With The Perrys - Sex, Sexual Trauma, and God’s Design with Dr. Juli Slattery
Episode Date: April 13, 2026Sex is a living metaphor. It’s how we experience oneness with the person we’ve committed to be in a covenant relationship with, similar to the relationship between Christ and the church. Dr. Juli ...Slattery joins the Perrys to discuss the importance of seeing sex as an ongoing journey of intimacy, not just a physical act, requiring emotional vulnerability and communication. The Perrys’ conversation with Dr. Slattery covers sexual trauma, pornography, entitlement, libido, and purity culture. Everything God created, He designed to be a reflection of himself, and that includes sex. Single, dating, married, widowed, divorced – this episode about sexuality is a helpful and necessary conversation for everyone to learn from. Connect with Dr. Juli Slattery: https://www.authenticintimacy.com/ https://www.instagram.com/authenticintimacy https://www.authenticintimacy.com/podcast/ https://www.authenticintimacy.com/books/ Scripture References Psalm 37 This Episode is Sponsored By: https://meetfabric.com/perry — Help protect your family today with Fabric by Gerber Life. You could be offered coverage instantly with NO health exam required! https://gominno.com/ — Sign up online with code PERRY to get your first month FREE! - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, St. Names, how are you?
What up with y'all?
I hope you're having a great, grand, beautiful, probably hard, difficult, complicated, complex, nuanced day.
It wasn't until we started and I realized what hat you had on.
It reminds us, reminds me of our anniversary.
Did you enjoy that?
I did.
I did.
You sure?
I did.
No, I really did enjoy it because the first time we went, so we went to Disney World for our anniversary.
The first time I went to Disney World.
of my life was like, but two years ago,
we took all of our children and it was miserable.
Yeah, it wasn't enjoyable.
Because it was like 115 degrees outside.
I mean, it was enjoyable.
Like, you have moments where your kids are looking at Mickey Mouse,
like, ah.
Oh, yeah, when my three-year-olds, he was three at the time,
he saw Mickey Mouse and he literally, like, thought he was,
he was in a different world.
They brought a lot of joy to be.
And then 10 minutes past,
I want to go home.
I personally think, and this ain't even an ad.
I wish Disney would pay us.
I think, I think,
more people should go to Disney World
as adults.
Like, it's just a different experience.
You know what I'm saying?
I thought it was funny that our kids felt some type of way
that we went to Disney World without them.
And they ain't going to see it.
I said August and Sage, they got to grow up a little bit.
I can't do that again with toddlers.
I just, I just can't.
I will say, here's a teachable moment.
Even people are like, why did y'all go to Disney World?
Because life is hard.
And I was like, we need to have fun.
I don't want to, I love.
beaches. I enjoy beaches, but sometimes
you just have to have some fun.
I was shocked though when you introduced
the idea to me because I'm always going to
like Mexico, Dominican Republic
or Costa Rica. She's like, let's go to
Disney World. I said, I need joy. I need
natural, holy ways
to give me some dopamine
and some serotonia. I was like, I just need
to go down somebody's roller coaster.
Scared you to life.
Speaking of dopamine, serotonin, serotonin, I just want to
welcome Dr. Julie Slattery.
How are you? I'm doing really well.
I love Disney too.
Yeah, yeah.
When the last time you've been?
Oh, man, maybe a year ago.
Oh, that was recent.
But I got another trip schedule.
Just me and my husband are going very soon.
What parks did y'all go to?
Y'all went all of them?
We have been to all of them.
I think most recently we went to Magic Kingdom and Epcot.
Yeah.
That's the hard part.
So we're not alone.
It's like, it's a world.
It's encouraging to me because I'm like, yeah.
Yeah, we went to three parks.
No, I'm saying it's dope.
All that they went to Disney World.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, we used to take the kids, but it is more fun as grownups.
You actually can enjoy it.
Yes.
You ain't anybody begging you for, you know, every teddy bed, AC,
you want all the funnel cakes.
It's like, go to bed.
And it was at some point.
I don't know if y'all experienced that.
We walked through the park.
I said, honestly, we have been at like three hours.
I said, we can go.
Like, I just want to lay down.
Yeah.
And I'm not going to cry like my son.
I'm like, yeah, I want to lay down too.
My knees hurt.
My ankles are in pain.
There you go.
Just wait.
It only gets worse.
I was trying to describe, are you a, you're a psychiatrist, you're a therapist.
Like, what, what, what, what, what are, I know you're a doctor.
I don't know exactly what kind.
Yeah, I'm a psychologist.
Okay, so what's the difference?
Psychiatrists are medical doctors, so they go to medical school and then they specialize in
psychiatry.
So they're going to be dealing with prescribing medication and depression and psychosis.
So psychologists are more like we get our degree in helping people talk through trauma,
manage anxiety, depression, relationships.
So it's like a talking doctor.
What got you into that?
I feel like I asked you before because it's just a fascinating thing what causes people to journey into that.
It is, yeah.
So I think I probably decided to go into psychology when I was a young adult, maybe 18 or 20 in college.
and just always wanted to make God's word really practical for people.
And there's a lot of psychology in the Bible,
but your psychology has to be rooted in the fear of the Lord.
You know, Proverbs says that, the beginning of all wisdom is the fear of the Lord.
And so just noticing, like I had an interest in that feel,
but noticing how quickly we can go off track
when we just pursue wisdom the way the world does.
And so just a real passion to speak in spaces of like marriage and family and women's issues from a biblical perspective.
I'll stop.
Yeah.
Do you think most people are crazy?
I think we're all crazy.
Okay.
I just want to know.
It's just by degree in how well we mask it.
So.
I know we're going to talk about a particular subject, but I, you know, I asked my therapist this one time.
is it ever frustrating when you're working with someone and you feel like you can't help them because they don't know how to be honest?
Yes.
You feel like you're wasting your time.
Yes.
So like when you ask a question, are we all crazy?
I mean, you got to kind of define that.
We're all hiding.
You know, like we're all, we all learn these ways to cope with the bad stuff in us and the bad stuff we experience in the world.
And so we have like what psychologists would call like defense mechanisms and ways that we survive.
And so when you bring that up, you know, a lot of what a good therapist is going to do is peel back layers to get you to discover what are your root fears.
Like what drives you.
What's your motivation?
And so what you're talking about there, Preston, is, you know, people that you meet with that they don't want to go there.
They just want you to fix their problem.
or they just want to be validated in their current situation.
But they're not ready or they're not able or they're not willing to do that hard work.
So, yeah, it's just, and I think that they're a therapist who will just keep taking your money and listening to you.
But I think somebody who really wants to see people flourish will be like, come back when you're ready.
Yeah.
Yeah, no waste my time, no waste your.
That's so funny because me and Preston talked about that this morning.
just about the fear of being known.
Yeah.
And just all of the work we put into over the years to keep ourselves from that.
And just the Lord was showing me just parts of my life, even presently, but in the past,
that I've just learned how to find just really fancy, dope fig leaves.
And it's like in deep seasons, I think wilderness seasons and pruning seasons,
it's like he's like yeah
that doesn't work for you anymore
you know what I'm saying and that is that's a scary
it's a hard process
to learn how to trust him to cover you
but it's also like a double conundrum
because what we were talking about is
how the enemy the devil
can kind of make you feel like in the world
those relationships were easier
because you cope with people
who who you hit in front of
all the time
but in Christ
Christ forces you not to hide, he removes those fig leaves.
And so even though you might have been comfortable more in your past life, you wasn't known
at all because you were presenting a version of yourself that wasn't really you.
Yeah.
You know, and so I think that's the beauty about, you know, serving the Lord.
The Lord forces us to be bare and vulnerable before people.
So, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so true.
Yeah.
So we want to talk about sex.
let's talk about sex baby let's talk about you
I don't know if they'll flag us
I would hate to be flagged because of Madonna
that would be something
I would be like
You know what's crazy?
I didn't even know who song it was
That's her song ain't it?
Isn't that Madonna?
No?
Nobody?
I don't know. You mean a fact checker
like in the debate?
I just remember hearing it when I was a young kid
I feel like it's her I don't know
I think it was like about AIDS or HIV
I don't know I don't know I don't know I do know that Dr.
Julius Ladder is here and we want to talk about sex
One, y'all are obsessed with it.
Every conversation we have ever had where sex is in the heading, the views go up.
That's why we don't talk about it because we are not, we're not going to itch y'all ears like that.
And we don't know what we're talking about.
Secondly, I do think it's a helpful, necessary conversation to have because it's pivotal.
Like, we are sexual beings.
We are married.
We're engaged.
We're dating.
We're widow.
We're divorced.
We're all this stuff.
We're traumatized.
And I just think you're the, you will be the best person.
Yeah.
I just want to say on air, Jackie has talked about you a lot.
Yeah.
Through the years.
I am.
Yeah.
Every time she comes back, she just brags about, like, how much she learned with you.
She administered to myself.
That's encouraging.
I feel the same way about you, Jackie.
Every time I interact with you, I just am like, that woman just speaks the truth.
Amen.
So it was so much courage.
Thank you.
She, I.
I'm just.
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questions what i guess in your journey you know as a psychologist what brought you into this field
to start writing and thinking about sex yeah that's a million dollar question right there
i certainly didn't sign up for it or think that this would ever be what the lord would call me to
it was really only about 15 years ago that i intentionally entered this space of
I guess becoming an expert on sexuality from a Christian standpoint.
And so I had spent a lot of years as a therapist and then as more of a generalist in terms
of helping people with marriage and family issues.
I worked at Focus on the family for a time.
And I just went through a season of about maybe nine or ten months of the Lord just
really drawing my attention to himself.
and I was pretty wrecked for that season.
And maybe you've gone through something like that
or our viewers have gone through that
where it's like God is just calling you to seek his face.
And so, yeah, it was like a wrecking of the Holy Spirit in my life.
So for about that period of time, nine or ten months,
I couldn't watch TV.
I couldn't read a magazine.
Like I couldn't do anything but take care of my family work.
and seek God.
And he began to like literally give me a pain in my chest that just felt heavy.
It would wake me up at night.
It would just cause me to get on my knees and pray.
And I was being mentored by a woman who was discipling me through this.
And then she just said, you need to start asking the Lord, like, what he is calling you to?
What is this pain?
And so I started like asking him and went through some seasons of like,
and fasting. And he just made it really clear through the course of like a month that he was
calling me to speak on this topic of sexuality, that there is so much pain and brokenness
that the church wasn't acknowledging and wasn't addressing. And so it was like just, it was one
of those seasons where all you know to do is wake up and do the next thing that God puts in
front of you. So started this ministry called Authentic Inimacy, about 14 years.
ago. And I have been on a learning journey ever since of just seeking the Lord and working
with people and entering into these very difficult and painful conversations around sexuality.
Yeah. Why did God make sex? Why is that a thing? Well, let me ask you first. What's the answer
that comes to your mind? Like a good psychologist, I got to answer your question with a question.
I know I got anxiety. I think, well, I mean, I
think it's couched. It has to be couched in Ephesians 5, you know, that marriage is a reflection of
his gospel. And I think sex seems to be the way we experience oneness in the same way that the
Trinity experiences oneness. And so I think that has to be, it can't just be procreation.
And that's not her saying like some weirdos actually like you have this ideology and
theology that the Trinity is intimate in what we're one.
They're one.
They're one.
And so I think one of the closest means of oneness in relationship with another is through
the sexual union.
And so I'm not, yeah, I think the oneness of the Trinity is something that is mysterious
and deep.
And so it's sex.
And so I just, I guess that's one reason.
Yeah.
So in Ephesians 5, it's not specifically talking about the Trinity, although there's a lot
theology around that. But it's talking about a husband and wife being a representation of Christ
of the church. So I think when we step back, and I'm so glad you brought that up, because a lot of
people are like, oh, it's how we make babies or how we show love. But that really isn't the depth
of what the scripture teaches us. The Bible really shows us that everything God created, he created
to reveal himself ultimately. So like a tree, you know, it's not just to give a show.
shade, we see all these scriptures that refer to plant life to help us reveal something about God
and our relationship with Him. And so if you pick up your Bible and you open any page,
you're going to see physical, created things that reveal spiritual truth. That's good.
And so we have to look at sex and we have to look at marriage to say, okay, what did God
create this to reveal about himself? And what we see throughout scripture is that the
one flesh union between a man and a woman that the scripture would call marriage is revealing
something called a covenant, a covenant relationship that God has with his people. And we see this
metaphorical language, both in the Old Testament and New Testament, that essentially is connecting
the idea of sex and marriage with God's covenant love. And so ultimately, God created sex
to be a living metaphor to show us what covenant is
and how he loves us with an intimate, faithful covenant love.
Yeah, wow.
Wow.
And this is the reason why the scriptures talk about,
like, you know, if a man joins body with the prostitute,
you know what I'm saying?
Like how offensive it is to the Holy and righteous God
will we give our bodies to somebody that we're not in covenant relationship.
Exactly.
That's deep.
That's deep.
I think what's scary about that is how un-nostic.
that understanding is.
Yep.
You know what I'm saying?
Because even when you say it, I know it's true,
but that's just not communicated on TV and music.
That's not what we were raised on.
Because I even think in Christian spaces is you do this because you're supposed to.
Or you do this because you don't want to sin.
You don't go to hell or you got to make babies.
But that vision for it is just deeper.
You know what I'm saying?
But also beautiful.
Yeah, it's very beautiful.
It's like, oh, no wonder.
this thing is like being used and abused in crazy ways.
Like would you, would you say that you, like, oh, I want to go so many places?
Why do you think sex is so powerful in light of the way scripture defines it?
Because it is one of the most powerful living metaphors we have.
Okay, so like if you look at the predominant metaphors in scripture that help us,
us understand God relationally.
One of them is a parent-child, which talk about a powerful relationship.
You never get over who your parents are, good or bad.
It's so imprinting on who you are.
And God created that to be a powerful relationship because it is a primary way we understand
who God is, is understanding family, understanding father, children, that provision,
that protection, that discipline.
And the second one, and I guess they would be equal,
is that relationship of a husband and wife.
It is throughout scripture.
Like from the very beginning, Genesis,
when God creates Adam and Eve,
has them naked in a garden.
And we have the verse,
for this reason,
a man will leave his father and mother
and be united to his wife.
And the two become one flesh, which is sex.
All right.
So that verse that Paul repeats in Ephesians 5,
all the way through to Revelation
where we're told mysteriously
that there's this wedding feast of the lamb
and his bride and they're joined together.
And so this metaphor is by God's design,
so powerful because his love,
his covenant love that pursues us,
that is faithful to us,
that knows us intimately,
is so powerful.
Yeah, that's really good.
So we have to look at
what are we meant to experience on earth
and what is it revealed to us about God?
Yeah.
And, you know, Jackie said it's so unnatural.
But what is unnatural?
The fact that we can't grasp that
because Satan has so vandalized it
or the statement that that's what it was always meant to be.
You know, I think we're living in the unnatural state
of not being able to integrate our sexuality with who God is.
Wow. That's really profound.
That's a fact.
Sheesh.
Wow.
So some years back, a lady at our church, she said something that always stuck with me.
She said, when you're not married, the devil wants you in everybody bed.
But when you are married, he don't even want you in your own.
Yeah.
That's so true.
And I was like, wow.
Yeah.
And we obviously know that the enemy attacks not just sex, but just marriage because it is a great picture of the gospel, Christ's relationship with this church.
Right.
So with all that being said, when it comes to the way the world pervert sex and the enemy attacks marriage and sex,
like what is a good way for a man and woman to connect?
Because I can hear some men, and I have disciples some men who say, you know, if sex is good, we should do it.
It don't matter how we feel.
Like it almost as if the sex is the thing that fixes a marriage, a relationship.
Right. And so I like how important for us how important is it for us to like emotionally connect
on a level to even get to the place for I. Am I making sense a little bit? Yeah. Absolutely.
You're making sense and I have heard a lot of guys say that. So you're not alone. And you know,
I will say that there's something to that. Something to do what? To what the husband is saying.
You know, even when we look at the biology.
of it. You know, God designed sex, particularly regular monogamous sex. I almost said monotonous.
That can be that too. But he designed it in such a way that your brain gets hits of dopamine,
which is a pleasure hormone. You get endorphins, which is that sense of feeling good and at
peace with the world. But there's also a hormone called oxytocin that bonds you together.
So women have tons of oxytocin in our bodies at any given time.
And a lot when you give birth, when you're breastfeeding,
because it helps you bond with this little creature that is going to destroy your life basically.
It makes you feel connected.
And so women will get oxytocin in their bodies at high levels
when they go on a date with their husband or he holds their hand.
men only get high doses of oxytocin right after intercourse.
Wow.
And so a man will get like a 500-time dose of oxytocin right after intercourse,
which makes him feel bonded to his wife.
And so when a husband will say, that's how I feel close to you,
like there's science behind that.
Wow.
But, and I say a big butt here, because that's not all there is to the gift of sex.
It's not just a physical act.
if you've been married any length of time, you realize that that physical act is only going to go so far in terms of keeping you close.
And it actually can become a source of conflict because you're so different.
And so you have to switch to understanding the gift of sex to actually being more a journey of intimacy, not just an activity.
And there are times in marriage where the activity is going to break down for one reason or another.
and you have to take the invitation
to go beyond what's happening physically
and get naked emotionally.
Wow.
And a lot of couples can be married for decades
and they know how to do the physical act
but they can't be vulnerable about the shame,
the fears, their longings, their desires,
even navigating how they feel rejected
when their spouse doesn't want sex
or how they feel objectified.
And so it's really an invitation to go
that deeper level of what is the journey of intimacy that we're on, not just physically, but beyond that.
That's really good.
Yeah.
It seems as if a part of the function of being in the world is that sex is self-centered, you know,
like it's useful to serve and meet all of our needs in a way, you know.
And so I think it can be an undoing to get married and realize that this act isn't solely about me.
You know what I'm saying?
As parents, a lot of us have experienced our children watching something and then something pops on the screen to add that we didn't want them to see.
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with brokenness.
100%.
Yeah.
It's like literally.
It's literally no void.
It's like it's like enthralled in our community, like in our communities and our shows
and our movies on our billboards.
And in our churches.
And in.
And in.
And even through like purity culture and like you can grow up in churches in Christian schools
and get a different kind of brokenness around sexuality.
Yeah.
And to me it kind of speaks to to to the power that God has behind the intention of sex.
that the fact that the enemy attacks it that much.
Yes.
You know what I'm saying?
It must be a very powerful tool for us.
There's a Catholic theologian who says,
if you want to look at what is most holy,
just look at what Satan most readily desecrates.
I'm kind of paraphrasing him, but referring to sex.
Like, why does Satan come after this?
Because he knows how powerful of a metaphor it is.
Yeah.
And so if he can keep us from experiencing,
seeing the fullness of that metaphor through pornography, through shame, through trauma,
through selfishness, then he'll do that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, you know, he said something earlier that I wanted to pick up on Jackie, that it has to be
more than selfishness.
You know, I've had about 15 years to think about all these different topics around sexuality.
And, you know, one of the things that I realize is, like, we have been so disciples
by our culture to think of sex as an expression of me.
Even if it's not self, an expression of how I feel about you.
And I think, unfortunately, in a lot of church settings,
instead of challenging that assumption,
we just kind of put Christian guardrails around it.
Like, as long as you get married,
it's an expression of how you feel.
But God never designed sex to be an expression of how we feel.
even in marriage.
Wow.
So if you are like, oh, I'm not attracted to my spouse anymore, I don't feel love.
It's not about how you feel.
It's about remembering and celebrating the covenant promise that you made.
Wow.
Which is a paradigm shift.
Because again, we don't talk about that in the church.
Yeah.
I mean, my mind immediately goes to, I think for, and I'm, I ain't studied it.
I'm just going off a conversation.
it seems like when you have a low libido or a high libido that does kind of dictate the like sex,
you know what I feel like doing it? I don't feel like doing it. Like how do you make sense of that
when it comes to that experience? Yeah. Yeah, if I could sort of reframe that a little bit in a way that
has been helpful for me and my marriage and then I think has helped a lot of other couples.
This is just stuff that I've learned along the way. We typically talk about sex.
of marriage in terms of high and low libido.
And what I think is more helpful is to talk about in terms of initiating desire
and responsive desire.
Okay, because that reframes it to say you have sexual desire, it just is different
than your spouses and it's different in different seasons.
And so initiating desire, which is what probably about 70, 75% of men have, is they're
going to be the one who's thinking about sex more often, who's thinking this is a way I connect
to my spouse, who is pursuing sex, who is initiating in the marriage. The wife, about 70 to 75%
of the time, particularly when you've got kids in the home and she's tired, is going to be more,
this is a furthest thing from my mind. But if you take me to Disneyland, if you give me away
from the kids, if you romance me, like if you give me time to get in the mood, I can actually
engage in this and enjoy it. So what ends up happening is usually have one of each in a marriage,
not always, but the initiator is always asking. And the responsive person is always sort of
caught off guard and kind of develops a muscle of resisting. Like, I'm not ready. Leave me alone.
And so you have a dysfunctional dance. And then it becomes defined as high,
libido and low libido instead of the fact that this is something you both want in marriage,
you just have a different way of approaching it.
Wow.
That's really good.
I have a lot of questions.
In our experience, that's legit.
And I think a part of what has complicated it is sexual trauma and abuse.
Can you speak to, I guess, what sexual abuse and sexual trauma does to all the things
and how to work through that as a couple?
Yeah, it is not only profoundly disruptive.
I also think people need to know how prevalent it is.
So there was a report by the CDC that came out.
I mean, these numbers just astound me that said that over 50% of women
and 30% of men have experienced sexual violence involving physical contact.
So we're not talking about just a few people that have experienced this.
This is over half of women and a third of men.
So this is impacting a lot of people, a lot of couples,
and so it's important that we talk about it.
And the more we learn about trauma, and this includes all trauma,
but especially for sexual trauma, it doesn't go away.
It's not stored like normal memories.
It's stored in somatic memories, like being touched a certain way
or a certain smell or sound or sensation that brings a memory and the fear associated with it back.
Okay, so a lot of people who have experienced sexual trauma,
they can kind of bury it for a while.
And it tends to resurface like around the 30s when they have their own kids or when they become sexually active.
They get married.
And so you're not looking for it to come up, but it gets triggered.
And so this will mean that if there's an initiation of sex and something happens that's triggering, you've got a couple of different choices.
You can either just shut down or you can go through the physical act but dissociate and kind of do.
distance yourself psychologically.
And so a lot of couples don't identify this and they just keep saying, well, the Bible says
we're supposed to do this.
So they go through the motions and they actually are retramatizing the individual as trauma.
Wow.
So there's a lot of work in terms of identifying what those triggers are, working through the
memories so that they're processed in a healthier way.
And then also like stepping back as a couple and learning to reintegrate touch.
in a way that feels safer
and where the person who has trauma
feels like they have agency
instead of just feeling like
they're supposed to endure this.
Yeah. I think that's important
because, you know,
I don't think I realized
how messed up in the head I was
until I got married.
You know, because
it's in my book, yeah, just being
sexually abused at
five, six
in middle
school, but I also think the doozy that pornography did on me when it came to, I think,
I didn't think I knew this, but I think it trained me to believe that my body legitimately
was an object for just a man's pleasure. And so I think one thing that we worked through that was
really helpful and people would probably think strange is that we've had to have seasons where that is not
an obligation for me.
Yes.
You know, where it's like, no, I want to connect with you, you know, your curiosity.
Let's play games.
Let's find other means of intimacy so that when we do come together in that way, you feel safe.
Because I think when that stuff is taken from you, safety is like a huge thing.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
And that's something that, you know, it's crazy how the Lord allows you to go through things
because what I've learned about the Lord is he's never going.
going to waste anything. And so, like, I went through things early on in my marriage even now.
Now I'm disciplining young men and they're going through the same things that I'm going through,
right? And so because so many women have been abused growing up, men aren't taught to even going
into a marriage having a heart posture that would even allow their wife to feel like she has
the autonomy to choose when she wants to receive sex, right?
And even have the emotional maturity to do the extra things, right?
Because I think vice versa, you know, in the same way that Jackie was taught watching
pornography, that porn kind of informs you that your body is an object.
I think for men, I think it actually teaches that women bodies are an object.
And so we even go into our marriage with this sexual brokenness and false ideology that, you know, this woman is for my pleasure.
Yeah.
And not for, like, not for me to lavish my love on.
We're both traumatized.
Yes, yeah.
So true.
And so, yeah, it's crazy how both men and women are traumatized.
It just looks different.
Yeah.
And it shows up, it manifestss itself in different ways.
I'm so glad you're disciplining men in that.
You know, I think there's a lot of sexual entitlement in Christian marriage where you feel like, hey, you know, like I've been waiting for marriage and this was sort of promised to me.
And so my wife is going to be the fulfillment of everything I want sexually and everything I need so I don't have to look at porn anymore.
And that whole paradigm is wrong.
And so guys and women, we need mature people to disciple us through when you hit that wall
and you realize that married sex isn't what you think is going to be and it requires a lot of
self-denial.
Yeah.
You know, like we call Christian singles to self-denial, but for some reason we never call Christian
married people to self-denial to say this isn't about me.
This is about learning to love the way God loves me.
Yeah, because I think ultimately it's a lot.
It's a heart issue, you know, and sex can't fix a heart issue.
And so I think your wife deny you actually exposes your heart issues.
But can you speak to that really quick?
Because you said there's a lot of entitlement.
And we talked before the episode about men, even some women, but mostly men use the scripture.
Your body is not your own, right?
So your body actually belongs to me.
Yeah.
Can you explain that?
Sure.
What do you think the scriptures are trying to communicate in that?
Yeah, for sure.
So we were talking about 1st Corinthians chapter 7, the first five verses.
And Paul says, you know, basically if you're married, your body isn't your own.
It belongs to your wife.
If you're a guy.
If your wife, your body belongs to your husband, you know, that you are to meet each other's needs, essentially.
And if you've been in church any length of time, you might have heard somebody preach on this.
and the conclusion they come to is if you're married, you owe each other sex,
and if you're not having sex, then Satan's going to tempt you to have an affair
or use pornography, because that's sort of what Paul seems to be talking about there.
But you know, because you guys are biblical scholars, in order to understand something,
first of all, you've got to back up and look at it in context.
And if we read the verses that precede 1 Corinthians chapter 7 and 1 Corinthians
chapter six we find an interesting thing. Paul first says, do you know that your body is not your own?
Your body belongs to the Lord. The Lord. Okay. So before we even start to talk about what marriage is,
we got to say as a believer, I don't go into marriage with a sense of entitlement.
My body, my sexuality belongs to the Lord. And Paul says, therefore, honor God with your body.
Bring him glory. And then he begins talking.
about what does that look like in marriage? And a lot of people would just interpret that verse
as the person who has the higher sexual need should get their needs met. So let's say
stereotypically, not always, but stereotypically, let's say the husband is like, yeah, I want sex,
wife, you've got to meet that need. Let's look at 1st Corinthians 7. That's what it's saying.
But really what we have to look at is Paul is saying, you both need to minister to each other sexually.
And so, guys, you need to minister to your wife sexually.
Her brokenness, her nuance, her complication.
Yeah.
You know, her hormones gone all over the place.
Her exhaustion and raising kids.
Don't look out for your own interests, but look out for the interests of the other.
And wife, you need to minister to your husband sexually.
Understand his brokenness.
Understand his history.
Understand why sex is a lot of.
an important connection point for him.
And together you're working out what it looks like to love with covenant.
You need to prioritize the sexual journey, not the sexual act.
That's good.
And when we put in that context, it fits within the whole of scripture that tells us to love with an unselfish love.
You know, if we fast forward in 1 Corinthians, we find that Paul is defining love in 1st Corinthians 13.
patient, kind, not looking out for its own interests, not holding, you know, a record of wrong.
Apply that to the bedroom.
You know, love is patient in the bedroom.
Love is kind.
It does not demand its own way.
Yeah.
It doesn't keep a record of wrong.
So when you read 1st Corinthians 7, you've got to put in the context of all of how the scripture defines love.
Wow.
Wow.
That's great.
That's really good.
Yeah.
I think you've done a good job with that.
Aw.
Oh.
A little word of affirmation.
I'm trying to love.
Not because I think it has been a journey, you know what I'm saying.
Because I even remember, I might have shared this before,
but how when I had therapy when I was, I don't know,
I think we were dead.
No, I was pregnant with autumn.
Yeah.
And my therapist was like, do you remember?
Yeah, I said this before.
She was like, do you remember the first man that touched you?
or yeah like do you remember the first time your dad touched you or something like that i was like
i don't know i was like i feel like the first man that touched me was my abuser and she was like
that's kind of significant that your first conception of affection from a man was not your father
but the man who like abused you you know what i'm saying and so i think the lord has used our
marriage and is using our marriage to undo whatever that did to my brain because it i
I was like, at some point, I remember praying to the Lord, I was like, my brain needs to be fixed.
It's like, I know the scripture, but my brain has been wired in such a way where I just respond crazy.
Yeah, yeah. And, you know, and I have my, because I think the truth is a lot of men, we go into marriage with a lot of sexual brokenness, but it's masks under so much crap.
Yeah.
And false masculinity and all of the things.
And I had my share of sexual brokenness.
I lost my virginity when I was 12
to one of my grandmother's foster children
who was very sexually active.
And so, you know, her coming in my room
every morning not even knowing what I was doing,
you know what I mean?
You didn't even consent.
I didn't even consent.
You know, half of the times I was sleep, you know.
And so that's how I lost my virginity
being woke up out of my sleep one day when I was 12.
And that's abuse.
It's abuse.
And so, yeah, I even wrote in my poem
just because I enjoyed it,
doesn't mean I wasn't molested.
No.
And so I think men going into marriage with that type of trauma, I think what the, if, if, if they're not, you know, I think some men are led to, you know, be like homosexual or whatever.
But I think for a lot of men, we're taught that we are only men if women desire us.
We are only powerful if women find us, you know, irresistible.
I think that's what pornography teaches us.
I think that's what, you know, girls in our neighborhood teach us.
And so when you come into this covenant marriage with this nuanced, complicated, beautiful woman.
Human.
Human, right?
And you actually have to do life.
It becomes super hard.
Yeah.
When society tells you you're a man, you're a man if a woman doesn't.
deny you. Right? And so now you have to, you have to create a whole different framework around.
You have to say, man, okay, Lord, how do you really want me to love your image bear, which is my wife?
And I think doing that work is hard, but I think it's necessary. Yeah. Thanks for sharing that
vulnerability, both of you. That's not easy to do. I remember hearing a guy named Dr. Archibald
Hart, who he's no longer with us, but he was a Christian psychologist who was writing on this stuff,
before I was.
And I heard him say something once that caught me in my track.
He said, he said that he believed men had more unwanted sex than women do.
Wow.
And I'm like, what?
Sheesh.
Yeah.
And he like, he peeled it back and he's like, men are having sex because they've been told that this is what proves their masculinity.
Wow.
And they have performance demands and they're supposed to always be wanting it and always be ready.
and when you really peel back those layers of why they're pursuing sex,
it has nothing to do with desire or intimacy.
It's all about this is what men do.
This is what I'm expected to do.
And so you're absolutely right.
Like in the crucible of marriage,
and particularly the sexual area of marriage,
if you're willing, it is going to reveal so much of the dross
that the Lord just wants to burn away,
the lies that we believe about what it means to be male or female, what it means to be human,
what it means to be whole.
Yeah.
And I think that's why it's sanctifying.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Like God uses all the things to purify because I do think for me, I think, what trauma has done,
it makes me very self-protective, therefore it makes me have a bent towards self-protective.
selfishness. And so there's a lot of honesty and vulnerability. I got to walk in to even
be able to say yes from a sense. And that's not all the time. I mean, we go on a trip. It might be
a different thing. But you've got kids, you got business, you got mystery. I like trips.
Yeah. When you remove the distractions, it's helpful.
Yes. So can you speak to, I know it's a lot here and everybody got a case-by-case basis,
but even for the woman, how to navigate that line between selfishness and I don't know how to say.
That's a good question, baby.
Because it gets weird.
After you answer, I got a question about men.
Okay.
Because we could be selfish, but we also need to be cared for.
Yes.
So it's like, yeah.
Yeah, it is.
Selfish?
No.
I'm just putting it bad.
Okay, so I think again, backing up and looking at the bigger picture.
Yes.
You know, what you really want in marriage is you want to be known and you want to be loved.
And you want to know your husband and you want to love him, right?
And so there's elements of sex, I think particularly in difficult seasons of marriage and when there's trauma where we want to love our husband without being known.
You know, and that can.
something right there, girl.
I mean, that can feel like, oh, I'm being such a good wife.
But in the long run, you're really not building intimacy.
You're really not inviting him to pursue the deeper layers of who you are.
And you learn to be vulnerable about even revealing those deeper layers.
And so, yes, there are seasons and there are times where it's like, we don't have the energy
to work through all this stuff.
Like, let's just do what we need to do to get through the day.
And I don't think there's anything wrong with that.
But if you stay there and a married couple can either stay in that kind of negotiated transaction
where it's like, oh, we got to do this because we haven't done it a while.
And they stay stuck.
Or they can stay in a rut where they're not having sex at all.
They're not working on anything.
Both of those are unhealthy.
But the trajectory of the marriage and of women is, yes, I want to be unselfish
in understanding and meeting my husband's needs.
But part of what he needs is to know how to love me.
And until I can be vulnerable and vocal about what's going on inside of me and the complexity of me, I'm never calling him to that space.
Hmm.
That's good.
That's really good.
That's excellent.
Yeah, it is.
Because in essence, it's getting underneath the yes and the no.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, because I think we, okay, I'll give it to you, bet, but it's like, or no, I won't, but why?
Yes.
Why?
Why?
Why am I resisting?
Is it that I'm tired?
Is it that I feel like you just want me from my body and I want you to want me?
Is it because I'm afraid you're looking at porn and I'm insecure?
I mean, what's going on?
Is it because I hate my body and I don't want to show you something I think you're going to reject?
And so those deeper levels are intimacy.
Yeah.
You know, they're where a couple gets beyond the physical act.
Yeah.
And actually starts going on a journey where they're getting naked at all levels.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love this conversation.
That's so good.
Because I think you talked about the oxytocin thing, right?
And I think because from a man's perspective, I think what I think what a lot of women don't understand is,
a lot of men, good men.
I'm not talking about men who are just out there just being trashed.
You know, good men who love their wives.
I feel like they're all chasing that feeling after sex.
They're chasing this, man, I feel close to her.
I feel, you know.
And so I can understand the frustration of a lot of men
who are accused of just wanting somebody's body.
When it's actually I want to, you know,
if I want somebody's body, I can go out there
and sheep with a whole bunch of bodies.
Yeah.
But I want you because I want to feel close to you.
Essentially, what you're saying is men want what women want,
but we just receive it at the end in a lot of ways.
Yeah, it is.
Yeah.
But they don't have words for it.
They don't have words for it.
And so this is my question to you.
Yes.
What are some practical tools that men can have to, one, actively communicate that to their wives?
display that, how we can love our wives.
Because I've even heard young men that I disciple go through what I went through
was I don't even want to feel like I'm doing this just because I don't want her to think
I'm doing all this just because I want sex.
Oh, like washing dishes and stuff.
Yeah, like that's definitely like a deposit.
But it works.
It feels like an investment.
You know what I'm saying?
And so like what are some practical tools to kind of communicate our hearts and our
motives to our wives about our expectations.
Yeah, I love that question.
I mean, I think first of all, they need a vision for something greater than what they have.
Because, again, even good Christian guys who, you know, listen to podcasts and read their
Bibles, they can still have the limited vision of, I want sex, God says sex is supposed to be
in marriage, I'm married, therefore I should have sex.
Yeah.
And they don't think beyond that.
I used to think like that.
Yeah.
I mean, that's how we're taught to think in the world.
And it's just sort of sanctified instead of blowing that box up.
And so when a guy has people in his life, whether it be somebody mentoring him or reading books or discipleship to see God has so much more for you.
Like this is actually a journey of intimacy that is going to take you deeper even in understanding yourself than you ever realized.
but more importantly, deeper in understanding how God loves.
And when he can see and talk to an older guy who's like,
let me tell you 20 years down the road,
the things God has taught me about love and how I've learned to love my wife
and how I've learned to receive her love,
he's got a vision for something.
Because then the road towards that is going to require some uncomfortable things
that go against that sense of entitlement.
So it's going to require,
I just want to give you a back rub
without expecting anything.
You're not even this lingering
if you're in the mood. No, I just want to minister to you.
You know, and if now's not, if you're not, if I initiate and you're not
interested, I can take that without being pouty.
You know, like, I just can take that as all right, Lord.
You know, teach me to love like you do and teach me to love the complexity of my
wife. Read a good book like one by Cliff and Joyce Penner. They have a number of good books,
one called Restoring the Pleasure, another called The Way to Love Your Wife, I think is called.
It helps you understand your wife physically, emotionally, because your wife is a complex creature.
Female sexuality is far more complicated than male sexuality. So become a student of her.
You know, those are some of the things.
And then use language that says, you are the most beautiful woman in the world to me.
And she'll argue with you, no, you know, like I've got this going on.
Like just convince her that you want her.
She's not an outlet for you.
Wow.
You want her.
Yeah.
And you want to learn to love her.
And that is a long road.
Like I said, that requires discipleship.
But when you have that vision of what it can look like and women do,
respond in time to that because they feel safe, they feel loved.
Yeah.
And they feel the freedom to pursue you.
And that's the other thing I would say to both men and women is women cannot be passive in the sexual relationship.
And I think a lot of times the dynamic is the husband is initiating and the woman is just passive.
She has to go after her own sexuality.
Like you read the song of Solomon.
and the woman isn't just waiting around.
Like, she's going after it.
And I think Christian women don't hear that message that you,
this is not a spectator sport.
You have to actively pursue understanding your own body.
The desires God has given you
and how that can be beautiful and holy in marriage.
Because a lot of women still feel like sex is dirty.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Do you think purity culture or the way the church
has navigated the sexual discussion as a part of that?
Yes.
In what way?
Yeah.
In so many ways.
Because I think, you know, like there's a lot of, there's a lot of stuff being said about
purity culture these days.
Some of it's fair.
Some of it's unfair.
I was alive during a lot of that.
And know some of the people who were writing about it and speaking about it back in
the day.
And the intentions were good, but the messages were way too simplistic.
And so when we simplify something complicated, it becomes legalism.
And so women heard not just don't have sex before marriage, but you shouldn't be a sexual person and your body is dangerous.
So cover it up.
Don't make your brothers fall and stumble.
And so women really internalize messages that my sexual body is bad.
Sexual desire is wrong always.
Sex is about men. It's not about me. There was victim blaming, you know, like if a woman was
abused, it was what were you wearing, why were you with that guy? Men were not taught the responsibility
of them stewarding their own bodies. So those are some of it, but it just, we could spend a whole
hour talking about that. Yeah, for sure. Yeah. I know I'm thinking about, so context, I have a monthly
meet a patronage men's group.
And so when I'm even talking to you,
a lot of their questions
and a lot of the things that I talk with them
that's pop it up in my head,
I know pornography kind of gives
us a false sense of
manhood, of
you know, this false masculinity
that says, I'm wanted about women, right?
But I do think
in many aspects,
I think it's something healthy there
for men to feel wanted
by the woman that he loves.
And I do think, and I think,
I feel like a lot of men want their wives to pursue sex.
Yeah.
Because they want to feel like they're desired.
Yep.
They want to feel like they're, you know, like you want me, right?
So I think it can become perverted.
But at the same time, I do think in a lot of ways it's natural.
Yeah.
For us to want to feel wanted or whatever.
And so I think what are some ways for men to help distinguish the two?
Yeah.
To the point where it's perverted or?
or this is a healthy wanting.
And in the healthy wanting, how can I get my wife on the same page?
Well, you're saying a lot of it, which is just identifying it.
And I think what you said that is so key is, you know, Satan just takes everything God made and twists it.
He doesn't invent new things.
And so, like, in Proverbs 5, Solomon is talking about this woman who is going after the guy and is saying,
come lie with me. And it's really, we have no description of what she looks like. It's just the
fact that she wants him. And she's luring him in. You know, but then Solomon says, like, instead,
like, drink water from your own sister and, like, be intoxicated by your own wife. And so
Solomon isn't saying the desire for that is bad. He's saying that desire needs to live in the right
place. And it's a choice. And so I think a lot of it is recognizing
the kernel of goodness in that desire, which you said.
A lot of guys who struggle with pornography, they'll go through, you know, integrity ministries,
which are great.
But they come out of those integrity ministries and the way they deal with their lust is
they just kill all sexual desire.
And they don't know how to reenter and reintegrate intimacy and desire in their marriage
in a healthy way.
Wow.
So it's recognizing some of those lies underneath that, working through the fear of
Where will my desire take me?
What does holy desire look like?
Yeah.
What does it look like to focus on my wife, not that I want to consume her, but that I love
her and I want to show her love.
So again, it's discipleship, but just sounds like you're doing.
Yeah.
Do you think men and women watch porn for different reasons?
Good question.
Yes and no.
Okay.
I think they're initially maybe drawn to it for different reasons for a lot of men.
You know, they get exposed to it before they can even really think it through in the early teen years.
And it's the visual stimulation.
It's the cultural discipleship that this is what boys do.
This is what makes you manly.
Women like the storyline, they can get drawn in either through erotica or through a guy they're dating who's like, watch this with me.
And they get the same dopamine.
you know, impact on their brain that then gets them hooked.
But where I say it's the same reason is porn is a medication for something.
So it actually works like a drug on your brain where you're going to get that dopamine.
You're going to get those endorphins that temporarily make you feel good.
And so men and women will use porn to combat loneliness, depression as a way of coping with trauma,
as a way of rewarding themselves.
And so there is probably more overlap,
even though they might be drawn into porn
for different reasons initially.
Yeah.
Can you talk about the psychological impact
and even the spiritual,
emotional impact that porn has on us,
especially when we watch it at a young age?
Oh, wow, there's levels to it.
Because I was watching that stuff at five.
Five.
Yeah, I start watching.
Not that I have kids,
I'm like, that is horrific.
Yeah.
Yes.
You know, we can talk about this psychological impact.
There's all kinds of studies that will show like the hit it takes on self-esteem, depression, anxiety, how it impacts relationships, intimate relationships.
It even impacts sexual functioning because your brain is wired to respond to something that's unnatural.
And so you have trouble responding in an emotional.
in a normal relationship, which is why, to be honest, a lot of people get married and their
bodies are connecting, but their minds are thinking about porn.
So it's not intimacy.
Yeah.
And that creates huge wedges.
When we look at spiritually, I think it's hugely significant because there's so much shame.
And most people, particularly if they're exposed to pornography, when they're young, they can't get off at themselves.
Wow.
And so they might love God, they might be in ministry, they might love their spouse.
They promise I'm not going to look at this again.
And they find themselves going back to it.
And they're like, I don't even know if I'm a Christian if I can't stop looking at this.
And God can't love me.
God can't possibly bless me.
And so they can live their whole life with that secret cloud of shame that keeps us from really intimacy with
God and receiving his love.
Wow.
I mean, would you, I know you're not like the freedom from porn guy.
Oh my gosh.
I just think.
Because our experiences are different in that, you know, I watch porn.
I don't think it was five.
I think it was seven, from seven to 19.
And when I became a believer, that was just something that was snatched from me immediately.
There was a lot of things I had to, a lot of sins I had to work through, work out.
That one was just gone.
And so that's why I always lean on you for wisdom on how to process that.
Because one thing I do remember, I was in discussion with some people recently,
we were talking about it.
When I used to watch porn in high school, I remember I would always feel this weight.
I didn't know it was shame, but it was this heavy feeling of badness and guilt.
And I was like, why do I feel?
And it was like, I see it in all kinds of ways and I don't feel guilty.
But with this one, it was in, I think it was a darkness.
You know what I'm saying?
And so, I don't know.
I just, I think of the women and the men, because I think a lot of women have also commented, like, no, we need help too.
Who just feel like they can't get out of that cycle, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think getting out of that cycle is, one, the first step is being honest with God about your expectations.
because I think the human condition,
I think the human heart
we're all searching for God,
even though we don't realize
that's what we're searching for.
We're searching for fulfillment,
which only he can give you.
We're searching for longing.
Only he can give you.
We're searching for joy, satisfaction,
and all of the things.
And so, one, I had to, like,
when I fell into pornography,
heavy pornography used to not marriage,
and it hurt you and it hurt God,
I really had to be honest with the Lord.
and I had to say, Lord, I'm longing for something, right?
And so one thing that it showed me is that I had to repent for my unbelief in what God can do in my life way before I got married.
Wow.
It was way before I got.
I didn't believe that God was God over my sexuality before I got married, right?
And so, like, you are, you redeemed me, but you redeem me holistically.
I just, it's aspects of my redemption that I don't believe you for.
And so I have to be honest with the law in that.
But I also have to be honest with myself, you know,
because I think a lot of times men are vicariously living through other men who are not being rejected.
And so it's not just a physical thing.
It's a fantasy thing.
It's like covetousness.
Yeah, it's like you want to be him, right?
You want to be the man who's making a woman feel this way.
You want to be the man who women want and desire.
it's really acting.
And so you're trying to vicariously live through a man who's acting, right?
And so I think a lot of times even in marriage, what the enemy tells us to do without
lust problem is to vicariously live through sin and perversion.
And so I have to just be honest with myself and say, man, early on in my marriage,
this false sense of intimacy comforted you every time your wife said no.
I had to be honest with myself
It's like you're looking for like you're looking for comfort
And then I had to be honest with myself even deeper
The Lord dealt with me a lot about this
I have to be honest with myself a little deeper
And the Lord show me, okay, now that you know
That this is true
Were you really pursuing sex to serve your wife?
Wow
Was it really about her or was it about you?
And so I just had to like the Lord had to like really
just help
and he's still doing it
I'm not perfect right
he's still doing a work
but I think just being honest with
when you be honest with the Lord
the next step is to automatically be
honest with yourself and that's the reason why I love
like honestly with God because he reveals
his will to you but then he also reveals
you you yeah and so I saw myself
I was like oh
I'm selfish oh I'm this oh
I'm that it was hard
but I think it was necessary for our marriage
to grow I hope that made sense
It makes purpose. I just want to say with that as someone who has had to, and is still being called to lay down all kinds of things.
I think the longer you walk with the Lord, he calls you to lay down good stuff.
You know, and so you have to process what that feels like and all the things.
I think it's okay to grieve sin to say, man, that really satisfied me in a particular way.
And I am really afraid that you will actually not be the water.
that you say you are.
And processing that unbelief with him to say, like, this repentance takes courage to say,
like, this has been a good drug, but not a good drug.
Sin is fun until it's not.
You know what I'm saying?
And so I think giving him the, like giving him you even in that place, but also being
willing to try him.
You know, like that's kind of been some of the process I've had when the Lord is like,
nah, I don't want you to do that.
Nah, I don't want you to do.
That's a freedom, but I don't want you to have it.
It's like, I'm being challenged to try you, you know?
And when you try him, you'll be amazed at how much imagination you have now.
Because I do think sin limits your scope.
You know what I'm saying?
It narrows your freedom in such a way where the Lord is like, no, I've actually given you every good tree for food.
And the enemy has had you focusing on the one I said no to.
And so, yeah.
I have a question for both of y'all.
Wow.
I'm speaking for myself, but I'm also speaking for a lot of men that I've talked to.
There is a lot of, I think, bitterness.
And men, if I'm just being honest, especially men in the body of Christ around the topic of sex.
Because I've heard men, and even I felt this way, of these macho men.
in society being rewarded.
And it seems like men in the body of Christ
who are being rejected, right?
It can feel like, man, I honored the Lord,
my body, I did it the right way.
And now I'm in this covenant relationship
and my wife doesn't want to have sex with me.
But then when you look out in the world,
all you see is men getting sex by the boatload.
And then we know like the end of that is destruction.
The load is crazy.
You know what I'm saying?
We know the end of that.
We know the end of that is destruction.
Yeah.
But I think I don't want a guilt trip a woman to think to think that all, I have to give my husband sex so he won't be bitter with other men, right?
But I do think that what you're talking about earlier, it is understanding what your spouse, your husband goes through and vice versa.
And so I guess my question to you guys is how can a woman.
and help connect with her man in that way of thinking.
And how can she understand a man's struggles
and what he sees in society and all the things.
You look at me.
Of course I am.
Oh, my goodness.
You know, as I hear you talk,
like one of the lies that I hear underneath that
is the greatest life is a sexually fulfilling life.
You know, like the greatest good you can have as a man is to have sex all the time.
If you wanted sexually, you know, it's like, where did we get that from?
Because that's underneath that.
You know, like, you've got your Bible so maybe you can turn to Psalm 37.
I got you.
Yeah.
Because this is, and I'll respond to your question as far as what a wife can do,
but this is ultimately an issue between God and a man.
This is not a husband and wife issue ultimately.
So, like, read those first maybe five or six verses of Psalm 37.
Fret not yourself because of evildoers. Be not envious of wrongdoers.
For they will soon fade like the grass and wither like the green herb.
Trust in the Lord and do good.
Dwell in the land to befriend faithfulness.
Delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart.
Commit your way to the Lord.
Trust in him and he will act.
He will bring forth your righteousness as the light and your justice as the noon day.
Be still before the Lord.
and wait patiently for him.
Fred not yourself over the one who prospers in his way,
over the man who carries out evil devices.
Yeah.
Yeah, so it's, you know, I'm speaking right to that.
And it's like, we are taking the world's paradigm
and saying, how come they're getting everything good?
Wow.
And that feels true for a while.
There's another psalma I can't remember the address right now
where the psalma says,
I was so discouraged by how people in the world were prostering.
I almost gave up my faith.
And then I went to the temple of the Lord.
And I remembered that all this stuff that we're chasing after is going to be gone.
You know, like wait to your 50 or 60 and see how fulfilling it was to have sex with 100 different people.
You know, it feels like life now.
Yeah.
But it's a, again, it's a discipleship journey of a man really confronting.
the lies he's been told over and over and over again,
and God's saying, do you really believe this is the most fulfilling path?
You know, again, go talk to people in their 50s and 60s and 70s.
Talk to the ones who have been on a journey of faithfulness with the Lord and with a spouse
and forge these journey of intimacy and a testimony and is poured into the next generation.
And their lives are so much more fulfilling.
and the guy who had all the pleasures in the world.
That looks good when you're 20 and 30, but it's like a tattoo.
It doesn't look so good when you're 70.
And so it's that perspective shift that God keeps calling us back to as men and women.
What you really believe is the most fulfilling life.
So, you know, as a wife, we want to do that own journey for ourselves
because we've got our own idols that we're chasing.
And I've found in my life my husband's here so he can validate there so not,
but the greatest impact I can have on him and I've had on him is when he sees my own journey
with the Lord and me being willing to put down my idols and wrestle with the Lord
and work through my selfishness and my pride.
That's good.
That's what calls him to the throne.
It's not me telling him, may she do something different or, you know, it's God.
It's God, God, and more God.
That's good.
And I think also like, but what you said is having that empathy.
You know, just like we call men to have empathy for their wives that were complicated,
we're sensitive, we need to be valued and treasured and protected.
Like women, I needed to learn and to know the vulnerabilities of my husband.
And that his vulnerabilities and what connects with him is different and be sensitive to that.
And to love him well.
even when it's difficult.
Like, what does it look like to love my husband well?
Yeah.
So it's that richer call for both of them.
Yeah, that's good.
I have more, but I'm not going to ask more questions.
I wish I do have to pick up the kids, so I'm sorry.
Guys, maybe we need to time these podcasts a little better.
I'm not sure.
But I wonder if you would be willing to close us out in prayer.
I would love to.
Just praying for a lot was said.
I'm pretty sure a lot of thoughts and processing, pain, fears, all types of questions people
have that they probably haven't even answered or don't have answers for came up and just praying.
Yeah, I would love to.
Yeah.
Lord, thank you for being in this room with us.
And you know that even when we talk about you in reference to sexuality for a lot of us, that feels weird.
and that you have been excluded from these conversations for generations.
And because of that, the enemy has reigned in our hearts with fear and with shame and with self and with pride and with lust.
And God, I thank you that you are a God who is a redeeming God.
You come after us in our brokenness, in our fear.
You come after us with mercy, with loving kindness.
with compassion, with endless patience.
And I just pray for each person who might be wrestling with an aspect of the conversation we've had,
that you, by the tenderness and the work of your Holy Spirit,
would show that man or woman what their next step is,
whether that's just to get on their knees and ask for help and repent,
whether that's to have a conversation with their spouse or the person they're dating,
or whether that's to take the step to seek discipleship or counseling,
whatever it might be, Lord.
We just want to say, Lord, that you have authority
of all heaven and earth.
And we ask that Satan would no longer own this conversation
in our hearts, but that you would reclaim and be glorified.
In Jesus' name, amen.
Amen.
Thank you, Dr. Julie.
Thank you for having me.
You taught me a whole lot.
I'll try that.
We covered a lot.
We sure did.
We will have all of Dr. Julie's,
resources in the show notes.
So you can continue this conversation
by connecting with her ministry,
reading her books, following her,
listening to the podcast.
And for all the men, listen,
go rub your white feet and don't expect
nothing in the return.
Amen.
Bye y'all.
Yeah, so we were having a conversation
after the podcast and I told them,
I'm going to be honest with y'all.
I was like, I had 11 questions in my head
at one time.
And one of the questions I had,
I didn't ask Julie, because I was like,
you know, I think it sounds stupid.
But I just told them,
and it was like,
that wasn't stupid.
And the question was, it's like, how much should we think about God in the act?
I think, you know, because society has conditioned us to think about so many other things as it relates to sex,
like literally thinking and meditating on God when it comes to sex doesn't pop up in our minds.
And I'm wondering maybe that's a lot of the issue.
It is.
And so how much should we think about God in the act?
and what should it look like?
I like that.
It's a great question.
Let me just say, first of all,
I don't think you can think about God too much in the act.
Like, you can't overdo that.
In other words, there's no way you could do that too much
because he created it.
But I think when we initially put that lens on it,
people are like, oh, well, then we can't have fun.
it's almost like like I realize this in marriage after about 10 or 15 years I had in my head
sort of this image that when my husband and I had sex it was sort of like God was up in heaven
like oh they're doing it again like tell me when they're done yeah because julie it is kind of
weird to imagine guy like okay but looking now like look at my image bears all right but okay
song of Solomon four and five like check it out
song of Solomon 4 is probably the poetry that describes their wedding night and it's they're talking about
how much they want each other how much they enjoyed each other like I've tasted your choice fruits
and like all this stuff that means we just had a really good time and there's a presence in the room
in song of Solomon 5 where somebody says eat friends drink and by
deeply, enjoy this.
Who do you think that somebody is?
God.
Yeah.
So like he's there going,
this is why I created this.
Wow.
Like I want you to have fun.
Wow.
Enjoy it deeply.
So you read Psalm 139,
where can I go from your presence?
Oh, if I close my door and have sex with my spouse.
You're there.
You're there.
Yeah.
So he's there.
So it's in our mind that says somehow,
sex is dirty so God can't be present.
Well, who taught us that was dirty?
You know, like, I think we have to go back to where do we even start with these assumptions
that God and sex belong in separate boxes of my life.
That is so deep, Ms. Julie.
And I would just add, like, I think you want him to be there.
Just because for me and I think for other, my mind can be very busy, so I can be present.
but again, my mind isn't.
And so I could start thinking about plans.
And it's not that I'm not enjoying it.
I don't want you to hear that.
I'm just saying.
I was going to say something.
Do you feel embarrassed?
No, I didn't feel embarrassed.
I'm just saying I could be feeling real productive in my mind.
But I've also had times where I'm also feeling tormented.
And so it's like there is a sense where you want him to be there to give you peace.
You want him to be there to relieve you of the, because the enemy is there too.
And so it's like you want him to push back against the darkness so that you could be present with your spouse.
Yeah.
So I think even thinking about this concept and thinking about this idea, this truth, really, what you just presented.
It's not just an idea, but it's a truth.
I think it kind of can speak to a man's ego to say, no, you need God to help you in this area too.
It's not just all about your masculinity and how well you are in the bedroom.
God knows your wife emotions and your mind in ways that you don't.
And so inviting him into that space, you need help in that space too.
It's a spiritual battleground like you're saying.
So why do we ever think we can win a spiritual battle by eliminating God's presence?
It's by inviting him.
Woof.
Amen.
Amen.
All, we're going for real this time.
Bye.
Peace.
With the Perry's is produced by the Perrys with support from Amanda Reed and Channing McBride.
Video recording and audio production by Matthew Baxter and Zayvester.
your fairly edited by the team at tread lively artwork by hop thank you for listening now go with god
