**What is sex? Ontologically? Spiritually? Humanly?**
If we don’t answer that first, moral rules float unmoored.
This follow-up essay attempts to bring the strands together: Scripture’s relative silence on explicit premarital sex prohibition, the unitive and procreative dimensions of sex, the science of bonding and happiness, insights from near-death experiences, and the wisdom of the Fathers — all through the lens of love.
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# Sex as Communion: Unitive, Procreative, and the Integrity of the Soul
A wise man once said, *“Sex with someone you don’t love is a lie. It’s saying with your body what you deny with your lips.”*
Whether or not Scripture gives a single verse that states, “All premarital sex is sin,” it unmistakably presents sex as spiritually consequential. When Paul writes, “He who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her” (1 Corinthians 6:16), he is not making a legal technicality. He is describing an ontological event.
Sex, biblically, is not friction. It is union.
And that changes everything.
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## 1. The Unitive Meaning: Bodies as Language
The Christian tradition — especially articulated in modern times by Pope John Paul II — speaks of the “unitive” meaning of sex. The claim is simple but profound:
The body speaks.
Sexual union enacts total self-gift. It is an embodied “I give myself to you.” It is a covenantal gesture, even if no vows are spoken.
This isn’t merely theological poetry. Biology reinforces it:
* Oxytocin and vasopressin strengthen attachment.
* Sexual vulnerability lowers psychological defenses.
* Pair-bonding has evolutionary depth.
* Emotional imprinting often follows sexual intimacy.
Even secular psychology acknowledges that sex tends to create bonding, not neutrality.
From a happiness science perspective, the strongest predictor of long-term flourishing is not pleasure but stable, loving attachment. Casual pleasure spikes dopamine; committed love stabilizes meaning. The research is clear: deep relationships sustain well-being more reliably than transient intensity.
So when Scripture treats sex as spiritually weighty, it aligns with human experience.
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## 2. The Procreative Meaning: Openness to Life
The second dimension is procreative. The design of male and female bodies is not arbitrary. The biological architecture of sex is ordered toward new life, even if conception does not always occur and even if it isnt intended.
But procreation is not merely biological output. It reflects something metaphysical: love that overflows becomes creative. In Christian theology, God’s love is life-giving. Human sexuality mirrors that pattern.
Sex closed to communion and closed to life begins to lose its ontological fullness.
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## 3. Scripture’s Silence — and Its Weight
It is correct: there is no verse that mechanically states, “All premarital sex is sin.” Paul’s counsel in 1 Corinthians 7 is pastoral — marriage as remedy, celibacy as gift.
Yet Scripture consistently frames sex within covenantal faithfulness.
Why?
Because sex creates a form of unity that calls for protection.
When Paul says marriage is better than “burning,” he isn’t trivializing desire. He is recognizing that uncontained desire destabilizes the soul. Marriage is not a bureaucratic requirement; it is a stabilizing container for a powerful force.
The biblical ethic is less about rule enforcement and more about guarding communion.
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## 4. The Fathers and the Desert Vision
The early Fathers did not treat sex as dirty — but as powerful.
For the Desert Fathers, the problem was not the body but disordered desire. They understood that eros is energy. Untethered, it fragments the heart. Ordered toward covenant and self-gift, it sanctifies.
Marriage, in their vision, was not a concession to weakness but a school of self-transcendence.
Centuries later, Thomas Merton would write about the false self versus the true self. Casual sexuality often feeds the false self — the ego seeking affirmation or escape. Covenantal love, by contrast, exposes and purifies the ego.
Sex, then, becomes either a reinforcement of illusion or a pathway to real communion.
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## 5. Near-Death Experiences and Love as Ultimate Reality
Near-death experiencers consistently report something striking: the ultimate measure of life is love.
They describe:
* Interconnectedness
* Radiant unity
* A sense that selfishness shrinks the soul
* A review of how one loved
If love is ontologically fundamental — as both Christian mysticism and many NDE accounts suggest — then sexual ethics cannot be reduced to mere rule compliance.
The question becomes:
Does this act increase communion?
Does it deepen truthful self-gift?
Does it honor the image of God in the other?
Sex divorced from covenant can sometimes approximate love — but it can also mimic communion without fully embodying it.
And that’s where the “lie” language emerges. Not necessarily because there is no affection, but because the body may be enacting permanence without permanence being secured.
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The body has a meaning. The question is whether we discover it or redefine it.
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## 7. The Happiness Dimension
Modern research shows:
* Stable marriages correlate with higher long-term life satisfaction.
* Secure attachment predicts emotional resilience.
* Sexual exclusivity often strengthens trust and psychological safety.
Pleasure alone does not equal flourishing.
Happiness science increasingly echoes what biblical wisdom intuited: enduring communion matters more than episodic intensity.
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## 8. A Careful Conclusion
This is not a simplistic condemnation of all sex outside formal marriage. Scripture’s relative silence invites humility.
But neither is it a dismissal of two thousand years of reflection.
Sex is:
* Unitive
* Potentially procreative
* Psychologically bonding
* Spiritually formative
It is not neutral.
The deeper moral question is not merely, “Is this technically forbidden?” but:
Does this relationship embody the kind of communion that mirrors divine love?
If sex is designed for communion — body and soul — then its fullest meaning likely requires a structure strong enough to hold that weight.
And that structure, historically, has been covenant.
Not because authority demands it.
But because love, to be whole, needs protection.
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This blog as a project is about the law of love as ontological coherence. Sexual ethics is not peripheral to that vision — it’s central.
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