I certainly understand that sex is a good thing and that it should not be eliminated from my --or any-- marriage. I have never suggested that it should.
But during our discussion --and it was a discussion, not an argument or a fight-- my husband said that he thought it was a sin to deny sexual relations from a spouse whenever it was requested. That surprised me. (And it it is true I’m more of a sinner than I originally thought.) Does a spouse have an obligation to engage whenever requested?
CITE SOURCES. None of the sources I’ve found have touched upon this subject one way or the other.
JBJ… I think you are right. I’m careful not to say that it is a sin. Many interpret it, but I don’t know too much that is specific. The scripture reference is pretty close I’d say, but there is a very specific set of circumstances at work there. Scripture could be interpreted in a way to make it sound sinful by the woman, but if the man isn’t loving the woman as Christ loves the Church, are all bets off? Again, as near as I can tell, It isn’t so much the denial as the reasons behind the denial. That I get from CW’s TGNAS&M…
Since it is meant to be sign of love, an expression of love, we as married couples, are expected to express our love in this form at times.
Denial can be for many reasons. Any of which, if reasonable, the husband should honor or not ask at all. If the husband is not seeing the act as an act of love, but as a duty to be performed on demand, then his request may not be in the form that scripture references.
A husband CAN be selfish in his desire for the act. A wife CAN be selfish in denying the act. If the act is an act of love between them, then neither is being selfish and it should not be an issue. Men need to be desired, too. IMO, A good and loving man deserves this form of love in return.
So maybe this will help… From CW’s TOB for Beginners. Page 112, Marital Spirituality
“When spouses are open to the gift, the Holy Spirit impregnates there sexual desires ’ with everything that is noble and beautiful,’ with ’ the supreme value, which is love.’ But when spouses, because of their ‘hardness of heart’ close themselves off to the Holy Spirit, sexual union quickly degenerates into an act of lust, an act of mutual exploitation.”
While it is easy to see that having sex can be exploitation, it might be a bit harder to see that denial can be exploitation, too.
At the alter, we say “yes” to everything associated with the relationship. Sex, children, support, love, mutual aid… when we start to say “no” or “maybe, but only if I feel like it” to some aspects of the relationship, we run into trouble quickly. BTDT.
Hope this helps.