That’s not actually what I said. I will try to clarify.
Anecdotally = only based on my personal experience.
I am quite sure that I am acquainted with male virgins over the age of 18; however, I don’t know who they are, because they haven’t told me and I don’t ask.
In other words, I know that those men are virgins and porn addicts because they have chosen (for whatever reasons) to share this information with me. I have not made assumptions or inferred this information via context clues.
Well, thanks for the clarification.
I think we need to be very careful when discussing issues of chastity, or sin in general, to certainly be charitable toward those who commit sexual sin, but not wind up denigrating the value of chastity itself.
(I’d say the same thing when it comes to, say, the large vs. small family debates, we can support large families without tearing down small families, and vice versa.)
Anyway, while I think there is still some value placed on female virginity, even if in a crass “I wanna be the first one” kind of way, secular society essentially places NO value at all on male virginity. It is a social liability, not an asset.
The idea that “male virgin = loser” who MUST suffer from low testosterone, or a porn addiction, or must be gay, is certainly a secular canard. And even in some Christian circles the idea that men can actually strive for self-control over their sexuality is seen as absurd. The expectation is often merely to avoid fornication until a marriage in the early twenties, and abstaining beyond that is often seen as “unrealistic”.
Also, most Protestant sects don’t find masturbation itself to be a sin, as long as no porn is involved. Many assume that if a married man commits adultery, the wife surely is to blame for not meeting all his sexual needs, because God designed men that way, to be unable to control themselves sexually. And so the women must bear the burden of being the sexual gatekeepers.
I find the Catholic beliefs on sexuality to be refreshing in that they do not assume this kind of sexual double standard. At least, ideally. But it does seem that in practice, many Catholics also seem to hold such double standards concerning sexual sin, that men deserve a pass in a way women don’t.
I disagree with that, of course, but I don’t think that it’s fair to assume everyone who has a preference for virgins (in my experience it’s very rare for someone to actually find it a total deal breaker) is a pathetic socially awkward porn-addicted “virgin-hunter”.
I understand now that you’re not actually doing that yourself, but that is certainly the attitude I get from some who have posted on this topic. Yes, SOME who strongly prefer virgins do so out of an immature attitude toward sex, but I think it’s uncharitable to assume everyone does.