Difference between revisions of "Sexual abstinence" - New World Encyclopedia

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:''This article focuses on premarital sexual abstinence in the modern context; for the lifelong abstinence of monastics and priests of certain religions see the article on [[Celibacy]].''
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'''Sexual abstinence''' in the modern context refers to the decision to refrain from [[human sexuality|sexual]] activity prior to [[marriage]]. The traditional religious virtue of [[chastity]] combines abstinence before marriage with sexual fidelity to one's spouse within marriage. Reasons for unmarrieds to abstain from sexual activity include [[religion|religious]] convictions, to conform to legal injunctions, to prevent undesired [[pregnancy]] or [[sexually transmitted disease]]s (STDs), and to "save oneself" for marriage with the hope of better marital outcomes.
  
:''"Sexual abstinence" redirects here''.
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The world's major [[religion]]s concur in viewing sexual intimacy as proper only within [[marriage]]; otherwise it can be destructive to human flourishing. Sexual abstinence prior to marriage and fidelity within marriage are time-honored norms for maintaining strong [[family|families]]. Traditional societies made [[virginity]] the norm for unmarrieds; backed by strong community sanctions and even by force of law. However, in the modern West particularly since the [[sexual revolution]] of the 1960s, this norm fell by the wayside, replaced by widespread acceptance of casual sex before marriage and even cohabitation in place of marriage. In the current cultural climate, many see sexual abstinence as unnatural, even unhealthy.
:''This article discusses celibacy, or sexual abstinence, in all its forms; for the religious view on the purpose and value of priestly celibacy see the article on [[chastity]]''
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{{toc}}
'''Celibacy''' refers to an individual having decided to refrain from [[human sexuality|sexual]] activity ('''sexual abstinence'''), or to remain unmarried. Common reasons to deliberately abstain from the physical expression of [[human sexuality|sexual]] desire include [[religion|religious]] or [[philosophy|philosophical]] reasons (such as [[chastity]]), material reasons (to prevent undesired [[pregnancy]] or [[Sexually Transmitted Disease]] (STD) transmission), or to conform to legal injunctions.  
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In attempting to combat the current climate, social conservatives in the [[United States]] have been advocating for abstinence-based [[sex education]], which attempts to uphold the traditional norm. These educators also advocate "secondary virginity," a recommitment to abstinence by teens who previously were sexually active. Some churches promote a "virginity pledge," a commitment to remain sexually abstinent prior to marriage. When supported by medical, psychological, social, and spiritual understanding, such educational efforts have positive impact on the lives of young people.
  
Some religions require celibacy of their [[priest]]s, regarding sexual purity as essential in order to perform the rites and rituals that connect the people to [[heaven]]. Others regard the priestly function more in terms of ministering to the people, and thus a healthy [[marriage]] is considered as good if not better than celibacy. In [[monasticism|monastic]] orders a vow of sexual abstinence is often viewed as essential in order to align ones mind and spirit to the path of spiritual growth, renouncing cares of the physical world, which include sexual relationships. Philosophers too have taken this path.
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==The norm of premarital abstinence and its decline==
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Throughout history and in most nations throughout the world, religious teachings have informed social and legal standards. Since [[adultery]] has generally been regarded as a [[sin]], and [[marriage]] was considered the legitimizer of sexual relations, maintaining [[virginity]] prior to marriage, which in early times often took place soon after [[puberty]], was the norm. Yet for many men, [[prostitution]] has been tolerated as a sexual outlet, whether openly practiced or conducted discreetly. The [[Victorian era|Victorian]] period saw a tightening of sexual [[more]]s. The [[First World War]] began an upsurge in sexual freedom and indulgence, even as large portions of society retained the traditional moral values of abstinence before marriage.  
  
For many, however, celibacy is seen as unnatural, even unhealthy. While debate persists on this issue, religious teachings maintain that fidelity within marriage is vital to the sacrament and to the health of the marriage and ensuing [[family]]. Beliefs in the sacredness of marriage and human sexuality provide reasons for abstinence prior to marriage, fidelity to one's spouse after marriage, and lifelong abstinence if a person does not marry.  
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In the 1960s, the advent of the first oral [[contraception|contraceptive]] pill and widely available [[antibiotic]]s suppressed many consequences of promiscuous behavior. This coincided with the "sexual revolution" which celebrated blatant sexuality as an expression of adolescent freedom and self-expression. By the 1970s, abandonment of premarital chastity was no longer [[taboo]] in the majority of western societies. Perhaps even the reverse: it became expected, or recommended, that members of both sexes would have experienced a number of sexual partners before marriage. Some cultural groups continued to place a value on the moral [[purity]] of an abstainer, but abstinence was caught up in a wider re-evaluation of [[moral]] values.
  
==Definition==
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A contributing social trend in industrialized countries has been the delay of marriage to the late twenties and early thirties, as more young people put off marriage to attend college and begin careers. Where traditionally the onset of sexual relations in the teenage years was a cause for early marriage, today early marriage is discouraged. Yet the sexual urges of youth are not as easily delayed, and to keep abstinent until one's thirties is a herculean challenge. Yet studies are questioning the conventional wisdom that early marriages are less stable and of lesser quality than marriages that begin later in life. The early twenties, when romantic feelings are at their peak and the body is most fecund, may be the best time for marriage. The keeping abstinent until then can be a realistic goal.  
'''Celibacy''' or '''sexual abstinence''' is defined as abstention from [[human sexuality|sexual intercourse]], or the state of being unmarried. Celibacy may be used as a synonym for "[[abstinence]]" or "[[chastity]]." A vow of celibacy may be a promise not to enter into [[marriage]] or to engage in sexual intercourse.
 
  
The word is derived from the [[Latin]] ''celibatus'' meaning "state of being unmarried," which itself came from the Proto-Indo-European roots of ''kaiwelo-libs'' meaning "alone living."<ref>[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=celibacy Celibacy.] ''Online Etymology Dictionary''. Retrieved August 5, 2007.</ref>
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Today most of the stigmas that discouraged premarital sex have been removed. Even as late as the mid-twentieth century, there was a stigma attached to being a "one-parent family" or producing an [[illegitimacy|illegitimate]] child—but no longer. The lifting of legal penalties and social stigma regarding illegitimacy has made cohabitation and single motherhood socially acceptable options. Society has not yet reckoned with the social costs of these options, particularly to the children.
  
==History==
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== Modern abstinence movements ==
Much of the history of celibacy is tied to [[religion|religious]] orders. In primitive societies [[shamanism]] was often practiced. Along with their intense experiences and extraordinary calling, shamans were committed to strict purity, which often included celibacy.
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With the increasing problems of unwanted teenage [[pregnancy|pregnancies]] and [[sexually transmitted disease]]s, socially conscious educators began to promote abstinence for teenagers and recommending [[virginity]] prior to [[marriage]]. Without sexual contact, it is virtually impossible to conceive an unwanted child. By avoiding exposure of the sexual organs to other people, one may also avoid the sexual transmission of many diseases (STDs).  
 
 
[[Eunuch]]s (castrated males) have had different roles in societies throughout history. The earliest record of intentional [[castration]] comes from the twenty-first century B.C.E. in [[Sumeria]]. Eunuchs have been called on to be courtiers or equivalent domestics, treble singers, religious specialists, government officials, military commanders, and guardians of women or harem servants. In the [[Byzantine]] empire, eunuchs were men who had chosen to be celibate or not procreate rather than those who were physically castrated.
 
 
 
Ancient [[Roman empire|Roman]] society exalted the [[Vestal Virgin]]s, who were the high priestesses of [[Vesta]], the goddess of the hearth. The Vestal Virgins were women who chose to become priests around [[puberty]] and dedicated themselves to thirty years of chastity.
 
 
 
The [[Ancient Greece|ancient Greek]] civilization developed two forms of celibacy for men: one was the sacerdotal celibacy of the [[priest]]; the other, the [[asceticism|ascetic]] celibacy of the [[philosophy|philosopher]]. Priests of various cults, such as the followers of [[Isis]], were required to abstain from sexual activity in order to be qualified to practice the sacred rituals. The philosopher [[Pythagoras]] and his followers were devoted to study, and practiced celibacy and [[vegetarianism]]. [[Epictetus]] and others regarded celibacy as important to avoid distractions and allow the mind to focus clearly on the complex task of scholarly inquiry.
 
 
 
For the general populace in most societies lifelong celibacy was not expected. However, for many societies religious teachings informed social and legal standards. Since [[adultery]] has generally been regarded as a [[sin]], and [[marriage]] was considered the legitimizer of sexual relations, maintaining [[virginity]] prior to marriage, which in early times often took place soon after [[puberty]], was the norm. Yet, [[prostitution]] was a constant, whether openly practiced or conducted discretely, such as by the rich and those who traveled far from home (soldiers, sailors, merchants, and so forth).
 
 
 
The early [[Victorian era|Victorian]] period saw a tightening of sexual [[more]]s, followed by a strict [[puritanism]] from the late Victorian era to the mid 1900s. The [[First World War]] began a return to sexual freedom and indulgence, but more often than not the appearance of conforming to the earlier moral values of abstinence before [[marriage]] was retained.
 
 
 
With the conclusion of the [[Second World War]], the societal importance of abstinence declined swiftly. The advent of the first oral [[contraception|contraceptive]] pill and widely available [[antibiotic]]s suppressed many consequences of promiscuous behavior, while social mores were also changing. By the 1970s, abandonment of premarital chastity was no longer [[taboo]] in the majority of western societies. Perhaps even the reverse: it became expected, or recommended, that members of both sexes would have experienced a number of sexual partners before marriage. Some cultural groups continued to place a value on the moral [[purity]] of an abstainer, but abstinence was caught up in a wider re-evaluation of [[moral]] values.
 
 
 
[[Anthropology|Anthropologists]] and social historians have noted that many cultures such as Victorian Britain or the rural areas in the modern United States, which formally place a high value on abstinence until marriage, actually have a large amount of premarital sexual activity. This activity, however, may take a form in which there is no actual [[sexual intercourse]], thus preserving a state known as "technical virginity."
 
 
 
In some cultures, those who infringe the rules regarding chastity may be ostracized. Social re-acceptance can sometimes be regained by marriage between the two. In the West, even as late as the mid-twentieth century, there was a stigma attached to being a "one-parent family" and an [[illegitimacy|illegitimate]] child could be legitimized by the marriage of the parents. This latter situation remains the case in many Western countries, though the lifting of legal penalties and social stigma regarding illegitimacy has rendered this irrelevant to social acceptance.
 
  
==Types==
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Organizations on the Left such as [[SIECUS]] have called abstinence-only programs "fear-based," "designed to control young people’s sexual behavior by instilling fear, shame, and guilt."<ref>Martha E. Kempner, [http://www.siecus.org/pubs/tsha_scaredchaste.pdf Toward a Sexually Healthy America]''SIECUS''. Retrieved August 9, 2007.</ref> Advocates for sexual abstinence dispute this, and claim numerous positive benefits, such as the freedom from teenage pregnancy and the resulting ability to focus on [[education]] and preparing for their future. They note that, contrary to the promiscuity [[norm]] following the "sexual revolution," preparation for a lifetime of happiness with a single, faithful marriage partner is well served by practicing self-restraint in situations of sexual temptation.<ref>''Educating for True Love'' (International Educational Foundation, 2006 ISBN 1891858070)</ref>
Reasons for celibacy are varied:
 
* Religious beliefs ([[Celibacy#Religious_celibacy|religious celibacy]])
 
* To avoid the risk of [[venereal disease]] and to prevent its spread
 
* To focus energies on other matters, like social issues
 
* To avoid contributing to [[Overpopulation|overpopulation]]
 
* To cultivate a relationship according to an ideal of [[chastity]]
 
* An inability to obtain a willing sexual partner ("involuntary celibacy")
 
* A distaste or lack of appetite for sex ([[asexuality]])
 
* To avoid persecution (such as prosecution for [[homosexuality|homosexual]] relations under [[sodomy]] laws)
 
  
===Religious celibacy===
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The effectiveness of abstinence programs for [[sex education]] remains a topic of much controversy in the [[United States]]. Opponents frequently adopt the line that abstinence education is acceptable only if it is combined with other methods, such as instruction in the use and easy availability of condoms. Proponents reply that to teach about condoms and promote their availability effectively undermines the abstinence norm.
Clerical or sacerdotal celibacy is a requirement for [[priest]]s of some [[religion]]s. In this understanding, the priest is in the position of mediator between [[God]] (or [[Heaven]]) and the people, and purity is required to fulfill this function. Since sexual power, or [[love]] of a woman, rivals the power of spirit and love for God, sexual abstinence is required for the office of priest.
 
  
In many religions some groups of people are expected to practice celibacy — to abstain from sex completely, and remain unmarried. These groups include [[monk]]s, [[nun]]s, and [[priest]]s in various sects of [[Christianity]]. [[monasticism|Monastic]] orders of [[Hinduism|Hindu]] and [[Buddhism|Buddhist]] traditions also require celibacy. In these cases, however, the purpose is not to be a conduit to heaven, but rather for individual spiritual growth; sexual power is considered a distraction and obstruction to attainment of the highest levels of spiritual maturity.  
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In the fight against [[HIV/AIDS]], [[Uganda]] is cited as a model for its "ABC" program that mobilized local clergy with its abstinence message. The initials ABC actually signified a mixed approach—"Abstain, Be faithful, use a Condom"—but with each of the three messages addressed to different audiences. Young people were advised to be abstinent; married people to be faithful to their spouse, and high-risk groups such as sex workers and promiscuous men to use condoms. With this separately-targeted approach, the government could utilize clergy to get out the word to the villages (which they were uniquely positioned to penetrate) with the abstinence and fidelity message, while other health workers dealt with the high-risk groups. Such a mixed approach is a sensible alternative to the polarization between advocates and opponents of abstinence that characterizes the issue in the United States.
  
Celibacy is also proclaimed by some religions as an ideal for laypeople, for the unmarried, or for [[homosexuality|homosexuals]]. [[Chastity]] is a [[virtue]] expected of the faithful of many religions, including [[Christian]]s and [[Muslim]]s. This usually includes abstinence from sex for the unmarried, and faithfulness to a [[marriage]] partner. From the Roman Catholic perspective everyone is called to chastity be they married, single, or in a religious order. Chastity is a function of one's respect for the dignity of another especially in a sexual context. Sex with one's spouse is not against chastity so long as both remain open to having children — [[contraception|contraceptives]] violate true chastity.
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==The Case for Abstinence==
  
====Buddhism====
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===Abstinence and marriage preparation===
In [[Buddhism]], according to the celibate, the main goal of living is to eliminate (or at least decrease) [[Tanha|desire]]. Desire is seen as one of the main causes of [[suffering]], both in the world and in the [[mind]] or heart. A commonly-used metaphor sees desire, especially sexual desire, to be like drinking [[saline water|salty water]]: the more one consumes, the greater the desire - and the worse one's (mental) state of health becomes.
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Beginning with Florida and Oklahoma in 1999, numerous states have begun mandating marriage education classes in high schools. This is in response to the growing rate of divorce and the perceived lack of relationship skills among young people to succeed in making lasting marriages. In cities that have instituted a "Community Marriage Policy" in which judges and clergy agree to conduct marriages only for couples who have received premarital education and counseling, divorce rates have dropped considerably.<ref>Michael J. McManus. ''Marriage Savers: Helping your friends and family avoid divorce.'' (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1995).</ref>
  
In [[Buddhism]], attachment to impermanent things is regarded as one of the major causes of suffering. Sex is arguably the strongest attachment to impermanent things that human beings have. Therefore in Buddhism celibacy has been regarded as essential to obtaining [[Nirvana]] (liberation from suffering):
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In this context, the practice of sexual abstinence creates an excellent foundation for marriage preparation. It allows for the strengthening of character free from the moral compromises of sexual involvements; it allows for personal development free from sexual distractions; and it allows for friendship building free from sexual complications. These in turn tend to reinforce postponing sexual activity. Individuals with integrity, a close relationship with their parents, many good friendships and cultivated talents and interests find abstinence less of a challenge.  
<blockquote>If a man should go naked... feed on potherbs, wild rice, or Nivara
 
seeds...wear coarse hempen cloth, or carry out any other [ascetic] prac-
 
tices... yet the state of blissful attainment in conduct, in heart, in
 
intellect, have not been practiced by him, realized by him, then he is far
 
from shramanaship, far from brahminship. But from the time, O Kassapa,
 
when a monk has cultivated the heart of love that knows no anger, that
 
knows no ill will—from the time when, by the destruction of the deadly
 
intoxications, he dwells in that emancipation of heart, that emancipation
 
of mind, that is free from those intoxications, and that he, while yet in
 
this visible world, has come to realize and know—from that time, O
 
Kassapa, is it that the monk is called a shramana, is called a brahmin! (
 
Digha Nikaya i.167, Kassapasihanada Sutta)</blockquote>
 
  
====Christianity====
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At the same time, those who practice abstinence tend to have a more positive view of marriage. Research found that virgins have more favorable attitudes toward marriage than do nonvirgins who had multiple sex partners. Both abstinence and pro-marriage attitudes reinforce each other.<ref>Connie J. Salts, "Attitudes toward Marriage and Premarital Sexual Activity of College Freshmen," ''Adolescence'' (Winter 1994): 775.</ref> Boston University’s ''The Art of Loving Well'' is a literature-based course that is used for both purposes.<ref>Loving Well Project, School of Education, Boston University. ''The Art of Loving Well: A Character Education Curriculum for Todays Teenagers'' (Boston: Boston University, 1995). ISBN 0872700798</ref> Marriage education sustains the hope of a happy committed relationship, making the choice of saving sexual activity until marriage more viable and attractive. Even where marriage preparation courses do not have an explicit abstinence message, educators report that the very discussion of the demands and rewards of committed relationships reinforces the concept of abstinence before such relationships.<ref>Tony Devine, Joon Ho Seuk and Andrew Wilson. ''Cultivating Heart and Character: Educating for Life's Most Essential Goals.'' (Chapel Hill, NC: Character Development Publishing, 2000). ISBN 1892056151</ref>
  
The [[Roman Catholic|Catholic]] Church requires that its priests be celibate. This is so that they can devote themselves completely to the care of Christ's Flock (Matthew 19:12). The Church has not required celibacy of all ecclesiastics at all times in history (it was not required of the majority of ecclesiastics in the early Church, and in modern times certain converts are permitted to be married when receiving [[Holy Orders]]). The Catholic Church's practice of clerical celibacy among priests and bishops of the [[Latin Rite]] and bishops of all rites, Eastern and Western, was confirmed by the [[Second Vatican Council]] and reaffirmed by [[Pope Paul VI]] in his encyclical letter, [[Sacerdotalis Caelibatus]], June 24, 1967.
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===Negative consequences of premarital sex===
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Lethal sexually transmitted diseases and unwed parenthood garner attention from parents, teachers, legislatures and public health officials. Lost in this focus is the reality that even if disease and pregnancy are avoided, every sexual encounter outside of a mature and lifelong commitment—marriage—carries the risk of negative psychological, relational and social consequences. This risk is inherent to the nature of sexuality and therefore unavoidable. Yet because the prevailing permissive ethic is grounded in a certain non-judgmental tolerance, the deeper, non-physical levels of harm and therefore the more subtle forms of abuse within sexual relations receive little acknowledgement.
  
Clerical celibacy was an important point of disagreement during the [[Reformation]]. Reformers argued that requiring a vow of celibacy from a priest was contrary to biblical teaching (1 Tim 4:1-5, Heb 13:4, 1 Cor 9:5), a degradation of [[marriage]], and a reason for the widespread sexual misconduct within the clergy at the time of the Reformation (discussed by [[John Calvin]] in his ''Institutes of the Christian Religion'' IV,12,23-28).<ref> [http://www.vor.org/rbdisk/calvin/ci_html/4_12.htm#4.12.23 Of the discipline of the Church, and its principal use in censures and excommunication.] (Calvin's Institutes Books). Retrieved July 30, 2007.</ref>
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As first explored by educators Thomas Lickona and Josh McDowell,<ref>Josh McDowell and Dick Day. ''Why Wait: What You Need to Know about the Teen Sexuality Crisis.'' (San Bernardino, CA: Here’s Life, 1987); Thomas Lickona, “The Neglected Heart,''American Educator'' (Summer 1994), 34-39.</ref> the emotional and psychological harm of sex in insecure relationships may be perceived only semi-consciously at the time, eclipsed by the pleasures and supposed benefits of expanded experience. Too often the real price paid is discovered after much of the damage is done. One woman psychiatrist recounts the impact of her promiscuous teenage years: “That sick, used feeling of having given a precious part of myself…to so many and for nothing, still aches. I never imagined I’d pay so dearly and for so long.” The effects of sex outside of marriage on psychological health, especially among adolescents are many:
  
Catholics understand celibacy to be a reflection of life in [[Heaven]], and a source of detachment from the material world, which aids in one's relationship with [[God]]. Catholic [[priest]]s are called to be espoused to the Church itself, and espoused to God, without overwhelming commitments interfering with the relationship. The [[Apostle Paul]] explained this argument for celibacy:  
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#'''Hindered personal development:''' Getting involved in sexual activities prematurely and in insecure relationships drains youth of the energy needed for emotional, moral, creative and intellectual growth. Sex under these circumstances becomes a powerful distraction away from important tasks that adolescents need to complete on the way to personal maturity, creating a family and pursuing their careers.
<blockquote>But I would have you to be without solicitude. He that is without a wife is solicitous for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may please God. But he that is with a wife, is solicitous for the things of the world, how he may please his wife: and he is divided. And the unmarried woman and the virgin thinketh on the things of the Lord, that she may be holy both in body and spirit. But she that is married thinketh on the things of this world how she may please her husband. And this I speak for your profit, not to cast a snare upon you, but for that which is decent and which may give you power to attend upon the Lord without impediment. (I Corinthians 7:7-8;32-35)
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#'''Corruption of character:''' In marriage, sexual intimacy supports the partners’ mutual love, while in uncommitted relationships among youth, it is mainly to boost the partners’ egos. Premarital sex thus often compounds self-centeredness, rather than supporting the developmental task of learning unselfish love.<ref>Wanda Franz, “Sex and the American Teenager,” ''The World & I'' (September 1989), 478.</ref> Worse, premarital sex is a corrupting influence, providing occasions for males to lie and cheat to get sex. According to a University of Connecticut study of 75 middle-class 19-year-old male students, sixty-five percent admitted that they had gotten young women drunk for that purpose. More than half had arranged to enter their date's apartment, and 40 percent had used verbal intimidation. One in five had used force or threats of violence.<ref>D.L. Mosher & R.E. Anderson, ''Journal of Research in Personality'' 20 (1986), 77. Cited in Joe S. McIlhaney. ''Sexuality and Sexually Transmitted Diseases'' (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1990), 62.</ref> In a survey of University of California students, one-fourth of men who were sexually involved with more than one person at a time said their sexual partners did not know.<ref>McIlhaney, ''Sexuality and Sexually Transmitted Diseases.'',  65.</ref>
</blockquote>
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#'''Guilt and shame:''' Many people intuitively feel that to give away their virginity in an unworthy relationship, and to possibly continue to abuse their sexuality, is a profound violation of self. This becomes a source of shame. The shame is deeper still if they have violated their parents' trust and feel compelled to keep their sexual activity a secret. Girls face the additional shame of a ruined reputation. For males, knowingly—or even unknowingly—using another only for the pleasure of sex and then witnessing the partner’s heartbreak after being discarded can generate guilt that can linger over a lifetime. College counselor Carson Daly comments, “I don't think I ever met a student who was sorry he or she had postponed sexual activity, but I certainly met many who deeply regretted their sexual involvement.”<ref>Thomas and Judy Lickona. ''Sex, Love & You.'' (South Bend, IN: Ave Maria Press, 1994), 39. </ref>
Yet, Catholics understand celibacy to be the calling of some, but not all.
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#'''Lowered self-esteem:''' When sex is a matter of making conquests or negotiating favors, or using and being used, youth may lose self-respect, even if they are not conscious of the loss for a long time. Further, making sexiness and sexual prowess an important basis for romantic connections amplifies the tendency to judge people on what they do and how they look rather than on who they are. Thus anxiety is built into insecure relationships. “Do I still please you? Do I still look good?” There is always the legitimate fear that someone else will perform better or look more attractive when sexual utility is the criteria for attention.<ref>Josh McDowell. ''Myths of Sex Education.'' (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1991),  254</ref>
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#'''Sex addiction:''' Like controlled substances, sex is addictive—there are estimated to be over 13 million sex addicts in the U.S. As with any addiction, sex can take over relationships and overwhelm other interests.
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#'''Depression:''' All romantic involvements of some duration are painful when they break up, and sex intensifies the feeling of loss. Breaking off a premarital relationship in which two hearts have bonded through sexual union can precipitate an emotional crisis resembling that of a divorce. The heartbreak, compounded with the sense of having given themselves so totally for such a paucity of return, can help drive young people to the brink of despair. One tragic result is teenage suicide, which has tripled over the past 25 years in the U.S.—the same period during which the rate of teenage sexual activity rose so sharply. Statistically, non-virginal girls are six times more prone to suicide than are virgins.<ref>Donald Orr, “Premature Sexual Activity as an Indicator of Psychosocial Risk,” ''Pediatrics'' 87 (February 1991): 141-147.</ref> 
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#'''Anti-social and criminal behavior:''' Sexually experienced girls aged 12 to 16 are 18 times more likely to run away from home than virgins. They are 9 times more likely to be arrested by the police. The probability of being suspended from school is 5 times greater. Non-virginal girls are 10 times more likely to use [[marijuana]], one of the gateway drugs. Similar correlations are found among non-virginal boys.<ref>Orr, “Premature Sexual Activity,” 141-147.</ref> The emotional explosion over a sexual betrayal can sometimes turn jealousy into rage, leading to violence against the former partner or the rival lover, even murder.
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#'''Alienation from parents:''' When their children enter into sexual relations outside the formal process of marriage, parents can feel disrespected and hurt, their values compromised.
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#'''Broken friendships:''' Sexual involvement can turn close friends into bitter enemies overnight. Few things are as divisive as sexual jealousy. A crowd of sexually active adolescents can feel like a sticky web of sexual attraction, possessiveness, jealousy, rivalry and betrayal. All intentions become suspect. Is it just a hug or an invitation to something more? Does she want a friend or is she trying to make someone jealous?
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#'''Emotional withdrawal:''' The expression, “Once burned, twice shy” applies to many people who emotionally withdraw and refuse to trust anyone as a potential partner after the heartache of the breakup of a sexual relationship. The remembered pain of betrayal can stand in the way of giving themselves trustingly to anyone else.
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#'''Prospective marriage derailed:''' The introduction of sex can risk derailing a warm and caring friendship that might well have been a good basis for marriage. Physical intimacy can become an easy substitute for the effort to build emotional intimacy. Sex can easily come to overpower any meaningful communication or other healthy activities together. Caught up in the pleasures of sex, the partners may begin to expect sex and demand it of each other, raising the level of tension in what had been a warm relationship. In fact, sexual involvement outside of marriage, especially among live-in lovers, is associated with more violence and other forms of abuse than among the married.<ref>Jan E. Stets, “Cohabiting and Marital Aggression: The Role of Social Isolation,” ''Journal of Marriage and the Family'' 53 (1991): 669-680.</ref> 
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#'''Negative consequences for future marriage:''' A person rarely forgets a sexual partner, even if he or she wants to. Those who have engaged in premarital sex may find that they are haunted by the images of past partners, even in the marriage bed. Involuntary comparisons to a previous lover—who might have been better at kissing or some other love-play—can certainly be disruptive to loving one's spouse. A young wife may develop a feeling of scorn for her husband who cannot measure up to her idealized memories of past partners.<ref>Stacey Rinehart and Paula Rinehart. ''Choices.'' (Colorado Springs: Navpress, 1982), 94; Josh McDowell. ''Myths of Sex Education.'' (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1991), 255.</ref> After many uncommitted relationships, sex may lose its power to build intimacy with the one chosen to be a lifetime companion. Like glue, sex does not bond as well when reused again and again. Worse, studies show the habit of surrendering to sexual feelings before marriage can prove to be a serious problem at some stressful time with a spouse.<ref>L.H. Buskel, et al., “Projected Extramarital Sexual Involvement in Unmarried College Students,” ''Journal of Marriage and the Family'' 40 (1978): 337-340.</ref> How can a spouse trust that her mate, who never practiced sexual integrity before marriage, will be able to do so after the wedding?
  
====Hinduism====
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===Unwed teenage pregnancy===
In [[Hindu]] culture, celibacy is observed when the young child leads a student life. A Hindu renunciate may take the vow of celibacy at any age when they have understood that living for material/sensual pleasures will never bring the perfect [[happiness]] that their [[soul]] desires. Thus their life becomes centered on surrender to [[Guru]] and [[God]] with the firm hope of God realization and the perfect Divine Happiness. The Hindu tradition of [[Brahmacharya]] places great emphasis on abstinence as a way of harnessing the energy of body and mind towards the goal of spiritual realization. In males, the [[semen]] (Veerja) is considered sacred and its preservation (except when used for procreation) and conversion into higher life energy ([[Ojas]]) is considered essential for the development of enhanced intellectual and spiritual capacities.
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Adolescent girls becoming pregnant and bearing children has always been commonplace; until the recent past they were typically married. Though there are some health risks, the greatest hazards of pregnancy to an unwed teenager are less physical than psychological, relational and economic—mainly due to her being unmarried. Unwed pregnancy generates a great deal of emotional distress, especially between the partners themselves. Nine out of ten American adolescent boys abandon their pregnant girlfriends, even if reluctantly. Suicide is seven times more likely for the pregnant girl.<ref>Susan Browning Pogany. ''SexSmart: 501 Reasons to Hold Off on Sex.'' (Minneapolis: Fairview Press, 1998), 57-58.</ref> 
  
In Hinduism, there is a difference between monks and priests. Historically, monks take vows of [[poverty]] and celibacy and are exempt from most public ceremonies and focus instead on [[prayer]] and [[meditation]], focusing on the contemplative side of the Hindu tradition. Priests on the other hand do not have to be celibate and are responsible for the public ceremonies in the Hindu faith. However, the public roles between monks and priests have started to change and now some monks function within the social structure in needy areas of society.
+
Economically, girls who choose to bear their child are far less likely to complete higher education, less likely to marry, or to escape [[poverty]]. Mothers who are unmarried, under 20 years old, and without a high school diploma are ten times more likely to raise their child in poverty in America than those who are not.<ref>William A. Galston, “Beyond the Murphy Brown Debate,” paper presented at the Institute for American Values Family Policy Symposium, New York, December 10, 1993.</ref> Aborting the pregnancy carries other risks, including chronic grief and guilt.
  
====Islam====
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=== Medical aspects ===
[[Islam]] forbids intercourse outside of [[marriage]], however maintaining celibacy as an act of piety is strongly discouraged, and marriage for all who are able is strongly encouraged. Similar to Judaism, abstinence is practiced during the time of a woman's [[menstruation]]. Abstinence from sexual intercourse is also practiced during the dawn to dusk fasts of [[Ramadan]] or other fasting days.
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The massive epidemic of [[sexually transmitted disease]]s (STDs) is largely a result of premarital sex with multiple partners. Of the total population infected with any STD, two thirds of these cases are youth under the age of 25. It is estimated that half of nonvirginal Americans can expect to be infected during their lifetime. (There are 300 new STD cases for every new HIV case in the United States.) More than one in five teenagers and adults currently has an incurable viral STD, apart from [[AIDS]].<ref>H. Hunter Handsfield, et al., “Report of the Genital Herpes Prevention Consultants Meeting, May 5-6, 1998,” Centers for Disease Control, July 30, 1998.</ref> [[Condom]]s are largely ineffective with common infections like [[genital herpes]], [[gonorrhea]], [[human papilloma virus]] and [[chlamydia]].<ref>S. Samuels, “Epidemic among America’s Young,” ''Medical Aspects of Human Sexuality'' 23 (December 1989). </ref>
  
====Judaism====
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Many people are even unaware that they have an STD. Like HIV/AIDS, these diseases can present no symptoms for quite a while. The potential consequences of STDs include chronic pain and psychological distress. In one study over half of herpes victims reported fear of rejection and [[depression]] during their most recent outbreak.<ref>''OB/GYN News,'' American Public Health Association, February 15, 1993. </ref> More serious consequences include [[infertility]], a greater susceptibility to [[cancer]] and HIV, and difficulty in getting married.
[[Judaism]] forbids intercourse outside [[marriage]] (which is termed ''zenuth'' or promiscuity), but has no ideal of abstinence for particular clerical groups. In fact, it is practically expected of men in religious functions (such as [[rabbi]]s) to be married. Abstinence is practiced while a woman is [[menstruation|menstruating]] and the week after cessation of flow (the law of ''[[niddah]]''), as well as a set period after [[childbirth]].  
+
 +
Young women's bodies are more vulnerable to infection than those of adult women. Their [[cervix|cervical]] mucosa is more conducive to microorganisms. Teenagers are ten times more vulnerable to [[pelvic inflammatory disease]], an affliction accompanying chlamydia and gonorrhea that threatens fertility.<ref>J. Anderson and M. Wilson, “Caring for Teenagers with Salpingitis,” ''Contemporary OB/GYN'' (August 1990); L. Westrom, “Incidence, Prevalence, and Trends of Acute Pelvic Inflammatory Disease and its Consequences in Industrialized Countries,” ''American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology'' 138 (1991): 880-892.</ref> Most of those with the chlamydial form of the disease will face pelvic surgery of some kind, whether to remove organs or to help conceive a child. Sexually active girls under 17 years of age have double the rate of cervical cancer of grown women. Cervical cancer is also linked to having many sexual partners.<ref>M. S. McAfee, ''OB/GYN Clinical Alert'' (July 1988).</ref> It does not occur in girls who remain virgins.
  
===Premarital chastity ===
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Youth are at greatest risk also because those who begin sex early will likely have more sexual partners over a lifetime. It is this—not whether each of those relationships was mutually exclusive at the time—that increases the probability of contracting an STD. Medical realities affirm that people, especially the young, are not suited for sex outside of a lifelong monogamous relationship.
Many religious and ethical systems proscribe sexual activities between a person and anyone other than a spouse of that person, including most denominational variations of [[Judaism]], [[Christianity]], and [[Islam]], as have, historically, many legal systems and societal norms. In such contexts, sexual abstinence is prescribed for unmarried individuals for the purpose of [[chastity]]. "Chastity" is sometimes used synonymously with sexual abstinence, but the mechanisms of chastity are typically different for persons who assume different societal roles. For example, in most cultural, ethical, and religious contexts, sexual intercourse within [[monogamy|monogamous]] [[marriage]] is not considered to be opposed to chastity.
 
  
Among Catholics and members of the [[Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] (LDS church also known as Mormons), homosexuals are expected to remain celibate. Those who identify as homosexual may not be able to become Catholic priests, however, even if they maintain celibacy.
 
 
===Ascetism===
 
Lifelong (or at least long-term) celibacy, often associated with religious [[ascetism]], is distinguished from abstinence before [[marriage]]. Abstinence is often viewed as an admirable act of self-control over the natural desire to have sex. The display of the strength of character allows the abstainer to set an example for those not able to contain their "base urges." At other times abstinence has been seen as a great social ill practiced by those who refuse to engage with the material and physical world. Some groups that propose sexual abstinence consider it an essential means to reach a particular intellectual or spiritual condition, or that celibacy allows one to achieve a required self-control or a self-consciousness.<ref>[http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=979394 The Hermeneutics of Sexual Order] ''Social Science Research Network''. Retrieved July 30, 2007.</ref>
 
 
In some religions, including some branches of Christianity, celibacy is required for those joining [[monasticism|monastic]] orders. The [[Shakers]] impose celibacy as a requirement for all members. However, they may adopt a child if they wish, which is one way to maintain the population. Another way they could expand their community's population is to allow converts to join the Shaker society.
 
 
While there have been cultures which achieved total sexual abstinence, such as [[castration cult]]s, most did not survive for a substantial period of time due to their lack of [[reproduction]].
 
 
== Medical aspects of abstinence ==
 
Throughout history, and especially prior to the twentieth century, there have been those who have held that sexual abstinence confers numerous [[health]] benefits. For males, lack of abstinence was thought to cause a reduction of vitality. In modern times the argument has been phrased in biological terms, claiming that loss of [[semen]] through ejaculation results in a depletion of vital nutrients such as [[lecithin]] and [[phosphorus]]. Conservation of the semen allegedly allows it to be reabsorbed back into the bloodstream and aid in the healthy development of the body. Before the "[[sexual revolution]]" of the 1960s, it was commonly believed by members of the medical profession that numerous mental and physical diseases in men were caused primarily by loss of nutrients through seminal discharge, and that the deliberate conservation of this substance would lead to increased health, vitality, and intellectual prowess. This thought was also applied to [[masturbation]].
 
 
However, medical studies have not supported this view. In fact, it has been suggested that frequent ejaculation may be beneficial, such as reducing the risk of [[prostate cancer]].<ref>[http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn3942 Masturbating may protect against prostate cancer] ''New Scientist''. Retrieved July 30, 2007.</ref> It has also been suggested that excessive repression of the sexual instinct leads to an increase in the overall level of [[aggression]]. <ref>James W. Prescott, [http://www.violence.de/prescott/bulletin/article.html "Body pleasure and the origins of violence,"] ''The Bulletin of The Atomic Scientists'',(1975): 10-20. Retrieved August 9, 2007.</ref>
 
 
== Modern abstinence movements ==
 
 
With the increasing problems of unwanted teenage [[pregnancy|pregnancies]] and [[sexually transmitted disease]]s, socially conscious educators began to promote abstinence for teenagers and recommending [[virginity]] prior to [[marriage]]. Without sexual contact, it is virtually impossible to conceive an unwanted child. By avoiding exposure of the sexual organs to other people, one may also avoid the sexual transmission of many diseases (STDs).
 
 
However, many STDs can also be transmitted non-sexually, and it has been noted that many do not consider oral sex or similar acts to violate abstinence. Many of these acts can transmit STDs. One study found that 55 percent of college students claiming abstinence had indeed performed oral sex.<ref name="Understanding Abstinence">Cynthia Dailard, [http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/tgr/06/5/gr060504.html Understanding 'Abstinence': Implications for Individuals, Programs and Policies] ''The Guttmacher Report on Public Policy.'' 6, No. 5, (2003). Retrieved August 11, 2007.</ref>
 
 
Organizations such as [[SIECUS]] have called abstinence-only programs "fear-based," "designed to control young people’s sexual behavior by instilling fear, shame, and guilt."<ref>Martha E. Kempner, [http://www.siecus.org/pubs/tsha_scaredchaste.pdf Toward a Sexually Healthy America] Retrieved August 9, 2007.</ref> Author [[Judith Levine]] has argued that there might be a natural tendency of abstinence educators to escalate their messages: "Like advertising, which must continually jack up its seduction just to stay visible as other advertising proliferates, abstinence education had to make sex scarier and scarier and, at the same time, chastity sweeter."<ref> Judith Levine, ''Harmful to Minors: The Perils of Protecting Children from Sex'' (Thunder's Mouth Press, 2003 ISBN 1560255161). </ref>
 
 
Advocates for sexual abstinence claim other, positive benefits, such as the freedom from teenage pregnancy and the resulting ability to focus on [[education]] and preparing for their future. It has also been noted that, contrary to the promiscuity [[norm]] following the "sexual revolution," preparation for a lifetime of happiness with a single, faithful marriage partner is well served by practicing self-restraint in situations of sexual temptation.<ref>''Educating for True Love'' (International Educational Foundation, 2006 ISBN 1891858070)</ref>
 
 
The effectiveness of abstinence programs and movements remains debated, but in spite of these criticisms, abstinence has become the de facto focus of [[sex education]] in the [[United States]]. Opponents frequently adopt the line that abstinence education is acceptable only if it is combined with other methods, such as instruction in the use and easy availability of condoms. Most nations of [[Western Europe]] use more comprehensive measures, and in sharp contrast to the heated discussion in the US, abstinence is hardly discussed as an educational measure.
 
 
==Notable celibates==
 
 
Some notable self-proclaimed celibates in history include:
 
 
*Swami [[Vivekananda]], the chief disciple of [[Ramakrishna]] and one of the most famous and influential spiritual leaders of the philosophies of [[Vedanta]] and [[Yoga]]
 
*[[Stevie Smith]], poet and novelist, was celibate all her adult life, after sampling and rejecting romance and sex in her youth. She was fiercely critical of those who thought that her life must be emotionally impoverished by not having sexual relationships, emphasizing the depth of her [[friendship]]s, especially her bond with the aunt with whom she lived.
 
*[[Nikola Tesla]], who developed the system of alternating electrical current that became the worldwide standard, was a self-proclaimed celibate.
 
*[[Sigmund Freud]] undertook a strict vow of celibacy from about the age of forty-one, which he maintained up to his death.
 
*Sir [[Cliff Richard]], British [[rock and roll]] star, converted to [[Christianity]] and became a vocal proponent of the abstinent lifestyle which he adopted.
 
  
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
Line 137: Line 77:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* Devine, Tony, Joon Ho Seuk, and Andrew Wilson. 2000. ''Cultivating Heart and Character: Educating for Life's Most Essential Goals.'' Chapel Hill, NC: Character Development Publishing. ISBN 1-892056-15-1
+
* Buskel, L. H. et al., “Projected Extramarital Sexual Involvement in Unmarried College Students,” ''Journal of Marriage and the Family'' 40 (1978): 337-340.
 +
* Devine, Tony, Joon Ho Seuk, and Andrew Wilson. 2000. ''Cultivating Heart and Character: Educating for Life's Most Essential Goals.'' Chapel Hill, NC: Character Development Publishing. ISBN 1892056151
 +
* Galston, William A. “Beyond the Murphy Brown Debate,” paper presented at the Institute for American Values Family Policy Symposium, New York, December 10, 1993.
 +
* Lickona, Thomas, “The Neglected Heart,” ''American Educator'' (Summer 1994), 34-39.
 +
* Loving Well Project, School of Education, Boston University. ''The Art of Loving Well: A Character Education Curriculum for Todays Teenagers.'' Boston: Boston University, 1995. ISBN 0872700798
 +
* McDowell, Josh. ''Myths of Sex Education.'' Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1991.
 +
* McDowell, Josh, and Dick Day. ''Why Wait: What You Need to Know about the Teen Sexuality Crisis.'' San Bernardino, CA: Here’s Life, 1987.
 +
* McManus, Michael J. ''Marriage Savers: Helping your friends and family avoid divorce.'' Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1995.
 
* Mitchell, F.S. 2006. ''Celebrating Celibacy.'' Xulon Press. ISBN 1597818720
 
* Mitchell, F.S. 2006. ''Celebrating Celibacy.'' Xulon Press. ISBN 1597818720
 
* Mullaney, Jamie. 2005. ''Everyone Is NOT Doing It: Abstinence and Personal Identity.'' University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226547574
 
* Mullaney, Jamie. 2005. ''Everyone Is NOT Doing It: Abstinence and Personal Identity.'' University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226547574
 
* Napier, Kristine. 1996. ''The Power of Abstinence.'' Avon Books. ISBN 0380783711
 
* Napier, Kristine. 1996. ''The Power of Abstinence.'' Avon Books. ISBN 0380783711
* Stanosz, Paul. 2006. ''The Struggle for Celibacy: The Culture of Catholic Seminary Life.'' Herder & Herder. ISBN 0824523814
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* Orr, Donald, “Premature Sexual Activity as an Indicator of Psychosocial Risk,” ''Pediatrics'' 87 (February 1991): 141-147.
* Stickler, Alphonso. 1995. ''The Case for Clerical Celibacy: Its Historical Development and Theological Foundations.'' Ignatius Press. ISBN 0898705339
+
* Pogany, Susan Browning. ''SexSmart: 501 Reasons to Hold Off on Sex.'' Minneapolis: Fairview Press, 1998.
 +
* Rinehart, Stacey, and Paula Rinehart. ''Choices.'' Colorado Springs: Navpress, 1982.
 +
* Stets, Jan E., “Cohabiting and Marital Aggression: The Role of Social Isolation,” ''Journal of Marriage and the Family'' 53 (1991): 669-680.
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03637d.htm Chastity] in Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved August 9, 2007.
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All links retrieved January 26, 2023.
* [http://www.nonewmoney.org/ No New Money for Abstinence-Only-Until-Marriage Programs] advocacy website Retrieved August 9, 2007.
+
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03637d.htm Chastity] in Catholic Encyclopedia
* [http://pureloveclub.com Pure Love Club] advocacy group that encourages sexual abstinence and chastity Retrieved August 9, 2007.
+
* [http://www.lifeway.com/tlw/ True Love Waits]  
* [http://reallove.net Real Love] syndicated columnist and abstinence advocate Retrieved August 9, 2007.
 
* [http://www.silverringthing.com/ Silver Ring Thing] abstinence pledge program Retrieved August 9, 2007.
 
 
 
* [http://www.newscientist.com/channel/being-human/teenagers/dn6957-teen-sex-abstinence-study-sparks-controversy.html "Teen sex abstinence study sparks controversy"] Shaoni Bhattacharya, NewScientist.com news service, 02 February 2005 Retrieved August 9, 2007.
 
* [http://worldcommunity.com/tl The True Love Thing to Do] abstinence curriculum for teenagers Retrieved August 9, 2007.
 
* [http://www.lifeway.com/tlw/ True Love Waits] Retrieved August 9, 2007.
 
* [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/02/24/MNG2PBG3VF1.DTL "Uganda's HIV rate drops, but not from abstinence] Sabin Russell, San Francisco Chronicle, 24 February 2005 Retrieved August 9, 2007.
 
* [http://www.waitteam.org WAIT "Washington AIDS International Teens"] Retrieved August 9, 2007.
 
  
  
  
 
{{Credits|Celibacy|147725291|Sexual_abstinence|144465574|}}
 
{{Credits|Celibacy|147725291|Sexual_abstinence|144465574|}}

Latest revision as of 10:13, 26 January 2023

This article focuses on premarital sexual abstinence in the modern context; for the lifelong abstinence of monastics and priests of certain religions see the article on Celibacy.

Sexual abstinence in the modern context refers to the decision to refrain from sexual activity prior to marriage. The traditional religious virtue of chastity combines abstinence before marriage with sexual fidelity to one's spouse within marriage. Reasons for unmarrieds to abstain from sexual activity include religious convictions, to conform to legal injunctions, to prevent undesired pregnancy or sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), and to "save oneself" for marriage with the hope of better marital outcomes.

The world's major religions concur in viewing sexual intimacy as proper only within marriage; otherwise it can be destructive to human flourishing. Sexual abstinence prior to marriage and fidelity within marriage are time-honored norms for maintaining strong families. Traditional societies made virginity the norm for unmarrieds; backed by strong community sanctions and even by force of law. However, in the modern West particularly since the sexual revolution of the 1960s, this norm fell by the wayside, replaced by widespread acceptance of casual sex before marriage and even cohabitation in place of marriage. In the current cultural climate, many see sexual abstinence as unnatural, even unhealthy.

In attempting to combat the current climate, social conservatives in the United States have been advocating for abstinence-based sex education, which attempts to uphold the traditional norm. These educators also advocate "secondary virginity," a recommitment to abstinence by teens who previously were sexually active. Some churches promote a "virginity pledge," a commitment to remain sexually abstinent prior to marriage. When supported by medical, psychological, social, and spiritual understanding, such educational efforts have positive impact on the lives of young people.

The norm of premarital abstinence and its decline

Throughout history and in most nations throughout the world, religious teachings have informed social and legal standards. Since adultery has generally been regarded as a sin, and marriage was considered the legitimizer of sexual relations, maintaining virginity prior to marriage, which in early times often took place soon after puberty, was the norm. Yet for many men, prostitution has been tolerated as a sexual outlet, whether openly practiced or conducted discreetly. The Victorian period saw a tightening of sexual mores. The First World War began an upsurge in sexual freedom and indulgence, even as large portions of society retained the traditional moral values of abstinence before marriage.

In the 1960s, the advent of the first oral contraceptive pill and widely available antibiotics suppressed many consequences of promiscuous behavior. This coincided with the "sexual revolution" which celebrated blatant sexuality as an expression of adolescent freedom and self-expression. By the 1970s, abandonment of premarital chastity was no longer taboo in the majority of western societies. Perhaps even the reverse: it became expected, or recommended, that members of both sexes would have experienced a number of sexual partners before marriage. Some cultural groups continued to place a value on the moral purity of an abstainer, but abstinence was caught up in a wider re-evaluation of moral values.

A contributing social trend in industrialized countries has been the delay of marriage to the late twenties and early thirties, as more young people put off marriage to attend college and begin careers. Where traditionally the onset of sexual relations in the teenage years was a cause for early marriage, today early marriage is discouraged. Yet the sexual urges of youth are not as easily delayed, and to keep abstinent until one's thirties is a herculean challenge. Yet studies are questioning the conventional wisdom that early marriages are less stable and of lesser quality than marriages that begin later in life. The early twenties, when romantic feelings are at their peak and the body is most fecund, may be the best time for marriage. The keeping abstinent until then can be a realistic goal.

Today most of the stigmas that discouraged premarital sex have been removed. Even as late as the mid-twentieth century, there was a stigma attached to being a "one-parent family" or producing an illegitimate child—but no longer. The lifting of legal penalties and social stigma regarding illegitimacy has made cohabitation and single motherhood socially acceptable options. Society has not yet reckoned with the social costs of these options, particularly to the children.

Modern abstinence movements

With the increasing problems of unwanted teenage pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases, socially conscious educators began to promote abstinence for teenagers and recommending virginity prior to marriage. Without sexual contact, it is virtually impossible to conceive an unwanted child. By avoiding exposure of the sexual organs to other people, one may also avoid the sexual transmission of many diseases (STDs).

Organizations on the Left such as SIECUS have called abstinence-only programs "fear-based," "designed to control young people’s sexual behavior by instilling fear, shame, and guilt."[1] Advocates for sexual abstinence dispute this, and claim numerous positive benefits, such as the freedom from teenage pregnancy and the resulting ability to focus on education and preparing for their future. They note that, contrary to the promiscuity norm following the "sexual revolution," preparation for a lifetime of happiness with a single, faithful marriage partner is well served by practicing self-restraint in situations of sexual temptation.[2]

The effectiveness of abstinence programs for sex education remains a topic of much controversy in the United States. Opponents frequently adopt the line that abstinence education is acceptable only if it is combined with other methods, such as instruction in the use and easy availability of condoms. Proponents reply that to teach about condoms and promote their availability effectively undermines the abstinence norm.

In the fight against HIV/AIDS, Uganda is cited as a model for its "ABC" program that mobilized local clergy with its abstinence message. The initials ABC actually signified a mixed approach—"Abstain, Be faithful, use a Condom"—but with each of the three messages addressed to different audiences. Young people were advised to be abstinent; married people to be faithful to their spouse, and high-risk groups such as sex workers and promiscuous men to use condoms. With this separately-targeted approach, the government could utilize clergy to get out the word to the villages (which they were uniquely positioned to penetrate) with the abstinence and fidelity message, while other health workers dealt with the high-risk groups. Such a mixed approach is a sensible alternative to the polarization between advocates and opponents of abstinence that characterizes the issue in the United States.

The Case for Abstinence

Abstinence and marriage preparation

Beginning with Florida and Oklahoma in 1999, numerous states have begun mandating marriage education classes in high schools. This is in response to the growing rate of divorce and the perceived lack of relationship skills among young people to succeed in making lasting marriages. In cities that have instituted a "Community Marriage Policy" in which judges and clergy agree to conduct marriages only for couples who have received premarital education and counseling, divorce rates have dropped considerably.[3]

In this context, the practice of sexual abstinence creates an excellent foundation for marriage preparation. It allows for the strengthening of character free from the moral compromises of sexual involvements; it allows for personal development free from sexual distractions; and it allows for friendship building free from sexual complications. These in turn tend to reinforce postponing sexual activity. Individuals with integrity, a close relationship with their parents, many good friendships and cultivated talents and interests find abstinence less of a challenge.

At the same time, those who practice abstinence tend to have a more positive view of marriage. Research found that virgins have more favorable attitudes toward marriage than do nonvirgins who had multiple sex partners. Both abstinence and pro-marriage attitudes reinforce each other.[4] Boston University’s The Art of Loving Well is a literature-based course that is used for both purposes.[5] Marriage education sustains the hope of a happy committed relationship, making the choice of saving sexual activity until marriage more viable and attractive. Even where marriage preparation courses do not have an explicit abstinence message, educators report that the very discussion of the demands and rewards of committed relationships reinforces the concept of abstinence before such relationships.[6]

Negative consequences of premarital sex

Lethal sexually transmitted diseases and unwed parenthood garner attention from parents, teachers, legislatures and public health officials. Lost in this focus is the reality that even if disease and pregnancy are avoided, every sexual encounter outside of a mature and lifelong commitment—marriage—carries the risk of negative psychological, relational and social consequences. This risk is inherent to the nature of sexuality and therefore unavoidable. Yet because the prevailing permissive ethic is grounded in a certain non-judgmental tolerance, the deeper, non-physical levels of harm and therefore the more subtle forms of abuse within sexual relations receive little acknowledgement.

As first explored by educators Thomas Lickona and Josh McDowell,[7] the emotional and psychological harm of sex in insecure relationships may be perceived only semi-consciously at the time, eclipsed by the pleasures and supposed benefits of expanded experience. Too often the real price paid is discovered after much of the damage is done. One woman psychiatrist recounts the impact of her promiscuous teenage years: “That sick, used feeling of having given a precious part of myself…to so many and for nothing, still aches. I never imagined I’d pay so dearly and for so long.” The effects of sex outside of marriage on psychological health, especially among adolescents are many:

  1. Hindered personal development: Getting involved in sexual activities prematurely and in insecure relationships drains youth of the energy needed for emotional, moral, creative and intellectual growth. Sex under these circumstances becomes a powerful distraction away from important tasks that adolescents need to complete on the way to personal maturity, creating a family and pursuing their careers.
  2. Corruption of character: In marriage, sexual intimacy supports the partners’ mutual love, while in uncommitted relationships among youth, it is mainly to boost the partners’ egos. Premarital sex thus often compounds self-centeredness, rather than supporting the developmental task of learning unselfish love.[8] Worse, premarital sex is a corrupting influence, providing occasions for males to lie and cheat to get sex. According to a University of Connecticut study of 75 middle-class 19-year-old male students, sixty-five percent admitted that they had gotten young women drunk for that purpose. More than half had arranged to enter their date's apartment, and 40 percent had used verbal intimidation. One in five had used force or threats of violence.[9] In a survey of University of California students, one-fourth of men who were sexually involved with more than one person at a time said their sexual partners did not know.[10]
  3. Guilt and shame: Many people intuitively feel that to give away their virginity in an unworthy relationship, and to possibly continue to abuse their sexuality, is a profound violation of self. This becomes a source of shame. The shame is deeper still if they have violated their parents' trust and feel compelled to keep their sexual activity a secret. Girls face the additional shame of a ruined reputation. For males, knowingly—or even unknowingly—using another only for the pleasure of sex and then witnessing the partner’s heartbreak after being discarded can generate guilt that can linger over a lifetime. College counselor Carson Daly comments, “I don't think I ever met a student who was sorry he or she had postponed sexual activity, but I certainly met many who deeply regretted their sexual involvement.”[11]
  4. Lowered self-esteem: When sex is a matter of making conquests or negotiating favors, or using and being used, youth may lose self-respect, even if they are not conscious of the loss for a long time. Further, making sexiness and sexual prowess an important basis for romantic connections amplifies the tendency to judge people on what they do and how they look rather than on who they are. Thus anxiety is built into insecure relationships. “Do I still please you? Do I still look good?” There is always the legitimate fear that someone else will perform better or look more attractive when sexual utility is the criteria for attention.[12]
  5. Sex addiction: Like controlled substances, sex is addictive—there are estimated to be over 13 million sex addicts in the U.S. As with any addiction, sex can take over relationships and overwhelm other interests.
  6. Depression: All romantic involvements of some duration are painful when they break up, and sex intensifies the feeling of loss. Breaking off a premarital relationship in which two hearts have bonded through sexual union can precipitate an emotional crisis resembling that of a divorce. The heartbreak, compounded with the sense of having given themselves so totally for such a paucity of return, can help drive young people to the brink of despair. One tragic result is teenage suicide, which has tripled over the past 25 years in the U.S.—the same period during which the rate of teenage sexual activity rose so sharply. Statistically, non-virginal girls are six times more prone to suicide than are virgins.[13]
  7. Anti-social and criminal behavior: Sexually experienced girls aged 12 to 16 are 18 times more likely to run away from home than virgins. They are 9 times more likely to be arrested by the police. The probability of being suspended from school is 5 times greater. Non-virginal girls are 10 times more likely to use marijuana, one of the gateway drugs. Similar correlations are found among non-virginal boys.[14] The emotional explosion over a sexual betrayal can sometimes turn jealousy into rage, leading to violence against the former partner or the rival lover, even murder.
  8. Alienation from parents: When their children enter into sexual relations outside the formal process of marriage, parents can feel disrespected and hurt, their values compromised.
  9. Broken friendships: Sexual involvement can turn close friends into bitter enemies overnight. Few things are as divisive as sexual jealousy. A crowd of sexually active adolescents can feel like a sticky web of sexual attraction, possessiveness, jealousy, rivalry and betrayal. All intentions become suspect. Is it just a hug or an invitation to something more? Does she want a friend or is she trying to make someone jealous?
  10. Emotional withdrawal: The expression, “Once burned, twice shy” applies to many people who emotionally withdraw and refuse to trust anyone as a potential partner after the heartache of the breakup of a sexual relationship. The remembered pain of betrayal can stand in the way of giving themselves trustingly to anyone else.
  11. Prospective marriage derailed: The introduction of sex can risk derailing a warm and caring friendship that might well have been a good basis for marriage. Physical intimacy can become an easy substitute for the effort to build emotional intimacy. Sex can easily come to overpower any meaningful communication or other healthy activities together. Caught up in the pleasures of sex, the partners may begin to expect sex and demand it of each other, raising the level of tension in what had been a warm relationship. In fact, sexual involvement outside of marriage, especially among live-in lovers, is associated with more violence and other forms of abuse than among the married.[15]
  12. Negative consequences for future marriage: A person rarely forgets a sexual partner, even if he or she wants to. Those who have engaged in premarital sex may find that they are haunted by the images of past partners, even in the marriage bed. Involuntary comparisons to a previous lover—who might have been better at kissing or some other love-play—can certainly be disruptive to loving one's spouse. A young wife may develop a feeling of scorn for her husband who cannot measure up to her idealized memories of past partners.[16] After many uncommitted relationships, sex may lose its power to build intimacy with the one chosen to be a lifetime companion. Like glue, sex does not bond as well when reused again and again. Worse, studies show the habit of surrendering to sexual feelings before marriage can prove to be a serious problem at some stressful time with a spouse.[17] How can a spouse trust that her mate, who never practiced sexual integrity before marriage, will be able to do so after the wedding?

Unwed teenage pregnancy

Adolescent girls becoming pregnant and bearing children has always been commonplace; until the recent past they were typically married. Though there are some health risks, the greatest hazards of pregnancy to an unwed teenager are less physical than psychological, relational and economic—mainly due to her being unmarried. Unwed pregnancy generates a great deal of emotional distress, especially between the partners themselves. Nine out of ten American adolescent boys abandon their pregnant girlfriends, even if reluctantly. Suicide is seven times more likely for the pregnant girl.[18]

Economically, girls who choose to bear their child are far less likely to complete higher education, less likely to marry, or to escape poverty. Mothers who are unmarried, under 20 years old, and without a high school diploma are ten times more likely to raise their child in poverty in America than those who are not.[19] Aborting the pregnancy carries other risks, including chronic grief and guilt.

Medical aspects

The massive epidemic of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) is largely a result of premarital sex with multiple partners. Of the total population infected with any STD, two thirds of these cases are youth under the age of 25. It is estimated that half of nonvirginal Americans can expect to be infected during their lifetime. (There are 300 new STD cases for every new HIV case in the United States.) More than one in five teenagers and adults currently has an incurable viral STD, apart from AIDS.[20] Condoms are largely ineffective with common infections like genital herpes, gonorrhea, human papilloma virus and chlamydia.[21]

Many people are even unaware that they have an STD. Like HIV/AIDS, these diseases can present no symptoms for quite a while. The potential consequences of STDs include chronic pain and psychological distress. In one study over half of herpes victims reported fear of rejection and depression during their most recent outbreak.[22] More serious consequences include infertility, a greater susceptibility to cancer and HIV, and difficulty in getting married.

Young women's bodies are more vulnerable to infection than those of adult women. Their cervical mucosa is more conducive to microorganisms. Teenagers are ten times more vulnerable to pelvic inflammatory disease, an affliction accompanying chlamydia and gonorrhea that threatens fertility.[23] Most of those with the chlamydial form of the disease will face pelvic surgery of some kind, whether to remove organs or to help conceive a child. Sexually active girls under 17 years of age have double the rate of cervical cancer of grown women. Cervical cancer is also linked to having many sexual partners.[24] It does not occur in girls who remain virgins.

Youth are at greatest risk also because those who begin sex early will likely have more sexual partners over a lifetime. It is this—not whether each of those relationships was mutually exclusive at the time—that increases the probability of contracting an STD. Medical realities affirm that people, especially the young, are not suited for sex outside of a lifelong monogamous relationship.


Notes

  1. Martha E. Kempner, Toward a Sexually Healthy AmericaSIECUS. Retrieved August 9, 2007.
  2. Educating for True Love (International Educational Foundation, 2006 ISBN 1891858070)
  3. Michael J. McManus. Marriage Savers: Helping your friends and family avoid divorce. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1995).
  4. Connie J. Salts, "Attitudes toward Marriage and Premarital Sexual Activity of College Freshmen," Adolescence (Winter 1994): 775.
  5. Loving Well Project, School of Education, Boston University. The Art of Loving Well: A Character Education Curriculum for Todays Teenagers (Boston: Boston University, 1995). ISBN 0872700798
  6. Tony Devine, Joon Ho Seuk and Andrew Wilson. Cultivating Heart and Character: Educating for Life's Most Essential Goals. (Chapel Hill, NC: Character Development Publishing, 2000). ISBN 1892056151
  7. Josh McDowell and Dick Day. Why Wait: What You Need to Know about the Teen Sexuality Crisis. (San Bernardino, CA: Here’s Life, 1987); Thomas Lickona, “The Neglected Heart,” American Educator (Summer 1994), 34-39.
  8. Wanda Franz, “Sex and the American Teenager,” The World & I (September 1989), 478.
  9. D.L. Mosher & R.E. Anderson, Journal of Research in Personality 20 (1986), 77. Cited in Joe S. McIlhaney. Sexuality and Sexually Transmitted Diseases (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1990), 62.
  10. McIlhaney, Sexuality and Sexually Transmitted Diseases., 65.
  11. Thomas and Judy Lickona. Sex, Love & You. (South Bend, IN: Ave Maria Press, 1994), 39.
  12. Josh McDowell. Myths of Sex Education. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1991), 254
  13. Donald Orr, “Premature Sexual Activity as an Indicator of Psychosocial Risk,” Pediatrics 87 (February 1991): 141-147.
  14. Orr, “Premature Sexual Activity,” 141-147.
  15. Jan E. Stets, “Cohabiting and Marital Aggression: The Role of Social Isolation,” Journal of Marriage and the Family 53 (1991): 669-680.
  16. Stacey Rinehart and Paula Rinehart. Choices. (Colorado Springs: Navpress, 1982), 94; Josh McDowell. Myths of Sex Education. (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1991), 255.
  17. L.H. Buskel, et al., “Projected Extramarital Sexual Involvement in Unmarried College Students,” Journal of Marriage and the Family 40 (1978): 337-340.
  18. Susan Browning Pogany. SexSmart: 501 Reasons to Hold Off on Sex. (Minneapolis: Fairview Press, 1998), 57-58.
  19. William A. Galston, “Beyond the Murphy Brown Debate,” paper presented at the Institute for American Values Family Policy Symposium, New York, December 10, 1993.
  20. H. Hunter Handsfield, et al., “Report of the Genital Herpes Prevention Consultants Meeting, May 5-6, 1998,” Centers for Disease Control, July 30, 1998.
  21. S. Samuels, “Epidemic among America’s Young,” Medical Aspects of Human Sexuality 23 (December 1989).
  22. OB/GYN News, American Public Health Association, February 15, 1993.
  23. J. Anderson and M. Wilson, “Caring for Teenagers with Salpingitis,” Contemporary OB/GYN (August 1990); L. Westrom, “Incidence, Prevalence, and Trends of Acute Pelvic Inflammatory Disease and its Consequences in Industrialized Countries,” American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 138 (1991): 880-892.
  24. M. S. McAfee, OB/GYN Clinical Alert (July 1988).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Buskel, L. H. et al., “Projected Extramarital Sexual Involvement in Unmarried College Students,” Journal of Marriage and the Family 40 (1978): 337-340.
  • Devine, Tony, Joon Ho Seuk, and Andrew Wilson. 2000. Cultivating Heart and Character: Educating for Life's Most Essential Goals. Chapel Hill, NC: Character Development Publishing. ISBN 1892056151
  • Galston, William A. “Beyond the Murphy Brown Debate,” paper presented at the Institute for American Values Family Policy Symposium, New York, December 10, 1993.
  • Lickona, Thomas, “The Neglected Heart,” American Educator (Summer 1994), 34-39.
  • Loving Well Project, School of Education, Boston University. The Art of Loving Well: A Character Education Curriculum for Todays Teenagers. Boston: Boston University, 1995. ISBN 0872700798
  • McDowell, Josh. Myths of Sex Education. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1991.
  • McDowell, Josh, and Dick Day. Why Wait: What You Need to Know about the Teen Sexuality Crisis. San Bernardino, CA: Here’s Life, 1987.
  • McManus, Michael J. Marriage Savers: Helping your friends and family avoid divorce. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1995.
  • Mitchell, F.S. 2006. Celebrating Celibacy. Xulon Press. ISBN 1597818720
  • Mullaney, Jamie. 2005. Everyone Is NOT Doing It: Abstinence and Personal Identity. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226547574
  • Napier, Kristine. 1996. The Power of Abstinence. Avon Books. ISBN 0380783711
  • Orr, Donald, “Premature Sexual Activity as an Indicator of Psychosocial Risk,” Pediatrics 87 (February 1991): 141-147.
  • Pogany, Susan Browning. SexSmart: 501 Reasons to Hold Off on Sex. Minneapolis: Fairview Press, 1998.
  • Rinehart, Stacey, and Paula Rinehart. Choices. Colorado Springs: Navpress, 1982.
  • Stets, Jan E., “Cohabiting and Marital Aggression: The Role of Social Isolation,” Journal of Marriage and the Family 53 (1991): 669-680.

External links

All links retrieved January 26, 2023.


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