Sunstone said:
It sounds to me like you've never managed to have a meaningful one night stand. But is your personal failure to have had a meaningful one night stand sufficient grounds on which to assert that all one night stands are meaningless? If so, how?
I've never had a one night stand, period. :no: The reason I think one night stands aren't meaningful is because I see no value in attempting physical intimacy when emotional intimacy, trust, love and respect are not present. And if all those things
are present...why is it just a one night stand and not a relationship?
Do you think second and third marriages are yucky and gross? For that matter, do you think second and third marriages are necessarily inferior in any meaningful way to first marriages?
I've always been taught that divorce is wrong, and that it is unacceptable except in extreme cases of violence and abuse, or where an extramarital affair has taken place. Many of the standard reasons people currently divorce, such as no longer feeling an emotional thrill, excitement or wanting someone new, I consider selfish. So, yes, I do tend to look at multiple marriages as cheapened and compromised, and not having the same authenticity as lifetime marriages. Of course, individual situations are different. Widows/widowers who remarry aren't wrong to do so, for example. I don't consider sex in marriage to be yucky, and that includes second marriages if the couple has only been with each other and their former spouses. Having many partners is yucky in my eyes, yes.
Sunstone said:
For your attitude here to make sense, don't you need to assume that virgin sex is all or almost all that makes a marriage special? And if that is so, then doesn't that notion seem a wee bit lunatic?
There are many gifts we are supposed to bring into our marriages. Sexual purity is one, but there are others. For example, emotional intimacy. Some Christians, not all, believe that it's not really right to form extremely close bonds with opposite-sex friends because that closeness should be reserved for marriage. The trust and commitment are crucial aspecsts of marriage. Marriage is also a partnership and finding your other half, and all of that matters; sex is just one part.
9-10ths_Penguin said:
If you say so. I think that's the general interpretation of the Epistles passages you referred to, though.
We are supposed to avoid sinful acts, but we aren't expected to be perfect. It doesn't matter what kind of sins someone commits, from milder-sounding sins like coveting and lusting, to theft, murder, whatever. Everyone can be forgiven if they sincerely repent of their wrongdoing and ask for forgiveness.
So do I, but when you set up a system where the only way you get to have sex is by getting married, I think you introduce the danger that this can occur.
Possibly. I guess sex just doesn't rule my life the way it rules some people's. I'm not excited about getting married so sex is 'legal'. I look forward to marriage because I'd like to be able to share the love and affection I have for people with someone who had a permanent and special place in my heart.
Hmm. Personally, I've found religion to be more of a hindrance than a help when it comes to togetherness, though I'm sure that my being an atheist has something to do with our different perspectives.
I'm sure that has something to do with it.
Religion would get in the way. Religion is rules. I'm sure everybody hates the treacly sweet suggestion some Christians make, that you don't need religion, you just need Jesus, but that's kind of how I look at it. I sincerely believe that praying together and supporting each other's faith can be a good way to build up a relationship, but I can of course see that an atheist wouldn't view it that way. I guess it just has to do with having something in common, some common ground to return to for stability, which for Christians will be faith.
MidnightBlue said:
You can have an emotional connection without an emotional commitment. I've had some bad one-night stands, but I've also had some wonderful one-night stands with guys I still remember fondly years later. I was thinking of one of them the other day, a smart, sweet, talented, handsome man who (20 years ago) was feeling ancient on his 39th birthday. I wonder what became of him, a little, but mostly I just think back fondly on our night together -- not because of physical satisfaction but because I think we opened our hearts to each other a little, for a while -- enough that my affection for him has remained strong over the years. I don't wish I'd married him; I don't wish I could find him again; I'm just happy for the time we shared together. There are others about whom I feel the same. I think what we shared was very good, and very right, passing though it was.
That's really interesting! I've never heard a positive story about one night stands before. Thank you for sharing it.
whereismynotecard said:
Why does everyone else get married just to divorce??
Because they think they like someone and they find out too late that they really don't. Don't worry though. I'm pretty sure I'll never get married.
That's why the phrase 'don't rush in' exists, I think.
Green Gaia said:
I don't know about you, but marriage is more than just about getting to have sex with someone. It's about commitment and love and family and taxes.
I do not believe that whether you wait for marriage or not to have sex has any bearing the commitment you make to your spouse.
I assume you didn't go to Christian school.
Marriage for me isn't about being able to have sex, either. Sex is part of the package but not the reason, for me, to go through with the ceremony. All the things you listed also matter (I'm not so sure about taxes, personally, but whatever). But I do believe whether you wait or not matters. My upbringing has included numerous lessons on the importance of being a virgin when you enter a marriage and that it would be stealing a gift from your future spouse to give away your virginity to anyone else. By waiting, I'm showing that I'm putting my future husband ahead of my own desire.
mball1297 said:
In my opinion, it doesn't need to mean anything. If it feels good and doesn't hurt anyone, what's the problem?
See, I believe it's supposed to matter, it's supposed to have meaning. I believe God gave people the gift of sex to be enjoyed when a connection exists, not just for the physical pleasure of it.