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Archive for June, 2008

Premature Issues…

I am putting the final touches on a new book that deals with, specifically, how Christian husbands can overcome issues with premature ejaculation.

If you are a husband that deals with this issue (or a wife of a husband that does), I would like to hear your story.

I want to ensure that the final book deals with ALL of the issues that concern you.

And, if you are dealing with this problem, I would like to send you (when the draft is ready) a draft copy of this book for your use and (potential) testimonials.

If you would like to have some input, before the book is completed, and you would like to be considered to receive a free draft copy to try, please send me an email at robert_irwin@comcast.net and let me know the following:

1) How has PE effected you and your marriage.

2) What would you MOST like to see/learn in a book about overcoming PE.

3) Are you open to trying the techniques in a new book and giving your feedback/testimonial?

Thanks for the help.

Sex And The Single Christian…

Our focus is sex within marriage.

Our books, Sexual Skills For The Christian Husband and Sexual Satisfaction For The Christian Wife are intended to help married Christian couples to make their marriages and sex life everything that God intended.

But, occasionally, we get questions from Christians that are single (unmarried, divorced or widowed). They are struggling with how to reconcile their sexuality and their “singleness.”

For those people, we now have a new resource to recommend: Lauren Winner’s “Real Sex:The Naked Truth About Chastity.”

This book deals with Christian sexual ethics, specifically Chastity in an intelligent and clear way.

It also confronts many of our culture’s current assumptions about sex and sexuality.

Single Christians should find this book to be a valuable and important addition to their library.

Below is an review of the book found on Laura’s web site. It will give you a taste of what you will find in the book.

A review of Lauren Winner’s Real Sex: The Naked Truth about Chastity

When Lauren Winner wrote about her conversion from Orthodox Judaism to Christianity in her 2003 memoir, Girl Meets God, her frank recognition of the complexities of newfound faith were unpredictable and charming. As she takes up the question of sex and chastity in her new book Real Sex, her candor is not only resonant, it is uniquely insightful. In what seems likely to emerge as a critical resource for any Christian seeking to pursue a coherent sexual ethic in a hyper-sexualized culture, Winner effectively redefines the scope of Christian sexual ethics to incorporate realities-as-they-really-are within the church. She emphasizes the profound relevance of Scripture and tradition as a remedy, while articulating a winsome, yet bold challenge for the Church to be less modest about its call to chastity.

It’s no surprise to anyone who watches television or shops at a mall that traditional sexual morality is on the decline. According to current statistics, about 65 percent of teenagers have sex before they finish high school and approximately 75 percent of adults have sex before they get married. What may come as a surprise, however, is how steep the decline is—not only within the culture, but also within the Church. In the 1990’s three separate surveys of single Christians showed only one-third of unmarried Christians are virgins. Likewise, of the students and young adults who signed abstinence pledges as part of religious sex-ed programs, 61 percent of students broke their pledge and of the 39 percent who kept it, 55 percent admitted to having oral sex, which they didn’t consider to be sex.

For some, these statistics supply more-than-justifiable grounds to rant about the weakened moral fabric of American culture. But for Winner, these statistics simply identify a growing need within the Church that faith, scripture, discipline and community are sufficient to address; she offers hope in what could otherwise be deemed a hopeless situation.

Central to her evenhanded call is a strong reliance on the truth that our bodies are good (as are our desires when rightly ordered) and that Scripture offers a much more coherent and comprehensive sexual ethic than is typically communicated in classic virginity-centric models of ministry. As she puts it,

To organize one’s Christian sexual ethics around virginity is to turn sexual purity and sexual sin into a light switch you can flip—one day you’re sexually righteous, and the next day, after illicit loss of your virginity, you’re a sinner.

This is not to suggest that Winner thinks pre-marital virginity is unimportant. Rather she refuses to indulge the slippery slope, how-far-is-too-far question, pushing the reader to explore and consider the depth and richness of God’s full story of creation, wholeness and redemption. She rejects what German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer might call the “cheap grace” approach to sexual ethics and insists on painting a much more brilliant—and challenging—picture of what the chaste life both requires and rewards.

Foundational to each of her assertions is the conviction that our decisions and behavior shape us, especially when it comes to how we use our bodies. As Winner summarizes it,

The choices we make every day—where we shop, what we do with our bodies, how we pass our time—form us. They shape the type of Christians we become. What we do matters, not because good behavior gets us into heaven, but because behavior, good and bad, creates certain expectations in us, teaches us certain lessons.

She reiterates this theme throughout the book, and near the end says, “Sexual sin forms us. It teaches us false lessons about what sex is, lessons that are not easily unlearned. But sexual sin is something we can repent of. It is something God forgives.”

Repentance, forgiveness and redemption are critical pieces of this puzzle, Winner argues, not only because they are part of how we learn and grow as Christians, but also because she takes current statistics seriously. She knows she is writing, most likely, to non-virgin Christians—unmarried, non-virgin Christians to be exact. And, for anyone who has “fallen off the wagon” so to speak, and read ad nauseum about the how-tos of Christian purity, her realistic treatment of sexual sin as common and forgivable is probably one of the most profound and refreshing parts of her book. As she acknowledges,

Sometimes adopting chastity is as simple as reading a book like this one, or attending a lecture, and then making a change in your life. But for many of us, it is the relearning of a basic story. It requires, prayer teaching, work, reformation, even weeping. It requires that we tell each other the story of the gospel, and the narrative of chastity, over and over and over.

Her willingness to share her own experiences as a (sexual) sinner in need of grace brings an authenticity that is often hard to come by in Christian books about sex. She has wrestled with sexual temptation, engaged in premarital sex prior to meeting her husband, struggled with Church teaching, and bought into deceptions and lies about sex. And yet, she has pursued an affirmative ethic that is big enough to hold all of that sin and confusion and still offer a hope for purity. “As the church,” she says, “we need to ask whether the starting point for a scriptural witness on sex is the isolated quotation of “thou shalt not”, or whether a scriptural ethic of sex begins instead with the totality of the Bible, the narrative of God’s redeeming love and humanity’s attempt to reflect that through our institutions and practices.” Again, she is speaking as one who has walked through the fire and doesn’t take its flames lightly, yet her own sanctification has borne a compassion for those who face the same struggle ahead of them.

Finally, she is wise to supplement her substantive critique of the Church with equally substantive, practical recommendations for how to navigate the realities of sexual sin and the road of redemption. She offers useful tools that provide a tangible way to pursue chastity in real life. She emphasizes developing chastity as a spiritual discipline, recognizing, “it is not only a state—the state of being chaste—but a disciplined, active undertaking that we do as part of the Body [of Christ].” Revealing her candid spirit, she frankly notes the practical aim of this disciplined approach is because “Speaking of spiritual discipline seems to elevate chastity from gritting-my-teeth-and-stonily-avoiding-sex to something lofty, noble and spiritual.” It is self-gratifying in its own way.

Winner also emphasizes the role of the church community in helping to guide unmarried Christians in the challenging call to chastity. Calling for young and old, single and married to come together and “be the church” on this issue is critical, “A community working toward chastity is not captive to euphemism, dissembling, and pretense, but is a place where sin can be spoken of freely, with contrition but without fear.” She talks about setting wise physical limits during dating but does so with a balanced perspective that allows for discernment with the help of community. She also stresses the importance of prayer, repentance and accountability with other believers. She has great faith the Church is equipped to address the pervasive misunderstandings and deceptions about sexual sin, she simply wants to see the Church apply it in a foundational, deeply biblical way.

Ultimately the genius in Real Sex is precisely that it puts forth something real. Sex is a real struggle for single Christians. In scripture and tradition the Church has tools at its disposal that offer real solutions. Winner’s bright and persuasive perspective suggests it is time for all Christians to be sincere and realistic about pursuing chastity as God intends.

Women, Is Your Lack Of Desire ‘Really’ A Dysfunction?

Dr. Joy Davidson is a certified sex expert, licensed marriage and family therapist, based in New York. She is one of the advisers on the Love And Health site.

She is a ’secular’ sex expert and we don’t endorse everything that she (or her site) promotes, but I find the majority of her advice to be very solid.

I find her comments in the following video (below) to be particularly important and relevant to our audience. It deals with the recent assumption that females with a less than nymphomaniacal desire for sex are…dysfunctional.

She is, specifically, addressing the fact that many in the health fields (read: Pharmaceutical companies) have a vested interest in making women feel ‘dysfunctional’ for having what, most likely, is a ‘normal’ level of sexual desire…given their age and situation.

The ‘pharmaceutical factor’ that has changed the landscape of sexuality has both negative and positive consequences.

Now that many (especially older) men can solve the ‘natural’ decline in sexual powers through the magic of drugs such as Viagra, there has been a (negative) pressure put on women to ’step it up’ and begin to perform, sexually, in a way that was never expected of women (of a ‘certain age’) before; there is an assumption that their (formerly) normal level of sexual desire is now…a dysfunction.

The positive consequence of this situation is that (some) focus has begun to be placed on the reasons for female lack of sexual desire.

Although the pharmaceutical companies hope that we buy into the idea that this ‘dysfunction’ can be solved via a ‘magic pill,’ many others are starting to focus on the real reasons for much lack of female desire…relational, emotional, physical (normal aging) and…the lack of technical skill of their husbands.

If you have been a reader of this blog for any amount of time, you know that we completely agree.

Most of the ’sex problems’ that we deal with here have NOTHING to do with sex; they are relationship problems. It is IMPOSSIBLE to expect a fully functioning and exciting and fulfilling sex life when the relationship has gaps or problems. Before expecting progress in the bed room, many couples will have to face the reality that their relationship is lacking and shore it up first. And, if the problems in the bedroom seem to originate with a lack of desire on the part of the woman, then you may need to explore WHY she doesn’t feel desire. Does she feel loved, supported, cared for, emotionally fed in all other areas?

Once the relationship is on solid ground, it is necessary that you explore the ‘technical’ aspects of your lovemaking.

In Sexual Satisfaction For The Christian Wife, we explore the ‘technical’ factors (and techniques) that are necessary for a woman to achieve physical satisfaction.

In Sexual Skills For The Christian Husband, we explore the ‘technical’ factors (and techniques) that the husband MUST understand to provide ‘a fighting chance’ for the woman to achieve sufficient satisfaction to allow natural desire to ‘kick in.’

If the relationship is positive and solid and you have addressed the ‘technical’ factors and (this is the important question) you both still feel that your overall lack of desire is less than you would like, then you MIGHT want to consider pharmaceutical approaches.

Dr. Davidson says…

Now, this is probably bad news for anybody who wants life to fit into neat categories, who prefers to see things in black and white rather than shades of grey. But for women who can accept that sexuality is as individual as personality, it’s good to know that there are millions of “normals” out there in the world, and that one of them has your name on it.

We agree.

Your ‘normal’ is a result of MUCH more than just physical factors. Your ‘normal,’ when you focus on the overall environment that surrounds your sexuality and desire can be wonderful…no matter the performance ’statistics’ you encounter.

Go Joe Go…

Joe Beam is one of the more visible advocates of passionate Christian sex within marriage.

Joe has been a very strong advocate for the ideas expressed in Sexual Skills For The Christian Husband and Sexual Satisfaction For The Christian Wife…that God intended sex within marriage to be exciting, frequent and relationship-building.