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Wednesday October 18, 2006

Sex Is Not the Problem (Lust Is)

Sex Is Not the Problem (Lust Is)Two of the first books I ever reviewed dealt with the topic of sexual purity. One of these books, Every Man’s Battle by Steve Arterburn, stands out in my mind and the review I wrote continues to generate emails even several years later. The main teaching of his book is the concept of “bouncing” the eyes. What this means is that when a man sees something that is sexually tempting he is to immediately divert his eyes. The authors state that most men, after six weeks of doing this, will make it a habit and will no longer struggle with lust the way they once did. Their eyes will naturally bounce away from objects they once found alluring. When men stop filling their minds with lustful images, they can then learn to control their thoughts and stop the cycle of sexual fantasy. This is exactly the kind of solution people love to find in a book of this nature. It is a simple plan and one that depends largely on the willpower of the individual. Sadly, though, it is a plan that has little to do with the centrality of the gospel in the life of the believer. I recently heard that Arterburn has been divorced twice and is now married to a woman he met at one his purity seminars. As I think back to the book he wrote, and as I ponder the news of his own struggles, I can see the tragedy of attempting to conquer lust through focusing on what a person can do through his own power. Guilt for sins committed and a desire to change are not enough to create lasting change.

I have read relatively little on the topic since Every Man’s Battle. Truthfully, much of what has been written follows the same pattern as Arterburn’s book, pointing to dependency on oneself in waging the war against lust. But, having received a copy of Josh Harris’ Sex is not the Problem (Lust Is) (previously released as Not Even a Hint), I decided I would dive into the topic once more. And this time I was rewarded.

Before I discuss this book, it bears mention that it is rated PG. This is a book that any adult or teenager should be able to read. Unlike some other books in this genre, it does not contain the graphic descriptions that tend to fuel lust rather than combat it. It will not, as Harris says, drag the reader’s imagination through the gutter. I should also mention that this is a book intended for both men and women. Harris does not allow women off the hook, assuming that they do not deal with issues of lust. While he affirms that men and women experience lust differently, he teaches that both men and women are susceptible to this and both genders need to deal with it.

So what is lust? Simply enough, “Lust is craving sexually what God has forbidden.” While sexual desire is good and natural, and given by God, lust is a perversion of what is good and right. “Lust goes beyond attraction, and appreciation of beauty, or even a healthy desire for sex—it makes these desires more important than God. Lust wants to go outside God’s guidelines to find satisfaction.” While lust is a problem that is as old as the human race, we live in a time when it is funnelled to us in ever-increasing measure. It is increasingly difficult to live pure and undefiled in our sex-saturated culture. And yet God’s standard remains the same: He demands perfection. “God calls us to the daunting standard of not even a hint.” The fact that this standard seems impossible is merely proof that man-centered solutions must fail. “Only the victory of Christ’s death and resurrection can provide the right power and the right motive needed to change me.” We must be motivated by God’s grace and empowered by the Spirit if we are to defeat lust.

Harris goes on to discuss the gospel. And this is what I love most about this book. Rather than moving from identifying the problem to planning out the solution, Harris pauses at the gospel—he pauses at the source of the solution. In a couple of chapters that seem they could as easily have been written by C.J. Mahaney or Jerry Bridges, he celebrates the gospel and the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. “We can’t save ourselves and we can’t change ourselves. Only faith in Christ can rescue us from the prison of our sin. And only the Spirit can transform us. Our job is to invite His work, participate with it, and submit more and more of our thoughts, actions, and desires to Him.”

Harris then wades into the thick of the battle, discussing the issues and offering strategies for long-term change. He discusses the types of issues we would expect him to tackle: masturbation, media, accountability and so on. The best and clearest solution offered, though surely the one that seems least attractive to the carnal mind, is memorizing Scripture passages most relevant to our particular temptations. A chapter at the end briefly discusses the Internet and tips for fighting against succumbing to the temptations of Internet pornography. Through it all, Harris speaks honestly and candidly, even holding out events and experiences from his life that must cause him a good bit of embarrassment. He is willing to admit his own weaknesses and failures in order to help others tackle theirs.

Ultimately, this book leads to the biblical (but still surprising) conclusion that, despite the allure of lust and the pleasures it seems to offer, there is far greater pleasure to be found in holiness. The pleasure and freedom of holiness is so much greater, so much truer, than carnal delights. “Remember,” Harris says, “God doesn’t call you to sacrifice as an end in itself. He calls you through it. On the other side of sacrifice is unspeakable beauty and indescribable joy. It’s not easy, but it’s worth every minute.” He holds out no easy, magical solution to defeat lust. Rather, lust’s power will decrease as we relentlessly pursue holiness.

Unlike so many books that share a shelf with this one at the local Christian bookstore, Harris holds out lust as a problem, but provides the gospel as a solution. And that isn’t even a fair fight. An excellent little book that is easy to read, easy to digest, and suitable for all audiences, I recommend Sex is not the Problem (Lust Is) without hesitation.

Comments (22) »


1. Ja'Son O'Rourke
October 18, 2006
12:26 PM

Thank you for this Blog. It has been very encouraging.


2. donsands
October 18, 2006
12:42 PM

Nice to know of a good resource. Thanks for the review.

“Come unto Me, My burden is light, and My yoke is easy, and you will find rest for your souls”


3. Jabbok
October 18, 2006
1:42 PM

I’m afraid, and ashamed to admit, that my faith in prayer would be much weaker if not for this very subject.

I prayed on my wedding day that God would keep me true to my vows. I asked him to help me keep my eyes on the Lord and to love my wife as He loves the church.

Just a few weeks ago we enjoyed our 30th anniversary. I am not immune to lust and I know that the success and contentment I’ve enjoyed for 30 years are because of His grace and I believe it has been an answer to my prayer. It calls for songs of loudest praise!

Good review.


4. theophilus
October 18, 2006
3:24 PM

I wish more books which deal with specific areas of temptation would take this approach. It seems most books point us to a new law: do these 5 steps, and you will have victory, and God will approve of you (finally). How refreshing it is to approach lust and other areas pertaining to sanctification with Harris’ gospel-centered outlook: “motivated by God’s grace and empowered by the Spirit”. Amen!


5. Michele
October 18, 2006
3:59 PM

I’ve read the book, and it’s excellent. I’ve also just finished Randy Alcorn’s helpful little book, “The Purity Principle” and thought it very valuable.
Can anyone recommend a book for someone struggling with an eating disorder? I’ve read the “Love to Eat Hate to Eat”, and they were good, but I’m always looking, as this friend is often struggling, and is willing to read to be encouraged. There is a lot of psycho-babbly type stuff out there.


6. Spencer
October 18, 2006
4:45 PM

I would recommend “The Lord’s Table” by Mike Cleveland. It is published by Focus Publishing. The ISBN is 1-885904-35-5. More information may be found at www.settingcaptivesfree.com. They also have great material for those struggling with pornography.


7. Van H. Edwards
October 18, 2006
4:47 PM

“I recently heard that Arterburn has been divorced twice and is now married to a woman he met at one his purity seminars.”

Tim, can you substantiate this at all? I agree that his book doesn’t really get to the root of the problem. I also don’t think that the “bouncing” exercise works for the eyes of the heart. While the way he lives his life does affect his credibility to deal with this problem, I’m not sure it’s fair to say “I heard” as a sidebar when it may not be accurate. Just a thought.

Either way, I would recommend Harris’s book over Arterburn’s anyday. Harris has learned well under his mentor.


8. D.B. Jones
October 18, 2006
5:33 PM

Van,

‘I’m not sure it’s fair to say “I heard” as a sidebar when it may not be accurate.’

How about, “I read”?

“http://www.albertmohler.com/blog_read.php?id=686”


9. Van H. Edwards
October 18, 2006
6:35 PM

How about, “I read”?
“http://www.albertmohler.com/blog_read.php?id=686”

Yea, that’ll work.

Thanks.


10. Tim Challies
October 18, 2006
8:19 PM

Yeah, sorry, I should have been specific to say that “I know” this about Arterburn. It is not in the realm of gossip but is public information. In fact, I think he revealed his divorces on his radio show…


11. DLE
October 18, 2006
9:45 PM

I don’t want to cause trouble here, I honestly don’t. I do wish to question one of the major suppositions of Harris’s book (as Tim has revealed it in his review), that filling one’s mind with relevant Scriptures is the surefire way to combat lust.

If that is true, then why are so many ministers, men who know the Bible well, struggling mightily with Internet porn?

I would suggest that just knowing the right Scriptures is not enough. There’s a demonic component to this that is overlooked and dealing with it requires more than just knowing the right Scriptures.

Leighton Ford spoke at a conference I attended. He told the story of a plane flight he took to a speaking engagement. He sat next to a man who seemed lost in prayer.

Wondering if the man was afraid to fly, Ford struck up a conversation. The man talked openly about prayer and forthrightly told Ford that he was praying over a list of names. The man showed Ford the list and then told him that he was praying that each of these men on the list would be destroyed.

Ford was astonished, since the names on the list were well-known Christian ministers. The man had no hesitation in letting Ford know that he worshiped dark powers.

Ford went on to say that every minister on that list, and Ford tried hard to remember the names, had had their ministry wiped out in the years that followed that fateful plane flight.

We spend too much time focused on our own selves. We might memorize Scripture and pray over our problems, but unless others are actively praying for us in a community of faith, we’re an Army of One. And despite all the PR the American Army gives to their ad campaign, an Army of One does not work. Christ did not come to establish an Army of One, but a community of saints who cover each other in prayer.

The Enemy of our souls destroys. We overcome him by the Blood of the Lamb and the word of our testimony. Yes, the Scriptures form part of the defense, but not the entirety.

Nor should we ever fight alone. If we are not covering each other in prayer, then we are not living out the prayerful communion of saints, the Church that Christ died to create. Evangelicalism’s narrow obsession with individual faith at the expense of community is one reason those men on the list Ford saw are out of ministry. Not enough of us were praying for them, but large armies of people (and the dark forces behind them) WERE praying against them.

None of us is immune. I could go on and on with real-life examples of how we underestimate what is arrayed against us. We need to marshall all the weapons Christ gave us to vanquish the foe. Scripture is one part of that defense; let’s not neglect the rest. And let’s also not fail to understand the need for reinforcements from the other Christians out there.


12. James Vander Woude
October 19, 2006
12:07 AM

DLE:

Who, exactly, would that man have been praying to? If the answer is ‘satan’, are we to think that satan has God-like powers, where he can hear and answer people’s prayers?

sincerely, James


13. Dave
October 19, 2006
4:52 AM

I bought this book, read it myself and gave it to my 18 year old son some time ago. It opened up some great conversations with him. It was a tremendous help in pointing him to the powerful grace of God, rather than to his own efforts in this area of life, which fathers often find embarassing to talk to their sons about. I believe this book has helped him to maintain a healthy desire for sex, coupled with a total dependence on the Spirit of God at work in his life.


14. Alex M. Rubio
October 19, 2006
8:57 AM

I’m reading this book right now. I’ve also read Steve Arterburn’s book Every Man’s Battle. I agree that his approach is not in line with “His” approach to purity and holiness. Thank you for a wonderful review of Brother Josh’s book.


15. DLE
October 19, 2006
11:09 AM

James,

Would you think it odd that people who oppose the Lord worship and pray to other “gods”? How many religions on this planet pray to false, demonic gods? If there were no response from those prayers, would people still pray them? Even if those prayers are not answered in the same fashion that God answers ours, something happens that allows dark powers to operate. In many parts of the world, people pray to ask demons to come into them so they can have power. Those possessions happen in response to that desire. If you don’t believe this, talk to African or Asian missionaries sometime.

Let’s not be ignorant on this. Pretending this doesn’t happen gets us into amazing amounts of trouble when it comes to spiritual warfare issues.

I once worked at a Christian bookstore. One day, two people with joy radiating from their faces walked into the store and told me they’d just become Christians. They also told me they’d been part of a coven of witches in the area actively praying against the bookstore. Even though the couple were very sincere about this, I brushed the whole thing off.

But that store, as successful as it had once been, soon encountered many problems. Weird things started happening, people started getting sick a lot, silly mistakes were made, and the store closed after a series of disastrous months. The couple who owned it eventually divorced.

Now the Western analysis would be to say that there were rational explanations for everything that happened. But what about spiritual warfare? Why couldn’t demonic powers be at work in what would seem—on the surface—to be rational explanations for the demise of the store? In looking back, I think I took the caution of those two former witches far too lightly.

Do we take the demonic too lightly? I think we underestimate the part demonic forces play in this issue of lust and how it’s so gripped our nation, churches, pastors, and congregants.

Again, let’s not be ignorant on this issue.


16. John Schlaack
October 19, 2006
12:34 PM

I’m curious if anyone has read “The War Within: Gaining Victory in the Battle for Sexual Purity (Revised and Expanded) by Robert Daniels. I was recently at the NANC annual conference and saw it on the book table but had never seen it before.


17. donsands
October 19, 2006
12:52 PM

“let’s not be ignorant on this issue”

Amen. And we need to be biblical. I don’t see in the Bible where the prayers of the pagans will have an affect on the people of God.

Satan surely can hinder the Church in all the ways he does, but he can do nothing, unless the Lord allows him.

We do wrestle with principalities and powers for sure. The devil surely tempts us with fornication and lust. It may be his number one scheme and snare to lead us into sin.
I believe the book of Proverbs deals with fornication more than any other subject.

Sorry for the rabbit path. I wonder, does Josh deal with the spiritual wickednesses? I suppose I’ll have to read the book.


18. DLE
October 19, 2006
1:40 PM

Don,

I don’t have a lot of time to respond to your comment, but Exodus 7 immediately springs to mind, when the magicians of Egypt turned their staves into snakes just as Aaron did. Yes, Aaron’s snake swallowed the others, but that only serves to remind us that we must be serious about the opposition we face, relying on God to be our champion, and not our own strength.


19. bob reehm
October 19, 2006
6:23 PM

I wrote the book “The War Within, Gaining Victory in the Battle for Sexual Purity”. I used the pen name of Robert Daniels to protect my pre-adolescent kids. My real name is Robert Daniel Reehm. I invite your readers to read and compare it with both Josh Harris’ and Steve Arteburn’s books on purity. I welcome your comments.
Thanks


20. Carmen
October 20, 2006
12:51 AM

I read the book when it first came out, I found it very practical and honest. Even for a girl.

I appreciated the gospel-centeredness to hope of overcoming lust/sexual lust.

It is a small book that manages to have solid content in it. The Gospel is simple, the battle against lust does not need to be so complex, we can be humble and we can receive help in very simple ways. There is no great mystery to the root of sin, pride (its insideous nature aside).

Matthew 7 13 “Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. 14 For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.

I think as the narrow gate is simple, hard but simple and straight, so is the approach to battle lust.

There is a study guide for women by Josh and Shannon Harris, same publisher. I have not checked it out, but it looks as if a good resource for accountability groups.


21. thebluefish
October 20, 2006
2:50 AM

Harris approach is really Piper’s (excellent approach) from Future Grace isn’t it?

Less memorising scriptures and more “prizing the promises” - scripture memorising to fight sin ends up often being a law-based and sin-focussed approach to attack sin - whereas prizing promises is about treasuring Christ more than sin…

Piper obviously promotes his “fighter verses” but the way he uses them is not the way we often might… his is about affection for God, whereas its possible to use the same good thing for self-exaltation.


22. Phil
October 22, 2006
8:11 AM

“I recently heard that Arterburn has been divorced twice and is now married to…”

Tim, brother, you could have done this whole review without this dig, ya know? I mean, if Arterburn is wrong, he’s wrong on the unmerited arguments he proffers. I’m not accusing you of gossip because Arterburn has been quite open about his divorce, pain, failure, etc. But simply because a brother, any brother, has been candid and open about his sin does NOT give us unlimited license to bring it up in any and every context, whenever and however we feel like bearing a negative report against a brother. Indeed the Scripture has much to say about malicious talk (and related speech).

What I’m simply saying is that in context of reviewing a book by Josh Harris, this off-handed comment reads, to me, as a one of those public-knowledge-wrapped-as-gossip delivered with the wink and a nudge. In casual speech it would go more like, “…heehee… he’s, um, divorced, ya know *wink wink* *nudge nudge*…” I believe we can be fairly confident that our Lord, who wrote Jeremiah 3:8 of Himself, is not pleased with such idle talk.

Ask yourself: “Could I have written about my brother and refuted his book without bringing this up? Do I have the utmost love for my brother and readers at heart when repeating this information?” If you could have made your point (and you have) without bearing a bad report, you should have done so.

Please consider a humble recourse: remove the disparaging comment (your review will read fine without it, I assure you) and remove the comments that refer to it (including this one).

Yours in Christ,
Phil