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Very well-put!Believe me… you don’t want sex.
You want total self giving in love… which is only found in marriage.
Very well-put!Believe me… you don’t want sex.
You want total self giving in love… which is only found in marriage.
Yes, puzzleannie, and some guys who get married only think about the “perk” of having sex, then when all that stuff you mentioned come along, they realize that great human experience comes with a heck of a lot of responsibility.then you had better also want marriage, children, mortgage, car payments, college savings, retirement planning, pets, Catholic school tuition, braces, soccer, band boosters, somebody hiding your remote and using your razor, and everything else that comes with the package. sounds like you are still discerning your vocation.
True enough, but it’s probably hard for buc-fan33 to take this advice from someone who is enjoying a sex life. It is advice which is much easier to give than to live.Find a pic of Our Lady, Help of Christians–and it must be that representation–and stare at it. Pray the rosary on a St. Benedict rosary, if possible.
Virginity is a pearl of great price, and the devil is intent on ruining as much of it as he can. “Stand fast,” says the book of Romans.
Blessings,
Cloisters
Actually, not true on two counts. Sociologist Father Andrew Greeley (a bad theologian, but a good sociologist) points out that Catholic priests are in general happier than married men. And a priest is not “single” - he is married to the Church in a real way “Mystical marriage” is not just some cute idea or cheap analogy - it is a profound reality.Sociologists have shown in many studies that of the 4 groups of married v. single men and women, the happiest are single women (surprise!) and the unhappiest are single men. Priests are single men, no matter how you look at it.
When you are a virgin, believe me, it is the “giving up of the sex” that’s hard, not really the inlaws and the emotional intimacy - though that is difficult too.Well, we married late and neither of us has ever looked back. No “what if’s.” We know that we are very lucky to have found each other and have never even looked at another person or regretted our past lives. I thought that I could live without marriage, but I have never regretted children, the in-laws, the intimacy, everything that marriage can and often does bring. And I maintain that for a man, giving all of this up–not just the sex-- is especially hard.
Marriage should not be referred to as being “lower”, but celibacy is indeed the “higher” or “superior” call.its not “lower” to be married… its just different… each has his vocation and that is the highest because that is the will of God for that particular person.:
Wow! Awesome post! Yes, if we only had the supernatural faith to see it, we would realize that the offering of our virginity as a gift is so much greater than any sexual experience could ever be.I am going to post from exactly the opposite side of the fence in the hope that it might help some of you who are feeling that you are missing out on something by not having sex.
I am a 55 year old woman who has been married (annuled) who wishes that she were still a virgin - and could offer this gift to God! Once you have had sex, that’s it - you are no longer a virgin and the gift is gone and you no longer have it to offer. But having had sex doesn’t mean that you never feel passion again or have the urge for sex - in fact, in some ways it is worse because you can have impure thoughts based on previous experiences, whereas virgins have more of a “pure” mind as well as a pure body. So the fight continues but without the beauty of the gift.
Next, I would like to say that the great grace of being able to be a priest is something that I envy every man - and I bless the hands of every priest because they can bring Jesus to me.
If you have a calling to serve Our Lord as a priest, rejoice at such a great blessing and try not to think so much about the sacrifice you will have to make, but the great love that will come from such an offering. It really is a supernatural calling, so the strength and the grace will be given to you if you ask for it.
I will pray you on because His Church needs priests so much! God bless you and keep you.
I teach Theology of the Body at John Paul II Bible School in Radway, Alberta, and I caution my students that Theology of the Body can make sex seem so good that all we want to do is get married, and celibacy in comparision seems like a farce.It sounds like your reading of “Theology of the Body” has started you thinking about the beauty of sex and your desire to experience it. My suggestion is to balance any “studies” you do about sex with twice as many studies about all the problems associated with marriage, sex, sexual disease, etc.
Bucfan, I think you hit the nail on the head with why being chaste is so difficult these days. You can’t turn on the TV, radio, computer, open a newspaper or magazine, or even drive down the road looking at billboards without being bombarded with images and innuendo.Yet, the reality of giving up this wonderful human experience is sometimes overwhelming. I mean, let’s face it. The world in which we live is inundated with sex, from the movies we watch, the music we listen to, books, T.V., everything.
Is this something others have dealt with, and if so, how did you do it?
Hey, buc-fan33. I have been responding to everyone else except you. So now I will respond to you.I’ve been debating whether or not to post this, but as the saying goes, nothing ventured, nothing gained. So, here goes. First, a little about my vocation story. I entered seminary a few years ago, and finished four years of seminary. This last June, after a long silent retreat, I discerned that the Lord was leading me out of seminary. However, I remained quite open to the fact that He one day could lead me back. Skip ahead to February of this year. I made another reatreat, this time, as far as I can tell, hearing clearly the call of God to serve Him as a priest. So, my plan next year is to return to seminary and begin my studies in First Theology, hoping to be ordained in four years. This is a mixture of emotion right now, humbling, daunting, exciting, and many others all rolled together. I have studied the Theology of the Body, and the Pope’s understanding of what I call a “Theology of Celibacy” is among the most profound things I have ever heard. An authentic understanding of this makes me desire the priesthood all the more.
However, this one tiny little thing remains. I really want to have sex! I am, thanks be to God, a virgin and I have never considered engaging in any sexual activity outside of marriage. In other words, I’ve striven to be chaste. Yet, the reality of giving up this wonderful human experience is sometimes overwhelming. I mean, let’s face it. The world in which we live is inundated with sex, from the movies we watch, the music we listen to, books, T.V., everything. I suppose you might liken it to someone on his deathbed (not that priesthood and celibacy is a death sentence!). A dying man suddenly wants to do all the things he missed out on in life. See the Eifel Tower, climb the Rocky Mountains, go sky diving, whatever. Well, for me, like I said above, I want to have sex. I want to know what it feels like, to experience it. I suspect that I am not alone in this, but I think it is often a taboo subject that effectively just gets swept under the rug with nice-sounding sayings like, “God will give you the grace,” or “Celebrating Mass will be so much better.” Both of these may be true, but they don’t really get at the heart of the matter. I even find myself thinking back to my high school/college days wishing that I would have given into temptation and slept with a girl. Thanks be to God I didn’t though!
Is this something others have dealt with, and if so, how did you do it?
I was going to say this tooI am a woman, so I might not completely understand what you are experiencing, but I am surprised more people have not told you what I am thinking- you’re not missing much.
Actually, I think he does need a man to tell him this. I would think the “physical sensations” are a lot greater than dessert - at least to a man. Some women say they like chocolate better than sex. Good luck finding a man who would say the same.I guess you would want to hear a man telling you this, not a woman, but the physical sensations in and of themselves aren’t really any better than treating yourself to a huge decadent dessert, it’s very fleeting.
Gamera I agree with your post.I haven’t often seen female posters address this and I think it’s a Mars/Venus thing. Girls see drastic changes in their bodies which show them they have become women. Puberty doesn’t change boys so dramatically physically, so we look more toward “accomplishments” as signs that we have become men. That’s okay as far as it goes; the problem is that fornication somehow got categorized as an “accomplishment” for us, which is scary and sad. Casual sex will not improve your self-esteem in the long run. First, because sin never helps anything. Second, because you can’t disconnect the “accomplishment” of fornication from the damage it causes to the young women who end up heartbroken, and the fact that you broke a girl’s heart makes you feel worse about yourself, not better.
Onetruechurch, you are exactly right that TOB has influenced me, but not in the way you think. When I first heard what JPII has to say about celibacy in his TOB, it made me desire celibacy more than I ever have before. The one thing I would disagree with you on is studying “all the problems associated with marriage, sex, sexual disease, etc.” This almost makes it sound like you want me to convince myself that sex and marriage are bad, which is most certainly not the case.
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I’m sorry if I sounded negative in my post. Let me put it another way: When physicians start to study medicine they feel privileged that they will be able to look at the human body. They have a high regard for the human body. They think of the human body as something beautiful. However, they spend most of their studies on diseases, injuries, etc that are not beautiful. They are trained to be healers.
When you become a priest you will also be a healer. It is good that you are studying the beauty of sex but when your flock comes to you for advice about sex most of the time it will be about the “disease” of their souls. You will need to be convinced that pre-marital sex is not only a sin but the major cause of all the many sexual diseases…physical, spiritual, and emotional. Even if every one of your parishoners was a virgin at marriage, that still does not guarantee a holy sexual life for the couple. I have heard of many “virgin” men becoming addicted to pornography and masturbation before marriage and once they were married they were not satisfied with their imperfect wives.