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Why Sex Is So Important to Your Husband

Barbara Rainey

My husband, Dennis, and I received a cute e-mail about the romantic differences between men and women. It began by asking, "How do you romance a woman?"

Answer: "Wine her, dine her, call her, cuddle with her, surprise her, compliment her hair, shop with her, listen to her talk, buy flowers, hold her hand, write love letters, and be willing to go to the end of the earth and back again for her." That sounds about right, doesn't it? Who wouldn't want that kind of treatment?

Ahhh … men.

The e-mail continued, "How do you romance a man?"

Answer: "Arrive naked. Bring food."

A woman's picture of romance tends to revolve around her emotional needs and her thirst for a relationship with her husband. It's a package deal, like going on a cruise. Your cruise ticket doesn't just allow you to enjoy sailing on a ship through beautiful waters to exotic locations; it includes three meals a day plus all-you-can-eat midnight buffets, access to swimming pools, games, exercise facilities, entertainment, excursions to ports of call, and a host of other amenities and experiences.

While a man has emotional needs, too, as Dr. Willard Harley asserts in His Needs, Her Needs, a man's view of romance is much more focused on a single experience: sexual affirmation. In that regard, God wired men and women very differently. As you probably have experienced, these radical differences in approach to romance set the stage for repeated clashes in marriage—the husband pursues romance based on his sexual passion, and the wife goes after relationship.

In order to understand these differences, we have to be educated and nurture a desire to learn about each other. Colossians tells us to "put on a heart of compassion" (3:12 NASB). If I love my husband, then I'll want to know him, to understand him, to have empathy for him so I can love him more. It's what we wanted in marriage: to know and be known by another in the safety of unconditional love.

Genesis chapters one and two teach that man and woman are made in the image of God. As I understand how God made my husband, I can better complete him as a man. We are "fearfully and wonderfully made," the Bible declares (Psalms 139:14 NKJV). My husband's maleness is as essential as my femaleness in the working out of God's design in our marriage.

Like oil and vinegar

When God created woman, He gave her multiple avenues for expressing the essence of her sexuality—her femaleness. Because I am a woman, I can participate in sexual intercourse with my husband. I can conceive a child and experience the miraculous process of creating a life in my body over nine months. My husband can only watch and wonder, but he'll never know what giving life is like.

After my child is born, I can physically nurse her for months and even years if I so choose. There is no way a man can feed a baby with a bottle and begin to experience the same deep fulfillment and satisfaction women feel when they successfully nurse their child.

The experiences of childbearing and nursing are affirmations of female sexuality. Women were made to nurture life. It is an expression of our inherent femaleness, even if we never have a biological child. We are nurturers by God's design.

By contrast, a man's sexuality, his manhood, is primarily expressed through sexual intercourse. Of course this isn't the only way he demonstrates his sexuality, but his sexual performance with his wife is an inseparable part of who he is. This area of his masculinity is subjected by the design of the Creator to a brief performance with a woman—his wife.

My point is this: when it comes to affirming your sexuality as a woman, you can participate in intercourse with your husband without having to become aroused. Your husband, however, cannot. His sexual affirmation requires him to be able to perform to complete the act of intercourse.

A wife must understand that temptation can get a foothold when her husband's sexual needs (including the need to feel desired by his wife) remain unmet. There are many voices in a man's world tempting him to fulfill his needs through illicit and perverted recreational outlets. Counterfeit pleasures beckon from every street corner—and every modem.

Is it any wonder that all of the warnings about sexual temptation in Proverbs are directed at men? While women are not immune from the pressures of sexual temptation, I find it remarkable that there are a host of examples of men falling into this sin throughout the Scriptures (Judah sleeping with his daughter-in-law thinking she was a prostitute, David and Bathsheba, Samson and Delilah, or Amnon raping Tamar)—not to mention the examples of women trying to seduce men (such as Potiphar's wife luring Joseph to her sofa), but there are no examples of women being seduced by men.

In a way, the blending of our romantic differences is similar to making a good salad dressing. Oil and vinegar are about as dissimilar as condiments get. The only thing they have in common is that they are liquids. Oil is smooth; vinegar is sharp. Oil is thick; vinegar is thin. Left alone in the same bottle, the two will always migrate to opposite ends and remain there forever—unless shaken.

Interestingly even after the bottle has been shaken, the two retain their unique identities. And yet they complement each other in a perfect unity; together, they serve as a zesty finish to an otherwise bland mix of lettuces. And so it is in marriage. No matter how many times a husband and a wife come together, they always remain unique. He will always think like a man; she, like a woman. While their innate design will not change, they can better understand each other and move to love each other with compassion, knowing that, in so doing, they give each other life.

Grateful for God's design

I've had women ask me, "Could God possibly design such a gigantic flaw?" Could He really not know the implications for His children? Hardly. God's design isn't a mistake. God is in control. He fashioned us together as husband and wife the way we are wired, with our unique backgrounds, for a specific purpose.

And He has done the same for you.

I turned a corner in our relationship when I chose to begin thanking God for His design of my husband and me. As a result, I started to see how important it was for my husband to need me, and I began to appreciate his greater sexual drive. Our coming together sexually was a key part of what has kept our relationship a marriage—not merely friendship, a roommate living arrangement. Sexual intimacy with my husband gives both of us the comfort of being known and accepted on a deep level that is unlike other human relationship. Safety and security are the result when we experience being "naked and not ashamed" as did Adam and Eve in Genesis chapter two.

Have you ever thanked God for the way He created you and your husband? God doesn't make mistakes, and thanking Him for His design is the first step in finding peace in your situation. And doing that will give God the opportunity to change your thinking.

Thanking God is a decision I choose to make. From there, I choose to love my husband even if I don't have strong feelings. Love, ultimately, is a commitment to seek the best of the one loved. I can choose to exercise my power as a passionate, nurturing, fully alive woman, or I can withhold and withdraw.

You face the same decision to love your man today.

Your husband will never be the man God created him to be if you don't validate his maleness and understand and satisfy his need for sexual intimacy. You are God's primary instrument of love and affirmation if he is to became God's man. You have the power to make him or break him because men are not born, they are made.

Adapted by permission of Thomas Nelson Inc., Nashville, TN., from the book entitled Rekindling the Romance, copyright 2004 by Dennis and Barbara Rainey. All rights reserved. Copying or using this material without written permission from the publisher is strictly prohibited and in direct violation of the copyright law.


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Showing 1 to 10 of 17   First | Prev | 1 2 | Next | Last 
Steve @ 10/17/2009 11:31:02 AM 
My wife's just disgusted by the thought of my touch, and refuses to touch me. There is no amount of candles, romance or anything that will change her. Last night I gave her my wedding ring, and asked her to give it back only when she wants to exchange love... not just sex. I guess I'm supposed to "be a man" and "suck it up", but I'm too human to do that.
don @ 3/23/2009 7:35:35 PM 
I would like to hear comments on this - A certain wise woman said to her daughter before her marriage: "My child, stand before thy husband and minister to him. If thou wilt act as his maiden he will be thy slave, and honour thee as his mistress; but if thou exalt thyself against him, he will be thy master, and thou shalt become vile in his eyes, like one of the maidservants."
Willie @ 3/23/2009 4:32:17 PM 
I want to share some of experiences with me and my wife we have beenmarried for 13yrs. I have initiated sex for the most part and my wife has done so but as time went on problems from past relationships pour over from what I was used to when I was single and having sex outside of marrage and bought those expectation to the marrage. Over time my initiating became rejection 80% of the time. I struggled with pornography and masturbation most of my life and now it is coming back and hurting me in my marrage. I asked God to forgive me and I also asked my wife to forgive me. Although she has said that she forgives me she still is fighting with the fact that I had an affair with pornograpy and masturbation. Right now I'm feeling lonely, frustrated, helpless and lost. I know God is working a change in me because I don't look at pornograpy any more and I don't masturbate anymore. It has been a struggle due to the fact that me and my wife have not been intimate in over 5months. So it is importan
Holly @ 3/13/2009 11:05:35 AM 
Charles,
Something you might concider is your wife's energy level: with 3 kids she's bound to be very busy. If she also works outside of the home that's another energy drainer. If your wife likes baths, make the bathroom an oasis: candles, fake/real rose petals, relaxing music, etc. Enable her to relax and to have some "down-time" without "Mom? Have you seen..." or "Honey? Can/will you...?"
Remember Phil. 2:3-4 "Let nothing be done through selfish ambitionor conceit, but in lowliness of mind let each esteem others better than himself. Let each of you look out not only for his own interests, but also the interests of others."
Two really great books to read are "Strengthening Your Marriage" by Wayne A. Mack and "The Intimate Marriage" by R.C. Sproul
Above all, pray for your wife and ask the Lord to show you how you can better be a servant-leader in your home.
Marjorie @ 3/6/2009 12:25:48 PM 
Catherine - PLEASE provide this information. I look forward to finding out more.
Catherine @ 2/15/2009 5:10:22 PM 
There actually is something for women that's like Viagra. I work at a compound pharmacy and we work with women all the time that's going through menopause and has no sex drive. If you want more info, let me know.
Todd @ 2/6/2009 5:10:43 PM 
In our "polite" society sex between a husband and a wife tends to be one of permission sought and permission granted: the husband seeks permission to engage in sexual intimacy with his wife and the wife grants that permission. I guess I'm just having a really hard time believing that there's a growing issue with men being cold to their wive's sexual advances when it seems that the woman has most, if not all of the control over whether sexual intercourse is going to take place. In my former marriage I learned that I was actually not allowed to initiate sexual intimacy with my wife. I "learned" this after several stern accusations by my wife that made me feel evil and wrong for trying to initiate sexual intimacy with her. So I did what only came natural — I stopped initiating sex with her and let her initiate it, which was usually 3-4 times a year. When she accused me of being disinterested in her my only response was that she made me that way through name-calling, etc. I'd like to
Marjorie @ 2/6/2009 8:02:56 AM 
Anonymous

Oh how I wish there were drugs for women like Viagra. I am in the middle of menopause and have no-none-zip sex drive. I can be a willing participant but it's no fun and I think my husband gets discouraged that he can't do anything to change it.

K @ 2/6/2009 7:43:44 AM 
Charles,
It sounds like perhaps your wife has some deep wounds or some spiritual needs. I have found that praying for God to be at work, asking Him to bring to light the needs and to bring healing has opened doors in our marriage. Ask Him to open the right conversation at the right time and to be at work in your heart and your wife's heart to bring you together to become close the way He intended. Pray that God would bring the right kind of friends and Godly counsel to your wife and that He would remove sources of wrong influence for both of you so that you can have his vision for your marriage. God is the mountain mover and He cares deeply about us as individuals and about our marriages. Ask God to show you what to do.
Tulip @ 1/2/2009 11:39:05 AM 
Maybe you could start making some changes in your enviroment yourself. Like shutting or dimming the lights off in the house around 9:00 at night. Agree to watch TV or relax together at that time. Light some candles and just relax together without any expectations of sex. Do things without pressuring her or having an agenda for sex that bring you closer as a couple. Take a date just the two of you when you can. If, things don't improve with intimacy in a month then you really need to sit down and talk about your sexual needs. Keep in mind that you both need to be willing to reach a compromise.
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