The 5 Biggest Areas of Conflict for Couples

The 5 Biggest Areas of Conflict for Couples

Drs. Les and Leslie Parrott

BY DRS. LES AND LESLIE PARROTT 
MAY 13, 2013

 

Drs. Les and Leslie Parrott are #1 New York Times best-selling authors of numerous books, includingLove Talk and the award-winning Saving Your Marriage Before It Starts. Their new book The Good Fight: How Conflict Can Bring You Closer releasesApril 22 from Worthy Publishing. VisitLesAndLeslie.com.

 

Conflict is inevitable in marriage, but here’s how to fight well.
One of the most common misconceptions in marriages today is that fighting is a sign of an unhealthy relationship. But is it? Is a healthy marriage really one completely absent of conflict?

As a psychologist (Les) and a marriage and family therapist (Leslie), married since 1984, we don’t claim to have a perfect relationship. We fight—just like every other couple on the planet. But we’ve learned a secret:  There’s a difference between a bad fight and a good fight.

And when a couple learns to fight a good fight, the conflict actually brings them closer.

WE’VE LEARNED A SECRET:  THERE’S A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A BAD FIGHT AND A GOOD FIGHT.

 

All couples generally fight over the same five things: money, sex, work, parenting and housework. Most argue about these five issues over and over again because these are all stressors that speak to our sense of love and fairness.

But you can learn to fight about them in a healthy way. Here are some tools to help you cool down “The Big Five.”

Money

Allow us to say it straight: Money fights between couples are rarely about money. So if you want to minimize a currency conflict, trace it back to the fear that’s fueling it.

Instead of fighting over the amount of money that was spent on who-knows-what, shift the focus toward what really matters: (1) your fear of not having influence in important issues impacting your life, (2) your fear of not having security in your future, (3) your fear of having no respect shown for your values, or (4) your fear of not realizing your dreams.

Sex

To keep sexual grievances down and the marital bedsprings bouncing, we recommend focusing on solving “coordination failure.” It’s a common problem in marriages. The number-one reason people report not having sex in their marriage is “Too tired,” followed closely by “Not in the mood.” Most of the time, that’s code, knowingly or not, for having mismatched sex drives.

So start talking about it. As we write this, we can almost feel you cringing. For most couples, talking about sex is about as comfortable as sleeping in a car. Yet it’s a conversation that’s critically important to aligning your libidos and minimizing your conflicts. When the time is right, when both of you are relaxed and not distracted, ask each other to explain when you feel most eager to head to bed. Your answers may surprise you.

Work

 

We’ve got two words for you: date night. We know. You’ve heard this a thousand times: do a weekly date night or your marriage will suffer. Sounds more like a threat than friendly advice, doesn’t it? But it’s a surefire way to keep career conflict to a minimum.

MARRIAGE IS LIVED BEST WHEN YOU’RE NOT TRYING TO BALANCE THE SCALES.

 

In spite of this frequent advice, the message doesn’t seem to be getting through. Here’s how often married people, aged 25 to 50 with two or more children, have a date night:

  • Once a week: 4 percent
  • Once a month: 21 percent
  • Once every two to three months: 21 percent
  • Once every four to six months: 18 percent
  • Once every seven months or less often: 36 percent

Yikes! We can do better than that, and there’s good reason to do it. The National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia recently released a report titled “The Date Night Opportunity.” This study found that husbands and wives who set aside a deliberate time to connect and have fun at least once a week were approximately three and a half times more likely to report being “very happy” in their marriages.

Children

The solution for nearly any parenting conflict is found in getting on the same page and presenting a unified front. Otherwise, your kids play you against each other and add fuel to the parenting fire. Conflict decreases as teamwork increases. It may not be easy to agree with your spouse on the rules and standards you are willing to enforce with your kids. That’s why the first order of business is to iron out differences behind closed doors.

Don’t try to solve your parenting squabbles in the moment—while the kids enjoy the show. The time for presenting your ideas and negotiating trade-offs is when the two of you are alone. Once you reach agreement, stick together. When parents present a united front, there’s no room for recriminating I-told-you-so’s.

Chores

Let’s face it—most housework fights come about because one spouse is keeping score. That’s a bad idea. The scales of marriage are always in flux, and you’re only setting yourselves up for turmoil if you’ve installed a figurative scoreboard in your relationship. Using the division of labor approach does away with all that.

Trina, for example, is better and faster than Dan at both doing the dishes and tidying up around the house. In fact, she does it in half the time it takes him. Given this fact, does it make sense for Dan to do either of these tasks? Not really. What does make sense is for Dan to refresh the water bowl for their pet and prepare their child’s room for bedtime. He’s also quicker at organizing and tracking their finances. He does it in half the time it would take Trina. He’s also pretty good at ironing his own shirts.

You get the idea. It’s simple. Quit trying to divide the household chores down the middle. Marriage is lived best when you’re not trying to balance the scales.

Conflict is a fact of life, but it doesn’t have to be a bad one. When you are your spouse hit up against it next—and you will—go ahead and fight it out, but fight it with the goal to grow closer, to understand him or her better and to love each other well even in the midst of disagreement.

Adapted with permission from The Good Fight by Drs. Les & Leslie Parrott © 2013. Published by Worthy Publishing, a division of Worthy Media, Inc., Brentwood, TN. 

SOME ADVICE TO YOUNG CHRISTIAN MEN

SOME ADVICE TO YOUNG CHRISTIAN MEN BY DAVE at http://crosspointstudents.info/2013/01/some-advice-to-young-christian-men/ 

Guys, we all need to step up.  It’s plain and simple.  It’s time we quit delaying adolescence and lead.  It’s time we honor the name of Jesus in our lives, the church, and those around us.  It’s time we take to heart the words of Scripture, But as for you, O man of God, flee these things. Pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, gentleness. (1 Timothy 6:11, ESV).   It’s time the church sees true men of God.  As a youth minister, I have the privilege of attempting to invest my life into cultivating young men (by the Spirit’s power). If I were to sit down in a room full of young men, I’d offer these words…

1. Put down your ego and look with humility toward the greatness of your God.  (John 3:30).  Men are all guilty of pride.  We are born with it (Psalm 51:5).  Pride creates opinions.  There is nothing wrong with cooking a meal for your family.  There is nothing wrong with doing the dishes.  Don’t be so full of yourself that your life centers around you.  Live your life daily with the desire to lift others up.  Sacrifice a game in order for your family to see your love.  Admit your failures.  Take advice and wisdom from others.  Be open for correction and live above reproach (1 Timothy 3:2). This glorifies Jesus.

2.  Don’t compromise your morals in order to be “just one of the guys.”  Those guys probably need Jesus.  Let the light of His grace shine in you when you are with them. (Matthew 5:16).  Real men don’t have to act like idiots and perverts in order to be defined.  Compromising your values while you are around “the dudes” only makes you less of a man and more like a boyish hypocrite.  Stand firm in your passion for Christ, not matter who you are with (Ephesians 6:10-18).  Those guys will be more impressed with your boldness in your faith than your cowardly compromise.  (Just a hint, you need accountability with this from another God-fearing man).

3.  Don’t follow the example of guys on T.V.  I will lose points on this one…but I have to say it; I absolutely hate “The Bachelor.”  I’m not judging Sean out of anger (calm down girls), but I’m stating the facts of what I observe weekly.  A young man who wants to honor Jesus…hooks up with more than a dozen women in order to find the right match.  This quote was found on a website today in description of the show He is on, “The Bachelor” airs Mondays at 8 p.m. ET/PT on ABC.We’ll be back next week with all the drama, tears, cocktail dresses, and inappropriate touching anyone could handle. We have too many young men preying on our sisters in Christ in the church today.  Don’t allow the media to influence the way you develop as a Godly man.  Go against the stream of sinful conformity.  Rebel.

4. Don’t disrespect women.  The ladies in our church need you to serve, lead, and honor them.  They need you to protect the holiness and purity of their faith.  If you are given the privilege of marriage one day, hold fast to the truth ofEphesians 5:25.   Cowards take advanage  of women.  Real men treat them with the respect and love that gives glory to Jesus.  Remember, that girl is not your wife until you make the covenant known before God and the church.

5. Study well, work hard, and stop depending on your parents.  This generation is lost in social media, smart phones, gaming, and other items of interest.  If you can’t look someone in the eye and have a conversation with them, there is a problem.  Don’t be a drain on this economy.  Don’t abuse your parents’ sacrifice in your college years.  Honor God by demonstrating strong work ethics.  Hard work honors Jesus.  Paul wrote, Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men, (Colossians 3:23, ESV).

I have more to say, perhaps at a later time.  I’m praying for all those young men that I’ve met over the years.  I consider it a joy to see them grow up, get married, have children, and honor Jesus.  I can do more years of this work (by God’s grace), if I see more young men step up.  It’s time.

Soli Deo Gloria!

Dave

Waiting Til the Wedding Night from Stand Firm by Jackie

 

Waiting Til the Wedding Night from Stand Firm by Jackie

 Is waiting the right thing to do?  What is your church teaching about pre-martial sex?  Or are they?

Let me preface this column by saying this: my wife (I have to get used to saying that) and I not only waited sexually in every way (no, we didn’t pull the Bill Clinton and technically avoid “sex” sex,) but we didn’t shack up as live-ins and most importantly, we courted each other in a way that was consistent with our publicly professed values.

We did it right.

Our wedding was perfect. Our wedding night was nothing short of amazing. I write this on a plane heading into a tropical paradise with the most beautiful woman to have walked the planet earth.

Feeling judged? I couldn’t care less. You know why? Because my wife and I were judged all throughout our relationship. People laughed, scoffed and poked fun at the young, celibate, naive Christian couple.

We’d certainly never make it to the wedding without schtupping, and if we did, our “wedding night would be awkward and terrible,” they said.

Turns out that people couldn’t have been more wrong.  Looking back, I think that the women saying those things felt like the floozies they ultimately were, and the men, with their fickle manhood tied to their pathetic sexual conquests, felt threatened.

You may disagree with the way he said it but he is correct.  People go out of their way to cajole, insult and tempt those who are not walking the path they have chosen when that path is one opposed to Christian values.  Must be where the misery loves company line orginated.

Alcohol is the perfect example.  I rarely drink.  It is a choice I have made for my own reasons.  I could care less if you drink as long as you can do it without acting like a drunken fool or drive a moving vehicle.  When I attend social functions, I have taken to quietly ordering a club soda with a twist.  I try never to respond to an offer of an alcoholic beverage with “Sorry, I don’t drink” because it is like a double-dog dare to every drinking person in the room to make it their sole goal of the evening to get me to have an alcoholic beverage.  I simply respond, “No thanks, have one already.”

Sex is the other “must do” activity for America.  Anyone who does not participate is a prude.  A goody two shoes. Or considered a hypocrite who surely does what they condemn in the darkness of the night.  Children are being assaulted with the notion that their sexual urges are uncontrollable and therefore they must take action to avoid the consequences of these pre-ordained acts.  There is no backlash when the sexually active taunt the abstinent.  When is the last time you heard sex outside of marriage (to each other none the less) condemned?  When society is in a full court press backed by Big Brother Government, Apostate Religious Groups and Moraless Hollywood, how do those who are charged to guide the innocent withstand the assault?

Holy Sex Toys Batman! by Todd Rhoades at toddrhoades.com

Shel Boese / Shelby Boese – Todd Rhoades posts this article then asks your opinion – go over to his Monday Morning Insight blog for some comments/make any.  My thought is this – sex toys are on the border.

And quite frankly anything that would cause you to fantasize of being with someone other than your spouse is out (e.g. porn is obviously out because it is a redirection of sexual energy to an image of someone other than your marriage covenant partner - not to mention it makes people commodities, enslaves a whole class of desperate addicts/actors and individualizes sex – which is entirely anti-christian sexuality).

But if something can enrich and increase intimacy with your spouse… well this is why we let the debate rip on secondary issues. (And since no one reads my blog I’m sure this won’t get a rise out of anyone.)

 Holy Sex Toys Batman! by Todd Rhoades at toddrhoades.com 

Get ready for (at least as far as I know) the world’s first ‘Christian’ sex toy store.  Following is part of a story from The Daily Beast.  Note:  If the mention of sex toys makes you nervous, uncomfortable, or just cringe slightly, you may want to stop now and head over to my post about this guy.

From the Daily Beast:

Joyce’s sex life can be divided into two acts: before and after the Turbo 8 Accelerator.

The evangelical Christian from California’s central valley had never had an orgasm alone nor with her husband of 25 years. “I didn’t know I wasn’t having one,” the 59-year-old mother of two told The Daily Beast. Yet after chatting with some church girlfriends, she learned what she was missing. “’All that happens to you?’” she asked. “They looked at me like I was crazy.”

Joyce, who requested that we use only her first name, and her equally devout spouse never would have found the bullet-shaped vibrator or the array of “marital aids” they’ve ordered since, if it wasn’t for the Christian sex toy website Book 22—introduced to her by a friend after their chat. “I’m a Christian, but this is awesome,” she said. “It was like being newlyweds again.”

Sex and religion have long been perceived to be at odds, with carnal pleasures representing sin more than saintliness. Yet in recent years, a handful of savvy Christian, Jewish and Muslim entrepreneurs have embraced the notion that the two can coexist in a way that jibes with doctrine—and even glorifies traditional values by strengthening marriages.

Enter the religious sex-toy industry, which carefully markets and sells a range of sexual-pleasure products to the faithful. With the voice and disposition of a summer-camp director, Joy Wilson founded Book 22 a decade ago, when she had trouble “getting her body to respond” to her husband after their second child, and her online search for remedies yielded scandalous imagery that offended more than it helped. The pioneering site, named after the Biblical book also known as the Song of Solomon, now faces growing competition from rival vendors including Hooking Up Holy, Intimacy of Eden, and Covenant Spice.

And the industry grew exponentially this fall with the launch of the Orthodox Jewish shop Kosher Sex Toys, and last year with the Muslim vendor El Asira. The sites even enjoy the support of many community leaders. “Religious people do it like everybody else,” said David Ribner, a rabbi and sex therapist based in Israel, who works as a consultant for Kosher Sex Toys. “Why shouldn’t they have access to toys that make their lives more satisfying?”

To be clear, the “religious people” targeted are married, heterosexual religious people; pious sex-toy vendors market their products exclusively to these couples. Unlucky in love and looking for some solitary fun after morning prayers? Look elsewhere.

You can read more here.

Hate to ask your opinion… but do you have one on this?

 

Blame the Sexual Revolution, Not Men Women have conspired in their own disempowerment.

 

 Shel Boese / Shelby Boese – This is right on.

OCTOBER 28, 2011 12:00 A.M.

Blame the Sexual Revolution,
Not Men
Women have conspired in their own disempowerment.
MONA CHAREN

Kate Bolick stares out at the world from the cover of The Atlantic magazine. She’s wearing a black lace evening dress. “What, Me Marry?” asks the headline. She isn’t smiling.

In fact, she isn’t smiling in any of the photos that accompany her several-thousand-word essay on singleness, marriage, and the changing nature of dating and mating in America today. Bolick, 38, is groping toward accepting the idea that she may never marry. She badly wants to convince herself — and us — that older ideas about “unhappy” spinsters are silly cultural baggage best dropped off at the curb. And yet, there are those glamour shots — Bolick behind the wheel wearing a fetching red dress; Bolick in a gold evening gown holding a glass of champagne; Bolick in a black cocktail dress — but her expressions range from pensive to sad — never happy.

Bolick seems genuinely conflicted about marriage. The daughter of a committed feminist, she marched off to third grade “in tiny green or blue T-shirts declaring: A WOMAN WITHOUT A MAN IS LIKE A FISH WITHOUT A BICYCLE.” She recalls that when she was cuddling in the back seat of the family car with her high-school boyfriend, her mother turned around and asked, “Isn’t it time you two started seeing other people?” She took it for granted, she writes, “that [I] would marry, and that there would always be men [I] wanted to marry.”

So sure was she of the limitless romantic opportunities available that at the age of 28 she broke up with a wonderful boyfriend. They had been together for three years. He was “an exceptional person, intelligent, good-looking, loyal, kind.” Why did she discard him? “Something was missing.”

Ten years later, she writes somewhat (though not entirely) ruefully, “If dating and mating is in fact a marketplace . . . today we’re contending with a new ‘dating gap,’ where marriage-minded women are increasingly confronted with either deadbeats or players.”

There is a great deal of interesting data in this piece. According to the Pew Research Center, 44 percent of Millennials and 43 percent of Gen Xers think marriage is becoming obsolete. As of 2010, women held 51.4 percent of all managerial and professional positions, compared with 26 percent in 1980. Women account for the lion’s share of bachelor’s and master’s degrees, and make up a majority of the work force. Three quarters of the jobs lost during the recession were lost by men. “One recent study found a 40 percent increase in the number of men who are shorter than their wives.” Fully 50 percent of the adult population is single, compared with 33 percent in 1950.

But these trends, however interesting, shed only an oblique light on the problem of the decline in marriageable males. Bolick edges closer to the truth in her discussion of sex.

“The early 1990s,” she writes, “witnessed the dawn of the ‘hookup culture’ at universities, as colleges stopped acting in loco parentis [actually they relinquished that role in the 1970s] and undergraduates . . . started throwing themselves into a frenzy of one-night-stands.” Some young women, she notes, felt “forced into a promiscuity they didn’t ask for,” whereas young men “couldn’t be happier.”

According to economist Robert H. Frank, “when available women significantly outnumber men . . . courtship behavior changes in the direction of what men want.” And vice versa. If there’s a shortage of women, the females have more power to demand what they want — which tends to be (surprise!) monogamy. On college campuses, women outnumber men by 57 to 43 percent.

But economic analysis can take you only so far. Men’s capacity to insist upon promiscuity rests completely on female cooperation. And women have been foolishly compliant for decades.

They’ve conspired in their own disempowerment not because they love their sexual freedom (though a few may), but because people like Gloria Steinem and Ms. Bolick’s mother convinced them that the old sexual mores, along with marriage and children, were oppressive to women.

The resulting decline of marriage has been a disaster for children, a deep disappointment to reluctantly single women, and unhealthy for single men, who are less happy, shorter-lived, and less wealthy than married men. The sexual revolution has left a trail of destruction in its wake, even when its victims don’t recognize the perpetrator.

— Mona Charen

Saved Sex – Terrell Clemmons

Saved Sex by Terrell Clemmons

Loving Our Young People Enough to Tell Them the Truth

Okay, I need to understand this ‘victory,’” Jeannie started in. The governor of our state had just signed legislation stripping abortion giant Planned Parenthood of about $4 million in annual taxpayer funding. “First, you do not want to teach sex-ed and provide condoms in schools. Second, you do not want to fund an organization that provides contraception to prevent pregnancy. And you do not want abortion as an option. Do you really think that more teens will practice abstinence because of this?”

A mother of three, Jeannie’s approach to teens and sex is, They’re going to do it anyway, so you might as well give them birth control so nobody gets pregnant. Setting aside all the loaded presumptions in her diatribe, I was left thinking, We’re talking about people, here, not animals in heat. Why should we accept such a low view of them?

Social commentators point to the sixties as the time when the sex-is-for-marriage dam broke, giving way to this “liberated” sexuality of If it feels good do it—with anyone, anytime, anywhere. Some two generations later, though, observant commentators—and not just religiously minded ones—are suggesting that maybe that dam wasn’t such a bad idea after all.

The Truth for Women

In an op-ed called “Why Monogamy Matters,” New York Times columnist Ross Douthat reports the findings of sociologists Mark Regnerus and Jeremy Uecker, authors of Premarital Sex in America: How Young Americans Meet, Mate, and Think About Marrying. Emphasizing the “significant correlation between . . . monogamy and happiness—and between promiscuity and depression,” Douthat distinguishes between relationship sex and hook-up sex. “There’s sex that’s actually pre-marital, in the sense that it involves monogamous couples on a path that might lead to matrimony one day. Then there’s sex that’s casual and promiscuous, or just premature and ill considered.” The latter is emotionally hazardous for women, he states, pointing to extensive research showing that “a young woman’s likelihood of depression rose steadily as her number of partners climbed.”

Whereas Douthat coolly relates research findings, Tracy McMillan speaks hotly from personal experience. In an in-your-face missive called “Why You’re Not Married,” which appeared on the Huffington Post on the eve of Valentine’s Day 2011, the TV writer directly addresses those promiscuous (and likely depressed) young women. “[I]f you’re having sex outside committed relationships, you will have to stop,” she tells them bluntly. For this thrice-married, now single woman in her forties understands something important about the female heart and soul: Women want security and love, and sex is not the way to get either one.

She explains the biology of it for females. “[C]asual sex is like recreational heroin—it doesn’t stay recreational for long,” she writes. “That’s due in part to this thing called oxytocin—a bonding hormone that is released when a woman a) nurses her baby and b) has an orgasm—that will totally mess up your casual-sex game.” It’s why you can be hooking up “with some dude who isn’t even all that great and the next thing you know, you’re totally strung out on him. And you have no idea how it happened. Oxytocin, that’s how it happened.”

Even setting aside moral and religious standards about sex, the practical reality is that, for the female half of every random pairing, casual sex is an emotional train wreck. Males give love to get sex, Dr. James Dobson has often observed, while females give sex to get love. The morning after a couple hooks up, only one of them has gotten what he was after. Rinse and repeat a few times—bond and break, bond and break—and pretty soon a woman finds herself either angry or sinking into a pit of despair, not knowing why.

The Truth for Men

While women suffer the more acute emotional distress, over on the male side of the equation, casual sex works a frustration of a different kind. Most men also want love, marriage, and family, but easy sex tends to sabotage their goal as well. “Couples who have sex very early on in a relationship may do so to the detriment of other aspects of their union,” Dean Busby of Brigham Young University says, as reported by Brian O’Connell of The Irish Times. “When sexual behaviors are involved very early in the relationship, they become very powerful and maybe even dominate the relationship experience, so that communication and other basic relationship skills do not develop as well.”

Busby and his team surveyed more than 2,000 couples, ranging in age from 19 to over 70, and they found that communication, stability, and both sexual and relationship satisfaction were better for those couples who had waited until after the wedding to consummate their relationship. O’Connell illustrates this by quoting the reflections of two men.

“Waiting until marriage has meant we were free to give ourselves freely to one another and what a gift this was!” said Patrick, who’s been married to Therese for ten years.

My friends who did sleep with others before marriage tell me that there was a discontent sowed in their hearts towards their wives, because they had all these other experiences to compare her with. I am truly glad I waited and would fully recommend it to every young person.

“Succeeding in an exclusive married relationship is something that comes more easily if the concept has already been applied before marriage,” added Tom, who has been married to Jacki for fifteen years. “This implies saving sex for marriage. This is not a popular concept, but neither is the truth always popular.”

“The bottom line from the study,” O’Connell concludes, “seems to be that if you want to give marriage the best chance of survival, it’s best to make each other wait.”

Joy over Sorrow

Make each other wait. That phrase, which concedes that discipline will be required, brings me back to Jeannie’s question, Do you really think teens will practice abstinence? This question implies that young people are incapable of self-control, and I disagree with that premise. Making each other wait may mean going against the post-sexual-revolution norm, but people, unlike animals, have the capacity to rise above herd ­mentality.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control released a report showing, not an increase, but a decrease in sexual activity among young people compared to the rates reported in a similar study in 2002. So not only is it possible to practice abstinence, but some are actually doing so. We simply do our young people a disservice by dismissing their capacity for self-control out of hand.

Rapper phenom Lil Wayne told Playboy magazine that he had lost his virginity at age 11, when a 13-year-old girl raped him. “I just stepped back and let her do what she do,” he said. When the sex-is-for-marriage dam broke, it set loose a flood of this kind of sexual chaos.

In the wake of it, we can do one of two things. We can tell our young people,Go forth and “do what you do” in the muck-laden valley. Or we can attempt a reconstruction project by giving them encouragement, information, and a higher standard to live up to. They still may not save themselves for marriage. But then again, some may. Short of that, they may save themselves for somebody,which will increase their chances of having a responsible, adult sex life that will be a source of joy rather than sorrow.

Joy over sorrow. Isn’t that what they want out of their relationships in the first place? •

From Salvo 18 (Autumn 2011)

Pornification, part 2: ‘Not that There is Anything Wrong With That’

Shel Boese / Shelby Boese – Ed is right on with these posts – I am particularly aware that most pop-music is also pornified as well.  It’s not just images – but also words that generate them.  Porn is the new slavery in so many ways – and our culture is in the 1500s-1700s on the issue.

Pornification, part 2: ‘Not that There is Anything Wrong With That’ from EdStetzer.com by Ed Stetzer

pornification.PNGLast week I began a series entitled “The Pornifcation of American Culture.” You can read the first post of this series here. These posts come from a lengthier article I wrote for the Assemblies of God Enrichment Journal. The entire issue is worth your time and you can access it here. In this part, I deal with changing views of sexuality and inceased sexualization.

Here is more of the text from that article:

The issues of human sexuality are impacting evangelical churches in a profound way. The church must recognize and address the changing sexual mores of the world. Sex and sexuality outside of marriage has been around for millennia but the current is moving to new places.

The famous line “not that there is anything wrong with that” from a 1993 Seinfeld episode is an example of a new era in our culture. The main character, Jerry and his friend George were trying to not be seen as gay but neither did they want to come across as homophobic. They repeated the line throughout the episode in an effort to make the distinction. Acceptance of people’s diverse sexual decisions is expected and demanded by American culture. We live under relentless pressure to “be conformed” to the world versus “being transformed” (Romans 12:2).

For the book, Lost and Found, we surveyed unchurched young adults to ask “If you were considering visiting or joining a church would knowing that the church did not welcome or affirm homosexual members positively or negatively impact your decision?” Eighty-three percent of the “always unchurched” young adults ages 20-30 responded “negatively.” Even among the most friendly unchurched (often church drop-outs) who were still somewhat open to the church, fifty-two percent said believing a church is not open to homosexuals would negatively impact their decision to attend. Alternative expressions of sexuality are not just normal, they are expected and to be affirmed.

We see diverse sexual ideas and activities everywhere. Some porn stars are more than mainstream; they are business people who call the shots on their filming, their books, DVDs and websites. A recent on-stage lip-lock between Scarlett Johansson and Sandra Bullock made MTV’s “The Best Girl-On-Girl List” (yes, that’s a category now). Pop stars like Lady Gaga (‘Poker Face,’ 2008) and Katie Perry (‘I Kissed a Girl and I liked It,’ 2008) blur the line between porn star and pop star. Their popular songs address issues like oral sex, bi-sexuality, and lesbianism. Well known secular record producer Mike Stock says he believes children are being “sexualized” by popular culture. “The music industry has gone too far. It’s not about me being old-fashioned. It’s about keeping values that are important in the modern world. These days you can’t watch modern stars like Britney Spears or Lady Gaga with a two-year-old. Ninety-nine per cent of the charts is R ‘n’ B, and 99 per cent of that is soft pornography. Kids are being forced to grow up too young.” [Daily Mail UK].

We’ve come a long way when secular record producers are concern about our sexual mores.

Lawyer and author John W. Whitehead recently observed, “Children between the ages of 8 and 18 spend approximately 30-120 minutes a day watching music videos — 75% of which contain sexually suggestive materials, and with the advent of portable technology, children’s television and music are often unmonitored by parents or guardians. Not only does this accelerate adolescent sexual behavior (girls between the ages of 12-14 are two times more likely to engage in sexual activity after being exposed to sexual imagery), but it increases the likelihood of more sexual partners.” [Huffington Post]

This is not a war on Perry or Gaga. Remember before them was Madonna and Brittany. They are the commercial products of our culture, not the root issue. When they go away (and they eventually will), they will be replaced unless our hearts change.

Looking more closely at the pornification of our culture will help answer a critical question – What does the world of the people we are trying to reach look like? Most of the Christian community appears overwhelmed or volitionally disengaged that what existed before in secret is now “shouted from the rooftops” concerning sex. Being overwhelmed about how to address the issue – we don’t. Choosing to disengage, we allow a culture–and our own children–the go-ahead to live by the world’s standards. The church has been given all that is needed to address sexuality from a biblical perspective. The Scriptures clearly teaches God’s plan for sex. Yet we stumble awkwardly past the issues. If the church refuses to address the issues not only do we become irrelevant, but we leave the conversation open to others who feel more free to do so.

Who will be the “salt” and “light” source of biblical guidance to a culture “gone wild?” The church must provide a clear and robust biblical ethic of sexuality. Although it may be uncomfortable for Christians and churches to discuss, these are issues on the hearts of young Americans. Addressing the issues of marriage, pornography, and homosexuality in biblical ways will enable a church to engage with its community and thrive in many ways. We must resist the temptation to acquiesce to culture through silence. The church should hold up the “new alternative lifestyle” (men married to women for life in a sexually pure covenant relationship) and live it out.

This is a very real issue that impacts churches and leaders. In yesterday’s Lausanne World Pulse, Brent Lindquist spoke about our need to respond to the “pornagraphy tsumani.”  I will be writing more on ways to deal with the issue later, but in the meantime his article is worth a read.

Lindquist explains how the church should deal with the issues:

[T]he majority of our church and culture has been impacted to some degree by pornography. If that is the case, then many of us are in recovery from pornography. If this does apply to us, then we are bringing this secret out of the darkness and into the light. “Into the light” means acknowledging to others that we are struggling with, or growing through, the effects of this problem. In our weakness we, through “He,” will become strong…

Waiting until people have fallen or discovered to have fallen usually means they are put into a therapeutic program. These programs are good and needed, but we should be focusing our efforts on intervention earlier in this process. This is where accountability and purity enter. Certainly, people who have fallen need accountability groups and processes and need to re-establish commitments to personal purity. But we, as leaders ourselves, need to seek personal purity as part of our regular lifelong spiritual journey.

In part 1 of the series, I was struck and burdened by the comments in the post. Some shared their struggle and other shared solutions.  Feel free to do so in the comments.

Lust: Not for Men Only

Reposted from DesiringGod.org July 21, 2011 | by Carolyn McCulley

 

We’re well into the heat of summer now, and that means many churches across the American landscape have, at some point, reiterated the modesty message for the good church ladies everywhere.

Wait. I can actually see that eyeroll of yours even from here. But, friends, don’t click away just yet. Because I am going to go where large swaths of American church culture need to go on this topic … but often don’t.

I’m talking about lust. And women.

For the past eight years, I’ve had the privilege of writing two books and hundreds of articles and blog posts for women, which then led to numerous speaking engagements. Right from the start, I noticed a trend at each event, whether in the U.S. or abroad. Invariably, one woman would wait to talk to me until the bitter end, because she wanted to confess something that made her feel doubly shameful. She wanted to talk about her lust and sexual sin, a struggle she was sure was hers alone among the women in church.

How did these women arrive at this conclusion? Because for years most churches herded the men off to talk about lust, while gathering the women to discuss modesty. While those are valid and much needed messages, they are incomplete for the culture in which we now live.

To understand the times, let’s look at the messages women have absorbed in recent years. There are stripper pole classes at the gym and women’s magazines with screaming headlines about sex and seduction techniques. The morning talk shows candidly discuss sex toy parties. “Sex and the City” becomes a major franchise while “Girls Gone Wild” captures drunken sexual escapades among college students. Abercrombie & Fitch markets push-up bikini tops to 8-year-old girls. Lady Gaga bursts onto the pop music scene wishing she could shut her Playboy mouth. Not one item is sold in the mall without an erotic image. And women are increasingly immersed in online porn.

This highly sexualized culture is the new normal for young women who grew up in the ethos of third-wave feminism’s pro-porn, pro-sex work stance. So normal that when I spoke at a Christian college earlier this year, one woman raised her hand to ask, “So are you saying that it’s bad that there’s too much pornographic influence in our culture? But shouldn’t women embrace their sexuality?”

Um, yes. And yes. That answer highlights the problem: the counterfeit has usurped the authentic. Sex is God’s idea and his good gift to be properly stewarded within his design. For that reason, the church should be the most pro-sex group there is. We have a message of hope and redemption in the morass of sexual confusion. But first we need to help the women who are confused and in our churches right now. Here are four points on how to do that:

1. Give the truth about sex and why it’s attacked.

Let’s start with that modesty message. If it’s framed as a simple “don’t tempt men” message, it is incomplete and easily dismissed. We need to back up and explain first what is good about God’s gift and how it is distorted in a myriad of ways. We should equip young women to be discerning about the spiritual battle raging around sexuality. The Adversary has no need to improve upon his first character assassination of God. Contradicting God’s boundaries and insinuating that he is holding out on his creatures is nearly foolproof.

2. Teach young women not to mistake broken for normal.

Then we need to teach young women how rapidly our culture became porn-saturated in only one generation. That’s often news to those who grew up in it and therefore they often don’t understand the brokenness that follows in the wake of the sexual imagery they accept as normal. As John Piper says, lust is the realm of thought, imagination, and desire that leads to sexual misconduct—and young women often overlook how their drive to be sexually desirable is smack in the middle of that realm.

When young women understand the cosmic consequences of sexual sin, the worldviews that shape our consumption of sexual messages today, and how God’s glory is under spiritual attack, they will not mistake any modesty message for a frumpy fashion campaign. Nor will they resent the men around them for being impediments to whatever is stylish. Instead, they will be sobered by how Satan still “prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour” (1 Peter 5:8)—and that men and women alike are fair game.

3. Stop thinking that only men have seeing problems.

Let’s not assume that immodesty only affects the eyes of men. Women are becoming increasingly visualized as well, and can be distracted in similar, though perhaps not identical, ways. We also need to remember and help those women who wrestle with same-sex attraction. After I mentioned this recently at a large conference, several women came up to say this is their temptation and how hard it is for them to be open about it in the church. They fear misunderstanding, judgment and gossip.

4. Create a culture of light.

We need to clearly teach that lust is a human condition, not just a masculine one. Knowing God’s glory is at stake, we need to create humble church cultures where secret sin is not kept in the dark, but rather brought into the light. If we rightly understand the doctrine of sin, we should never be surprised by our own temptations nor by the confessions of others. We should want to create “safe harbors” for God’s people to confess, repent, and welcome accountability for change. The roaring lion waits in the cover of darkness to attack what he finds there, but “whoever lives by the truth comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that what they have done has been done in the sight of God” (John 3:21).

Let us help the women in our churches experience the freedom of living in the light.

Carolyn McCulley is an author, speaker, and documentary filmmaker. She has written more about third-wave feminism in her book, Radical Womanhood: Feminine Faith in a Feminist World.

 

Porn…Getting Real and Dealing…It’s the New Slavery

Free Pornography Book

January 3, 2011

by Pete Wilson -One of the pastors at Cross Point Church.

I’ve passionately written about the impact of pornography before.

I’ve talked about my own personal struggles.

I think it continues to be a growing  issue in our culture today. Rarely a week goes by that I don’t hear about another couple whose marriage is blowing up in our church with pornography being a primary issue.

I also talk to a ton of pastors who are secretly battling this nasty monster. They feel like they could never tell anyone they struggle with it so they choose to stay in the dark where this sin just continues to gain more and more momentum. Believe me when I say I know all about the criticism you’ll receive when you publicly talk about this stuff. But it will be the beginning of freedom for you.

With all this in mind I’m really excited about a new resource that’s available specifically for those of you in ministry called Internet Pornography: A Ministry Leader’s Handbook. In this FREE e-book from the great folks at Covenant Eyes which contains stories of pastors and counselors who dealt personally with the addiction of pornography and many who have broken free from Internet pornography addictions themselves. Please, please, please, take the time to read this. It could change your life.

And if you still don’t think this “porn” stuff is a big deal than check out this graphic which sums up some heartbreaking statistics.