Christian Sex? From the Mundane to the Ecstatic!

I once heard about a Texas reverend who asked his mega church congregation to participate in a seven day sex challenge. All married members of his church were admonished to have sex with their marriage partner for seven consecutive days. The pastor kicked off this copulation crusade by bringing a bed on stage and preaching a message on the virtues of married sex. The pastor’s discourse on . . . conjugal relations was lauded by many. I am not making this up. . . seriously, google it!

Not to be outdone, Dr. Ruth, the world renowned sex therapist, once admonished her followers to read their Bibles and pray for eight consecutive days. Unfortunately, that last part isn’t true, so please don’t google Dr. Ruth. . . please! However, the Reverend’s seven day sex challenge actually happened. Which leads me to many observations, some of which I can write down.

First, as I’ve written in other contexts, “For an event to truly be eventful, it must not happen every day.” I think this is true of even the most glorious marital perks. Second, it seems to me that building a sabbath into any activity is worth consideration. Third, this post is making my mom so very nervous!

Which is why this seven day sex challenge publicity stunt is worth further consideration. This mega church Pastor has touched upon. . . wait, let me find the right word. . . The pastor’s message addresses a topic that is simply not dealt with in popular or Christian culture. That is the issue of everyday intimacy.

About the only time Christians publicly talk about sex is when the word is accompanied by other words such as “moral failing” or “inappropriate” or “ask your mother.” The church spends far more time talking about “when” sex is appropriate than about “what” purpose intimacy should have in a marriage relationship.

The love stories of our age and every age deal almost exclusively with young love or new love. Whether or not these stories advocate or demonstrate moral purity, they are often united in their celebration of first love. If one ponders their favorite romance movie or novel, they will most likely find a narrative filled with burgeoning love.

Our most celebrated love stories exist within the realm of the first embrace, the first kiss, and that first powerful feeling of complete infatuation. In the denouement of any good love story, the lovers finally realize they are forever meant to be together or are tragically doomed to be forever apart. Either way, these timeless love stories pluck our heart strings pitch perfect.

The problem with such stories is they end where a lifetime of love actually begins. Marriage exists in the “happily ever after” part. However, the “happily ever after” part does not exist in the realm of reality. Reality has both sunsets and sunrises, joy and sorrow, passion and apathy. If anything, human relationships are marked by a myriad of conflicting emotions and contradictory ways of being.

First love eventually grows up and becomes deeper love. Deeper love transcends sensuality. Deeper love moves beyond sexual appetite. Deeper love finds intimacy in peaceful silence, in aimless country drives, in finishing a puzzle while the children sleep, in attempting to start over in the midst of a seemingly endless fight.

Love that holds a marriage together goes far beyond the bedroom. It exists driving in the mini van as she reaches over to caress the back of my neck with her perpetually cold hands. This is how she says she’s sorry. Timeless love exists in my failed attempt to make her laugh even though she has every reason to stay angry. She loves the attempt, not the punch line. She is less enamored with the comic as she is with the struggling man.

True love goes beyond grand symbolic gestures and carefully chosen poetic words. True love finds rest in the breath and the heartbeat. When given preeminence, true love permeates the mundane and ecstatic expressions of marital life. As my love for my wife grows, I find the compartmentalization of our affection blurring.

Seven days of sex. . . I guess. But seven thousand ways to say I love you. . . that seems more our style.

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8 Responses to Christian Sex? From the Mundane to the Ecstatic!

  1. Cindy Holman May 14, 2011 at 8:19 pm #

    Great article Doug! I totally agree 🙂

  2. Cindy Holman May 15, 2011 at 1:51 am #

    What? You don’t practice this all the time? Just saying….

  3. dan behrens May 15, 2011 at 4:18 am #

    not just your mom, i too was getting nervous.
    very good my friend.

  4. Matt Krachunis May 17, 2011 at 6:56 pm #

    I liked the idea. 7 days in a row would be an ‘event’. The wife and I tried it, but failed because it happened over Thanksgiving, and well, that’s just a recipe for disaster.

  5. Dan Bursch June 11, 2014 at 9:27 pm #

    I read his book, “The Sexperiment”. Good read but I never tried it. I love this article though. You are so right about how media and entertainment glorifies the excitement and rush of first love. But I love what you wrote, “The problem with such stories is they end where a lifetime of love actually begins.” Thank for reminding all of us what real love is all about.

  6. Jacqueline Bursch June 12, 2014 at 3:55 pm #

    Dear Son, You really did not make me nervous. I had an idea where you were headed, and I was right. Excellent post! When your dad and I first married we made a vow. We said that although we loved each other then, we knew our love would grow. Someday when all we could do is help each other in and out of bed, we would love each other more than ever before. After 50 years of marriage, our love and respect goes beyond all the things the world sees as marital bless: it comes from deep within where God has made us one. I have no words to express the inexpressible joy we find together, abiding in Christ.

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