Apologies. I'm sure this has been answered before but is masturbation clearly defined as a sin or is there much debate on it?
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Apologies. I'm sure this has been answered before but is masturbation clearly defined as a sin or is there much debate on it?
Of course it isn't a sin. Little kids do it and they don't even know what they are doing. It is a normal human function and God designed us to feel and enjoy pleasure. If you really want to know the various Christian thought on this issue...use the search function. This issue has been discussed ad nauseam.
CC
the actions of "little kids" and mature adults cannot always be group as the same things. Certainly I'm sure we can all understand that children are motivated differently and with different understanding. A child for example is not sexuality motivated because it is a concept that is foreign to them unless of course they have inappropriate exposure (like abuse). As adults however our exposure to sexuality is much different and we cannot approach masturbation without applying our sense of sexuality to it as well.
Masturbation for adults is a very a sexual action where as for a child it can actually be completely removed from any sexuality at all. Little kids do not touch because of sexual desires, or because of sexual needs like for example for a release, they would instead do it out of things like curiosity or innocent exploration.
So we cannot approach masturbation like as a child does because we are not children. We are adults with adult minds, adult behaviours, and adult motivations. We are not fooling anyone when we excuse our behaviour simply because children do it; we need to grow up and act like adults.
People may claim that masturbation as an act is sinless; without lust it is merely a pleasure without consequence. However we cannot dismiss the connection of sexuality with masturbation. As children we are not sexual so masturbation is not a sexual act nor should it be thought as that however as adults it is a very sexual act and we need to treat it with the same respect that we treat sex itself. Although the bible may seem silent on the subject there is a clear design from God for our sexual organs.The Bible shows us a picture of a woman designed for a man and a man design for a woman. Together they make one unit and the design of their sexual organs is a vital part of this union; they speak of relationship and togetherness. When we touch we seek our own pleasure which is void of relationship. Void of relationship with God or with a mate. This is contrary to the point of sex itself and in essence goes against the design it was intended for and even the design of us as a whole which is focused around relationship. When we remove a God-centred focus from our actions, which is about restored relationship through Christ, the action is not for God but against and is a sin.
It isn't that complicated. This is an example of the "mental gymnastics" Christians go through to justify their dogma. Rev. Allen...a wise old Christian...just told us everything we need to know about masturbation. It isn't mentioned in scripture ANYWHERE...just like having a bowl of ice cream isn't mentioned. I hope you're not insinuating that we should tell teens that it is a sin to touch...yet expect them not to have premarital sex? That is a recipe for disaster!!!
CC
How is that a recipe for disaster? Sounds like a recipe for learning some self discipline.It isn't that complicated. This is an example of the "mental gymnastics" Christians go through to justify their dogma. Rev. Allen...a wise old Christian...just told us everything we need to know about masturbation. It isn't mentioned in scripture ANYWHERE...just like having a bowl of ice cream isn't mentioned. I hope you're not insinuating that we should tell teens that it is a sin to touch...yet expect them not to have premarital sex? That is a recipe for disaster!!!
CC
Stimulation of a sex organ isn't sexual stimulation? Do tell. How do you know what kids are and are not thinking? They do it because it feels good, and it's a sexual area of the body. How isn't it sexually motivated?the actions of "little kids" and mature adults cannot always be group as the same things. Certainly I'm sure we can all understand that children are motivated differently and with different understanding. A child for example is not sexuality motivated because it is a concept that is foreign to them unless of course they have inappropriate exposure (like abuse). As adults however our exposure to sexuality is much different and we cannot approach masturbation without applying our sense of sexuality to it as well.
Prove it.Masturbation for adults is a very a sexual action where as for a child it can actually be completely removed from any sexuality at all. Little kids do not touch because of sexual desires, or because of sexual needs like for example for a release, they would instead do it out of things like curiosity or innocent exploration.
This assumes that people do it because kids do it. This is far from the motivation many people have for masturbating, myself included. Prove that the behavior is wrong.So we cannot approach masturbation like as a child does because we are not children. We are adults with adult minds, adult behaviours, and adult motivations. We are not fooling anyone when we excuse our behaviour simply because children do it; we need to grow up and act like adults.
So what? It's sexual. Why is this a big deal?People may claim that masturbation as an act is sinless; without lust it is merely a pleasure without consequence. However we cannot dismiss the connection of sexuality with masturbation.
How WE treat sex has no bearing on this conversation. What the Bible says matters, and it says nothing about masturbation. Masturbation isn't sex. There's no other person involved. It cannot be between two people. Again, you assume that children somehow have sex cut out of their lives. Where does it come from in us, then?As children we are not sexual so masturbation is not a sexual act nor should it be thought as that however as adults it is a very sexual act and we need to treat it with the same respect that we treat sex itself.
You do the same thing when you read, play video games, watch movies solo, eat solo, and do any number of other activities by yourself for pleasure. Your argument here fails. The rest of your argument does as well, because it is a solitary act. The Bible has nothing to say about solitary sexual acts, only sexual acts with other people.Although the bible may seem silent on the subject there is a clear design from God for our sexual organs.The Bible shows us a picture of a woman designed for a man and a man design for a woman. Together they make one unit and the design of their sexual organs is a vital part of this union; they speak of relationship and togetherness. When we touch we seek our own pleasure which is void of relationship.
Christians can touch. I'm living proof. You can have a relationship with God and pleasure yourself.Void of relationship with God or with a mate.
Prove that masturbation is sex.This is contrary to the point of sex itself and in essence goes against the design it was intended for and even the design of us as a whole which is focused around relationship. When we remove a God-centred focus from our actions, which is about restored relationship through Christ, the action is not for God but against and is a sin.
If you can't say it's sinful, then why are you trying to imply it every sentence you write?masturbation is a broken solution to fix a broken system. I cannot fully say it is "sinful" as an act alone but I do know ultimately masturbation is not the goal we should be striving for and it is not a system that God intends for us.
Hi Servant John,
I see the Bible telling us to avoid sin but I don't see the Bible also saying and avoid every thing that we might think is close to sin. I understand Jesus to be saying those things are the rules of men that Jesus was so upset with the Pharisees about putting yokes on peoples necks that they can't stand up under.
dayhiker
Which leads to the question, what is lust? I've already provided a link to address this, and lust isn't what you seem to think it is."But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfill the lusts thereof." (Romans 13:14 RV)
dayhiker,
You completely misunderstould what I wrote. Here is a quote from my first post:
"Masturbation may or may not be a sin in and of itself, but lust clearly is."
If you don't believe lust is a sin, you need to read this:
"But I say to you that whoever looks on a woman to lust after her has already committed adultery with her in his heart." (Matthew 5:28 MKJV)
As for my final sentence in my previous post, "Instead of trying to figure out what all we can get away with as a Christian, why don't we see what all we can overcome as a Christian.", I believe that principle is upheld in 1 Corinthians 6:12 that reads,"All things are lawful for me; but not all things are expedient. All things are lawful for me; but I will not be brought under the power of any." (RV).
After reading the pdf at the link you provided, I was not impressed with the paper at all. It looks like a paper written by a first year siminary student. He fails to fully support his argument. He uses a Bible translation that adds confusion to the texts he discusses when almost every other translation out there does not have that confusion. The only reasons I can see for this is that he only read the verse in one translation and assumed all others were the same or he used the one version out there that gave him the opportunity to sound smart by correcting it. There was no need for this and it only confused the situation instead of clearly making his point.Which leads to the question, what is lust? I've already provided a link to address this, and lust isn't what you seem to think it is.
He carried out his thoughts just fine: That lust is directly connected to coveting, which is very different from lust being just sexual desire or just a few sexual thoughts. A simple analysis of the words he mentions will show this. I don't cite it as an end-all resource, I cite it as supporting evidence. So rather than ripping his writing style, address the evidence.After reading the pdf at the link you provided, I was not impressed with the paper at all. It looks like a paper written by a first year siminary student. He fails to fully support his argument. He uses a Bible translation that adds confusion to the texts he discusses when almost every other translation out there does not have that confusion. The only reasons I can see for this is that he only read the verse in one translation and assumed all others were the same or he used the one version out there that gave him the opportunity to sound smart by correcting it. There was no need for this and it only confused the situation instead of clearly making his point.
As for the two points he was arguing, he did not carry out his thoughts fully to support his conclusions. I could see him maybe getting a C on this paper but not worth using to support your own view of the definition of lust.