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What Are The Real Purposes Of Sex? Read!!! by Truecelebmedia(f): 3:41am On Jul 17, 2016
WHAT ARE THE REAL PURPOSES OF SEX?


What’s the point of sex anyway?
Historically in the Church and in our society currently, we often
misunderstand the real purpose of sex. There are three basic
reasons for God’s gift of sex in marriage.
Reproduction. Genesis 1:27-28 says: “So God created mankind in his
own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he
created them. God blessed them and said to them, ‘Be fruitful and
increase in number.’” At that moment, He had created vegetation,
animals, and humans — all with their own ways of reproducing.
His design for us was a sexual relationship between husband and
wife that had the potential to create new life.
When you really think about this process, it’s pretty incredible.
Male and female come together, join their complementary bodies,
and an egg the size of a grain of sand and a sperm 1/30th that
size merge. From there, cells differentiate, a baby grows in the
womb, and a full human being emerges months later. Let me tell
you, when you look (up) at your man-sized teenage son, it’s
particularly astonishing that this whole process started with a
fertilized egg the size of the period at the end of this sentence. And
all that . . . began with the sexual act.
The first direct mention we have of sex in the Bible shows this
purpose of reproduction. And Eve understood how incredible this
was: “Adam made love to his wife Eve, and she became pregnant and
gave birth to Cain. She said, “With the help of the Lord I have brought
forth a man” (Genesis 3:1). I can imagine her tone as she said, “I
have brought forth a man,” like Holy canoli, how did that happen?!
And over and over, we see similar phrases:
“Cain made love to his wife, and she became pregnant and gave birth
to Enoch” (Genesis 4:17).
“Adam made love to his wife again, and she gave birth to a son and
named him Seth” (Genesis 4:25).
“There Judah met the daughter of a Canaanite man named Shua. He
married her and made love to her; she became pregnant and gave
birth to a son, who was named Er” (Genesis 38:2-3).
“So Boaz took Ruth and she became his wife. When he made love to
her, the Lord enabled her to conceive, and she gave birth to a
son” (Ruth 4:13).
“Elkanah made love to his wife Hannah, and the Lord remembered
her. So in the course of time Hannah became pregnant and gave
birth to a son” (1 Samuel 1:19-20).
“Then David comforted his wife Bathsheba, and he went to her and
made love to her. She gave birth to a son, and they named him
Solomon” (2 Samuel 12:24).
Throughout history, the Church has had this reason down pat. Just
like we understand that we need to eat to keep our bodies going,
we understand we need to conceive children to keep our families
and our communities going. This was the official teaching of the
Church for many years — that sex was for procreation.
“The early Church Fathers of the Patristic Age did indeed teach
that the marital act was solely for procreation and that spouses
should intend children when they engaged in intercourse” (Catholic
Online, Sex: Only for Procreation? ). St. Augustine famously
believed sexual passions to be a consequence of The Fall and
thought that, if sin had been avoided, humans would reproduce “by
a calm act of the will” (Christianity Today, What Would Augustine
Say – On Sex: God’s Blessing or Humanity’s Curse?
).
Procreation has been an easy reason for Christians to embrace
throughout the centuries. The Bible’s message is that children are
a blessing (see Psalm 127:3-5 ; Proverbs 17:6 ; Mark 10:13-16 ).
Given the first commands to man to “be fruitful” and the many
times God blessed His people with children, it’s not surprising that
reproduction has been championed for centuries as a main
purpose of sex.
Pleasure. I started to write, “this reason is more recent.” But I
don’t think that’s true. It’s both ancient and recent. That is, in Bible
times sexual pleasure in marriage appears to have God’s high
blessing (see Song of Songs 5:1 ). In Jewish tradition, pleasure was
seen as a woman’s right in the marriage bed. She was not to be
deprived of it by her husband (see Exodus 21:10 ; Deuteronomy
24:5 ).
Through a culmination of influences (Gnosticism, an attempt to
avoid the sexual immorality prominent in secular cultures, the rise
of monastic societies in the Church, etc.), the Christian Church
came to view sexual pleasure as opposed to spiritual purity.
Indeed, the Song of Songs became viewed strictly as an allegory of
Christ and His Church, with this view perhaps best espoused by
Origen in the 3rd century. He believed that Song of Songs was the
“meat” of scripture and could only be fully understood and
appreciated by the spiritually mature. He worried about those who,
“not knowing how to hear love’s language in purity and with chaste
ears, will twist the whole manner of his hearing of it away from the
inner spiritual man and on to the outward and carnal; and he will be
turned away from the spirit to flesh, and will foster carnal desires
in himself, and it will seem to be the Divine Scriptures that are thus
urging and egging him on to fleshly lust!” ( Origen, The Song of
Songs Commentary and Homilies ).
But I wouldn’t put much stock in that, since Origenthought the
body was so evil that he also slept on the floor, owned no shoes,
and reportedly castrated himself based on his interpretation of one
line in Matthew 19:12: “There be eunuchs, which have made
themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven’s sake.” Not to be too
graphic, but a guy who’d cut off his own nuts probably isn’t too
bothered by not having sex for pleasure.
This perspective — but not self-mutilation — was the official stance
of the Church for many years: that we Christians should be careful
not to enjoy sex too much. Otherwise, it smacks of loving the flesh
overly much and not being sufficiently spiritual. Of course, this
view fascinates me given the physical acts that many such
proponents took to display their spirituality. For instance, charity —
a definite Christian virtue — involves the physical act of actually
helping people with bodily needs, like food, water, clothing, shelter.
Are we not to take pleasure in helping people around us? Must it
merely be duty and nothing else?
Anyway, the Church has thankfully moved away from that in
recent years, with an acknowledgment that we allowed outside
philosophies to taint what the Bible really says. Just look at verses
like these:
“A loving doe, a graceful deer— may her breasts satisfy you always,
may you ever be intoxicated with her love” (Proverbs 5:19).
“I have come to my garden-my sister, my bride. I gather my myrrh with
my spices. I eat my honeycomb with my honey. I drink my wine with
my milk. Eat, friends! Drink, be intoxicated with love!” (Song of Songs
5:1).
“How beautiful you are and how pleasing, my love, with your delights!
Your stature is like that of the palm, and your breasts like clusters of
fruit. I said, ‘I will climb the palm tree; I will take hold of its fruit.’ May
your breasts be like clusters of grapes on the vine, the fragrance of
your breath like apples, and your mouth like the best wine” (Song of
Songs 7:6-9).
If you need more convincing — note our biology, ladies. That
handy-dandy clitoris has no role to play in reproduction, solely
pleasure. God wanted us to enjoy the sexual act and the intimacy
that we feel when we’re physically one-flesh with our beloved
covenant mate.
Intimacy. Speaking of intimacy, I tend to think this is the crowning
jewel. Because, to be honest, you could reproduce and feel
pleasure during sex without marriage. We see it in society all the
time. But there’s something special about sex that makes it an act
God intended to gift husbands and wives. Yes, of course he wants
daddies and mommies to raise kids, but not every sexual act
creates a baby. What’s the purpose of those other times?
Ephesians 5:31-32 says: “‘For this reason a man will leave his father
and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one
flesh.’ This is a profound mystery—but I am talking about Christ and
the church.” Well, what’s that’s about? How is becoming united/
one-flesh in marriage like our relationship with Christ? I think it’s
about the deep, loving intimacy between lover and beloved.
This is not the only time marriage is compared to God’s
relationship with His people. For instance:
“For your Maker is your husband– the LORD Almighty is his name —
the Holy One of Israel is your Redeemer; he is called the God of all the
earth” (Isaiah 54:5).
“I will betroth you to me forever; I will betroth you in righteousness and
justice, in love and compassion” (Hosea 2:19).
God prizes intimacy. Between us and Him. Among His people. And
certainly between husband and wife. In fact, He infused the sexual
act with ways to make it feel especially intimate, like the
vulnerability of unclothedness and body chemicals like Oxytocin and
Dopamine to make us connected to our lover.
And these affects are not seen in short-term bursts of sexual
activity. Rather, the intimate feelings come when we are linked to a
partner again and again, in longer-term relationships. As in
marriage .
Sex is something to be uniquely shared with your spouse, and thus
it creates a deep intimacy when you partake together regularly and
lovingly. God intended sex for reproduction and pleasure, but also
to nurture intimacy between husband and wife.
Those are the three primary purposes for sex I see in the Bible.
What benefits have you seen from having sex in your marriage?
By: @damexmrcoded
Re: What Are The Real Purposes Of Sex? Read!!! by Bluezy13(m): 3:53am On Jul 17, 2016
Hmmm...












This term paper just for konji...
La Konji la bad.
Re: What Are The Real Purposes Of Sex? Read!!! by foolinlove(f): 6:41am On Jul 17, 2016
Go to religion section.
Re: What Are The Real Purposes Of Sex? Read!!! by sinaj(f): 6:43am On Jul 17, 2016
To pursue cold lipsrsealed
Re: What Are The Real Purposes Of Sex? Read!!! by Marlvin(m): 6:48am On Jul 17, 2016
sinaj:
To pursue cold lipsrsealed


People still screw like rabbits under scorching sun. what a they 'pursuing' ??
Re: What Are The Real Purposes Of Sex? Read!!! by currency10(m): 6:50am On Jul 17, 2016
Op I concur with you. But pls what are the names of Abel and Cain wife in the bible.
Re: What Are The Real Purposes Of Sex? Read!!! by sinaj(f): 7:00am On Jul 17, 2016
Marlvin:




People still screw like rabbits under scorching sun. what a they 'pursuing' ??
konji lipsrsealed
Re: What Are The Real Purposes Of Sex? Read!!! by Certifiedbillio(m): 7:29am On Jul 17, 2016
Truecelebmedia:
WHAT ARE THE REAL PURPOSES OF SEX?


What’s the point of sex anyway?
Historically in the Church and in our society currently, we often
misunderstand the real purpose of sex. There are three basic
reasons for God’s gift of sex in marriage.
Reproduction. Genesis 1:27-28 says: “So God created mankind in his
own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he
created them. God blessed them and said to them, ‘Be fruitful and
increase in number.’” At that moment, He had created vegetation,
animals, and humans — all with their own ways of reproducing.
His design for us was a sexual relationship between husband and
wife that had the potential to create new life.
When you really think about this process, it’s pretty incredible.
Male and female come together, join their complementary bodies,
and an egg the size of a grain of sand and a sperm 1/30th that
size merge. From there, cells differentiate, a baby grows in the
womb, and a full human being emerges months later. Let me tell
you, when you look (up) at your man-sized teenage son, it’s
particularly astonishing that this whole process started with a
fertilized egg the size of the period at the end of this sentence. And
all that . . . began with the sexual act.
The first direct mention we have of sex in the Bible shows this
purpose of reproduction. And Eve understood how incredible this
was: “Adam made love to his wife Eve, and she became pregnant and
gave birth to Cain. She said, “With the help of the Lord I have brought
forth a man” (Genesis 3:1). I can imagine her tone as she said, “I
have brought forth a man,” like Holy canoli, how did that happen?!
And over and over, we see similar phrases:
“Cain made love to his wife, and she became pregnant and gave birth
to Enoch” (Genesis 4:17).
“Adam made love to his wife again, and she gave birth to a son and
named him Seth” (Genesis 4:25).
“There Judah met the daughter of a Canaanite man named Shua. He
married her and made love to her; she became pregnant and gave
birth to a son, who was named Er” (Genesis 38:2-3).
“So Boaz took Ruth and she became his wife. When he made love to
her, the Lord enabled her to conceive, and she gave birth to a
son” (Ruth 4:13).
“Elkanah made love to his wife Hannah, and the Lord remembered
her. So in the course of time Hannah became pregnant and gave
birth to a son” (1 Samuel 1:19-20).
“Then David comforted his wife Bathsheba, and he went to her and
made love to her. She gave birth to a son, and they named him
Solomon” (2 Samuel 12:24).
Throughout history, the Church has had this reason down pat. Just
like we understand that we need to eat to keep our bodies going,
we understand we need to conceive children to keep our families
and our communities going. This was the official teaching of the
Church for many years — that sex was for procreation.
“The early Church Fathers of the Patristic Age did indeed teach
that the marital act was solely for procreation and that spouses
should intend children when they engaged in intercourse” (Catholic
Online, Sex: Only for Procreation? ). St. Augustine famously
believed sexual passions to be a consequence of The Fall and
thought that, if sin had been avoided, humans would reproduce “by
a calm act of the will” (Christianity Today, What Would Augustine
Say – On Sex: God’s Blessing or Humanity’s Curse?
).
Procreation has been an easy reason for Christians to embrace
throughout the centuries. The Bible’s message is that children are
a blessing (see Psalm 127:3-5 ; Proverbs 17:6 ; Mark 10:13-16 ).
Given the first commands to man to “be fruitful” and the many
times God blessed His people with children, it’s not surprising that
reproduction has been championed for centuries as a main
purpose of sex.
Pleasure. I started to write, “this reason is more recent.” But I
don’t think that’s true. It’s both ancient and recent. That is, in Bible
times sexual pleasure in marriage appears to have God’s high
blessing (see Song of Songs 5:1 ). In Jewish tradition, pleasure was
seen as a woman’s right in the marriage bed. She was not to be
deprived of it by her husband (see Exodus 21:10 ; Deuteronomy
24:5 ).
Through a culmination of influences (Gnosticism, an attempt to
avoid the sexual immorality prominent in secular cultures, the rise
of monastic societies in the Church, etc.), the Christian Church
came to view sexual pleasure as opposed to spiritual purity.
Indeed, the Song of Songs became viewed strictly as an allegory of
Christ and His Church, with this view perhaps best espoused by
Origen in the 3rd century. He believed that Song of Songs was the
“meat” of scripture and could only be fully understood and
appreciated by the spiritually mature. He worried about those who,
“not knowing how to hear love’s language in purity and with chaste
ears, will twist the whole manner of his hearing of it away from the
inner spiritual man and on to the outward and carnal; and he will be
turned away from the spirit to flesh, and will foster carnal desires
in himself, and it will seem to be the Divine Scriptures that are thus
urging and egging him on to fleshly lust!” ( Origen, The Song of
Songs Commentary and Homilies ).
But I wouldn’t put much stock in that, since Origenthought the
body was so evil that he also slept on the floor, owned no shoes,
and reportedly castrated himself based on his interpretation of one
line in Matthew 19:12: “There be eunuchs, which have made
themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven’s sake.” Not to be too
graphic, but a guy who’d cut off his own nuts probably isn’t too
bothered by not having sex for pleasure.
This perspective — but not self-mutilation — was the official stance
of the Church for many years: that we Christians should be careful
not to enjoy sex too much. Otherwise, it smacks of loving the flesh
overly much and not being sufficiently spiritual. Of course, this
view fascinates me given the physical acts that many such
proponents took to display their spirituality. For instance, charity —
a definite Christian virtue — involves the physical act of actually
helping people with bodily needs, like food, water, clothing, shelter.
Are we not to take pleasure in helping people around us? Must it
merely be duty and nothing else?
Anyway, the Church has thankfully moved away from that in
recent years, with an acknowledgment that we allowed outside
philosophies to taint what the Bible really says. Just look at verses
like these:
“A loving doe, a graceful deer— may her breasts satisfy you always,
may you ever be intoxicated with her love” (Proverbs 5:19).
“I have come to my garden-my sister, my bride. I gather my myrrh with
my spices. I eat my honeycomb with my honey. I drink my wine with
my milk. Eat, friends! Drink, be intoxicated with love!” (Song of Songs
5:1).
“How beautiful you are and how pleasing, my love, with your delights!
Your stature is like that of the palm, and your breasts like clusters of
fruit. I said, ‘I will climb the palm tree; I will take hold of its fruit.’ May
your breasts be like clusters of grapes on the vine, the fragrance of
your breath like apples, and your mouth like the best wine” (Song of
Songs 7:6-9).
If you need more convincing — note our biology, ladies. That
handy-dandy clitoris has no role to play in reproduction, solely
pleasure. God wanted us to enjoy the sexual act and the intimacy
that we feel when we’re physically one-flesh with our beloved
covenant mate.
Intimacy. Speaking of intimacy, I tend to think this is the crowning
jewel. Because, to be honest, you could reproduce and feel
pleasure during sex without marriage. We see it in society all the
time. But there’s something special about sex that makes it an act
God intended to gift husbands and wives. Yes, of course he wants
daddies and mommies to raise kids, but not every sexual act
creates a baby. What’s the purpose of those other times?
Ephesians 5:31-32 says: “‘For this reason a man will leave his father
and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one
flesh.’ This is a profound mystery—but I am talking about Christ and
the church.” Well, what’s that’s about? How is becoming united/
one-flesh in marriage like our relationship with Christ? I think it’s
about the deep, loving intimacy between lover and beloved.
This is not the only time marriage is compared to God’s
relationship with His people. For instance:
“For your Maker is your husband– the LORD Almighty is his name —
the Holy One of Israel is your Redeemer; he is called the God of all the
earth” (Isaiah 54:5).
“I will betroth you to me forever; I will betroth you in righteousness and
justice, in love and compassion” (Hosea 2:19).
God prizes intimacy. Between us and Him. Among His people. And
certainly between husband and wife. In fact, He infused the sexual
act with ways to make it feel especially intimate, like the
vulnerability of unclothedness and body chemicals like Oxytocin and
Dopamine to make us connected to our lover.
And these affects are not seen in short-term bursts of sexual
activity. Rather, the intimate feelings come when we are linked to a
partner again and again, in longer-term relationships. As in
marriage .
Sex is something to be uniquely shared with your spouse, and thus
it creates a deep intimacy when you partake together regularly and
lovingly. God intended sex for reproduction and pleasure, but also
to nurture intimacy between husband and wife.
Those are the three primary purposes for sex I see in the Bible.
What benefits have you seen from having sex in your marriage?
By: @damexmrcoded
op, biko try to read first, then you post the summary for us, this one to much for old age like us

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