Sexual Ethics in an Oversexed World
Rev. Rebecca Turner
January 23, 2005 Reading --Anonymous Japanese Sermon This week I saw a commercial with a woman in a sleek, sexy gown looking Sex is used to sell everything. We are inundated with sexual images every Janet Jackson reveals a breast during the halftime show of a football game, NBC refuses to show a paid commercial for the United Church of Christ that Could we possibly send any more extreme mixed messages? If you watch So what’s wrong with an “abstinence outside of marriage” philosophy? I When I was in high school, I had a friend named Charlita. Charlita dated the When I was a freshman in college my mother called and asked me to come My mother died about 15 years ago. About two years later, my father met a My dad then explained that the reason he wanted the ceremony was because So what’s wrong with our public policy that drums into our heads and our 1. It assumes that marriage can take a bad relationship and make it good. Abstinence until marriage made sense in a by-gone culture where puberty But today, young girls experience menses at age 10. We want them to finish We live in a far different world than our ancestors. And we’re really Our confusion is evident is the way our media spouts one thing and our How can we be an oversexed nation and a fundamentalist one at the same This hypocrisy isn’t just in the Catholic Church. I don’t mean to pick on We don’t want to promote promiscuity, but the old ethics don’t work. And I don’t think it’s all that difficult. First we begin by acknowledging that sex is a good and natural part of Next, we need to talk about treating others with respect. We teach our A good sexual ethic is concerned with health. Physical, mental, and spiritual The new sexual ethics should emphasize monogamy instead of marriage. A When my daughter was 15, she asked me “How will I know when I’m ready When you’ve met someone and dated him for awhile, and you both act in Sex is for adults who are in a loving, committed, monogamous relationship. The church has for too long been the voice of rejection and shame upon And then the religious community needs to spread the word to our We have to stop allowing the government to define morality by sexual The religious community has the power to define ethics and morality, and Thomas Moore, in his book “The Soul of Sex” talks about restoring the soul “What then, does it mean to live our ordinary, daily lives erotically? It “In this context, sex takes on immense meaning. The expression of love,
Emerson Unitarian Universalist Church
This is the truth my lover:
My childhood could not last;
Since my long hair was clipped
Full eight long years have passed.
Blooming like a fruit tree,
I am a secret stream
Running beneath earth’s surface
And you my constant dream.
I, too, have prayed the gods
To make my childhood stay.
But time must take its course
And love will have its way.
Just before Christmas, a commercial played constantly. It showed several
scenes of women, first dressed in white, then in red, each of them saying in a
sultry voice “I got the Big O”. The first time I saw this commercial, my
eyes were nearly popping out of my head, wondering what was next. And
then I saw it across the screen “Overstock.com”. What a letdown.
over herself in a full-length mirror. There are several shots of her in
different gowns…red, white, black…all of them quite seductive. The
voiceover says “whatever car you dream of, we’ve already created it.” Now
I ask you…how was I supposed to know I should be thinking of cars while
looking at a woman in an evening gown?
time we turn on the television or pick up a magazine or newspaper. An
observer from another planet might think we live in a completely
permissive, sexually open society. But upon closer inspection, another side
also becomes clear.
and gets into big trouble with the network and the FCC. But they have no
problem airing commercials during that same game that have a woman
swooning over a man and extolling the powers of Viagra.
shows two men being refused entrance into a church. They said that given
the efforts of the administrative branch of the federal government to define
marriage, it was too controversial. Please note that the commercial implied
nothing about marriage. Please also note that NBC’s top sitcom is Will and
Grace.
television, free sex is everywhere, without consequence. But the message
coming from our government agencies is “no sex outside of marriage” which
obviously means no sex for teens, no sex for college students, no sex for
same-sex couples, no sex after divorce, no sex for older adults after they are
widowed.
want to answer that question by sharing some very personal stories with you.
I am assuming that if all of these situations have existed in my life, they’ve
probably been in yours, too.
boy next door from the time she was in seventh grade. When Charlita was
16, her mother sat her down and said “You’ve been dating Steve for a very
long time. Either you break up with him, or it’s time to get married.” And
so it was that Charlita, beautiful, young and in love, got married at 17, had
two children, and was divorced by age 21. Was marriage the right answer
when Charlita was ready to be sexually active?
home that weekend. Her voice had an ominous sound, and I feared
something catastrophic. The big news was that my 19 year old sister was
pregnant. My parents were taking her out of college and forcing the young
man to marry her. I was horrified and argued with my mother that we didn’t
want that irresponsible man in the family, that he would make a horrible
father and husband. My mother argued that family life would make a man
out of him, and besides that was just the right thing to do. Two years and
two babies later, the man deserted my sister. Once a bright, talented college
student with a full-ride music scholarship, Debbie has lived near the poverty
line her entire adult life. Was marriage the solution?
widow and fell in love. He moved in with her. He took me aside and said
“Becky, would you perform a wedding ceremony for Esther and me,
something where we invite all the kids and grandkids?” and I quickly said
“of course!” He said, “But there’s a catch. We don’t want to get a license,
so the marriage wouldn’t be legal. I’d like you to keep that a secret until I
die.” I said, “Dad, I understand the legal reasons that someone your age
should not get married. I know how it hurts your social security benefits,
and complicates your will. You don’t have to explain why you don’t want it
to be legal. But I want to know why you want the ceremony, and why you
want the legal part kept secret.”
he thought he was setting a bad example for the grandkids. He didn’t want
them to think that “living in sin” was okay. I said “Dad, you’re not setting a
bad example. I teach my kids that sex is for adults in a loving, committed,
monogamous relationship. By that standard, you are setting a very good
example.” He was so relieved, and we never did the ceremony.
children’s heads that there is to be no sex outside of marriage?
2. It encourages young people to marry too early, before they know
themselves, before they finish their education, before they have a
decent job and a solid foundation for their lives.
3. It ignores the realities of older adults.
4. It ignores same-sex relationships.
5. It implies that sex is only for procreation.
6. It just plain doesn’t work in our culture.
When I was a pastor serving a congregation, I frequently worked with
teenagers and their parents. It was not unusual for a mother to say to me “I
teach my kids that they shouldn’t have sex until they get married, but I don’t
really expect them to do it. I just want them to wait as long as possible.” I
would respond “Then why don’t you teach them what you actually expect?”
came at age 15, boys and girls were married young, young women died in
childbirth in their 30’s, and a man’s life expectancy was 45.
college and develop a career. We don’t want them to have children while
they are too young because we know that teen mothers and their children are
at risk for a variety of health problems and social ills. We don’t want our
daughters to stay in abusive marriages. Half of us have been through a
divorce. We can expect to live healthy lives well into our 80’s and 90’s.
confused about how to think and talk about sex in ways that are healthy and
wholesome and ethical and moral.
religious and political leaders spout the extreme opposite. Our confusion
comes out when we read that although we live in the most religious of the
industrialized nations, the United States has higher teen pregnancy and
abortion rates than any of them.
time? I would suggest that the two extremes depend upon one another, they
feed off one another, they are each a reaction to the other, and cannot exist
separately. Look at the sex scandals within the Catholic church. The church
takes young men and women in their teens and early 20s, and demands
celibacy as the proof of a pious life. What is the most likely outcome of
such repression of natural physical urges? Why should we be surprised that
those urges, long denied and suppressed and seen as sinful, would ultimately
express themselves in the most deviant of ways? The demand for celibacy
as a godly virtue cannot be maintained and becomes responsible for the most
ungodly behavior.
them, but they just provide us with an excellent example. It’s also in the
government that makes the NIH take the word “condom” off of the website
that teaches people how to avoid HIV. This hypocrisy about sex is
everywhere around us, and we must confront it.
Neither of these extremes is working for us, and we don’t seem to know
what to do except spout the old ethics and make people feel guilty when they
can’t live up to them. We need sexual ethics that don’t change with the
situation, that work whether you are 16 or 60. We need sexual ethics that
promote health and well-being for everyone involved. We need sexual
ethics that tell the truth.
human experience. And we can’t just say that privately in our bedrooms, but
also to our children. If children do not hear it from adults, they will take all
of their messages about sex from the television, from their music, from
magazines that a friend sneaks into the locker room. We need to say to our
children “those people are not real.” and “I don’t like the way that
commercial uses a sexy woman to sell soap.” Sex is not dirty. It is a good
and healthy part of an adult relationship.
children this value from the time they are toddlers. It is natural that we
should talk about respect in the context of an intimate relationship. Sex
should only happen between two people who respect one another, and want
to be kind and gentle in all of the ways they touch one another. Our boys
and girls should not hesitate to run from relationships where they are put
down or harmed in any way.
health. Couples in a good sexual relationship are concerned with protecting
their own health and protecting the health of their partner. They should be
able to talk easily about testing, condoms, birth control, and all of their
health needs.
couple that decides to allow sex into the relationship should first feel a deep
commitment to the other and to the future of the relationship. This may or
may not include marriage at some future time. Marriage might be
unrealistic, but commitment to one special person is a value we can agree
upon. Some other ceremony may be in order, but more important than a
ceremony is the understanding forged between the two…an understanding
that they are committed to making their relationship work, an understanding
that sex is reserved for that relationship alone.
for sex?” My answer was this:
very loving ways toward one another. You each trust the other completely.
You feel a deep sense of commitment, and you both want the relationship to
last. But if you’re afraid to talk about condoms, birth control, and sexually
transmitted diseases, then you know you’re not mature enough to have sex.
If you are afraid to ask and answer the question “What will we do if I get
pregnant?” then you’re not mature enough to have sex.
I believe that this ethic is one we can all live with throughout our entire life
cycles. It is one that works for the divorced mom and her teenager. The
widower grandfather. The determined college student. And it even works
for our gay and lesbian friends who are denied the legal rights of marriage.
those in non-traditional relationships. It is time the religious community
opened its doors and its arms to all families. It is time the church found
ways to honor and welcome all of those people who are living in loving,
committed, healthy relationships.
government. We have some serious hypocrisy going on. In Missouri,
legislators have introduced a bill that will alter the current law on sex
education in the schools. It will remove the words “teach the latest
medically accurate information” from our law. We have to stop this.
behavior. Where is the morality in lying to our children? Where is the
morality in destroying our national parks, or allowing more mercury in our
children’s drinking water, or rounding up hundreds of people and putting
them into prison without any legal charges? Why can we so easily have a
public debate over a public official’s sex life, but not his business dealings?
we cannot let the government take that power from us.
to our understanding and experience of sex. I’ll close with this quote:
doesn’t mean to exaggerate the importance of sex. It doesn’t mean to
abandon our spiritual and moral sensibilities. It doesn’t mean to create a
sentimental philosophy that denies the dark and difficult aspects of everyday
living. Eros is involved in our pain and struggle as much as it is in happy
moments.
desire, passion, and attraction to one’s partner are ritual ways of saying yes
to life’s grander offerings. With our partner, we dance the aesthetics of sex,
expressing the deepest nature of things, and that realization goes so deep that
it makes relationship meaningful and makes sex the spring from which a full
life flows. As we embody our love with another, we make a significant
contribution to the erotic dynamic that keeps all things fully alive and
connected. Sex mirrors the contours, movements, qualities, and sensations of
everyday life recapitulated, celebrated, and made into art.”