JohnHopkins wrote:
Strictly speaking, any opinion is valid.
I've never met anyone else who has the same opinion as you, and it boggles my mind that you've managed to get married to someone if you've lived your whole life screwing whoever you want at any time. How exactly does one reach the point of this commitment when you spend half of your time sleeping with other people? And even if I was to buy into this philosophy, you'd struggle to find anyone else who did.
This reads like much of the fundamentalist morality propaganda they hand out at those "Celibacy Pledge Parties" the churches have around here. Not that it's worth much. The 'failure' rate is about the same for those who take the Celibacy Pledge as for those who don't.
And, for the record, your statement is inaccurate. I have not 'screwed' whoever I wanted at any time; some of them simply were not interested at the time, so I might have had to settle for second- or third- level choices.
There are many of us who feel the same way about 'cheating' - most of us are still single, and at least
try to have social lives away from blogging, posting, studying, and working. If 'cheating' on a boyfriend or girlfriend is a crime, then it is a crime of opportunity; and there is a
lot of opportunity out there! There is no struggle to find anyone else who shares this philosophy; you just have to know where to look!
How does one reach the level of commitment I'm enjoying now? Choice, kid. You make the
choice to commit - especially once you find someone who makes a monogamous relationship worth the effort.
I agree. It is disappointing that in the USA, Christians have at least as high a divorce rate as the rest of the population. I accept that we all fall short of the glory of God and so we will never be perfect, but at the same time, Christians have to be a shining light to the rest of the world. As Christians, our righteousness MUST exceed that of non-Christians, because then non-Christians then feel they have cause to say, "Well, their religion isn't making any difference to them, so why should I bother following it?"