Probe Ministries
Sexual Purity
Dr. Ray Bohlin
Medical Reasons for Sexual Purity
As our society prepares to enter the 21st century,
one trend and long-time staple of our culture looms ever larger on
the horizon. The places to which one can escape in order to avoid
sexual temptation continue to shrink. Children cannot be allowed to
roam unsupervised through the neighborhood video stores because of
the racks of videos with alluring covers of scantily clad
exercisers and playmates of the year. The aisles of popular new
releases contain images from R-rated movies that were only found in
skin magazines thirty years ago. A trip to the grocery store can
take you past the book aisle with suggestive covers on romance
novels which contain graphic descriptions of sexual encounters.
Billboards for beer, cars, and movies all use sex to sell. Radio
stations readily play songs today that were banned from the
airwaves decades ago. A trip to the mall takes you past stores with
only sex to sell. Your home is invaded with sexually explicit
images over even the free non-cable channels and your home
computer. Unwelcome mail enters your home selling well-known sex
magazines that continue to earn millions of dollars every year.
From the moment Adam and Eve were ashamed of their nakedness,
sexual temptation has been in our midst. But except for brief
periods in declining cultures, the temptations had to be sought
after. There were places where one could be relatively safe from
the sights and sounds which inflame lust and desire. Those days are
over. Oh, sure, you can have blocks installed on your computer or
phone and the local video store will allow you to put a screen on
your children’s rentals. But the fact that such systems are
necessary and only voluntary should be enough to tell us of the
pervasiveness of sex in our society. Sexual purity is a rare and
often scorned virtue today. When a Hollywood couple makes it known
that they are saving sex for marriage, people ask, "Why would
you do that?"
While sex is clearly pervasive in our society, you don’t have to
look very far to find plenty of reasons to avoid sexual relations
outside of marriage. The biblical words for fornication or
sexual immorality refer to all sexual activity outside of
marriage, and the Scriptures clearly state that all such activity
is forbidden (Lev. 18 & 20; Matt. 15:19; 1 Cor. 6:9-10,18; 1
Thess. 4:3). But a person may rationalize that while sexual
activity outside of marriage is sin, "I can always be forgiven
for my sin, and as long as I am not found out, who gets hurt?"
Paul answers this resoundingly in Romans 6. "May it never
be!" cries the apostle. By allowing sin to reign in our hearts
we effectively say that Christ’s death and resurrection has no
power in our life.
If this is not powerful enough, consider the physical
consequences of sexual immorality that exist today. In the 1960s
there were only two STDs: syphilis and gonorrhea. Today there are
over 25, and 1 in 5 Americans between the ages of 15 and 55
has a viral STD. That number is 1 in 4 if bacterial infections are
included. There are 12 million new infections every year with 60
percent of these among teenagers.
Chlamydia and gonorrhea can lead to pelvic inflammatory disease
which often results in sterility. Human Papilloma Virus (HPV)
frequently produces genital warts which can develop into cancer.
Rampant HPV infection is the primary reason that women are urged to
have Pap smears on a yearly basis. If you are sexually active
outside of marriage and "lucky," you may only contract
herpes, but even this is an embarrassing, bothersome, incurable
infection. But you may get AIDS, which will kill you. Since the
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can lie dormant for years before
developing into deadly AIDS, your sex partner may not know that he
or she is infected. The fact is, if you are sexually active outside
of marriage, it is almost guaranteed that you will contract at
least one STD.
But information is not enough. Why is sexual purity within
marriage so important to God? And what do we do to avoid falling
into sexual sin with so much temptation swirling around our heads?
We will now turn to explore some time tested advice from Scripture
to see what we must do and why.
The Naturalistic Rejection of the Mystical Nature of Marriage
In his book Reason in the Balance, Phillip Johnson
brilliantly documents the vise grip of philosophical naturalism in
science, law, and education in the United States. Our populace has
been taught for so long that matter, energy, space, and time are
all that exists that it has infected every form of cultural
discourse, including our sexual behavior. Freedom of choice and
personal fulfillment are praised as the ultimate virtues because,
for the naturalist, sex is just a physical act that fulfills a
basic need and instinct of every person. People should be free to
pursue whatever sexual expression they choose to meet that basic
physiological need. And this need is only created by our
fundamental drive to reproduce and spread our genes into the next
generation. In the naturalistic world view, sex becomes simply a
basic need and marriage just a relative cultural expression to
satisfy that need for some, but not all people.
That is why so many people, including Christians, look at
Scripture’s clear statements condemning sex outside of marriage as
antiquated and old-fashioned. "Oh," they say, "they
applied to the people of that time, but not now. Not as we prepare
to enter the 21st century!" But this raises some
important questions. First, do the Scriptural injunctions against
any sex outside of marriage really apply today? The answer, of
course, is, "Yes, they do." We recognize readily what the
Bible has to say about sex, and we see all about us the physical,
emotional, and relational consequences of sexual immorality. Since
God is sovereign, He established these consequences as warning
signs not to transgress His principles. But second, just why is
sexual fidelity so important to God?
The first reason is because God’s intentions for marriage were
clearly stated right from the beginning. Genesis 2:18-25 makes it
plain that God’s design was one man and one woman for life. Jesus
used this passage as the basis for His teaching on divorce in
Matthew 19: "What God has joined together, let no man break
apart." As Creator, God has every right to tell us what He
wants.
Second, the Father has used the marriage union as an analogy for
His relationship with Israel in the Old Testament and the church’s
relationship with Jesus in the New Testament. Isaiah 1:21, Jeremiah
2:20, 3:1-10, and especially Ezekiel 16:15-34 accuse Israel of
playing the harlot, chasing after other gods and ignoring her
rightful "husband." God’s union with Israel was to be
forever. He was faithful, but Israel was not. The Lord rained down
His judgment on the unfaithfulness of Israel and Judah. In
Ephesians 5 Paul tells husbands that they are to love their wives
as Christ loves the church. Elsewhere, Jesus is spoken of as the
bridegroom and the church as His bride, another relationship that
is to be forever. Jesus will be faithful. Will the church? Our
marital and sexual relationships are to mirror the Lord’s special
relationships with Israel in the Old Testament and the church in
the New. God hates divorce and any sexual relationships outside of
marriage, because He hates it when His faithfulness to us is
spurned by our turning to other gods. This is true whether they be
the pagan gods of old, which are still around, or the modern gods
of self, money, power, and sex.
Well, we may know what is right, but knowing what is right is
often not the same as doing what is right. Now, I want to look at
a passage in Proverbs that instructs its readers concerning
dangers, both obvious and subtle, of sexual temptation.
A Young Man Lacking Sense Meets a Harlot
It is hard for some to imagine that the Bible contains explicit
advice on how to avoid sexual temptation. But the entire chapter of
Proverbs 7 is devoted to exactly that. In the first five verses,
Solomon essentially pleads with his son to listen and guard his
words carefully concerning the adulteress.
My son, keep my words,
And treasure my commandments within you.
Keep my commandments and live,
(sounds like serious stuff!)
And my teaching as the apple of your eye.
(actually the "pupil" or "little man of your
eye." This was meant therefore to be a precious truth
to be closely guarded and kept.)
Solomon goes on in verse 3:
Bind them on your fingers;
Write them on the tablet of your heart.
Say to wisdom, "You are my sister,"
And call understanding your intimate friend.
That they may keep you from an adulteress,
From the foreigner who flatters with her words.
In verses 6-9, King Solomon takes the role of an observer,
telling his son what he sees unfolding before him.
For at the window of my house,
I looked out through my lattice,
And I saw among the naive,
I discerned among the youths,
A young man lacking sense.
Passing through the street near her corner;
And he takes the way to her house.
In the twilight, in the evening,
In the middle of the night and in the darkness.
Solomon speaks of one who is young, inexperienced, and lacking
judgment. His first clue was that he purposefully walks down her
street and actually heads straight to her house in the middle of
the night. As Charlie Brown would say, "Good grief!" The
young man’s intent is probably harmless. He is curious, perhaps
hoping for a glimpse of the adulteress plying her wares to someone
else on the street. Sin is probably not on his mind. He just wants
to see what the real world is like. That kind of thinking is still
heard today. "I just need to know what is out there so I can
warn my family and others around me." In reality, our young
fool was looking for titillation and was confident that he could
withstand the temptation.
This is precisely why Solomon says he is lacking sense. The
apostle Paul warns in 1 Corinthians 10:12, "Therefore let him
who thinks he stands take heed lest he fall." Overconfidence
is our worst enemy in the face of temptation. I am reminded of two
contrasting characters in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings
trilogy, Boromir and Faramir. Boromir and Faramir were brothers.
Boromir, the elder, was renowned for his exploits in war. He was
his father’s favorite and the principal heir. He was confident,
however, that were he to wield the One Ring, the Ring of Power, he
would not be corrupted by it and could use it to defeat the armies
of the evil Sauron. However, his overconfidence and lust for power
lead him to attempt to steal the ring from the designated Ring-
bearer. His foolishness caused the Fellowship of the Ring to be
split apart under attack and led eventually to his death. He
thought he could stand, but he fell.
His brother Faramir, however, had a more realistic picture of
his sinful nature. When confronted later with the same opportunity
to see and even hold the Ring, he refused. He knew the temptation
would be strong and that the best way not to yield to the lust for
power was to keep the temptation as far away as possible. Faramir,
though perceived to be weaker than his brother, was, in a sense,
actually the wiser and stronger of the two. He took heed and did
not fall and later played a significant role in the final victory
over the forces of evil.
What about you? Do you consider yourself strong enough to resist
the temptations presented in movies, books, commercials, etc.? Do
you walk into the movie theater blindly, lacking sense, uninformed
as to why this movie is R-rated or even PG-13? Are you a headstrong
Boromir, or a wise Faramir who knows his weakness in the face of
temptation and avoids it whenever possible?
The Schemes of the Adulteress
As we continue in our walk through Proverbs 7, Solomon now
focuses his attention on the schemes of the seductress. Our young
man lacking sense is walking down her street, right past her house.
Solomon continues in verse 10:
And behold, a woman comes to meet him,
Dressed as a harlot and cunning of heart.
She is boisterous and rebellious;
Her feet do not remain at home;
She is now in the streets, now in the squares,
And lurks by every corner.
Wow! What a surprise! A woman comes to meet him! Can’t you just
hear Gomer Pyle exclaiming at the top of his lungs, "Surprise!
Surprise! Surprise!" Surprise, indeed! This is only what was
expected. Her boisterousness lends an air of fun and frivolity.
Let’s face it, if sin weren’t so enjoyable we wouldn’t fall prey to
it so easily. Solomon next gives the impression that she is
everywhere to be found. As I pointed out earlier, that is even more
true today. Even a widely proclaimed family movie like Forrest
Gump surprised many with scenes that were unnecessary and
sexually explicit. If you were surprised, you shouldn’t have been.
Check these things out beforehand. Don’t act like a young man
lacking sense and wander down the street of temptation unaware.
Remember that Jesus extended the moral law from our actions to our
thought life. If we simply lust after a woman, we have already
committed adultery in our hearts (Matt. 5:27 28).
Solomon next turns to the woman’s tactics:
So she seizes him and kisses him,
(Suddenness can put you off your guard unless you have
predecided what you would do, whether it is a real seduction, a
scene in a movie, TV program, or book. Will you close your eyes,
leave, change channels, skip a few pages? What? Know
beforehand!)
And with a brazen face she says to him:
"I was due to offer peace offerings;
Today I have paid my vows.
(I’m not such a bad person. See, I do a lot of the same
things you do. You’re not going to reject and judge me, are
you?)
Therefore I have come out to meet you,
To seek your presence earnestly, and I have found you."
Ah, the ultimate weapon with a man: female flattery. Men are
suckers when they’re told that they are needed. It was he,
particularly, that she was waiting for. Not just anybody. If a man
senses he is needed, he will be very reluctant to say no. Men
usually hate to disappoint.
Solomon continues:
"I have spread my couch with coverings,
With colored linens of Egypt.
I have sprinkled my bed
With myrrh, aloes and cinnamon.
Come, let us drink our fill of love until morning;
Let us delight ourselves with caresses."
As she continues her assault on the male ego by indicating all
the trouble she has gone through just for him ("Don’t hurt my
feelings now," she says), she creates a sensual picture that
is meant to arouse him and draw him in. Be realistic. This sounds
inviting, even from the pages of Scripture. This should be a loud
tornado siren in your ear to tell you: "There, but for the
grace of God, go I!" The adulteress finishes her seduction
with the assurance that no one need ever know, in verses 19 and 20.
She says:
"For the man is not at home,
He has gone on a long journey;
He has taken a bag of money with him,
At the full moon he will come home."
This rationalization of "no one will know" is true not
only of an affair, but also of what we allow into our minds through
the privacy of our computer, videos rented when no one else is
home, magazines stashed away in a secret place, or visits to parts
of town where we certainly don’t expect to find anyone we know. But
it’s a lie. These things cannot be hidden for a lifetime. Either
you will slip up sooner or later, or you will poison your mind to
such an extent that the outward temptation can no longer be
resisted. Moses speaks to Israel in Numbers 32:23 warning them that
if they do not obey the Lord, "their sin will find them
out."
The Young Man Capitulates and Must Face the Consequences
As we have seen, the young man in Proverbs 7 has walked right
into temptation’s snare and has been totally mesmerized by the
pleas and schemes of the adulteress. I have made many parallels to
today as to how prevalent sexual temptation is. Now we will see the
young man’s demise and the consequences of his actions. Beginning
in verse 21:
With her many persuasions she entices him;
With her flattering lips she seduces him.
Suddenly he follows her,
(probably as if in a trance)
As an ox goes to the slaughter,
(silently and dumbly)
Or as a stag goes into a trap,
Until an arrow pierces through his liver,
As a bird hastens to the snare,
(again blindly and without knowledge)
So he does not know that it will cost him his life.
He capitulates without a word, mesmerized by her seduction. The
analogy to the ox, the deer, and the bird point out that each of
them walk blindly, silently, and unknowingly to their death. So it
is with the young man lacking sense. While he will not die in a
physical sense, though he may if he contracts AIDS, he will die in
the sense that his life will never be the same. Not only will the
shame and guilt be difficult to overcome, but there will be severed
relationships that may never be repaired. There may also be
consequences that can never be removed and scars that may never be
healed, such as a child out of wedlock or a broken marriage in
which children are the real victims. But even if the sin is with
pornography, remember your sins will find you out. You may keep up
appearances for awhile but your ministry, your family, and your
relationship with God will slowly rot from the inside out. Solomon
closes with some final warnings and observations:
Now therefore, my sons, listen to me,
And pay attention to the words of my mouth.
Do not let your heart turn aside to her ways,
(do not give your mind opportunity with impure material)
Do not stray into her paths.
For many are the victims she has cast down,
And numerous are all her slain.
Her house is the way to Sheol,
Descending to the chambers of death.
Your best defense is to first realize that none are immune.
Remember Boromir and Faramir from Tolkien’s Lord of the
Rings. Boromir, the stronger, older brother, thought he could
resist the power of the One Ring and use it to defeat the enemy. In
the end, his lust for power drove him to irrationality and
eventually to his death. Faramir, however, assessed his weakness
correctly and refused to even look at the Ring when the opportunity
arose, knowing its seductive power. He not only lived but was used
mightily in the battles that followed. No one was capable of
totally resisting the power of the Ring. Those who actually gazed
upon the Ring, handled it and even used it, resisted only through
an extreme exercise of will often aided by the intervention and
counsel of others or circumstances (Frodo, Bilbo, and Samwise).
Those who totally yielded to it were destroyed by it (Gollum).
Many have faltered before you and many will come after you. Your
first mistake would be to think of yourself as above this kind of
sin or immune to it. Don’t kid yourself. It can ruin you
physically! It can ruin you emotionally! It can ruin you
spiritually!
Purity affirms who we are; we are made in the image of God.
Purity affirms our relationship to Jesus Christ as His bride.
Purity affirms women as a treasure God created for us as a
companion and helpmate and not as an object for us to conquer.
Pray and ask forgiveness for any involvement in pornography, R-
rated movies, and lustful thoughts. Commit to predecide what to do
about those sudden temptations, commit to purity, commit to wives
and husbands (or future wives and husbands) to be faithful in the
power of the Holy Spirit. Martin Luther said that you cannot stop
birds from flying over your head, but you can certainly stop them
from making a nest in your hair. Some temptation is unavoidable,
but as far as it depends on you, give it no opportunity to set up
residence in your mind.
© 1999 Probe Ministries
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About the Author
Raymond G. Bohlin is executive director of Probe Ministries.
He is a graduate of the University of Illinois (B.S., zoology),
North Texas State University (M.S., population genetics), and the
University of Texas at Dallas (M.S., Ph.D., molecular biology). He
is the co-author of the book The Natural Limits to Biological
Change, served as general editor of Creation, Evolution and Modern
Science, and has published numerous journal articles. Dr. Bohlin
was named a 1997-98 and 2000 Research Fellow of the Discovery
Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture. He can
be reached via e-mail at rbohlin@probe.org.
Copyright © 2002 Probe Ministries.
All rights reserved.
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www.probe.org
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