention of the word would have turned ears to scarlet and had the deacons popping antacid pills. Sure, every year the youth group did a “True Love Waits” program, but we never got down to the real nitty-gritty. We dutifully signed cards and pledged to “wait for true love and marriage” - whatever that meant.

Many Christian youth today are in the same rapidly sinking boat. They have plenty of questions, but not enough people willing to give answers. Or worse, the wrong kind of people are giving the wrong kind of answers. For those getting no answers, sex turns into "This Great Mystery." Lack of information inspires intrigue and sex becomes even more appealing. The lure of the unknown consumes the mind, and much like Eve, regret blooms after one taste of the forbidden fruit.

How many young men and women could have been protected if they had just been told that sex was not some guilty pleasure denied them, but rather, a part of God’s plan for their future marriage and well worth the wait? How many babies could have been saved if only these young girls had realized not just the negative consequences of sex outside marriage but the positive truth about sex within marriage?

Silence Outside Marriage, Confusion Within

After the wedding, one of the hardest things for young Christian couples to adjust to is the fact that sex is suddenly - okay! All the years of silence on the “forbidden topic,” all the years of feeling guilty for asking questions, all the years of wondering and dreaming, all the years of thinking sex as a four letter word, suddenly diminish. Sex is expected, allowed, and not only that, but – gasp – it’s a part of God’s plan!

During their most formative years Christian teenagers, especially young girls, are often expected to push the topic of sex aside. The good girls are the ones that sign their pledge cards, sit on their hands when dying to ask questions, and polish their purity rings once a week.

However, I think those years are equally hard if not harder for young men. Those who remain pure during the trying years of hormone overload get married and suddenly expect to experience everything they’ve seen on TV, read in books, or heard in the locker room at school. And why wouldn’t they? It’s all they know.

Suddenly, we have two Christians who’ve done their best to remain pure but may be facing some challenges ahead. Because the mindset “sex is bad” has been drilled into the young woman’s mind for as long as she can remember, she finds it hard to relate to her husband physically. This creates tension between the newlywed couple. The woman creates a false sense of guilt in her head, and the young man develops insecurity – he misreads the situation and assumes something is wrong with him or thinks he is not appealing to his new wife. And what God has purposed for good between a husband and wife becomes distorted.

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Most Recent User Comments
JanaMac
4/1/2007 2:40 PM
Thank you so much for your article on "Sex and the Christian Marriage". My husband and I have been married for almost 12 years, and this can still be an issue for me. Our sexual relationship needs a lot of prayer in order to prevent the enemy from taking a foothold in our marriage. I have definitely found that what we see on t.v. influences our perception of what sex is suppose to be like. I also struggled w/ "smut" books for years until my mother explained it like this: you open the door to temptation and satan just a little bit and he'll take the opportunity to kick the door down at the first opportunity! You allow that junk into your mind, and it is very hard to make it disappear! After that I changed the type of books that I read, and trust me there is an abunadance of good christian fiction out there that will satisfy any romantic! I just wish that there was more "wholesome" t.v. available as well.
thisnthat2
3/27/2007 9:44 AM
Great article! And I wholeheartedly agree about Christian fiction. It is a wonderful way to illustrate what a beautiful marriage should look like. I grew up reading Janette Oke's books and they truly helped me love and appreciate my husband and my children more. There is so much excellent fiction there now that does NOT contain the graphic sex, violence and language of most novels in the bookstore. I always enjoy Betsy St. Amant's articles. Keep them coming!
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