Category Archives: Biblical Sexuality

Training Your Toddler to Battle Porn

The battle against porn starts while your son is still in diapers…

My oldest boy, Hudson, has developed a habit of requesting his dessert before he finishes his meal. This request always meets with a firm denial from me. And so my sweet little boy decides he will not eat at all. I am careful to inform him that this decision is okay, but that he will not be eating his dessert either until he clears his plate. Often, he will then attempt to persuade me to reconsider my position with an oh-so-polite, “Please, daddy!” But his manipulation only results in a much sterner reiteration of my earlier declaration. I do add a few qualifiers this time around. I tell him that I want him to enjoy his dessert. Desserts are gifts from God meant for our enjoyment, but they only come after meals and not before them. Sometimes my son listens to reason; sometimes he goes to bed with an empty stomach.

Regardless, this post is only kind of about desserts… Continue reading

Love and War

“The Bible is a cosmic love story, to be sure. At the end of The Book, Christ “gets the girl”–the bridal city that He desires. But history is also a war story. In it God proves Himself the best, the only one worthy to reign, by crushing all rivals and enemies in a just and righteous wrath.” William E.Mouser, The Story of Sex in Scripture pg. 21

Sex is Not Safe

“As [Wendell Berry] writes in the splendid essay, “Sex, Economy, Freedom, and Community”: “Sex was never safe, and it is less safe now than it has been.” Community customs, arrangements, and controls had existed “in part, to reduce the volatility and the danger of sex.” These controls would preserve its energy, its beauty, and its pleasure” so that the sexual act would in turn bond husbands to wives, “parents to children, families to community, [and] the community to nature.” Whenever sex becomes “autonomous,” freed from communal restraints, and valued solely for its own sake, it also becomes “frivolous” and “destructive–even of itself.”

“Rather than freedom the disintegration of the household through “sexual liberation” has produced a novel form of bondage. The new overlords, Mr. Berry says, are the sexual specialists–sex clinicians and pornographers–”[b]oth of whom subsist on the increasing possibility of sex between people who neither know or care about each other” and who also “subsist on our failure to see any purpose or virtue in sexual discipline.”

Allan Carlson. “Not Safe, Nor Private, Nor Free: Wendell Berry on Sexual Love and Procreation.” The Family in America. Sept-Oct 2007.

The Pastor’s Wife

I cannot think of a more difficult position in life than that of a pastor’s wife.   Grace Driscoll, wife of Pastor Mark Driscoll, has written two excellent posts on being a ministry wife. She covers all the major issues and supplies some great solutions. You can read part one here and part two here.

Is Homosexuality Genetically Innate…

…and does it even matter?

I tend to believe that there are genetic factors at play with most people who have same-sex attraction. However, this belief doesn’t yield the conclusion that gay activist desire. Homosexuality can involve genetic factors and still be a sin. Anyone that wants to read a relatively short article on why this is so should read John Frame’s, “But God Made Me This Way!” Here is a short passage to get you interested:

“Would a genetic basis for homosexuality eliminate the element of “choice?” Certainly not. A person with a genetic propensity for alcoholism still makes a choice when he decides to take a drink, and then another, and then another. Same with an xyy male who decides to punch somebody in the nose. If we assume the existence of a genetic propensity for homosexuality, it is true as we said that those with that makeup face greater temptation in this area than others. But those who succumb to the temptation do choose to do so, as do all of us when we succumb to our own besetting temptations. Homosexuals certainly choose not to remain celibate, and they choose to have sexual relations. They are not forced to do this by their genes or by anything contrary to their own desires.”

Home-schooling Homes and Homosexuality

Homosexuals come from all sorts of households. Single parents homes, Christian homes, middle class homes, biracial homes and just any other category of home you can come up with. Homosexuality is a sin (Scripture says this clearly and repeatedly) and sin knows no boundaries. That being said, Dr. Joseph Nicolosi’s research has shown that there are a triad of factors that tend to be present in the homes that homosexuals come raised in. The present of these environmental factors and shaping influences will put a child at higher risk of developing and acting upon homosexual urges. Several years ago I noticed this triad in one of the places a Christian would least expect. I started noticing an abnormal amount of especially effeminate young men from home-schooling families. I couldn’t wrap my mind around the causes behind this trend.  However, over time I began to notice that three variables tended to be present in all these home-schooling households.

First, the father was often absent due to working long hours to provide for his family. It should be noted that the father appeared to be godly in all examples I observed. He just was gone a lot and was exhausted when he was home.

Second, the mother tended to be overbearing in her management of her home. Her home was well kept. Her lesson plans well-executed. She was queen of every aspect of her home.

Third, not all the sons in these homes came across as effeminate. Some of the boys were very masculine. They were covered in bruises and cuts from building a tree house or playing soccer. However, I noticed the sons that did demonstrate these prehomosexual tendencies were usually homebodies. They tended to be very timid, artistic*, and clung to mother while his brothers explored the world outside.

So, in summary, a distant father, overbearing/protective mother, and timid child were a concoction that tended to produce effeminacy and potential homosexuality. This was disturbing to me because all three are common in home-schooling households. In this sense, home-schooling can be a very dangerous environment for young men to mature in.

What is a parent to do? Should we reject homeschooling? Should we force our artistic boys to build tree houses? Not necessarily. There is another way to come at this and it starts with the parents.

Consider this passage from Joseph Nicolosi’s A Parent’s Guide to Preventing Homosexuality:

“For variety of reasons, some mothers also have a tendency to prolong their son’s dependence. A mother’s intimacy with her son is primal, complete, exclusive, and this powerful bond can easily deepen into what psychiatrist Robert Stoller calls a ‘blissful symbiosis.” But the mother may be inclined to hold on to her son in what becomes an unhealthy mutual dependency, especially if she does not have a satisfying, intimate relationship with the boy’s father. In such cases she can put too much energy into the boy, using him to fulfill her needs for love and companionship in a way that is not good for him.
Continue reading

Muslims may bungle the solution but….

An Honest Read of Our Evangelistic Methods

Pastor Tim Bayly wrote an excellent post entitled, “Go for the men and the women will follow…” In the post, he relates some great advice his father gave him on how pastors are to reach people with the gospel. He then contrasts it with some of the “evangelistic strategies” churches and para-churches often employ…

Young Life: Go for the leaders and the nobodies will follow.

Child Evangelism Fellowship: Go for the children and their parents will follow.

F-V: Go for the children and the great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great grandchildren will follow. Continue reading

Theology of Work

My theology of work use to have the depth of an Loverboy song (click it if you dare). Work was what I did to fund the time I was off the clock. It was simply a means to an end. This, of course, isn’t only shallow but it is also godless.  Sadly, it took me well into my twenties to realize that I was wrong.

God gave Adam work to do before the fall. It isn’t a product of sin. It is part of God’s design for mankind. Work is a function of being human and, therefore, shouldn’t be thought as merely a means to an end (i.e. money). Work is a good in of itself. Work is worship.

There aren’t many good books on the theology of work… Continue reading

Girly Worship Part Deux

Aye Crumba! I didn’t get any comments but I got quite few hits off the “Girly worship” post. There was also a lengthy debate over the post on Facebook that quickly descended into madness. I can’t reproduce the dialogue here. Trust me, that is a good thing but the main questions were basically as follows:

What is masculine worship? What does it look like? Is just a matter of male leadership or is there something more to it?

This morning I put up a post over on ClearNote blog by Jody Killingsworth that starts to answer some of these questions. Check out here.