Monday, October 22, 2012

He Doesn't Want Sex


They haven't been married for very long.  They are both young and healthy.  They both love Jesus and are so very precious.  They both work hard and are fun to be with.

The problem...he rarely wants sex.  He is addicted to pornography.  She is miserable.  She was even contemplating divorce...

I tell her that we are not here on earth to be happy but holy.  {True happiness, however, is a by-product of holiness.}.  She is commanded by God to love her husband...period.  He is trapped in an ugly, destructive sin.  If she leaves him, it will only get worse.

I told her to love and serve him as God commands.  To win him without a word.  Mostly to pray for him.  She has a lot better chance of helping him by loving him than by being angry.

These are hard words but she appreciated them.  She knows they are Truth.  She doesn't want to give up.  She loves him and is willing to fight for him because that is what she has decided to do.

Many men, even Christian men, are addicted to pornography.  It is everywhere.  Sexy women are everywhere.  You can get it with a click of a mouse.  We must not let Satan win this battle.  We must continue to do spiritual battle for our husbands by loving and praying for them.

If they want to be held accountable, great!  If they want help, great!  For those who don't, remember God is the God of the impossible.  He came to set the sinner free...Free from what?  SIN.  Believe Him and rest upon His promises and His strength.
Love suffers long and is kind.
I Corinthians 13:4

Marital Oneness

Comments (21)

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Yea and it is hard with drinking too. Even if they do want help it is still hard. I could use some prayers ...and so could my husband.

Thanks for reminding us.
1 reply · active 648 weeks ago
Yes, it is hard, Elle. I will pray for you and your husband.
A wonderful post. I wonder what you would advise a woman whose husband calls her names, tells her her opinion doesn't matter and has even shoved her to the floor. I know a dear lady who cries herself to sleep almost nightly because of her husband. She has determined not to let the enemy win over her family and try to win her husband "without a word", but she has recently admitted it is becoming increasingly difficult. She wonders how she can continue to allow her children to be witness to his behavior. She prays for him. I pray for him. But, she's desperate for a "hero" to step in and tell him to get his act together and God acts so slowly sometimes. I am concerned for her mental, and spiritual, well-being.
1 reply · active 648 weeks ago
What you describe sounds like such an impossible situation and if the wife did not trust God so completely at His Word, the situation might be without hope. My counsel to such a wife would first be to appreciate her faith and faithfulness, and then to speak to her about certain practical things. To "win your man without a word" does not mean that a wife must be his doormat or shoving bag. Name calling and shoving is unacceptable and she should communicate this in a gentle, but clear manner. 
 
A wife in this situation must surround herself with godly counselors who understand and seek to live completely by God's Word, and then to prayerfully consider what options are open to her if her godly strategy appears not to be working. One strategy may be to give her husband more time. If the oppression becomes unbearable, separation, or threat of separation may be acceptable and perhaps healthy options. 
 
The scriptures are always true ... and so is the promise that a wife "may win her man without a word." A multitude of wives have seen this blessing and the results of this promise, but "may win" is not a guarantee that all husbands will be won.  Seeking wise Christian advisors who know the cost of separation on a family, and the cost of giving up too quickly, is vital to advise such a wife on her particular situation. The harm done by such a man on the psyche of the kids is an important consideration to be balanced against the known costs of separation or divorce. 
 
Thank God we have the Holy Spirit who "leads us into all truth" as we seek to please Him through obedience to His Word. God's truth lives in a healthy tension that each believer is responsible to live out sensibly before the Lord.  With good advisors even tough situations like this one can come to a good and God honoring solution.   
 
 
I have spent several years in her shoes. Yes, your advice is so right. Pray for him and keep loving him. For me, his addiction still exists, but my reaction to it has changed. Like the practice of forming a good habit, I have learned...and often have to re-learn...to let God lead me. Instead of trying to 'handle' my husband myself, I understand I have to let God work his purpose. The things I've learned from the heartache and pain I've experienced relating to my husbands addictions and actions...they've changed me. My advice to any woman in this position, study forgiveness. Giving forgiveness. What it means, how to give it fully. There is so much depth to forgiveness.
1 reply · active 648 weeks ago
Wonderful advice, Dianna, especially since you have experienced this very issue.
Speaking from experience (& a healed marriage) pray pray pray. I prayed that he would resist temptation & that he would deeply desire me. My company, my body, sex with me. But if your gonna pray for it be ready to go to bed with your husband. & very often.
Adrienne Dixon's avatar

Adrienne Dixon · 648 weeks ago

I love your blog Lori! I am soooo thankful to have you and ken in my and my husbands lives. Love you!
1 reply · active 648 weeks ago
We both love you two also! You are precious.
One doesn't generally 'love and serve' an addict by turning a blind eye to their behaviour and being pleasant while they destroy their very soul.

A wife *can* win her husband to Christ 'without a word' -- but that is neither a garuntee that it will work, nor is it the only plan laid out in Scripture that she may follow.

Confrontation, accountability and consiquences are a part of love too. They are a part of love in the Body of Christ, and they can be a way for a wife to love and serve her husband, doing him good all the days of her life, rather than being prayerful yet passive, and therefore helpless in her suffering.
1 reply · active 648 weeks ago
She has not turned a blind eye to his behavior or been passive about it. She has confronted him and is holding him accountable. He wants to be held accountable, thankfully, but you can not change another person. Only God can do that and prayer is VERY powerful.
This addiction is becoming an epidemic in the church. In our own church, I know 3 families that are being devastated by this sin! 2 of the couples are ending in divorce - after 20 years of marriage and precious children. But the wives had had enough. The 3rd couple, the wife is fighting for her husband and with her husband. Not sure how that one will turn out.
Anyway, I do agree with what you say and also to pray, pray, pray. But this is what I'm wondering: when these women have gone to the pastor (and his wife) and elders, they've basically just been given a pat on the head and a "there, there, dear". What do you think should be the response? Somehow these 3 women were made to feel victimized again by the pastor and elders. Also, each one has told me that this porn addiction is equal or worse than adultery. That is why 2 ended in divorce. That was the conclusion that the wives came to in order to justify ending the marriage. Do you think that a long term porn addiction could be equated to adultery?
3 replies · active 648 weeks ago
Absolutely not. Having sexual intercourse with a woman other than their wife is much different than pornography. Both are sins and are wrong but when the Bible gives adultery as the only reason for divorce, it is talking about the physical act. I would venture to say that all men have lusted in their lives. Many have viewed pornography but this is not the same as adultery. To use it as an excuse to get divorced is not good in my opinion. It is giving Satan the victory. These women who went to the elders should have been given an older woman to whom they could confide in and pray with for support. Those children need their fathers even if they are far from perfect.
I disagree when you say, "when the Bible gives adultery as the only reason for divorce, it is talking about the physical act." There are two reasons for my disagreement.

The first is that in the Bible text, Matthew 19:9, the 'reason' Jesus gives as acceptable is *not* the word adultery, but a different word, translated "sexual immorality" in most translations, and "fornication" in the King James. This word does not mean merely the physical act of copulation. It has a wide semantic domain which is well worth investigating before advising people that any non-copulation offense falls short of destroying a marriage.
The second reason is that Jesus Himself, within the *same book of the Bible* very much broadens the definition of adultery itself -- to include the sin of lust (not desire alone, but volitional lust) as an act of adultery. (Matthew 5:28).

It may be that viewing pornography, while arrousing, might or might not meet the definition of volitional lust -- but it does absolutely fall within the definition of sexual immorality. Jesus does set copulation as the only grounds for divorce... and I don't think you are going to change His mind.

You are gifted and a deep thinker Lori. You would be a much more successful teacher if you would refrain from your bad habit of using an English dictionary to define Greek words. With your level of desire for Scriptural knoweledge, I think you would really enjoy access to a good theological dictionary for scholars. Unfortunately they tend not to be very affordable (which is why internet resources are so sub-par). I can make some reccomendations if you would like. I assume you are primarily interested in the New Testament?
I have to disagree. Pornography is adultery. The men that are viewing porn don't simply view it they act out on it. When they are participating in masterbation to the images of women what else can it be considered other than adultery. Many times these men refuse sexual realtions with their wives because of the porn use their wives are victims. When they are refusing their wives it is also sin. A lot of the times the children in these homes also view the porn because they catch the men viewing it. Porn addiction goes way beyond lust.
1 reply · active 648 weeks ago
a·dul·ter·y
[uh-duhl-tuh-ree] Show IPA

noun, plural a·dul·ter·ies.
voluntary sexual intercourse between a married person and someone other than his or her lawful spouse.

Pornography isn't sexual intercourse with someone else. The definition of adultery is very clear. Masturbation isn't sexual intercourse.
I would ask the women if porn is equal to adultery, are romance novel and daydreaming about other romances equal to adultery? Don't get me wrong I cannot image the pain and rejection and sense of betrayal if my husband were involved in porn. However, I just think sometime women are selective in their criticism of men. It is equally harmful to a marriage when women give in to their weak areas of emotional porn. The husband may never know because it is secret but it still puts a wedge between her and her husband and tears down the relationship and her respect, value, appreciation and love and it is a deep betrayal.
1 reply · active 648 weeks ago
I just wrote a post about this issue. Great points! I also wrote one on what you wrote to Ben about a woman claiming no one can tell her what to do with her body when a fetus is NOT her body! You must be reading my mind! :)
PJB you are correct that the word used in is Mathew 19:19 Is *not* the word adultery, but a different word, translated "sexual immorality" in most translations, and "fornication" in the King James." The word is transliterated as "porneia" where we actually get the word "porn."

At this point I would have to part ways with you to some degree. Although I do not agree with the conclusions of this website, I love the way they have gathered of much of the rich Biblical commentary on the work "porneia" and listed it for us. His conclusion is that "porneia" almost always indicates an illegal sexual act between a married person and another married or unmarried person, or a prostitute. To broaden the work out to include every sexual sin and pornography is a stretch as 95%+ of its usages is referring to an illicit sexual act between two persons. Look up all the usages, but disregard his conclusions as there are plenty of other passages that forbid premarital sex, which he is trying to excuse.
http://www.the-goldenrule.name/Fornication_ILLICI...

I would challenge any conclusion to Matthew 19:9 that it does not refer to an actual sexual act between two parties, and would suggest that even the way Jesus used the word was not intended to broaden out fornication to all sexual sins, but instead as referring to true infidelity with another party. To apply this to all sexual sins would give most Jewish and Christian women the right to divorce their husbands which Jesus is specifically arguing against in the context!

So yes, sexual immorality or fornication is a most appropriate translation of the word "poneia" BUT everything about the word "porneia" when studied in almost every context of the scriptures refers to a sexual act between two persons. When one would translate the word as "adultery" in the Matthew 19:19 context the strong sense would be that they are capturing what Jesus intended his listener to understand.

Beyond this, the entire Sermon on the Mount is given in such a strong manner that it should be seen as Christ, the New Law Giver, taking the place of Moses. All that Christ is teaching in this Sermon is before the age of Grace has begun. He is speaking to the Jewish people and their hard hearts and making the ultimate point that none of us can keep the law and what God intends for his children. He is setting the groundwork necessary for the cross, that apart from the cross we all are hopeless and we all sin, we all lust, we all fall short of the glory of God."

Fast forward to the apostle Paul and you have your answer on divorce for any reason:

I Cor. 7:10: "To the married I give this charge (not I, but the Lord): the wife should not separate from her husband 11 (but if she does, she should remain unmarried or else be reconciled to her husband), and the husband should not divorce his wife."

Paul was very familiar with what Christ said, and yet under the inspiration of God he writes to the church that Christians are not to divorce, period. That they may separate, but if they do so they should stay single or reconcile.

I am not trying here to throw divorced Christians under the bus, as I know this is a heart wrenching issue and the grace of God covers even divorce. My point is that for Lori to say that the context of Matt. 19:9, the general use of the word "porneia," and Paul's not repeating any "out" Jesus may be giving for divorce, all tell me that if one is to adopt a grounds for divorce they should go to the strongest of terms, adultery, or sexual intercourse for the use of "porneia" in this context, instead of the broader use of the term as sexual immorality... which still would in this context mean illicit sexual intercourse with another person.

Jesus, nor the whole of scriptures, teaches that divorce is acceptable because of a man or woman's sin of pornography, and certainly not because a person lusts after another, other than their spouse.
While I do agree that a wife can win her husband to the Lord by her prayers and quiet spirit, I also belive that when a man is involved in porn Satan uses it to destroy his very soul. The Bible says if a man even looks on a woman in a lustful way he has committed adultery therefore if a husband continues in this addiction after being confronted by the wife she should definitely let him know it will not be tolerated especially if he is looking at it in their home where children might come across it. Also, there are instances where children could be victims of sexual abuse because of their father's addiction. So your advice was good as far as telling your friend to pray, etc. but action should be taken to remove the sin from the rest of the family until the husband's heart has been restored.

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