Last year I wrote a 6-part series on gender, morality and modesty seeking to defend  Biblical morality by showing the consequences of the alternative. While  this is nothing new in itself, I approached the problem from an  original angle. Rather than simply lamenting how bad things have become  in our society, I tried to show that the results of the sexual  revolution have actually been antithetic to its own goals.
Starting at the time of the ‘Enlightenment’ and working my way  through to the present day, I observe that a consequence of rejecting  the Biblical worldview has been to rob men and women of the ability to  properly enjoy themselves as God intended. The reductionism of gender  and sexuality wrought by the materialistic worldview has created a new  network of secular taboos. The result is that gender has been  neutralized and the spice has been taken out of life.
As my argument unfolded, it became clear that the Biblical approach  is not simply the ethical option: it is also the most sexy. The  alternatives to Biblical morality, which our society has been  desperately trying to make work, not only fail to achieve their own  goals, but are ultimately boring by comparison.
At the moment chastity is ‘in’ but coherent thinking about chastity  is at an all time low. Many Christian young people think that as long as  you don’t have sex before marriage then you are keeping to the Biblical  sex ethic. That is ethics by subtraction, which leaves a moral vacuum  that makes the young person a prime target for sexual temptation. My  approach was to try to show that purity is not a matter of  negation, but of affirmation. Against those who maintain that Biblical  standards of purity and integrity represent a repressive or a  pessimistic view of sexuality, I show that the shoe is actually on the  other foot.
In the long run, I argue that Biblical morality is the truly erotic option.
Following are links to the 6 different posts in that series:
Overview of Argument
In the first post, ‘Reducing the Human‘,  I consider the implication that certain ideas of the European  Enlightenment had on the concept of nature. If everything a person does  is simply the predetermined result of mechanical forces, then all  actions can be defended as being “natural.” I explore some of the  implications this had in the area of sexual morals. In particular, I  examine how it unleashed a sexual revolution at the time of the  Enlightenment. The followers of Locke had no reservation in moving from a  mechanistic view of man to formulating an entirely mechanistic theory  of moral values. Hence, we see Diderot arguing that since man is a part  of nature, whatever he does is, by definition, “natural”. I explored  that it was in the area of sexual ethics that the ideas of the  Enlightenment become acutely practical. Since determinism implied that  anything is natural as long as you are doing it (since no action could  have been otherwise in the great deterministic machine), it followed  that nature could be used to defend sexual taboos as well as a more  licentious approach. (And it should hardly come as a surprise if the  naturalness of the latter and not the former began to dominate popular  thinking as the eighteenth century progressed.)
I built on this in Part 2  by exploring the way key Enlightenment thinkers were unhappy with the  practical ramification their ideas were having in the area of sexual  morality. As an alternative, they proposed utilitarian substitutes to  Christian morality. The pragmatic approach to sexual ethics at the time  of the Enlightenment is similar to how people also began to approach  religion in the eighteenth century. Though the materialist philosophers  of the Enlightenment all agreed that the doctrines, practices and claims  of institutionalized religion were absurd, a good many of these  philosophers also felt that society needed these institutions in order  to give the common people an incentive for morality. In other words,  though religion might be based entirely on fables, it was still a  necessary component to a cohesive society. Likewise, while many 18th  century intellectuals considered the Christian taboos about  extra-marital sex to have no rational basis, still it was better for  society if those taboos were generally adhered to. And, of course, they  weren’t. Clinging to the forms of religion and morality without the  content, the result was not dissimilar to the way our own era has  developed a pseudo-morality around the need for “safe sex.” (Indeed,  following in the Enlightenment pedigree, the Chastity Movement has  generally been content to affirm the thou-shalt-nots of Christian  doctrine on entirely utilitarian grounds.)
In the third post  in this series, titled ‘Ideas Have Consequences’, I explored how just  as materialism affected one’s view of morality, it also affects one’s  view of gender. A corollary of mankind being deconstructed by the  materialist hammer is that our identity as men and women is also  smashed. In particular I look at how these problems played out in the  conflict between Rousseau and Mary Wollstonecraft. The very idea that  the sexes would have different roles, responsibilities, strengths and  weaknesses, had assumed that these differences went beyond mere physical  dissimilarities. Indeed, it had assumed that men and women were  different in their very natures. However, materialism’s reduction of  human beings left men and women without any natures at all. What we call  our “nature” is really only billions of particles that happen to have  collided in the event we call a person. The corollary of this was that  the ancient customs and notions that the eighteenth century inherited  concerning relations between men and women were believed to be flawed  not simply in practice, but in very principle. We thus find Mary  Wollstonecraft keen to eliminate modesty as a sexual virtue in women.  This reduction of modesty to a sexually neutral virtue was an  unavoidable consequence of Wollstonecraft’s androgyny, which was itself  an inevitable corollary of the Enlightenment materialism explored in Part 1 of this series.
In Part Four: The Gender Benders  I explored how these same problems have come to a head in our own era.  In this post I argued that our own age has been more consistent with the  implications of the Enlightenment worldview, and thus it is widely  assumed that all non-physical gender differences are mere social  constructions. This leads to androgyny or the unisex movement, whereby  the differences between the sexes are neutralized. I saw that rather  than being able to glory in our identity as men and women created in the  image of God, our society makes us feel ashamed of the very concept of  manhood and womanhood, while the emblems of our sex are reduced to  symbols of servitude and conformity. I few practical applications in the  area of both chivalry (properly defined!) and modesty. Chivalrous  behavior, I argue, presupposed certain things about our humanity. It  assumes, for example, that women ought to be treated in a special way  because they are women, just as feminine modesty proclaims that women  ought to dress in a certain way because they are women. When a man  embraces his calling to look after and protect women, or when a woman  embracers her calling to dress modestly, they are both proclaiming that  there is a fundamental difference between the sexes. These very  differences are what our age, following in the wake of the  Enlightenment, has sought to undermine.
Part Five: The Disenchanting of Sex  is where my argument begins to become acutely practical. I argue that  the strangeness inherent in such things as co-ed dorms, co-ed bathrooms,  co-ed wrestling and even co-ed sleeping bags, is not that such things  exist, but that they can exist without sexual connotations. This can  only be achieved to the extent that gender has been emptied of its  implicit sexuality. In a world where manhood and womanhood have been  deconstructed, it should hardly come as a surprise. Whether a woman  strips down to a bikini on the grounds that there is nothing sexual  about it, or puts on a long dress designed to remove all shape, in both  cases her latent sexuality is not being properly acknowledged. In both  cases, the subject is unconsciously acting out the unisex  presuppositions of our post-Enlightenment culture. In a brothel, women  have overcome the natural shyness surrounding erotically important parts  of their bodies in order to advertizes sex; on a sunny beach, scores of  women can be seen who have overcome this natural shyness with no  thought of sex at all. Indeed, by refusing to explicitly acknowledge the  erotic implications of minimalistic attire, we are approaching sexual  revolutionist William Reich’s ideal of a sexual utopia in which all  shyness has been overcome and sexuality itself has been trivialized and  flattened of its innate potency. By deconstructing our world  (materialism), the Enlightenment couldn’t help but deconstruct gender  (androgyny), with the result that our sexuality has been neutralized,  stripped of any transcendent categories that might otherwise elevate it  above that which is merely common.
The sixth and final post in this series,  titled ‘Liberated into Bondage’ considers what is happening as the  residual capital of the Christian worldview is being depleted from  Western culture. Ideas have consequences, but those consequences can  sometimes take hundreds of years before they kick in. We have now  reached a point where we no longer have the luxury enjoyed by the  inconsistent materialists of the Enlightenment. Because materialism  denied that a transcendent God had revealed himself to His creation, it  placed man as the sole arbitrator of morality. The result was that man  turned sex into a god. It is a biblical principle that whenever a thing  is worshiped idolatrously, the original thing is destroyed. In removing  the restrictions placed on sexuality and denying the design God created,  the sexual revolution ended up de-valuing the very thing it sought to  elevate. Far from liberating and empowering male and female sexuality,  the twin pillars of androgyny and materialism have achieved the opposite  effect. This can be seen in the way that many feminists, after  denouncing all gender distinctions, have been responding with  puritanical outrage against that one activity which continually  reaffirms our sexual identity: heterosexual sex. Indeed, for many  feminists, the liberation of our sexuality does not stop with merely  rejecting romantic love. Nor does it stop with getting rid of marriage,  though it involves that too. Rather, the process completes itself in a  full scale pessimism of heterosexual sex itself, a paradoxical  culmination to the Enlightenment’s emancipation project and itself an  apt illustration that we destroy those things we worship idolatrously.
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