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Home›Happiness›SEX AND RELIGION (2)

SEX AND RELIGION (2)

May 24,2026
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By Adesuwa Ewoigbokhan

Religion attempts to claim sex as its own domain, asserting a monopoly on morality that focuses more on limiting sexual expression than on ethical or rational decision-making. Religion’s teachings on sex usually reduce to “don’t do this and don’t do that.” Hence, sexuality is religion’s worst nightmare, as it offers the possibility of personal autonomy: anyone can be sexual, regardless of wealth, age, height, education, or social standing.

Happy and romantic african american couple lying in bed together at home and being intimate. Playful black boyfriend and girlfriend bonding together with their foreheads touching. Love and passion

Moralizing preferences: frequency, timing, style, and initiation are preferences. Labelling a preference “unspiritual,” turn negotiation into condemnation.
Many religious communities excel at teaching what not to do before marriage, but offer zero training on how to talk about consent, pleasure, or disappointment after marriage. Silence becomes the default language.

Unspoken questions begin to surface: What is “acceptable”? What crosses a line? Certain forms of sexual expression, levels of openness, even initiating desire, may be quietly judged as inappropriate or “unholy,” not necessarily because sacred texts forbid them, but because cultural interpretations have labelled them so. What one partner sees as normal or even healthy may be viewed by the other as excessive or morally questionable.

Many of these concerns are not rooted in explicit religious prohibitions, but in inherited ideas about modesty, control, and gender roles. When these assumptions go unexamined, they can restrict intimacy, turning what should be mutual exploration into cautious performance. Desire becomes filtered through fear of judgment rather than guided by trust.

Gender expectations deepen this divide: men may feel entitled to expression, while women may feel pressure to remain reserved even within marriage. This imbalance can quietly erode connection, making intimacy feel like obligation rather than shared experience.
Couples who navigate it successfully tend to shift the conversation by moving away from rigid assumptions and returning to the core values, their faith actually emphasizes mutual respect, kindness, and consent. Within those boundaries, many discover that intimacy is not about a fixed script, but about understanding each other.

Honest communication becomes essential about preferences, boundaries, curiosity, and even discomfort does not weaken faith, it strengthens the relationship. It allows couples to distinguish between what their religion truly teaches and what they have simply been told to believe.

There is also room for unlearning, shame attached to sexuality does not disappear at the wedding altar; it must be addressed intentionally. Sometimes through guidance, patience, but always through openness.

The real conflict is not between sex and religion but between assumption and understanding.

When belief and embodiment finally agree, sex stops being a battleground and becomes what it was meant to be: a place where trust is rebuilt in the dark.

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