Lust: Not for Men Only




Lust: Not for Men Only
July 21, 2011 | by: Carolyn McCulley | Category: Commentary

We're well into the heat of summer now, and that means many churches
 across the American landscape have, at some point, 
reiterated the modesty message for the good church ladies
 everywhere.

Wait. I can actually see that eyeroll of yours even from here. 
But, friends, don't click away just yet. 
Because I am going to go where large swaths of American 
church culture need to go on this topic … but often don't.

I'm talking about lust. And women.

For the past eight years, I've had the privilege of writing 
two books and hundreds of articles and blog posts for women,
 which then led to numerous speaking engagements. 
Right from the start, I noticed a trend at each event, whether in the U.S. or abroad. 
Invariably, one woman would wait to talk to me until the bitter end, 
because she wanted to confess something that made her feel doubly shameful. 
She wanted to talk about her lust and sexual sin, a struggle she was sure was
 hers alone among the women in church.

How did these women arrive at this conclusion? Because for years most 
churches herded the men off to talk about lust, while gathering the women 
to discuss modesty. While those are valid and much needed messages, 
they are incomplete for the culture in which we now live.

To understand the times, let's look at the messages women have absorbed
 in recent years. There are stripper pole classes at the gym and women's 
magazines with screaming headlines about sex and seduction techniques. 
The morning talk shows candidly discuss sex toy parties. "Sex and the City" 
becomes a major franchise while "Girls Gone Wild" captures drunken sexual 
escapades among college students. Abercrombie & Fitch markets push-up bikini
 tops to 8-year-old girls. Lady Gaga bursts onto the pop music scene wishing she 
could shut her Playboy mouth. Not one item is sold in the mall without an erotic image.
 And women are increasingly immersed in online porn.

This highly sexualized culture is the new normal for young women who grew 
up in the ethos of third-wave feminism's pro-porn, pro-sex work stance.
 So normal that when I spoke at a Christian college earlier this year, one 
woman raised her hand to ask, "So are you saying that it's bad that there's 
too much pornographic influence in our culture? But shouldn't women 
embrace their sexuality?"

Um, yes. And yes. That answer highlights the problem: the counterfeit has 
usurped the authentic. Sex is God's idea and his good gift to be properly 
stewarded within his design. For that reason, the church should be the
 most pro-sex group there is. We have a message of hope and redemption 
in the morass of sexual confusion. But first we need to help the women who
 are confused and in our churches right now. Here are four points on how 
to do that:

1. Give the truth about sex and why it's attacked.

Let's start with that modesty message. If it's framed as a simple "don't tempt men"
 message,
 it is incomplete and easily dismissed. We need to back up and explain first 
what is good about God's gift and how it is distorted in a myriad of ways. 
We should equip young women to be discerning about the spiritual battle 
raging around sexuality. The Adversary has no need to improve upon his 
first character assassination of God. Contradicting God's boundaries and
 insinuating that he is holding out on his creatures is nearly foolproof.

2. Teach young women not to mistake broken for normal.

Then we need to teach young women how rapidly our culture became 
porn-saturated in only one generation. That's often news to those who 
grew up in it and therefore they often don't understand the brokenness
 that follows in the wake of the sexual imagery they accept as normal. 
As John Piper says, lust is the realm of thought, imagination, and desire 
that leads to sexual misconduct—and young women often overlook how 
their drive to be sexually desirable is smack in the middle of that realm.

When young women understand the cosmic consequences of sexual sin,
 the worldviews that shape our consumption of sexual messages today, 
and how God's glory is under spiritual attack, they will not mistake any
 modesty message for a frumpy fashion campaign. Nor will they resent 
the men around them for being impediments to whatever is stylish. 
Instead, they will be sobered by how Satan still "prowls around like a
 roaring lion, seeking someone to devour" (1 Peter 5:8)—and that men 
and women alike are fair game.

3. Stop thinking that only men have seeing problems.

Let's not assume that immodesty only affects the eyes of men. Women
 are becoming increasingly visualized as well, and can be distracted in 
similar, though perhaps not identical, ways. We also need to remember 
and help those women who wrestle with same-sex attraction. After I mentioned
 this recently at a large conference, several women came up to say this is
 their temptation and how hard it is for them to be open about it 
in the church. They fear misunderstanding, judgment and gossip.

4. Create a culture of light.

We need to clearly teach that lust is a human condition, not just a masculine 
one. Knowing God's glory is at stake, we need to create humble church cultures 
where secret sin is not kept in the dark, but rather brought into the light. 
If we rightly understand the doctrine of sin, we should never be surprised
 by our own temptations nor by the confessions of others. We should 
want to create "safe harbors" for God's people to confess, repent, and 
welcome accountability for change. The roaring lion waits in the 
cover of darkness to attack what he finds there, but "whoever lives 
by the truth comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that 
what they have done has been done in the sight of God" (John 3:21).

Let us help the women in our churches experience the freedom 
of living in the light.

Carolyn McCulley is an author, speaker, and documentary filmmaker. 
She has written more about third-wave feminism in her book, 
Radical Womanhood: Feminine Faith in a Feminist World.

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