Faith and Sexuality
Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2014 9:23 am
What have been your experiences between your religion/spirituality in relation to your sexuality, or to things like your sexual orientation or gender identity? I know the two are not always compatible, so if you've got some horror stories, you're welcome to share those. And if you've got some stories or thoughts that show that faith and sexuality are not always at odds, lets hear those (and anything in between as well).
For my own part, I was skeptical for a long time about my own personal beliefs around sex ever fitting within a religious framework. And I had an adversarial view of a lot of religion because it always seemed to be condemning ideas or people I cared for. Many faith groups still do. But, my partner began attending a Quaker meeting while we were in college, I started going with him. I was in a car with a group of them when someone asked where I worked (I was working as a campus sex educator). I answered and then braced myself for the response. The response was "is that the place that makes those "I know where my clitoris is buttons?" Because those rock!"
Not what I was expecting, but I was thrilled to find a faith space where I did not feel like I had to hide what I do. As of now, I've helped them run a sex education workshop for the teens. It was interesting to see how they applied the values of their faith community (like acceptance, respect for the difference in life experiences, etc) to talking about sex and sexuality. It was nice to see a religious viewpoint used to celebrate the diversity of sexual identity and encourage things like communication and boundaries rather than see it used as tool for shaming people.
For my own part, I was skeptical for a long time about my own personal beliefs around sex ever fitting within a religious framework. And I had an adversarial view of a lot of religion because it always seemed to be condemning ideas or people I cared for. Many faith groups still do. But, my partner began attending a Quaker meeting while we were in college, I started going with him. I was in a car with a group of them when someone asked where I worked (I was working as a campus sex educator). I answered and then braced myself for the response. The response was "is that the place that makes those "I know where my clitoris is buttons?" Because those rock!"
Not what I was expecting, but I was thrilled to find a faith space where I did not feel like I had to hide what I do. As of now, I've helped them run a sex education workshop for the teens. It was interesting to see how they applied the values of their faith community (like acceptance, respect for the difference in life experiences, etc) to talking about sex and sexuality. It was nice to see a religious viewpoint used to celebrate the diversity of sexual identity and encourage things like communication and boundaries rather than see it used as tool for shaming people.