Baptist Believer said:
Yep. That’s really common, and I’ve lived in that condition for many years. But you don’t have to live that way.
With all due respect, yes I do have to live with it. It's a battle I fight every day. Only with the help of our Surpreme Lord am I able to overcome. But it is a daily battle.
Baptist Believer said:
Before we go any farther, let me tell a little more about my life.
I married at 25 and I filed for divorce at 28, after my wife had renounced her faith, cheated on me repeatedly and disappeared one day while I was at work, cleaning out my bank accounts and running up nearly $12,000 in credit card debt. I divorced her out of self-preservation since Texas is a community property state and I was responsible for any additional debt she might incur (and she was buying all sorts of things on credit).
For the next 12 years I was single, although I began dating a Christian woman on a steady basis about 9 years ago. We married last December.
I know what it is like to be single. I’ve been single the vast majority of my adult life. When I talk about lust, it is primarily coming from the perspective of a single man who had had sexual experience, but was unable to legitimately fulfill those natural urges.
Then I stand corrected.
I went though a similer experience. While I was away from God, I was living with a woman that I was madly in love with. Even though I refused to see it, we grew apart and she started sleeping around. We reconciled, got engaged, then broke up again. It became an on-again-off-again relationship. During this time she was also sleeping with someone who was supposed to be a friend of mine. (So much for friendship.) She got pregnat, claimed it was his, and left me for good to mary him. When the baby was 16 months old, she informed me that the child was indeed mine. (DNA test proved it.)
Now I have a wonderful daughter whom I adore (and she me) but I must deal with her mother (who's now on her 3rd husband) on a regular basis. Trying to raise a non-custodial daughter in the proper Christian way because I have experienced what following the world will get you.
(What that has to do with the topic of conversation, I have no idea. But there it is!!)
Baptist Believer said:
(And here’s a little secret: when you get married, you don’t get to treat your wife as a sexual plaything, so you still don’t get to act on your impulses all the time.)
Never thought it did. But married Christians (of both genders) have an outlet that unmaried ones do not.
Baptist Believer said:
Modesty does not apply to couples within the privacy of their relationship together, but it certainly applies to how they dress before others.
Agreed. As it does to singles as well.
Baptist Believer said:
As far as lust goes, it definitely applies to couples. Just because you have the a potential legitimate outlet for sexual desire doesn’t mean that the temptation to lust is significantly reduced. Lust is the desire for something you cannot legitimately have. If you develop, nurture and sustain your heart toward lustful thoughts, you will have the same troubles when married. There will always be other women to look at and opportunities for immorality.
Certainly. I'm not claiming that it is otherwise. All I am saying is that maried couples have an opportunity for the physical and emotional company of another that singles do not have. This desire, given by God, is one of the main drives for marrage and a family. (Let's face it, you didn't get married because your wife makes good pancakes. IHOP makes good pancakes. However, IHOP can't satisfy the physical and emotional desires that are inside of every person.)
I also agree with what (I think) you are trying to say in that if a person nurtures the desire to look upon a person other than her/his spouse, then that person is living a sinful lifestyle and the state of marrage is inconsiquential to their state of arousal.
I also believe that the single person has a more difficult time with this than the married person. When I was in a solid (if sinful) relationship, my physical desires revolved around her. Yes, I was tempted to look upon another woman with lust, but found it relatively easy to redirect my lustful thoughts to a more appropriate thought about my partner. (Yes, I was still living in sin. But I did treat it as a marrage. That, however, doesn't excuse my sin. I'm not claiming that it does.)
Baptist Believer said:
Oh, I think quite a few of them do. Remember, women are no strangers to lust.
Not saying that women doen't lust. I'm just saying that men's triggers for sexual activity are more easily initiated than women's are. (And I mean that in a generic sense. I'm sure there are men who have almost no sex drive and that there are women with a very high one.) Men are more visually driven, women more verbally driven.
Part of the problem is that when we discuss modesty, we generally only think of visual modesty. What a person wears (or doesn't wear, as is more the case in American society today) is more likely to affect a man's desires than a woman's. However, verbal and physical modesty is a faucet as well. But verbal modesty isn't too much of a problem in today's society (although, it's heading that way).
For instance: I'm sure there are things that you can say or ways you can touch your wife that excite her. If before you started dating her you'd have walked up and said those words, or did those things, to her, more than likely she'd have slaped you and never have wanted to talk to you again. And with good reason.
However, (in today's society) women walk around all day wearing articles of clothing that illicit the same physical response from men that your words and touch get from your wife, then get offended when they are told to cover themselves. They don't understand exactly how (or how much) their "show" excites the men around them.
Baptist Believer said:
I won’t disagree, but just because men are more intensely prone to lust doesn’t give men any excuse. In Christ, we have the means to escape the control of lust and live as sexually-fulfilled people – even if we are single.
Not trying to make excuses. Trying to show reasons for why things are the way they are. Do things need to change for the better (IE. more Biblical)?? Most definatly. On the part of both men and women.
Baptist Believer said:
That’s quite a stereotype... one that is less true every year.
No, it's not a stereotype, it's true. If I said that most people who speak Spanish in America are from Mexican decent, that wouldn't be a stereotype, that would be the truth. Is it changing? Yes. Both boys and girls are less modest today than when we were their age.
Baptist Believer said:
That’s certainly not a respectful attitude for women. Frankly, that’s one of the places where change needs to begin. Women do not exist for the sexual gratification of men. They are created in the image of God, just like men, for the purpose of bringing glory to God through their character and works. When you reduce women to sexual objects, you’ve already lost the battle against lust.
Why is it than whenever a man states a truth of society about the current relationship of men and women, they are said to be reducing women to sexual objects, but when a women does it she's standing up for her gender?????
Like it or not, men are trained to be the preditor and women the prey. I don't like it, but that's the way it is. I'm not defending it. I'm just pointing it out as a truth.
Baptist Believer said:
I really have to strongly disagree here. From what you wrote, it appears that you have confused healthy sexual desire for lust – a common error often taught in our churches.
You're right. I was using "lust" being synomous with sexual desire. My bad. It would have been more appropriate to say: "From the genetics God gave us, to the cultural norms we live in men are driven to a high sexual desire."
I have seemed to struck a strong cord with a couple of people on this subject. While I don't mind the interchange, I do not like to be misconstrude. So I feel that I must clarify my position.
I do not feel that women are inferior to men in any way, shape or form. There are differences that in today's PC society are glossed over for the sake of being "non-offensive." I strive to not do that. I try to say what I mean and mean what I say. I call a spade a spade, a heart a heart, a club a club, and a diamond a diamond. If that offends you, just remember James 3:2 and that I am not a perfect man.