Thursday, December 4, 2008

Lustful Thoughts

Young women of Jerusalem, I charge you, by the gazelles and the wild does of the field: do not stir up or awaken love until the appropriate time. Song of Solomon 2:7 (HCSB)

Young women of Jerusalem, I charge you, by the gazelles and the wild does of the field: do not stir up or awaken love until the appropriate time. Song of Solomon 3:5 (HCSB)
Young women of Jerusalem, I charge you: do not stir up or awaken love until the appropriate time. Song of Solomon 8:4 (HCSB)
I've been reading Mark Driscoll's Porn-Again Christian. It's a short (and very frank) e-book written for men about God's view of sex presented in stark contrast with fallen man's view of sex. I don't know if I'd recommend it to any female. If you're married and you're curious, have your husband read it first; he'll know if it will offend you or not. I've read some to Emily. Almost from sentence to sentence she'll flip from "that's good stuff" to "he's a chauvinist pig". That's the extent of my warning.
It sounds as if his church is mainly 20-somethings, typically unchurched, and apparently sex, God's view of sex, is a common question presented to him. On the Mars Hill Blog, there is a Christian Sex Q&A (another thing I've read to Emily where she responded as I mentioned above) and also a sermon series called The Peasant Princess: A Love Story from the Song of Songs.
Anyways, some where while reading through all this literature one point really jumped out at me: "do not stir up or awaken love until the appropriate time." In other words, we should not stir up sexual/romantic passions outside of marriage.
In Porn-Again Christian, Driscoll says, "The purpose of pornography is clearly lust. And, lust for anyone but your wife is condemned by God as a grievous evil repeatedly throughout both the Old and New Testament."
Lust.
I happened to be around three woman, probably all in their thirties, the other night as they discussed Twilight.
"The Twilight thing is not going to work out this weekend," said one.
"Don't worry about it," answered the second. "I've already seen it twice."
To which the first girl said, "Me, too." Followed by a round of schoolgirl giggles and some Twilight movie commentary that was basically addressed in this manner (I hope I'm remembering the names right):
"Ooohh, Edward."
"Well, I prefer Jacob."
"Mmmmmm."
"Why would these two guys be fighting over such a stupid girl?"
Lust. The stirring up and the awakening of passion outside of marriage. There may not be sex, but just like pornography for men, these books, after reading numerous blog comments by women who have read them, stir up passions and awaken desires that are to be only for your spouse. And to market this to our teen girls, calling it acceptable because of the lack of violence and physical sex, is dangerous.
As to what stirs the passions of a teen boy vs. a teen girl (or even a husband and a wife), I'm guessing most of us know. To allow a teen girl (or woman) to stir up her passions through the 'romance' of any book series, is the same as giving a teen boy a copy of Playboy and calling it okay. Both of these kids can be intelligent enough to recognize the object of their lust is fictional, but the lust exists just the same.
Credits: The image above was taken from Mark Driscoll's Blog.

4 comments:

gideonmommasita said...

You just had to get that off your chest didn't you? Well, bravo...knew there was a reason why I didn't want romance in books. Glad the three women you were around don't read your blog, then I might just lose a friend!

Josh said...

Whoa, don't misunderstand me. I don't get this exactly right either. It's just having a thirteen year old son and a recent hearing of teen-passion-issues involving folks I never thought would have that sort of issue has sparked reflection on the topic. It's something I always pushed to the back burner (the Biblical view of lust, teen passions, and the God-given desires we all have) not wanting to address it too early with my sons (Emily gets Elise), but knowing I wish I knew what the Bible taught about sex and desire prior to high school.

CroppinRobin said...

Josh, actually I agree with you. Awaking desires for women is certainly not what awakens a man's desire. This is the EXACT reason I do not want Hannah reading this books. Innocence is golden and awakening the desire for that kind of 'love' can wait til much later. I'm on board with you, brother in Christ.

CroppinRobin said...

PS...
Still Emily's friend...although, after this post and the wine and infant baptism posts by your wife I may have to rethink.....
ºÜº