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. Keep Reading...
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