You can’t go anywhere without someone talking about how over-sexualized our culture is, berating our morals, and wagging a finger at what those crazy kids are up to. But as a purveyor of culture and lover of the Church, something more needs to be done than merely standing by the sidelines with our eyes covered and praying for a good outcome.

I say this because recently the good church kid  Justin Bieber has been alleged of being someone’s baby daddy. The allegation—true or not—has stirred up in me the desire to take a stand bring a solid definition of what our view of sex should encompass.

*Warning: This post contains sensitive material and should not be read unless you’ve had The Birds and The Bees talk with your parents.

After almost eight years in youth ministry, I was constantly asked what was okay to do in dating relationships; essentially, how far is too far. The question hasn’t disappeared for adults, however, we have defined our own definition of what is sex and is not sex. The problem with ignoring or sidestepping the question leaves others to fill in the blank.

I hear parents or church leaders respond with the holy yet nebulous response, The question shouldn’t be what the line is. The question should be how far can we stay away from those temptations! And I agree. But isn’t there a real answer?

The questions emailed or asked of me:

  • Is oral sex technically considered sex?
  • If I’ve had oral sex, am I still a virgin?

What does the bible say? How far IS too far? We need to address these questions because there is a generation of Katy Perry’s and Justin Bieber’s and Jessica Simpson’s who grew up in the church and probably asked those same questions. Were they given good responses? Did anyone have the gall to give them the truth? Or were they afraid of what others may say?

Let’s break it down from a biblical resource and a non-biblical resource:

  1. When Paul addressed the Ephesian church, he stated that there should be no hint of immorality among the believer. The Greek word used for immorality is pornea, which is like the catch-all for sexual activity. Everything from shacking up, to booty calls, to hand/mouth/genital intercourse. It. Is. Wrong.
  2. By medical definition, sexual intercourse now encompasses hand, mouth, and genital engagement. Even Merriam-Webster dictionary includes all three areas as sexual intercourse.

If you’re married and Christian, you probably have forgotten the temptation that faces single people ranging from ages 12-99. People, it’s everywhere! Television, media, movies, commercials, books, the gym—temptation is everywhere. In a world saturated with sex, it isn’t surprising to discover that over half of American 10th graders have engaged in oral sex. Yes, I said half [and the data is outdated (1999)]. A suburban group of 12-16 year-olds set seventh grade as the starting point for oral activity. When asked what they thought of it, most stated that it wasn’t sex.

In April 2000, another New York Times article on precocious sexuality quoted a Manhattan psychologist as saying “it’s like a goodnight kiss to them” in a description of how seventh- and eighth-grade virgins who were saving themselves for marriage were having oral sex in the meantime because they perceived it to be safe and risk-free.*

If this is affecting our youth, it’s affecting our culture. If it’s affecting our culture, it’s affecting our church. In the words of Notorious B.I.G, if you don’t know, now you know!

Tomorrow I’ll address the question, If I’ve had oral sex, am I still a virgin? Until then, feel free to comment on the topic and add your insights.

*The stats were pulled from Oral Sex Among Adolescents: Is It Sex or Abstinence? 

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