FEBRUARY 23, 2003
"SEXUAL INTEGRITY IN A PORNOGRAPHIC AGE"
PROVERBS 7:6-23; 1 THESSALONIANS 4:3-8
Several months ago on a crisp autumn afternoon, I was on
my way downtown for an appointment. I was driving my car north on the
interstate, minding my own business--having a rather pleasant drive. When
suddenly, there she was--off to the side of the road--right between the
ads for Blue Bunny ice cream and Boatmen's bank.
Stretched across a billboard, bigger than life was the representation
of a beautiful young woman wearing nothing but a smile and a pair of high
heels. The words of the advertisement covered certain portions of her
body in such a way as to barely make the ad legal and the advertisement
was inviting me to come to a certain club in the city and watch girls
like her "perform" for me.
Well, after I pulled my car out of the ditch--I realized
how profoundly that billboard depicts the spirit of our age. I mean it's
not like I was in the back room of a seedy bookstore, or even in the privacy
of my home--I was driving down an interstate highway!
Today sexual images have pervaded every corner of our society.
You can't open a newspaper, you can't pick up a magazine, you can't turn
on the television, you can't even drive down the street without very quickly
being confronted with a sexual image. In the space of thirty short years
we went from the Beatles singing "I want to hold your hand"
to George Michael singing "I want your sex."
We are confronted every single day with sexual images and
a sexual philosophy that says "anything goes that is mutually pleasurable
between persons." And what was once confined to secret places and
unrevealed actions is now available to every person, even children, through
print, video, and the Internet.
And yet while there is unprecedented permissiveness in our
culture and some people want to call the accessibility of sexual images
and experiences "progress", we just don't seem to be getting
the connection to the epidemic of sexual abuse and violence in our culture.
Officials project that one of every four girls in America today will be
sexually assaulted during her lifetime. Out of one side of our mouths
we say, "Anything goes and everything is permissible" but out
of the other side of our mouths we cry outrage when people get hurt. Are
we really that stupid?
Well, I know I don't have to convince you that we live in
a sex crazed culture. We live in a pornographic age. But I want to talk
to you today about sexual integrity in the midst of a pornographic age.
We must speak openly about it. Part of the problem is the silence of the
church. We pretend it isn't an issue. We pretend it's all out there. I
promise you, it's not all out there--it's in here. As Christian people,
as people whose desire is to serve God and lead pure lives, the fact of
the matter is we are struggling with sexual issues. And a lot of the time,
we are not doing very well.
Now unfortunately, for most of the history of the church,
the only response we could think of to sexual issues was to try and shame
people into holiness. Shaming each other over our sexual sin doesn't change
anything, it only creates a bunch of shame-filled sinners. And it is easy
for us to feel shame over sexual issues. Some are ashamed because of what
they have done. Others are ashamed because of what has been done to them.
Still others are ashamed because they were lead to believe that sex itself
is dirty.
The truth is, sex is good. Sex is beautiful. God created
sex, He's the one who thought it up! What a God! The problem is that because
of our selfishness and sinfulness sex has been stripped from its rightful
place of dignity within the boundaries of the marriage covenant and made
a slave to the very worst lusts of the human spirit. And that's why as
Christians, we need to bring sexuality back to its rightful place. The
only way that will happen is if we begin to talk openly about it on the
basis of the truth of God's Word.
So I want you to know that as I talk about this subject
today, I do not come to you as a prophet trying to stand above the problem.
I come to you confessionally, as a person who knows what it is to live
in a pornographic age. I know what it is to deal with sexual temptation.
I know what it is to struggle with keeping my thoughts pure in the midst
of a sex-crazed culture. I'm with you here and my desire is to help, not
to condemn.
The worst thing we could do today is to try to convince
ourselves that this is not really a significant issue in the church. Much
of what Im saying to you today is based on information that comes
from an excellent book put together by Dr. Archibald Hart, a Christian
psychologist and educator. In his book, The Sexual Man (W Publishing
Group, 1995), he traces the patterns not of the general population but
of what he calls good men. The results of his study suggest
that its our problem in the church as well as a cultural problem.
Now I want to very clear about what I mean when i use the
term "pornographic age." I'm not really talking about certain
kinds of materials or even behavior, although that's certainly a part
of it. I'm using the word in the same way the New Testament uses it. The
root "pornea" from which we get pornography, is a common biblical
word. And it most often means: "sexual immorality." It refers
to an attitude and a spirit, a mindset. So I am using the term pornographic
as any expression of our God-created sexuality outside it's God-intended
boundaries.
I think there are basically two questions that we need to
deal with today. One: "What has gone wrong to create such a dismal
situation? Two: "How should we be responding to it?" The truth
is these struggles we are talking about are really nothing new as the
passage from Proverbs bears out. I mean the scene that we read from Proverbs
could be the basis of a blockbuster movie today, yet it was written thousands
of years ago.
Dealing appropriately with our sexuality has long been a
major dilemma for the human race since the beginning. I really believe
one of the major reason for that is because we have separated sex from
intimacy. That separation is what is being so dangerously exploited by
our culture today. This is especially pronounced in men. Women usually
learn to connect their feelings to their sexuality, but men don't. Most
often in men, the act of sexual release is separated from relationship
and intimacy. Now part of the reason for this is critical to understand
in order to see clearly what's happened in our culture.
While a woman's sexual response is triggered primarily by
intimacy and closeness and romance and conversation and warmth, a man's
sexual response is triggered primarily visually. A woman responds to the
person. A man responds to the body. That's why men so often become fixated
on certain parts of a woman's anatomy. Its why when a couple goes
away on a special anniversary weekend, she's thinking about the dinner
conversation and sitting together watching the sunset and sharing thoughts
and feelings about each other--you know, the romance and playfulness of
it. But all he's thinking about is the negligee he saw in the corner of
the suitcase!
So much sexual dysfunction in marriage is related to a failure
on the part of both spouses to understand that about each other. But I'll
tell you exactly who does understand that: the people who produce pornographic
magazines and videos and Internet sites. I'll tell you what advertisers
and big business and organized crime (the largest producers of pornography)
know about men. They know we are visually stimulated and they know that
we will spend money to get that stimulation.
You see there's a level at which our pornographic age is
not really about sex but about money. Big money. The kind of money that
can take a runaway girl from living out of garbage cans to a six-figure
salary simply for taking off her clothes and submitting to the lustful
desires of men. Its a reality about men that our culture has learned
extremely well how to exploit. To the point that though 61% of Dr. Hart's
"good men" report thinking about sex daily, many are not finding
fulfillment in a wholesome and intimate relationship with their wives.
According to a University of Chicago a few years ago, 41%
of all men in the previous twelve months to the study had either watched
an x-rated movie, gone to a strip club, bought a pornographic magazine,
or called a phone-sex line.
And 16% of all women had participated in one of those. Now
with the explosion of the Internet, those figures would be much higher.
And the stats are really not significantly different when you look at
Christians. Do you know what that means? That at least a third of the
men in this congregation have in the last twelve months have watched an
x-rated movie, bought a porn magazine, gone to a strip club, or logged
on to cyberspace porn. It is our problem.
Dr. Hart says he sees more and more men in his practice
who report the same attitude that was expressed by one man in particular
when he said: "Id rather just go off by myself with a sexy
video or some magazines and take care of myself. Sex is just too complicated,
too demanding, and not really as great as private self-stimulation."
Now let me throw in another factor here. Virtually everyone
agrees that the average age at which puberty sets in is dropping. And
yet at the same time, the average age at which young people marry is rising.
So the waiting period between the onset of sexual ability and marriage
is increasing. To the point that most in our society believe it's completely
unrealistic to tell young people that they should wait until marriage
to experience sexual intercourse. But while the entertainment industry
continuously finds new ways to cater to developing adolescent sexuality,
most moms and dads (especially Christians) prefer silence and denial.
No wonder we have such a terrible mess on our hands. No
wonder there are so many conflicting messages in our world. We have tried
to convince ourselves that sex is no big deal, while God says to us: "Wrong:
it is a very big deal, it's one of the greatest things I created."
And so into this madness, comes a sane, holy, peaceful word
from God: It is God's will that you should be sanctified: that you
should avoid sexual immorality; that each of you should learn to control
his own body in a way that is holy and honorable, not in passionate lust
like the heathen, who do not know God. For God did not call us to be impure,
but to live a holy life (1 Thessalonians 4:3-5, 7, NIV).
I'm sure we wouldn't debate that here, the question is,
How? There's no doubt that God desires our purity, but at
the moment lust takes control, God can seem quite unreal to us. So how
can we be people of sexual purity and integrity in the midst of pornographic
age? I think there are some ways to do that and I wish I could take a
lot more time with each, but allow me to at least outline for you. First,
we must learn to talk openly as Christians about these issues. The Promise
Keepers movement helped us tremendously in this area.
Issues of sexual struggle have tremendous power of us when
they are kept in the realm of mystery and secrecy. But if we can begin
to share our struggles honestly with each other, we will begin to see
their power over us broken. I know that for a fact. I have watched in
the last year, men and women in this congregation experience healing and
freedom from sexual sin. And most often it started, when they reached
out to someone and said, "Help me, I'm struggling."
Second, we must take seriously the influence of our culture
and do whatever it takes to protect ourselves. This could include taking
drastic measures to protect ourselves from the insidious encroachments
of those who would entrap us into illicit relationships or pornography
or even careless conversation. When the Bible speaks of sexual immorality
it always gives the same answer: "Flee."
Third, no amount of external safeguards will solve the problem
of living in a sex-crazed culture. Purity has to come from the heart.
Something has to change deep within. God has to do a work in my spirit
in order for me to really have victory over these issues. So I want to
give you the hope of the gospel this morning. That is exactly what God
wants to do for you. The Apostle says here: "God gives you his Holy
Spirit. He wills, he desires your sanctification, your purity, your holiness."
God doesn't want you to go around constantly defeated spiritual
because of your sexual struggles. He wants to give you strength in the
temptation, victory over the sin, and freedom to enjoy his gift the way
it was meant to be enjoyed.
And that has to be the bottom line in this whole issue.
We live in a society that is teaching us to separate sex from true intimacy,
but God wants to teach us how sex is the expression of real intimacy between
a husband and a wife. And so in a very real sense the issue is, "Am
I going to surrender my will and my life to God's way of doing things?"
By the way, according to that university of Chicago study, do you know
who in our society reports by far the greatest degree of sexual satisfaction?
Married couples in a faithful, exclusive relationship where sex becomes
the natural and beautiful expression of the intimacy that is being developed
between them.
I'm know that I've raised more issues this morning than
I could possibly deal with in one sermon. What I am asking us to do is
to commit this morning by the grace of God to take whatever steps are
necessary toward spiritual health in this area of sexual purity.
Perhaps couples need to have an open, serious conversation
about this. Parents should talk to teenagers. Teens, ask your parents
about this. They want to talk to you and are sometimes afraid about bringing
it up. Christians, lets talk to each other about this. Lets
work to create in the church a culture of truth and healing instead of
a culture of shame. Set up accountability systems in your life. Get rid
of negative influences that are leading you down a dangerous path.
But most of all, let us humble ourselves before God. Let
us cry out to him to save us from this wicked and perverse generation.
He wants to help us. And it's time we let him.
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