Redeeming Sexual Love

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Chapter 1

Masculinity and femininity have something to do with how men and women relate in human community, how they relate by the Spirit’s power in ways that correspond to how the Father and Son relate in divine community  [1]. L. Crabb, Fully Alive

Truth Statement: God purposefully created us relationally to reflect Him. Healthy relationships of men and women are vital to restore God’s image and experience personal fulfilment.

Before we married, Greg protected me and valued my virginity, perhaps more than I did. I intended to stay a virgin. He made it easy. Naïve, when I pushed for more than hand-holding affection, kissing aroused a passionate struggle that was confusing. I thought marriage would free Greg from what he couldn’t shake. Never doubting his promise of love and commitment, after five years of marriage, why did I feel unloved?  I thought the problem with our sex life was me; some people like peas, some like carrots, and some like sex. But NOT me!!  With time, I realized my emotions seared with every sexual encounter. I was dying. Overcome by the numbness enveloping my heart, a void within deepened. Passion, distorted by lies kept us ignorant of God’s place in our sex life. These kept us defeated, broken until we began to hear God as never before.

On a late summer day, not expecting an answer, I asked God a pleading question. Why did He create sex?! Marriage and pre-marriage books hadn’t given me what I needed or settled the questions I longed to resolve. Blinded to God’s greater plan, we’d developed unhappy patterns. His sexual advances combined with my sexual avoidance created an atmosphere of building tension which mounted as Greg battled to keep frustration and anger at bay. I would relent, and we’d experience the release necessary to bring our home back to an atmosphere that seemed stable.  Balanced on the outside, the insincerity of our sexual intimacy created a coldness I couldn’t shake. Healing came gradually. Through mutual responses of compassion and listening, we established patterns of identifying with each other’s experience and forgiveness of our failures. Finally, trust accompanied our repeated attempts at sex; developing trustworthiness in our relationship, God created heart changes through intimate understanding.

It didn’t make sense to me that a good God would prohibit something so fantastic as sex! I grew up in a strong, religious family, and knew the rules. I heard talk of saving sex for marriage, but who did that? If I entertained the question of why I should wait, it was brief. Certainly, I didn’t come up with good answers. I could confess my sins to the priest. What did it matter anyway?!

Fast forward. Married, and facing the realities of our marriage commitment, I began to see that by expectations created in previous sexual experiences, I had deeply hurt Carlene. After almost 20 years together, we had worked through so much baggage! Yet, the Lord continued to clarify my offences. Compelled by my growing understanding, I found my wife to say how sorry I am to have robbed her of the pleasure and joy of discovery in sexual intimacy. Through the sincerity of heartfelt confession, God lead Carlene and me to deeper healing than we had ever experienced before that time.

A Biblical view reveals sex is about becoming one in what is both physical and spiritual. Spiritually sex points to God’s passionate Tri-unity and physically joins Him in the procreative work of humanity. When people attempt physical intimacy without a spiritual understanding, beliefs about self, trustworthiness, and sexuality get in the way of a fulfilling experience. Everyone has a past which forms the basis for how we view life. Whether generated by relationships in the flesh or contrived through media and personal beliefs, each of us has preconceived ideas about what it means to be sexual.

Healthy views bring notions of spirituality and sexuality in line with the Truth about God’s purpose for creating us as He did. Though journeys differ, Biblical truths infuse hope in our stories. Focusing on God, we begin to set aside the me-colored glasses that create our ‘self-ish’ perspective. ‘Self-ish’ is to be limited to the perspective created by my experience; it is my perception alone. To be ‘self-ish’, in the normality of life, moves away from the negative overtones associated with the sin of selfishness. ‘Self-ish’ is a state of being; it’s how we are, you and I. Yes, it’s sin, Original Sin. Not something we knowingly chose, yet a matter of choice, none-the-less. Noted author and speaker, Rosaria Butterfield (2015) states, “Original Sin makes us not just bad, but blind. This fact -that Original Sin distorts us at the deepest level- can be an overwhelming idea. But that is not its intent. Original Sin is not meant to shame anyone. Rather, the doctrine of Original Sin is the most democratizing idea in all human history. It means that we are all in the same boat” (Preface, para 25). We’re all ‘self-ish’ until God intervenes. When God clears the fog, unveiling my narrow point of view, selfish choices are revealed and my ‘self-ish’ perspective is brought to light.

Like glasses, ‘self-ish’ points of view color everything we see. Though they prevent us from identifying with one another, ‘self-ish’ perspectives are often reasonable. After all, how can I interpret anything, except by what I have personal knowledge of, understand, or can see?

Unable to disregard these glasses, relationships are riddled by miscommunication and dysfunctional patterns. ‘Self-ish’ perspectives, while understandable, prevent us from sharing in meaningful relationships that are ultimately fulfilling.

Integrating sexuality and spirituality moves men and women, meaningfully, toward a shared perspective. Trustworthiness becomes evident as we set aside the ‘self-ish’ glasses to heal. Whether a couple or a community, people enjoy a sense of fulfilment when they connect and heal by a shared perspective.

Zakar and Neqebah: The Image of God!

Read Genesis Ch 1&2

  • Who was created in God’s image? Man       Woman      Everyone
  • After God created them in His image, what did God want the man and woman to do? (1:28)
  • What activity is necessary for this mandate to be followed?
  • After God completed the creation of humankind, what did He say about it? (1:31)

Chapter one overviews the creation story with Elohim doing the work. Genesis chapter two is a more specific account of the creation of man. Beginning with 2:4 we find further insight regarding the work of God, it was Jehovah Elohim (Yahweh) who created all that we know and love. The person of Yahweh becomes important as we get to know our Creator God.

Before Eve’s creation, imagine the process of Adam identifying and naming the various species in creation. Amid the beauty of Eden, Adam’s joy of discovery was diminished by a growing awareness. Possibly without even realizing it, Adam was searching for another like himself!

  • As Adam searched for another like himself, what did Adam conclude? (Genesis 2:20)

Already Adam felt alone and desired another, like him, with whom he could share the goodness of life. Intimacy. This beginning of human longing indicates something was incomplete. Fully created in God’s image, Adam remained unfulfilled and lonely. Then as now, God’s image cannot be realized in isolation.

According to Dr. Larry Crabb (2013), the Hebrew words zakar and neqebah, used in Genesis 1:27 for male and female, are words that demonstrate God’s image is both masculine and feminine. In his book, Fully Alive, he suggests zakar, masculinity, mirrors God’s penetrating and powerful love by moving deeply into another’s soul with life-changing impact. Dr. Crabb proposes that neqebah, femininity, reveals God’s relational nature and irresistible beauty that invites others to join Him in unity that reflects the relationships of the Trinity (pp.23-78).

  • After God had created Adam (zakar), and before He created Eve (neqebah), how did God evaluate humankind? (2:18-20)
This is not to say that men cannot be relational. Neither does it imply that women, the men’s “ezer,” are not impactful! Quite the contrary. However, it does mean that without the presence of the opposite sex and the diverse focus each possess, the creation of humankind, fully in God’s image, was “not good.” In other words, before God created Eve, the fullness of God’s image, though entirely present in zakar, was NOT entirely evident!

Knowing how together men and women reflect God’s image is vital to a healthy view of self and purpose!

Theologian T.F. Torrance (1984) said, “The basic unit of creation is not man or woman but man-woman, man and woman in a divinely ordained unity” (p. 7). This unit explains the loneliness and longing of which many singles struggle. It also accounts for deep loneliness that persists in marriage when solitary thinking is the norm.

Equal or Complimentary? …TeleologicaL!!

A teleological view of God believes He created us purposefully knowing the end to design the beginning.[2]

Read John 1:1-5&14

  • From the Genesis accounts, and John 1, who was present at Creation?
  • What was the Spirit’s role? (Genesis 1:1)
  • Fill in the blanks from Genesis 1:26: Let ________________make man in ______________own image.

God referred to Himself in the plural. These accounts of creation demonstrate His nature, His purpose, and what God is moving toward when His plan is complete. Jesus existed in the beginning and was present when the Spirit moved over the deep. 

  • To what extent did Jesus participate in creation? (John 1:3)
  • What happened as the Spirit moved? (Genesis 1:2&3)
  • From the scripture we’ve read so far, who is Yahweh our Creator, and what is He like?
So, when Yahweh Elohim created, who was in charge? And were they equal or complimentary? Yahweh, the LORD is One. The Spirit (Ruach) moved, Elohim spoke, and the Word that made everything became flesh generations later. Individually these are the great US who purposefully created you and me to be “like Him.” One God, Yahweh became flesh so we might conceptualize God’s intention for humankind, Jesus’ life reveals that both God’s nature and human nature are inherently relational. Like God, with His image in us by His design, relationships complement one another and are most satisfying and very good when we function productively together as equals. We’ll struggle with a conviction that there is “something more” until we experience the relational health of God’s design.
 

Understanding God’s purposes reveal something about Himself. A teleological viewpoint gives substance to His created order, and definition to our deepest longings and the connected relationships we desire.

Emotions are NOT a Choice!

  • What was Adam’s response when he discovered Eve? (2:23)
  • What kind of partner did Adam find in Eve that he could not find in any other created being 2:20?

To reflect the divine US required God create zakar in a single being, and neqebah in another. We are emotionally and sexually diverse, and that was intentional! God pronounced His creation “very good,” only after He had created perspectives, juxtaposed yet intimately united to reflect Himself.

When God brought a woman to Adam, he was overjoyed and felt whole! “Bone of my bone…” Adam finally felt complete when he discovered Eve. In fellowship with another, celebration and joy took the place of longing in God’s image bearer.

  • What did that celebration of zakar and neqebah look like? (2:23-24)
  • How do we know that Adam’s longings were, initially, completely satisfied? (2:25)

A suitable helper and diverse community were essential to God’s “very good” image in humankind. Together, the strengths and characteristics of men and women reflect God’s image more completely than either can do alone. Without the intimacy of connection, God declared that humankind is “not good.” Alone, we are insufficient to sustain physical and emotional life that reflects the greatness of Him.

Just as with Adam, emotions evidence there is “good” and “not good.” Emotions evidence something about who you are and how God created you. Additionally, they indicate where we stand in relationships. Alone until God created another, Adam’s emotions came alive when he met another, who was like him, but NOT!

However, God didn’t stop at “not good”, and neither should we. Our Triune God is diverse and complicated yet intimately united. He is one: the author of what is “good” and “not good.”  In His image is a wholeness that drives us to find fulfilment in diverse relationships that reflect His triunity.

Sabotage to the Celebration

From Genesis 2: 22-25

  • How do we know that Adam & Eve were united in marriage, more than just united sexually? (vs. 24)
  • How do we know there was nothing to hinder Adam and Eve from enjoying and sharing vulnerably in life and intimacy? (vs. 25)

Leave and cleave. One flesh. No shame. God established physical intimacy in marriage, beginning with Adam and Eve. And God what God established in Adam and Eve He indicated was “very good.” The Hebrew words translated as “one flesh” in Genesis 2:24 means to be united[3] in the flesh of their bodies.[4] In the Bible,

Becoming one flesh refers to the act of sex and was created to point to the divine intimacy of knowing.

Sex is vital to the well-being of humanity. In addition to being required for procreation, sex is an activity, an experience, and a picture that, in marriage, celebrates God-ordained unity. Sex in singleness distracts God’s created beings from His plan for intimate understanding that can only be discovered in the commitment of covenant. Focusing on isolated pleasure in and outside of marriage, eventually, sex becomes confusing, hurtful, and isolating. We weren’t created to be alone. The fullness of God’s image, the imago Dei, is complete and very good only when people function in unity and community. Married and single, celebrating relationships and honoring divine unity is integral to understanding and celebrating God’s plan for our lives. Yahweh is one God, but never alone. As such, single and married people should live in communities and be there for one another, in intimate understanding, as God designed. 

The story doesn’t conclude with the fulfilment of Adam’s deepest desire by meeting Eve. Somewhere in The Garden, God’s opposition was crafting its own plan. The satan[1]  hinted that God might not be trustworthy.[5] Listening to an-other, Adam and Eve relinquished their authority to by trusting a perspective that was not God’s. Trusting the adversary’s words set in motion relational patterns where questions of trust and trustworthiness are relentless. Failing to consider how choices affect unity, from that time onward, zakar and neqebah continue with a ‘self-ish’ perspective in place. Failing to set aside our ‘self-ish’ lenses zakar and neqebah in singleness and marriage miss out on the belonging and intimacy we were created to enjoy.

The unity, trust, belonging, and intimacy lost in human relationships, remain necessary to experience the personal value that we possess because God’s image remains. God’s  image, unity and intimate understanding, was targeted by the original sin. And this remains the target of Original Sin in each of our lives today. In broken relationships, shame and fear have replaced the honesty and certainty we long to share.

Adam and Eve felt uncomfortable for the first time, after eating the fruit from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Understanding evil, the vulnerability they once enjoyed with God and one another became unpleasant because of uncertainty and lack of trust. Disregarding God’s boundaries violated their unity with Him and one another. And the only one willing to take responsibility for the brokenness of these relationships was the satan.

No longer in authority on earth, uncertainty passed from Adam & Eve to every generation and broken relationships along with it. Without unity, questions of trust still linger. Can I trust you? Can you trust me? Can we trust God? Lack of trust and fear prevent intimate understanding, even invading the marriage bed. Without intimacy grounded by trust, in and out of marriage, we cannot reflect the unity of the Trinity.

Though broken relationships fail to reflect our Creator, His intrinsic nature remains. Diverse people, driven by deep-seated needs, long for connection and fulfilment both spiritually and often sexually. In an environment of brokenness, heart connection does not feel safe. With trustworthiness compromised in this way, we separate the spiritual from the sexual in a disconnected pursuit of both. Outside of God’s design, religious practice, and sexual practice diametrically oppose one another and drive people apart.

Two Sides of One Coin

Spirituality and sexuality are foundational to who God created us to be: His Image bearers. Together, what is sexual and what is spiritual are threads of the same fabric designed to draw people together into relationships as they were at the beginning: relationships that reflect Yahweh Himself.

Spirituality cannot be isolated from sexuality without destroying the essence of both.

Spirituality is shallow without a proper view of sex and leads to legalism and judgment. Sexuality is out of control and destructive without a view of sex that is relevant to spiritual truth. To satisfy intimate longing, we must integrate our spiritual and sexual beliefs and practices. The result of integrating spirituality and sexuality is divine intimacy.

God became flesh to reveal what integrated spirituality and sexuality would look like. A single male, Jesus honored women and said I came that [you] might have life …abundantly! (John 10:10) …he who follows Me will not walk in the darkness but will have the Light of life (John 8:12). Take my yoke …and learn from me …and you will find rest for your soul (Matthew 11:29). Learning from Jesus, we join Him in fellowship with others, and life takes a turn for the good …toward very good.

  • From the Bible’s first reference to sex, fill in the blanks from this verse. “And God said to them, _____________________the earth, and _________________________ it.” (1:28)

Fill! Subdue! In other words: “What I’ve created you to do, do to the full!” When God commanded Adam and Eve to multiply and dominate the earth, He affirmed sex is part of His “very good” creation. He also invited them to join Him in His creative work, but in a way that required them to trust and wait. Trusting and waiting for the other to be there, and trusting and waiting for God’s blessing and His provision.

 

Conclusion

To experience fulfilment, meaning, and value in relationships, worthiness must be affirmed. God’s image, the essence of God in you in me makes everyone worthy, and greatly valued. Yearning for unity and trustworthiness is the bottom line we all share. Our Triune God is the epitome of trustworthiness. We choose to believe it or not. You and I can’t shake the desire to know and be known because we are like Him! Equal in our neediness, men and women are passionately driven. Anglican Theologian Harry Blamires (1963) says, “Passionate youthful longings and dissatisfactions [are a] pointer to the divine creation … [we are] called to [His] glory” (p. 180). Passionate expression from one individual to another looks different. We are different! Though differing in appearance, our needs to connect are equally intense.

Some cannot set aside their passionate emotions to connect in physical ways, any more than others can disregard their physical drive to connect with their partner’s point of view. Uniquely created, all are passionate for something of significance. This is the image of God that longs for productive expression.

 

We are sexual because we are spiritual; we are spiritual because we are sexual. Zakar and neqqbah, it’s God’s design to share in intimate understanding that knows the immense value of diverse individuals.! Author and speaker Debra Hirsch (2015) said, “sexuality and spirituality are in fact two sides of the same coin.”(pp. 26 & 51). She suggests that

“Looking to Jesus as our sexual model forces us to move beyond our fixation with genital sexuality to a much broader view of human sexuality, one that includes non-genital intimacy”

When people have sex without respect for God’s design, the flesh drives without the integrity of spiritual unity. Thus, sexual vulnerability is surrounded by insecurity, shame, and abuse. Confusion reigns since we have longings we can neither satisfy nor escape. Respecting one flesh unity as God intends creates spiritual meaning in the physical expression of who we are: image-bearers. Honoring the image of God spiritually and physically draws us into fulfilling relationships beyond what is imaginable!

Why sex? Why wait? Sex is deeply meaningful and only a celebration when a husband and wife come together to affirm an eternal commitment and the personal sacrifice required to experinece the unity and wholeness of God’s image, given to individual men and women from diverse perspectives. Disregarding its holy design, sexual expression creates confusion: about God, about love and relationships. Discovering the sacredness of sexual union is necessary to come to a place of complete satisfaction and healing.

If you are unmarried and still a virgin, carefully consider your choices. Becoming sexually active does matter! Redeeming Sexual Love explains why sex is more about God’s righteous gift than human, passionate expression. If you are sexually active and wondering, what now? Be assured, God doesn’t intend to hold you back from feeling whole. Rather, He wants to move you into the wholeness of relationships that are intimately healthy for you and those around you. Trust Him as He leads you to live according to His plan.

Married? Listen. Feel the emotions, and learn the perspective of your spouse. Needs, feelings, and experiences are critical; past experiences are influential.  These establish foundations for who we become, how we relate, and how we grow.

Married and Single, unity such as the Trinity has always experienced is the goal. Commitment to sex in marriage is a vehicle for understanding God and learning to function in the kind of unity He has always enjoyed! Restraint to honor God’s plan and His Biblical Picture is crucial to knowing God and understanding ourselves. Godly restraint creates space for you and I to be compassionate and experience unity. Don’t give up! God hasn’t given up on you!

 

Time for Reflection

  • When it comes to sexuality, which description is most like your view of God? An angry parent? Or a compassionate friend?
  • What does God’s image look like in you? Identify the longings that keep you engaging with others. Is it a desire for connection? Acceptance? Belonging? Something else?
  • Are you single? God’s plan is good. Waiting for His time to celebrate with someone likeminded who is also committed to His plan is mutually satisfying and incomparable to the random experiences of today!
  • Are you called to remain single? Abstinence as a single celebrates God’s design and honors His Image embedded in your sexuality. Celebrate by serving God in fellowship with other believers.
  • Are you single and sexually active? His image remains in you; your longings reflect that. It isn’t too late. He wants you to trust Him and passionately await His timing. He knows the struggle. And He invites you to join Him by sacrificing your fleshly drive to to trust what He says is good. Having a life partner celebrates God’s eternal commitment and establishes an environment for intimacy that challenges isolated thinking draws us to identify with Him in acts of sacrifice to serve another.
  • Are you lonely in your singleness? Don’t be confused by relentless hormonal desire. Find a fellowship of like-minded believers who are committed to being relevant to church and culture through the passionate pursuit of His plan for the body of Christ. Singles are also called to serve, sacrifice, and celebrate the Biblical picture in honoring God’s timing and trusting Him to provide.
  • Are you married and not yet enjoying the commitment as you anticipated? With or without the cooperation of your spouse, God has a way forward. His plan is a hopeful place to start. He changes hearts through experience that’s consistent with His Word.
  • To reflect our Trinitarian God isn’t a matter of being married or single. Rather, each of us is called to celebrate God by uniting spiritual truths with sexual design and applying it to individual circumstances.
  • What has God called you to? How can you apply these truths in your life? How do these truths apply to our relationships in the body of Christ?
  • Honor God as you consider the relevance of His Word to your experience. Sexual choices have natural and real outcomes physically and emotionally. Allow God to reconstruct solid foundations for your sexual expression.
Endnote:

[1] The authors note that in ancient Hebrew and Greek texts, God’s adversary remains unnamed, “a satan,” meaning one who stands opposed. Choosing to be consistent with the original texts, the authors choose not to honor God’s opposer with the dignity of a proper name, but to refer to it as Jesus did: “the satan,” that stands opposed to God, or His adversary. See Footnote5

Footnotes:

[1] Crabb, L. (2013). Fully Alive, A Biblical Vision of Gender That Frees Men and Women to Live Beyond Stereotypes. Grand Rapids. BakerBooks. (p. 28).

[2] Pearcey, N.R. (2018). Love Thy Body [Audiobook] Retrieved from https://www.audible.com/pd/Love-Thy-Body-Audiobook/B078NG97HN

[3] Hebrew Lexicon :: H259 (KJV). Retrieved from http://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/Lexicon/Lexicon.cfm?Strongs=H259&t=KJV

[4] Hebrew Lexicon :: H1320 (KJV). Retrieved from http://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/Lexicon/Lexicon.cfm?Strongs=H1320&t=KJV

[5] The Bible Project. (3 June 2019). Mackie, T; Collins, J. The Satan and Demons -Question and Response. Retrieved from  https://bit.ly/2FioujB .

Unpublished work. Copyright 2026, Greg and Carlene Seghers