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I Kissed Dating Goodbye Part 3: Purity Culture’s 4-Step Plan for Control | #45

July 31, 2025 / 01:33:16

This episode covers the third part of the series on "I Kiss Dating Goodbye" by Joshua Harris, focusing on chapters 8 through 11. Key topics include the four steps for pursuing a godly lifestyle in relationships, the role of parents as mentors, establishing boundaries, and evaluating influences from media.

Jacob Gooden discusses chapter 8, which emphasizes starting with a clean slate and the importance of repentance in relationships. He critiques Harris's approach to purity culture, arguing that it fosters guilt and shame rather than healthy self-control.

In chapter 9, Gooden reflects on making parents teammates in romantic relationships, expressing concerns about the potential overreach of parental involvement. He questions the exclusion of divorced or non-Christian parents from offering guidance.

Chapter 10 focuses on guarding one's heart against lust and infatuation. Gooden challenges the notion that attraction is inherently sinful, advocating for open discussions about natural feelings and desires.

The final chapter addresses the societal pressures around dating and the awkwardness of explaining one's choice to abstain from traditional dating practices. Gooden emphasizes the need for honest communication and the importance of understanding personal boundaries.

TL;DR

Jacob Gooden critiques Joshua Harris's "I Kiss Dating Goodbye," discussing purity culture, parental roles, and the complexities of attraction and dating.

Episode

1:33:16
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What is good exhies? It's your boy Jacob
00:00:01
Gooden. We are back for part three of
00:00:04
the I Kiss Dating Goodbye series. If you
00:00:06
missed parts one and two, go back check
00:00:08
those out. But we are talking about
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probably the worst Christian dating book
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on the market. Uh thank God it's no
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longer on the market, but uh yeah, I
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Kiss Dating Goodbye by Joshua Harris.
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This is a terrible, terrible book. And
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today we're going to be covering part
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three of the book. So chapters 8 through
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11. And uh yeah, it's going to be all
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kind of like his practical tools for how
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we keep pure and uh live a a godly
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lifestyle in our romantic relationships.
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So yeah, without further ado, let's get
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into it.
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[Music]
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So chapter 8 is titled Starting with a
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Clean Slate: The Four Important Steps
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for Getting on Track with God's Plan.
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And like most of Josh's chapters, it
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starts off with a story and Josh tells a
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story of going to a birthday party for
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one of his buddies and uh as a part of
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his birthday. So it's all boys invited
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to this party and their dads are asked
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to come along with them. And they're
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their dads are also asked to bring along
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a tool that they use on the regular and
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a life lesson that goes along with it.
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And so they sit around and these dads
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bring these different tools. One of them
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brings him a really nice pen and talks
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about the significance of the pen.
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Another dad brings him a nail puller and
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talks about the significance of the nail
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puller and how in life sometimes, you
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know, you got to pull a couple nails uh
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and kind of restart uh so to speak
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instead of just like continually
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hammering nails into, you know, the two
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pieces of wood you're trying to connect
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or something like that. And so anyway,
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kind of an interesting thing. It's
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setting up this whole like life lessons,
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building a godly lifestyle, the tools
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you're going to need for that segment of
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this book. And there was a couple things
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I just found so interesting about this.
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One was that it's a gender specific
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birthday party. Uh no girls were
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invited. Um no moms were invited to
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impart their wisdom. And two, the thing
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that struck me was I went to a birthday
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party like this and it kind of unlocked
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this memory for me of going to my
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friend's party and I think he was
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turning 12 or 13, but kind of early
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manhood adolescence was taking place,
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right? And it was a little bit different
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in that I don't remember all the dads
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bringing a tool to give to their sons.
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But I do remember
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the the kid being given like a sword
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like Lord of the Rings style like broads
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sword kind of a thing. And there was a
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whole nighting ceremony. There was
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prayer that was involved with it. all
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these kind of things. The dad gave this
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longass speech um talking about what it
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means to be a man and stand up and and
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all all these different things. And then
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it went around the room and all of these
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fathers uh shared a piece of life advice
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with my friend. And on surface level, I
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don't want to say that this is like bad,
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okay? Like I'm not trying to sit here
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and say like, oh, I don't think dads
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should give advice because that's that's
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not true. It just felt like weird
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timing. You know, a birthday party is
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meant to be fun. Games, cake, presents,
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like that kind of a thing. We sat there
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for probably 2 hours listening to these
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dudes spew off stuff. And if you know
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anything about dudes and you know
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anything about dads specifically, a lot
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of times they have a lot of trouble
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getting right to the point and saying
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exactly what they mean. And so there's
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just a lot of rambling. And I remember
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as a kid just being like, "How long do
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we have to sit through this?" And even
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asking my dad, "This is not something
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we're going to do when I turn 12 or 13,
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right?" Um, and uh, I hope I didn't hurt
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his feelings when I said that. And I
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hope I didn't make him feel bad cuz
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maybe he didn't want to do that, but uh,
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I wasn't into it. So anyway, just kind
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of a weird story to kick things off. So
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right after this, we get right into the
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four steps for getting on track with
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God's plan. And those four steps are
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start with a clean slate, make your
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parents your teammates, establish
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protective boundaries, and check who's
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whispering in your ears. So, right off
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the rip, we're getting right into it.
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Start with a clean slate. Josh says this
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in the book. If I want to live a godly
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lifestyle, we must first repent of
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sinful attitudes and behaviors in our
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relationships. The Bible uses the word
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repent to describe turning from what's
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wrong and pursuing what's right.
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Repentance is a change of direction
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based on a change of heart. Have you
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practiced selfishness in your
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relationships? If so, consider admitting
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your selfishness and correcting it. Have
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you played loose and careless in the
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area of purity? Then maybe you need to
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ask God to forgive you and seek ways to
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reverse your course. Are you currently
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involved in a relationship that you know
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is wrong for whatever reason? Then ask
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God to give you the courage to do his
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will, which might include breaking off
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the relationship.
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Right off the rip, Josh is playing this
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sinful card. Again, if you didn't grow
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up in the Christian environment, this is
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something that is taught right from the
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beginning. I remember as a kid being
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single digits being told this like we
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are sinful, we are evil, without God, we
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can't do anything good and we need him
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uh to be perfect, right? And I think
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it's kind of a it's it's a very
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difficult thing now unpacking where I'm
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just kind of like
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it it sets in your mind this like well
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I'm just evil. I'm wicked. And so when
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sinful things happen it's just my nature
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being my nature. And it never allows for
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the fact of like looking at how does the
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human body react to things, right?
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Especially when we come to those teenage
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years, those hormone years, right? where
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where things are changing, uh,
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adolescence has kicked in, right? And we
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are finding things sexually attractive,
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we are turned on unexplicably.
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Um, that kind of a thing. And so Josh
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goes on to tell a story of a guy Danny
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who's like 18 and him and his girlfriend
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have been together for a couple months
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and their relationship is almost purely
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physical. And Danny feels like he needs
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to break it off because even though they
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set up they set up rules with each other
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and roadblocks and all of these things,
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their relationship inevitably turns back
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to being physical. And I find this
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really strange because I think, you
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know, I can sit here and say I think
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this needs to be a lesson of
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self-control.
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And that's coming from me now thinking
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that as humans we're not inherently evil
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or wicked. But Christians, we use that
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as a copout to basically be like, well,
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I have no control over my body. And
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specifically, guys get told this a lot.
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We have no control over our bodies. And
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that's why the physicality uh of stuff
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kind of escalates a lot of times. That's
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why guys tend to be the ones who push
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the physical uh side of romantic
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relationships, right? And so, but
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instead of just like running away from
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it and being like, I need to break up
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with this girl and I need to break her
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heart and all of these things, like why
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not actually like learn to have some
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self-control and learn to set up the
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correct kind of boundaries and get help
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where you need help, right? Maybe you
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need to have an older couple kind of
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walk you through some of the things you
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do or maybe maybe you do need to take a
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break, you know? And I do want to say
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this too, like if it's the physicality
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that made him uncomfortable and his
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partner was the one who was kind of
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pushing that on him, that's a totally
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different boundaries conversation. Uh
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that's a totally different scenario. But
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like that's not what really what we're
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being given. We're just being told like
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they're physical and in their
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relationship and they can't control
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themselves but be physical so they
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should break up because obviously
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they're not ready to get married. Okay.
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And I just think that that's that's
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kind of bullshitty. Jumping on to the
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next step along the path. We are looking
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at making parents your teammates. Here's
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what Josh has to say. You'll need two
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things as you live out a new attitude
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towards relationships. Wisdom and
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accountability. Ideally, both of these
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should come from your parents. You need
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your mom and dad. I realize that's not
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uh that not everyone has the opportunity
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to benefit from relationships with both
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their parents, but even so, I believe
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that you can gain valuable insights from
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whichever parent or guardian uh you most
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trust.
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Why do I say we need to gain wisdom and
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accountability from our parents? Because
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I can see how I shot myself in the foot
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by not trusting my parents in the past.
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When I was in high school, I hid my
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relationships from my parents. If I
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liked someone, I wouldn't let my parents
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know. I feared that if they got
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involved, they'd mess things up. What a
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mistake. By hiding my romantic life from
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my parents, I cut myself off from the
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God-given source of wisdom that could
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have saved me from making so many
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mistakes. I agree that I think having
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your parents or having trusted uh
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mentors, older figures in your life,
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being involved in your relationship, I
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think that can be really good. Okay?
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But one, I don't think it needs to
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happen immediately. Okay? I also think
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that there is
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this over um
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it can fall into this overprotective
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parent scenario, right? Where you have
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this kind of like helicopter parent
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scenario and they're with you on all the
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dates and they have to be at everything
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and they have to know everything that's
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going on in your love life at all times.
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Uh and nothing can be secret. And we'll
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see that more as we unpack more in the
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book. Uh Josh talks more about privacy
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or what he labels as privacy and um
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it's just an area that I think can get
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really muddy really quickly. And so he
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also goes on to talk about what
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qualifies someone to be like a proper
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mentor and the things that disqualify.
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He discounts divorced parents,
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non-Christian parents. Um, and I think
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that that also is a dangerous thing to
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play. Now, I know that Christians like
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to do this thing of like don't really
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get wisdom from people who are not
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Christian because
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who knows? It could be bad advice. It
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could be from Satan. It could be
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whatever. But I think when you discount
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that, especially like a divorced parent
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scenario, like they've learned a lesson.
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there's a reason they're divorced. They
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weren't compatible. Um, and there's
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something to be learned there, right?
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There's also something to be said for
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the fact that there's a lot of parents
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who stick together even though they
00:10:55
probably shouldn't. So, there's a lot of
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toxic traits to be learned from that
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where you're putting up with things that
00:11:01
you probably shouldn't be putting up
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with to be quite honest. And so Josh's
00:11:06
kind of solution to that, he talks about
00:11:11
introducing other mentors from inside
00:11:13
the church, right? Maybe it's a youth
00:11:15
leader, maybe it's a pastor. Um, you
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know, it's some other mentor that can
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give wisdom, accountability regarding
00:11:22
your relationships from a godly
00:11:24
perspective.
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Here's again where I'm going to take
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some issue with that.
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How many youth leaders and youth pastors
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have groomed young girls and told them
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to wait uh to wait to find the right guy
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and as soon as that girl turns 18, they
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snap them up, right? And they love bomb
00:11:44
them and right convince them that God
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has given them this message that they're
00:11:50
supposed to be together, right?
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It's kind of weird. And in the same way,
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I also know some pastors who, you know,
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would would kind of they would mentor
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relationships that were broken or or
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young people who were single or
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whatever, and then they would inevitably
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have an affair with that person, which
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would dissolve their marriage and create
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like a gigantic church scandal. Like,
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and I understand there's going to be the
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argument of like, well, that's just
00:12:20
human behavior. That's just, you know,
00:12:23
sinful human behavior. I get that. But
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why are we still continuing to push this
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idea that that's what you need in order
00:12:33
to have a godly relationship, right? You
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need these mentor figures who are
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involved in your romantic relationship,
00:12:39
who are speaking into it, who are
00:12:41
telling you when to break up, who are
00:12:43
giving you the the playbook, so to
00:12:44
speak.
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uh when we have this history inside of
00:12:48
the church of that not working out.
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Okay, maybe we shake shake things up a
00:12:54
little bit. Maybe we try a different
00:12:55
pattern. Okay, let's jump into step
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three, which is establish protective
00:13:00
boundaries. Josh says this, after you've
00:13:02
formed your team, you need to establish
00:13:04
boundaries and guidelines for your
00:13:06
relationship with the opposite sex. Sit
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down with your mom, your dad, your
00:13:10
mentor. Ask them questions such as, what
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constitutes a romantic setting? What is
00:13:14
going out with someone when not what
00:13:17
when is going out with someone
00:13:18
appropriate and when should it lead and
00:13:21
when would it lead to pre-mature
00:13:24
intimacy?
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Think about some of the situations that
00:13:28
might arise. What do you do when someone
00:13:30
feels attracted to you or vice versa?
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How much time should you spend on the
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phone with someone of the opposite sex?
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How much time should you have spent
00:13:37
together even in group settings? Setting
00:13:39
boundaries like these will allow you to
00:13:41
respond with confidence in differenti
00:13:44
situations. Uh yeah, and okay, a few
00:13:49
things here.
00:13:52
Again, I don't think that every piece of
00:13:54
Josh's advice is completely god- aful. I
00:13:56
think that it veers off into being
00:13:58
really disgusting.
00:14:00
But the overall idea of like establish
00:14:03
protective boundaries around what you
00:14:05
want a relationship to look like is
00:14:07
valid, right? We all need that. What am
00:14:10
I looking for in a relationship? What do
00:14:12
I not want to do? How quickly do I want
00:14:14
to move? All those things
00:14:17
are okay, right? We can do those things.
00:14:20
It's when we start getting into this
00:14:21
like what constitutes a romantic
00:14:23
scenario and especially when we're
00:14:26
talking about the purity culture realm
00:14:28
where and we get into this in I I think
00:14:30
it's in section four but he kind of has
00:14:32
the the ev not not the evolution but the
00:14:36
step by step of here's the phases you go
00:14:38
through in a relationship casual friends
00:14:41
to uh more serious friends to like a
00:14:45
courting scenario and then marriage. He
00:14:48
really emphasizes this like your
00:14:50
friends, your friends, your friends and
00:14:52
then you know that that's the person you
00:14:53
want to marry and so you marry them and
00:14:55
then like the intimacy begins, the
00:14:57
romance begins like almost
00:15:00
at marriage. But like when you're
00:15:02
limiting what romance is and you're
00:15:04
limiting the time you can spend with
00:15:06
somebody and and not trusting yourself
00:15:07
around the opposite sex, that's another
00:15:09
issue. Not trusting yourself around the
00:15:11
opposite sex. Okay, I can't tell you the
00:15:14
number of times I hung out with somebody
00:15:15
of the opposite sex. It's literally just
00:15:17
a friendship thing. It's literally just
00:15:19
us getting coffee, going to the movies,
00:15:22
having fun, doing something that's just
00:15:25
friends, okay? And there's no
00:15:27
stipulation of like this is a date or
00:15:29
this isn't a date or this isn't romance.
00:15:31
We read the we read the room and we
00:15:34
figured out what was going on. And what
00:15:35
was going on was we were just being
00:15:37
friends with each other. Okay? We didn't
00:15:39
need a third party there. Nothing bad
00:15:41
was happening. We had self-control over
00:15:44
our own bodies. We weren't jumping each
00:15:46
other's bones in the car. Like, we
00:15:49
just inherently understood what was
00:15:51
going on. And I think, again, this goes
00:15:54
back, and I'm going to continue to put
00:15:56
this on the guys specifically.
00:15:59
We as men are not taught
00:16:03
that like where those lines lie, right?
00:16:06
We just anytime we get horny, we view
00:16:08
everything as this like sexual
00:16:10
experience and this like we have this
00:16:13
just utter desire for everything to be
00:16:15
sexual almost. And it's it's really
00:16:17
pathetic and disgusting. And we need to
00:16:20
get out of that mindset and understand
00:16:22
that there is a time and a place for
00:16:23
that and there's a way to communicate
00:16:26
that that's what we're interested in
00:16:28
pursuing with somebody.
00:16:30
It's not all the time. It's not every
00:16:32
place, okay? And it's not something that
00:16:35
we should just expect that everybody is
00:16:37
anticipating that we are romantically
00:16:40
interested in them. I also wrote this
00:16:42
down in my notes and I wanted to share
00:16:43
this. I said, I have come to the
00:16:45
realization that I believe Josh left
00:16:48
sexual sin ambiguous in this book to
00:16:51
sell more copies. I think if he had
00:16:53
truly spelled out exactly what he
00:16:55
believed was right and wrong, this book
00:16:57
would have been met with a ton of
00:16:59
criticism.
00:17:01
I mean, throughout the book and his
00:17:03
follow-up book, Boy Meets Girl, he talks
00:17:05
about what is appropriate for him and he
00:17:08
places himself on a pedestal above
00:17:10
everyone else who chooses differently.
00:17:12
Right? We just read it in the book. What
00:17:16
is right? What is wrong? How much time
00:17:18
should you be spending with the opposite
00:17:19
sex? He then goes on, for example, and
00:17:22
he says, I have committed to avoiding
00:17:23
situations that could lead to
00:17:25
temptation. Being alone with a girl in
00:17:26
an empty house is one such situation.
00:17:29
So, I've created a boundary about this
00:17:31
issue. I will not go to a girl's house
00:17:33
if no one else is there. If a girl calls
00:17:35
me, invites me to come over, and me
00:17:37
mentions in passing that her parents
00:17:38
aren't home, I don't have to weigh the
00:17:41
situation or pray about it. I already
00:17:43
know that I won't accept the invitation.
00:17:45
Rules by themselves won't change our
00:17:46
hearts, but once we've taken on a new
00:17:49
attitude, protective boundaries can help
00:17:51
keep the course. Again, boundaries are
00:17:54
important. I understand he doesn't want
00:17:55
to go over to a girl's house.
00:17:58
This is also written, like I said, from
00:18:00
a 21-year-old man who at 21, most people
00:18:03
are in college or starting to move out.
00:18:06
They don't live with their parents
00:18:07
anymore. And so that gave it away to me
00:18:09
that he wrote this for high school kids.
00:18:11
He wrote this so that high school kids
00:18:14
would feel this need to not be alone
00:18:17
with the opposite sex. I have had
00:18:19
experiences in my life. I also set
00:18:21
boundaries like these things in my life
00:18:23
for periods where I didn't always feel
00:18:25
comfortable being alone with the
00:18:27
opposite sex alone at a house. Uh I
00:18:30
didn't maybe always feel comfortable. It
00:18:32
was it was easier for me to be in public
00:18:34
with them. We talked about last week the
00:18:36
the Billy Graham kind of mindset of
00:18:38
like, you know, never let the door close
00:18:40
if you're in an office with someone of
00:18:42
the opposite sex because, you know, you
00:18:45
just want there to be no question about
00:18:47
it. And I think it kind of comes down to
00:18:50
the fact that like
00:18:53
if guys were actually taught
00:18:55
self-control, if we were taught about
00:18:58
understanding
00:18:59
the appropriate time and place for
00:19:01
things, that would never be an issue.
00:19:04
There would never be a question.
00:19:07
Bad stuff's still going to happen, of
00:19:08
course, but like it would become less
00:19:11
and less of an issue that those things
00:19:13
would happen. Moving on, last step. Step
00:19:16
four, checking who's whispering in your
00:19:19
ear. This is what Josh has to say about
00:19:21
that. He says, "Finally, keep an eye on
00:19:23
your influences. Who and what you listen
00:19:26
to, listen to, read, and watch will
00:19:29
encourage or conflict with our
00:19:30
commitment to pursue God's best in
00:19:32
relationships."
00:19:35
He goes on to talk about some girls in
00:19:38
his church who always feel like
00:19:40
dissatisfied
00:19:41
um after watching romantic movies. It
00:19:43
makes me wonder uh why doesn't that
00:19:46
happen to me? Does anything in your life
00:19:48
cause that kind of discontentment? If
00:19:50
so, then maybe you need to consider
00:19:52
cutting out some things. Maybe you need
00:19:54
to stop reading romance novels, watching
00:19:56
soap opers because they encourage
00:19:58
ungodly longings within you. Perhaps you
00:20:00
need to turn off the radio because much
00:20:02
of today's music exalts a false
00:20:04
definition of love. You might need to
00:20:06
tune out some of your favorite TV shows
00:20:08
because they mock your beliefs about
00:20:10
purity. Whatever e whatever uh tempts
00:20:14
you towards discontentment or
00:20:16
compromise, don't put up with it. Tune
00:20:18
it out. Turn it off. Here we go again.
00:20:21
Josh criticizing the media. He's
00:20:23
criticizing pop culture and the things
00:20:27
that people consume. He's claiming that
00:20:29
again it paints this unrealistic
00:20:31
picture, expectations of love and
00:20:33
romance. And he's doing the classic
00:20:36
Christian culture war argument uh that
00:20:38
they love so much, right? The media is
00:20:41
bad. They are promoting bad things and
00:20:46
we should steer clear of that. That's
00:20:48
why we have people who argue today that
00:20:50
like Disney's gone woke, right? Or they
00:20:53
don't allow them their kids to watch
00:20:54
like the Cartoon Network or Nickelodeon,
00:20:58
things like that. Uh I'm going to get
00:20:59
into that in a new in a soon to come
00:21:02
episode about the things we weren't
00:21:03
allowed to do as homeschoolers. that
00:21:05
like that's part of the reason that
00:21:08
certain things are are hindered from
00:21:10
people. And it's not always the reason,
00:21:13
but a lot of it is. Something that I
00:21:17
learned, I want to say maybe around
00:21:20
18ish, was learning to to
00:21:24
differentiate between reality and
00:21:27
fantasy.
00:21:30
And this came about a couple different
00:21:31
ways. one. I mean, I grew up reading a
00:21:33
lot of fantasy novels, a lot of fiction,
00:21:36
and that's pretty cut and dry. That's
00:21:38
make believe, right? We don't believe
00:21:40
these things actually happened, but it
00:21:42
makes for a good story, right? Doesn't
00:21:45
leave me discontented because I know I'm
00:21:47
not I don't have the magical powers of
00:21:49
somebody in the Chronicles of Narnia.
00:21:51
Uh, right? I don't believe that, you
00:21:54
know, I can travel across the galaxy in
00:21:56
a spaceship and, you know, go a million
00:21:59
par sex and go to visit this new planet
00:22:01
with all these new aliens and, you know,
00:22:04
whatever. I just don't believe that's
00:22:06
fantasy. That's made up. And and then we
00:22:10
have the stuff that maybe is a fiction
00:22:12
book, but it's written in a way that can
00:22:15
convey some more
00:22:18
seriousness to it. And I talk a lot
00:22:21
about the Da Vinci Code and reading that
00:22:23
book with my dad. And one of the reasons
00:22:27
I always go back to that example was the
00:22:29
fact that for a lot of people that book
00:22:32
was an instant no because they heard
00:22:34
someone talk about it and how it was bad
00:22:35
and how it uh portrayed Christianity in
00:22:38
this negative light and it told lies and
00:22:40
it was coming for your faith.
00:22:44
When you open the book, the first little
00:22:47
synopsis thing in the book literally
00:22:48
says, "This is a work of fiction,
00:22:50
historical fiction." And while a lot of
00:22:52
the elements are pulled from
00:22:56
real stories, real historical uh like
00:23:01
evidenced things.
00:23:04
It's makeelieve. They've been twisted.
00:23:06
They've been altered, right? It's like
00:23:08
national treasure. No one thinks that
00:23:10
there's a treasure map on the back of
00:23:12
the Declaration of Independence, right?
00:23:14
We pretty much all know that's fake.
00:23:17
And so
00:23:19
learning to differentiate between the
00:23:21
reality and the fantasy has helped me a
00:23:25
lot because it's helped me in consuming
00:23:28
a lot of media because I know when I can
00:23:32
turn that on and turn that off. And
00:23:35
that's a skill that I think a lot of
00:23:37
people need to start working on in in
00:23:40
their lives of where do those lines
00:23:43
where does that line lie um for you and
00:23:47
what is you know convincing you of
00:23:49
something that is not actually happening
00:23:52
uh but you're taking it to be real and
00:23:55
again I see that in Josh's argument here
00:23:57
who's whispering in your ear goes after
00:24:00
media right he goes after the movies you
00:24:02
watch the books you're consuming Right?
00:24:04
Especially like the romance genre of
00:24:06
stuff. Romance is super spicy right now.
00:24:09
I just read my first spicy book this
00:24:11
summer and spoiler alert, it wasn't that
00:24:13
spicy. But there was elements to it that
00:24:15
I was like, "Okay, yeah, this is a fun
00:24:18
fantasy. This is a fun
00:24:21
fake reality, you know, but that's what
00:24:24
it is. I can't do everything that's in
00:24:27
that book. A partner can't do everything
00:24:29
that's in that book. It's fantasy. It's
00:24:31
makeelieve." That's okay. But it's a lot
00:24:34
of fun still. And that's I think where
00:24:38
Christians get it wrong is they act like
00:24:41
the media is portraying everything as
00:24:43
reality when it's not. A lot of it is
00:24:45
just fantasy. Okay, let's move on.
00:24:49
Chapter nine. It's called Just Friends
00:24:52
in a Just Do It World. Uh it's keeping
00:24:56
relationships out of the romance zone.
00:25:00
I'm going to read this first section of
00:25:01
this chapter again. He kind of tells a
00:25:03
story or it's a a scenario and I think
00:25:06
it just it just helps kind of paint the
00:25:09
picture for what this chapter is going
00:25:10
to be about. So, he says this. He says,
00:25:13
"You meet someone of the opposite sex.
00:25:14
He or she really catches your eye.
00:25:16
Uh-oh." Then you get to know this person
00:25:19
and you find out he or she has a great
00:25:21
personality as well. Double uh oh. To
00:25:24
top it all off, this person sends you
00:25:26
that I'd like to get to know you better
00:25:28
vibe. Major uh oh, if you've decided to
00:25:32
put romance on hold until you're ready
00:25:34
for marriage, what do you do in a
00:25:36
situation like this? If you're not going
00:25:39
to play the dating game, what's the
00:25:41
plan? The simple answer is to just be
00:25:43
friends. Easy, right? Not quite. Maybe
00:25:48
we wouldn't struggle with the scenario
00:25:50
if God created us without hearts, devoid
00:25:53
of emotions and immune to attraction.
00:25:56
But he didn't. Most of us have to deal
00:25:58
with all three as we stumble through the
00:26:00
confusing process of finding balance
00:26:02
between two extreme options. Jumping
00:26:05
headlong into romance with everyone who
00:26:07
catches our eye or running in fear from
00:26:10
all members of the opposite sex. Finding
00:26:12
that balance is anything but easy. The
00:26:15
middle ground can often feel more like a
00:26:17
tight rope stretched over a gaping
00:26:20
chasm.
00:26:22
I put down in my notes, I said, "Uh oh,
00:26:24
I found you attractive and now I'm
00:26:25
sinning."
00:26:27
I said, "Good Lord, Josh." He just
00:26:29
doesn't want people to feel any type of
00:26:31
way. He's denying the reality that the
00:26:34
human body creates hormones and has
00:26:36
emotional responses to people we find
00:26:38
attractive.
00:26:40
I'm going to take back a little bit of
00:26:42
that statement and say I think he does
00:26:43
recognize that. Uh
00:26:46
but again, I think he's pushing people
00:26:49
to kind of the wording of his books
00:26:54
lends themsself to needing to be this
00:26:57
perfect thing. this person who's kind of
00:27:00
devoid of romantic feelings and romantic
00:27:03
attraction and all of those things until
00:27:05
they're ready to get married. Flip a
00:27:08
switch, turn those things on, find a
00:27:10
partner, get married very quickly, and
00:27:13
then in marriage flip the switch of sex
00:27:16
is good. And that's just not how things
00:27:20
work, unfortunately. That's just not how
00:27:23
the human body operates. It's not how
00:27:25
our minds work. All that kind of stuff.
00:27:27
Hey, I went on to say, "Even with my
00:27:30
friends, I sometimes find myself
00:27:32
thinking about them and wanting to spend
00:27:34
time with them, fantasizing about the
00:27:36
next time we're together. That's normal
00:27:38
for humans to do. We're allowed to feel.
00:27:40
It's chemical." And now, I don't mean
00:27:42
that I find my friends romantically
00:27:44
attractive, although I do have some
00:27:45
attractive friends, much more attractive
00:27:47
than me. But
00:27:50
what I mean is it's very normal as a
00:27:53
human being to get to know somebody, to
00:27:55
meet somebody and want to spend time
00:27:57
with them. That's what we do. We're
00:27:58
we're creatures of connection, right? We
00:28:01
need that. We long for that. That's
00:28:04
something that is just part of our DNA
00:28:06
is community. We need that. When we live
00:28:09
in isolations,
00:28:11
uh we don't we can't be our truest,
00:28:14
fullest, most fulfilled person, right?
00:28:17
uh co should have taught us that uh at
00:28:20
this point the next kind of bulleted
00:28:22
section in this chapter is called just
00:28:24
plain confusing and he goes on kind of
00:28:27
this
00:28:29
statement of being just friends is plain
00:28:31
confusing in all honesty I haven't
00:28:33
completely figured it out okay and he
00:28:36
goes on and he talks about the Tootsie
00:28:39
Pop ad right everyone knows this right
00:28:42
how many licks it's the kid with the owl
00:28:44
how many licks does it take to get to
00:28:45
the center of the Tootsie Pop Right? He
00:28:47
licks once, he counts one, right? He
00:28:49
licks again, two, licks again, three,
00:28:52
looks a fourth time, he crunches down on
00:28:54
it, skips the whole line. We never know
00:28:57
how many licks it actually takes to get
00:28:59
to the center of a Tootsie Pop. So, he
00:29:01
goes on to say this after that. When I
00:29:03
consider my friendship with girls, I
00:29:04
feel like that boy, the one from the ad,
00:29:06
right, who wants to know how many licks
00:29:07
to get to the center. I don't want to
00:29:09
reach the chewy center of romance. I
00:29:11
just want to be friends, but I don't
00:29:13
know how much attention a friendship
00:29:15
between a guy and a girl can handle
00:29:17
before crunch. We've crossed the line
00:29:20
from friendship into more than
00:29:21
friendship.
00:29:23
I put this in my notes. I said Josh
00:29:27
seems to turn every interaction with
00:29:29
girls into a sexual situation. We just
00:29:31
talked about this. I think that's a him
00:29:34
problem. Like, dude, chill out.
00:29:38
And again, every time he talks about
00:29:42
someone of the opposite sex, because
00:29:43
again, we're talking in a very
00:29:45
heterosexual space, right? Christianity,
00:29:48
heterosexual space, one man, one woman,
00:29:51
no room for anything else. Every
00:29:53
interaction that Josh has with a girl
00:29:55
has this grain of sexual tension to it,
00:29:59
right? Will they, won't they? I find
00:30:01
them attractive,
00:30:04
you know, should we kiss? All those
00:30:06
types of things. is this the person I
00:30:08
meant to to be with? And you see later
00:30:10
on even like the way he views his quote
00:30:13
unquote friendships with girls when they
00:30:15
start to pair off, there's jealousy
00:30:17
involved for him.
00:30:19
And again, we talked about it.
00:30:23
It's okay to be friends with someone of
00:30:25
the opposite sex. It just is.
00:30:28
I have plenty of friends. You've met a
00:30:30
lot of them on the show. Friends of mine
00:30:32
who are of the opposite sex. They're
00:30:34
beautiful young women and like I love
00:30:37
them dearly. But am I romantically
00:30:39
attracted to them? No. They're just my
00:30:42
friends. We have a great time when we're
00:30:44
together. We go get a beer. We go to the
00:30:46
movies. We go mini golfing. We go
00:30:49
rollerblading. We have fun. We do fun
00:30:52
adult friend things,
00:30:55
but there's nothing sexual there
00:30:58
because you can have that. Not every
00:31:00
scenario with someone of the opposite
00:31:02
sex has to be sexual. And that's
00:31:04
something we need to start teaching our
00:31:06
young people. Not every interaction with
00:31:09
someone of the opposite sex is sexual.
00:31:12
And we need to not be sitting there
00:31:13
wondering, "Do they like me? Do they not
00:31:15
like me? Is this a romantic thing? Is
00:31:17
this not a romantic thing?" Okay? We
00:31:20
have to get over that. We have to get
00:31:21
over that hump. I'm going to jump
00:31:24
forward just a little bit. There's a lot
00:31:25
of things I could continue to unpack in
00:31:28
that last section, but
00:31:30
I feel like I'd be going in circles,
00:31:32
right? It's kind of all pointing back to
00:31:34
the same thing of guys and girls can
00:31:36
have friendships. It's okay.
00:31:39
But let's jump into this next section,
00:31:41
which is understanding the difference
00:31:42
between friendship and intimacy. Okay,
00:31:44
Josh has this to say about this. He
00:31:46
goes, "We can more clearly see the
00:31:48
elusive line between friendship and more
00:31:51
than friendship when we understand the
00:31:53
difference between friendship and
00:31:55
intimacy. Friendship is about something
00:31:57
other than two people in the
00:31:59
relationship. Intimacy is about each
00:32:02
other. In a true friendship, something
00:32:04
outside the two friends brings them
00:32:06
together." CS Lewis wrote this. "We
00:32:09
picture lovers face to face, but friends
00:32:12
side by side. Their eyes look ahead. The
00:32:15
key to friendship is a common goal or
00:32:17
objective on which both companions
00:32:19
focus. It can be an athletic pursuit, a
00:32:22
hobby, faith, music, but it's something
00:32:24
outside of themselves. As soon as those
00:32:27
two people involve focus on their
00:32:29
relationship, it has moved beyond
00:32:32
friendship. I think it's really weird. I
00:32:35
think Josh's definition of intimacy is
00:32:37
wrong because if you look up the Webster
00:32:40
definition of intimacy, intimacy is a
00:32:43
close familiarity or friendship. It's a
00:32:45
closeness with somebody. Okay? And so my
00:32:49
understanding of intimacy has always
00:32:51
been that there are different types of
00:32:53
intimacy. There's friendship, there's
00:32:55
romantic, there's uh there's a a
00:32:58
parental uh intimacy, there's all these
00:33:01
different things. And and so I think
00:33:05
it's I I I
00:33:08
think we need to reexamine
00:33:10
what Josh is trying to say here, right?
00:33:12
Of friendship has this component of you
00:33:15
guys looking to something else, right?
00:33:17
Whether it's a hobby, whatever it is,
00:33:20
you can also have friendships that are
00:33:23
about each other
00:33:25
like and that you don't share passions
00:33:28
that you don't like you can just be
00:33:30
friends. You know what I mean? Um, and
00:33:33
so, but I think about like
00:33:37
my my relationships with people, right?
00:33:40
And I think about my dear friends and
00:33:43
how I would tell them anything,
00:33:47
anything they want to know, my deepest,
00:33:48
darkest secrets, they ask, they're
00:33:50
theirs to have. And like that is a very
00:33:55
deep level of intimacy. It's a closeness
00:33:58
with that person where I feel
00:33:59
comfortable, right? It's a comfort thing
00:34:02
with them. With my parents, there's a
00:34:04
lot of things that I'll share with them.
00:34:05
There's a lot of we we have this bond
00:34:10
because they've been there my entire
00:34:11
life, right? They've seen me grow up.
00:34:13
They know me probably better than most
00:34:16
people know me. Um,
00:34:19
and
00:34:21
you know, so we have this this
00:34:22
closeness. We have an intimacy. Now, my
00:34:25
wife and I, we also have an intimacy,
00:34:27
not only as friends and the closeness
00:34:30
that comes with that, but also romantic,
00:34:32
right, in nature. And so, there's
00:34:35
different ways to look about it. But I
00:34:38
think just lumping the word intimacy
00:34:40
into sex and into romance is a bad it's
00:34:46
a bad game to play because
00:34:50
again we talked about or I mentioned how
00:34:54
purity culture and the Christian culture
00:34:56
I grew up in, there was a lot of things
00:34:59
there was a lot of media and a lot of
00:35:00
books that were kind of these like
00:35:01
instant nos. And
00:35:06
it it's interesting because even still
00:35:08
I'll pick up a book and I'll read the
00:35:10
back, right? Or I'll flip through a
00:35:11
couple pages of it and I'll see
00:35:13
buzzwords that I go that's associated
00:35:16
with this, right? And I remember picking
00:35:19
up this book, I'm totally spacing on
00:35:21
what the book was titled, but it was
00:35:22
about um building intimate
00:35:25
relationships. And I picked it up being
00:35:27
like, "Okay, interesting romance book.
00:35:31
Here we go. relationship, you know,
00:35:33
we're going to talk about sex, we're
00:35:34
going to talk about romance. That's what
00:35:35
this book's about. No, this book had
00:35:37
nothing to do with that. This book had
00:35:39
everything to do with building closeness
00:35:41
with people, right? Setting correct
00:35:43
boundaries, understanding, you know,
00:35:46
this person kind of fulfills this need
00:35:48
in my life and I share this with them.
00:35:50
The levels of intimacy and how you get
00:35:52
to that, right? How you build that trust
00:35:54
with people, all those types of things.
00:35:57
And and so as I flipped through that, I
00:35:58
was like, this is really interesting.
00:36:00
this is a different way to view this.
00:36:02
And so again, I think we just need to
00:36:05
take certain words and redefine them uh
00:36:09
or look at maybe actually define them
00:36:11
and take out the Christian definition
00:36:13
that people like Josh continuing to put
00:36:15
on these things, right? That maybe we
00:36:19
don't agree with uh and and actually
00:36:23
look at what they truly do mean. Okay, I
00:36:26
had this in my notes too that I wanted
00:36:30
to share was that I have not always been
00:36:35
uber close with every friend, even the
00:36:36
people that sometimes I would label my
00:36:38
best friends. And I was thinking, as
00:36:41
I've been prepping and rereading this
00:36:43
book and because even though I read it
00:36:45
and I took all these notes, like it's
00:36:47
been a little while, so I'm kind of
00:36:48
rereading it as we're going through it.
00:36:50
But I had this thought and I was
00:36:54
thinking about
00:36:57
holding certain people at arms length
00:36:59
growing up. And as I've unpacked my
00:37:02
religion,
00:37:04
I've really started to realize that a
00:37:07
lot of my youth leaders and a lot of my
00:37:10
friends who were Christians, I held them
00:37:13
at this arms length because
00:37:16
I didn't have the closeness with them to
00:37:20
always share
00:37:23
all of the maybe the the things that I
00:37:25
believed were sinful in my life, right?
00:37:28
or the degree to which I was struggling
00:37:30
with them. And the reason I didn't do
00:37:32
that was because
00:37:35
especially with the leaders, I was
00:37:36
looking for someone
00:37:39
who was going to help guide me and point
00:37:43
me in kind of a direction of like here's
00:37:45
the steps to take to get better. So, I'm
00:37:49
going to use porn as an example, okay? I
00:37:51
grew up believing porn was sinful. It
00:37:53
was wrong. It was evil.
00:37:55
And
00:37:58
but I never wanted to talk about it with
00:38:00
my youth leaders because at youth group
00:38:02
whenever it would come up of course
00:38:03
every teenage boy for the most part was
00:38:06
struggling with looking at porn. We were
00:38:09
struggling with that. And or we were
00:38:12
quote unquote struggling with it. But
00:38:16
if I went to them and said, "I have this
00:38:18
problem where I'm looking at it four
00:38:20
times a day. I can't turn it off. It's
00:38:23
all I think about. that I close my eyes
00:38:24
and I see it, right? I do believe
00:38:26
personally I probably had
00:38:30
a low degree of addiction to this at
00:38:32
different points in my life. But I was
00:38:35
looking for steps to get out of that.
00:38:38
Okay. And so even when I would bring it
00:38:40
up kind of subtly to test the waters of
00:38:42
like, oh yeah, like I've just been kind
00:38:43
of wrestling with this or I I
00:38:47
essentially I was being like I want to
00:38:49
get clean, right? I want to get sober uh
00:38:51
from that. It was always met with pray
00:38:54
more, worship more, serve more.
00:38:58
Now, those are definitely things that
00:38:59
you can do. However, they're not steps
00:39:03
to actually break the addiction, right?
00:39:05
And I was maybe looking for something
00:39:07
that was like, here's the seven steps,
00:39:09
right? Here's what we're going to do.
00:39:10
We're going to put this protection on
00:39:12
your computer. We're going to have you
00:39:14
text so and so at this time. And so
00:39:16
because I didn't get when I would test
00:39:18
the waters, I didn't get maybe the steps
00:39:22
I felt like necessary to take a to take
00:39:25
some some movement forward in my
00:39:28
struggle. I wouldn't trust him with
00:39:30
anymore because I was like, you gave me
00:39:32
bad advice. You gave me advice that's
00:39:34
not working. I can pray a whole bunch,
00:39:36
but then I just feel really guilty. I I
00:39:38
can serve in church and feel like, okay,
00:39:41
I'm paying penance for what I'm doing,
00:39:43
but like
00:39:45
I needed actual practical advice and
00:39:48
step-by-step things that were going to
00:39:51
get me to where I wanted to be, and I
00:39:53
wasn't getting that. So, I didn't build
00:39:54
an intimate connection with any of those
00:39:56
people because
00:40:00
they weren't there wasn't we couldn't
00:40:02
have that closeness because there wasn't
00:40:05
a trust there because I was continually
00:40:07
worried that if I did tell them, I was
00:40:09
going to just again be told here's what
00:40:11
you do and then I was going to be
00:40:13
watched like a hawk and constantly told
00:40:15
like, "Hey, did you look at porn today?
00:40:17
Hey, did you do this today? Hey, did you
00:40:19
do that today?" You know, and but I was
00:40:21
never going to be given the tools. So, I
00:40:23
was going to continue to fail, but then
00:40:24
I was going to be made to feel bad about
00:40:27
it the entire time. Okay, does that make
00:40:29
sense? Moving on. Next section.
00:40:33
Being inclusive, not exclusive. So,
00:40:37
we're jumping to page 130.
00:40:41
And this is what Josh has to say. The
00:40:44
second step in being just friends with
00:40:46
the opposite sex is to include others
00:40:49
instead of isolating ourselves with just
00:40:50
one person. We don't want dating's
00:40:52
mindset of being alone to carry into our
00:40:55
friendships. We can avoid this by going
00:40:58
out of our way to involve friends,
00:41:00
family, and maybe even strangers in our
00:41:03
lives. Kind of a weird take, but okay.
00:41:06
This is again so weird. We kind of
00:41:07
talked about this already. This whole
00:41:09
idea of like just don't be alone with
00:41:11
someone of the opposite sex. And what
00:41:12
does even alone mean, right? Like if I
00:41:14
go out with a friend of the opposite sex
00:41:17
and we go to dinner, we're not
00:41:19
technically alone. there's other people
00:41:21
there, right? In the Christian
00:41:23
worldview, that would be like a date,
00:41:26
right? Um, I don't know if I've told
00:41:28
this story on the show before. I know
00:41:30
I've brought it up with friends before,
00:41:32
but when I was in high school, um, I was
00:41:35
friends with a lot of people. And one of
00:41:38
there was a couple of girls that lived
00:41:42
uh in this one part of town and I would
00:41:43
go hang out with them and we would
00:41:45
inevitably end up at Starbucks. And
00:41:48
usually I would hang out with them solo.
00:41:51
We would just go do something fun and it
00:41:53
wasn't a big deal. My parents were cool
00:41:54
with it. Their parents were cool with
00:41:56
it. And for whatever reason, we would
00:41:58
end up at this Starbucks. And there was
00:42:00
a homeschool mom who continually ran
00:42:02
into me at this Starbucks with all of
00:42:04
these different girls and made comments
00:42:08
about the fact that she thought that I
00:42:10
was seeing all of them and being a
00:42:12
player.
00:42:15
Now, like I get it. Like, actually, no,
00:42:19
I don't get it. I was wanting to feel
00:42:21
bad there for a second for this person.
00:42:25
Without asking us anything about what
00:42:27
we're doing, why we're hanging out,
00:42:29
nothing, she assumed that I was
00:42:32
romantically entangled with all of these
00:42:34
people, and that I was like basically
00:42:38
going behind every one of their backs to
00:42:41
date somebody else, right? And so I had
00:42:43
all of these girls all at my fingertips
00:42:45
to my play things so to speak. And like
00:42:51
that was hurtful when that came out that
00:42:53
like she was accusing me of that because
00:42:55
that's not how my friends felt. That's
00:42:57
not how I felt about the situation. And
00:42:59
it made me really self-conscious about
00:43:02
where I go and how I go and how I
00:43:03
conduct myself and all of these things.
00:43:05
And I didn't feel like I could be around
00:43:06
her daughters at all. And I didn't feel
00:43:08
like I could be around those girls for a
00:43:11
little while. uh without having a
00:43:13
conversation and setting
00:43:15
setting this expectation, right, of like
00:43:19
we're just friends, right? Like we're
00:43:21
just this. I think that's what's so
00:43:24
harmful about like this book and this
00:43:27
idea of like we can be nothing more than
00:43:29
friends until we're certain that we are
00:43:32
meant to be together. And
00:43:35
it played into this like idea that like
00:43:39
we're like siblings. we are. That's
00:43:42
like, you know, romance is like a no no.
00:43:45
And it never let anything evolve
00:43:47
naturally because even if one of us was
00:43:50
feeling a romantic inkling towards the
00:43:53
other person, why would you ever say it?
00:43:55
Because the other person's probably
00:43:57
going to say, "No, but like we're just
00:43:59
friends, right? They're going to shoot
00:44:00
you down." And so it led to a lot of the
00:44:04
homeschool group just not dating, right?
00:44:06
We didn't date each other. We didn't we
00:44:10
for sure didn't have sex but like there
00:44:12
was no romantic anything amongst any of
00:44:16
us even though maybe internally we felt
00:44:18
that way but we couldn't because it
00:44:21
would be crossing this line and sinning
00:44:24
right and that was a big no no. So, I
00:44:28
just think
00:44:30
I don't know. I just hated this idea and
00:44:32
it got continually pushed by if anyone
00:44:35
ever watched like the Duggar family. I
00:44:37
don't remember what their show was
00:44:38
called. It was like 18 and counting or
00:44:41
something like that, but like their kids
00:44:43
would go on dates and they would have
00:44:45
chaperones which were usually the
00:44:46
siblings and they would, you know, do
00:44:48
all these different It's just weird. It
00:44:50
was just weird. And that was the reality
00:44:52
of what I grew up inside of, of these
00:44:55
people who even if my parents had said,
00:44:57
"Well, dating looks like this and this
00:44:59
is acceptable and this is okay and you
00:45:01
can do these things." There were other
00:45:03
people in the homeschool group who would
00:45:05
have frowned upon that, right? So, I
00:45:09
want to move on. I got a lot to cover.
00:45:11
We're only like halfway done. Let's look
00:45:13
at this next part, which is seek
00:45:14
opportunities to serve, not to be
00:45:17
entertained. And he goes on, he says,
00:45:20
"The late Kirk Cobain captured the
00:45:23
attitude of today's culture with the
00:45:25
line," here we are now. Entertain us. I
00:45:28
believe that unfortunately many
00:45:30
Christians have made Cobain's line the
00:45:32
refrain um for of their friendships. In
00:45:36
my opinion, our cultural obsession with
00:45:38
entertainment is really just an
00:45:40
expression of selfishness. The focus of
00:45:42
entertainment is not producing something
00:45:44
useful for the benefit of others, but
00:45:46
consuming something for the pleasure of
00:45:48
self of self. Number one thing, just got
00:45:52
to point. It's not in the book. They
00:45:53
spelled Kirk Cobain's name wrong.
00:45:55
Spelled it with a C instead of a K. So,
00:45:58
it's Kurt with a C. Um, yeah. So,
00:46:01
whoever also edited this book, um, you
00:46:03
messed up. Obviously, they were not
00:46:06
enjoying today's entertainment. But
00:46:08
here's what I wrote down about this.
00:46:10
Christians really get caught up in the
00:46:12
servant attitude and forget about the
00:46:15
self. Even Jesus took time for himself,
00:46:18
right? He went out in the wilderness for
00:46:20
40 days, but we're not allowed. We must
00:46:23
always be giving, be serving, be
00:46:25
stacking chairs, be worshiping, uh be
00:46:27
serving on the worship team, uh teaching
00:46:29
Bible study or Sunday school. I
00:46:32
understand that we can get to know
00:46:34
people better by doing something
00:46:35
constructive, but I was never taught the
00:46:38
part about being selfish for a second.
00:46:41
As I got older and I burned out in
00:46:45
college or church, it was because of
00:46:47
this reason.
00:46:49
I was always looking for opportunities
00:46:51
to serve other people, right? I worked
00:46:53
at other church where I would get up at
00:46:55
[ __ ] 5:00 a.m. in the morning on
00:46:56
Sundays. I go set this thing up and
00:46:59
stack chairs and be on the worship team
00:47:01
and run sound and do all of these things
00:47:04
um that were just like insane behavior
00:47:06
for a college kid to be doing. Um and I
00:47:09
did that every week for like 6 months.
00:47:12
And in addition to that, I was part of
00:47:14
Bible studies. I went to other chapel
00:47:17
services. I did all these other things.
00:47:19
I looked for any opportunity to serve to
00:47:21
serve to serve to give of myself. And I
00:47:23
burned out because you have to take time
00:47:25
for yourself regardless of if you're
00:47:28
Christian or not. Like regardless of if
00:47:30
you want I still love to serve people. I
00:47:32
do. Like that's what I love to do.
00:47:34
That's what I do for the clients I work
00:47:37
with. That's what I do with some of you
00:47:39
guys even like of like the connections
00:47:41
that I can build with people and
00:47:43
connecting the dots and putting you guys
00:47:45
in scenarios with other people hopefully
00:47:47
or helping you with something or
00:47:49
whatever. Like I love to do those things
00:47:51
because that's a part of who I am. I
00:47:53
love the opportunity to serve. Um,
00:47:55
that's what this podcast is meant to do.
00:47:57
It's meant to be of service to you guys,
00:48:00
right? To talk about things, to share
00:48:02
stories. Um, there's a selfish component
00:48:06
to it, but it's selfish in the sense
00:48:09
that I also really like to do that. I
00:48:12
just do, right? And so, I get a kick out
00:48:13
of it. But I've learned as time has gone
00:48:16
on to be selfish. that it's okay to take
00:48:19
a day where I just do what I want, where
00:48:21
I just chill, where I relax, where I eat
00:48:24
the thing I want to eat, and I play the
00:48:26
video game I want to play and I read the
00:48:28
book I want to read and I don't worry
00:48:30
about anybody else because I've already
00:48:31
given so much of myself to other people
00:48:34
and I just need a minute to refuel,
00:48:36
right?
00:48:38
We're not taught that in church. I
00:48:40
wasn't taught that at church. If you
00:48:42
were, congratulations. Awesome. But if
00:48:44
you weren't taught that in church,
00:48:46
please remember to do that, okay?
00:48:49
Because otherwise, you become a shell of
00:48:51
the person who you really are. We need
00:48:53
time to fill the tank back up. We need
00:48:56
that time. Take that time. It's okay.
00:48:59
Call it selfish, but you need it. It's
00:49:01
okay to be selfish sometimes. The last
00:49:04
piece of this chapter that I want to
00:49:05
talk on is this section called brotherly
00:49:07
love. He has this quote in here and he
00:49:11
says, "What's our relationship with each
00:49:12
other? We're brothers and sisters in
00:49:14
Christ. How do we view and cheat treat
00:49:17
each other with honor? Um, and what's
00:49:20
the secret of our zeal service side by
00:49:22
side for God's glory? I wrote this in my
00:49:25
notes. I said the brother sister thing
00:49:28
really threw me off for a really long
00:49:29
time. Okay, again, I talked about
00:49:32
growing up in the homeschool community.
00:49:34
We were all told for so long, these are
00:49:36
like your brothers and your sisters. and
00:49:38
we would go to each other's houses all
00:49:39
the time and we would, you know,
00:49:41
sleepovers and we were with these people
00:49:43
a lot and so they became those things to
00:49:46
us. It's also really weird to have
00:49:48
romantic feelings about your brothers
00:49:49
and sisters. Just going to put that out
00:49:52
there.
00:49:53
And so we were primed not to be romantic
00:49:56
with each other, right? Because that's
00:49:57
weird. That's like incest, right? It's
00:50:01
just weird. And so if you look at the
00:50:03
homeschool group I grew up in, there's
00:50:05
not that many homeschoolers who married
00:50:07
homeschoolers that we knew. There's just
00:50:10
not. So even if you did marry a
00:50:12
homeschooler, a lot of times it's from
00:50:14
some other group or some other, you
00:50:16
know, scenario where we weren't there
00:50:19
wasn't the closeness, there wasn't the
00:50:21
sibling uh attitude. But for the rest of
00:50:24
us, we all still look at each other. I
00:50:26
mean, maybe I I'm going to speak for
00:50:27
myself, but we look at each other and
00:50:29
it's like that's my sibling, right? We
00:50:31
went on vacation together, we did this
00:50:32
thing together, we, you know, whatever.
00:50:35
And so there was never space for there
00:50:37
be anything of romance.
00:50:41
And so if you had a crush,
00:50:43
no. And I think about the experiences I
00:50:47
had with prom and this constant needing.
00:50:51
I mean, the first prom I went to, I was
00:50:53
the one invited, uh, but was very clear
00:50:55
on the phone, but we're just going as
00:50:57
friends. It's like, well, yeah, for
00:50:59
sure. Um, the next year when it was my
00:51:03
senior prom and I invited my date, uh, I
00:51:06
called Julia and I remember being like,
00:51:08
"But just friends and there needing to
00:51:10
be this stipulation of us just being
00:51:12
friends." Uh, because we're we're not
00:51:16
romantic. And again, the media playing a
00:51:19
role in when you go to prom with
00:51:20
somebody, there's this expectation of
00:51:22
you're going to you're going to kiss or
00:51:24
you're going to hook up or something
00:51:25
like that is playing this role. again,
00:51:28
fantasy reality, right? Um, type of
00:51:31
thing. And one of the things about this
00:51:34
whole scenario of the brother, sister,
00:51:37
love
00:51:39
fiasco, I'm just going to call it. But
00:51:41
this kind of
00:51:43
not allowing us to have romantic
00:51:45
feelings towards each other is that when
00:51:47
I got to college, it made me really
00:51:49
awkward at dating because I had never
00:51:50
done it before. It was my first time.
00:51:52
And not that there's anything wrong with
00:51:54
that, but it would have been nice to go
00:51:57
into it having had my heart broken a few
00:51:59
times, right? Having just maybe a little
00:52:03
experience under my belt, you know, of
00:52:05
of anything, of knowing what the pain
00:52:07
felt like when it didn't work out. Um, I
00:52:10
think that those little pieces like that
00:52:13
would have been helpful. And so I wanted
00:52:16
to to also put this in here that said,
00:52:19
"Stop teaching kids that their bodies
00:52:21
are being s are um are being sinful by
00:52:24
having natural reactions to things. Uh
00:52:27
penis habers get boners. Vagina owners
00:52:30
get wet. It's normal. Your body is
00:52:32
reacting." And I wrote that because as I
00:52:36
thought about
00:52:39
this these feelings that we had growing
00:52:41
up and how we were siblings,
00:52:44
we were denied our natural reactions to
00:52:46
things, right? We were never it was
00:52:48
never put in the correct context of what
00:52:51
we were feeling. And so there was lack
00:52:53
of sex. There was lack of us talking
00:52:56
about these things. And if your parents
00:52:58
talk to you about these things, kudos to
00:53:00
your parents. But like it felt awkward
00:53:03
and weird. Again,
00:53:06
all of these buzzwords, intimacy,
00:53:08
romance, kissing, all of these things
00:53:10
were bad. They were they were negatives
00:53:12
in our life because you were not
00:53:14
supposed to do them. They are saved for
00:53:16
marriage. That is what Josh Harris is
00:53:18
telling you throughout this whole book.
00:53:19
All these things are saved until
00:53:21
marriage. They're saved until marriage.
00:53:22
They're saved until marriage. And when
00:53:25
you're telling a kid that, you're
00:53:26
telling them to go against the natural
00:53:28
urges that their bodies are having. And
00:53:30
I'm not saying that's not to say that we
00:53:32
should just let high schoolers and young
00:53:34
adults just do whatever they want. And
00:53:36
you know that's also a recipe for
00:53:38
disaster. But what I'm saying is that we
00:53:40
have to start having these
00:53:41
conversations. We have to start talking
00:53:43
about these things. Why is your body
00:53:45
reacting this way? Why are you feeling
00:53:47
this way when you see that person? Why?
00:53:49
Why? Why? Asking those questions and
00:53:51
being okay with the awkward
00:53:54
conversations, right? Being okay with
00:53:56
talking about these things. being okay
00:53:58
saying it is perfectly normal for your
00:54:01
body to be reacting that way. Now, what
00:54:04
are we going to do with that? Right?
00:54:06
That's where again we it all connects to
00:54:08
each other, right? I talked about guys
00:54:10
not understanding the correct the
00:54:12
correct con um context for sexual
00:54:15
situations. We need to be having those
00:54:18
conversations with people. What is the
00:54:20
context of this scenario? Do we need to
00:54:22
be doing that? No. Okay. When is the
00:54:24
appropriate time to do that? here's the
00:54:26
appropriate time. Those types of things.
00:54:29
And so we set these young adults, we set
00:54:32
these young people up for success when
00:54:34
it comes to their body and understanding
00:54:36
and listening to their body as opposed
00:54:38
to continually denying themselves and
00:54:40
ending up like somebody like me who
00:54:43
still wrestles with understanding that
00:54:45
my body tells me things, right? My body
00:54:48
tells me when it's tired and I need to
00:54:50
listen. It tells me when something feels
00:54:52
good and I need to not feel ashamed for
00:54:54
that. It tells me when I'm hungry. It
00:54:56
tells me all of the things I need to
00:54:58
live. I have denied myself that for so
00:55:02
long. I'm 28 [ __ ] years old. I'm
00:55:05
about to be 29 by the time this comes
00:55:06
out. I'm probably 29. Okay,
00:55:09
29 years old.
00:55:12
I still don't get it always. Okay, these
00:55:16
things have lasting impacts. these
00:55:18
things that Josh are talking is talking
00:55:19
about the the concepts and the way that
00:55:22
he he words it and it's it's um
00:55:26
ambiguous and it's it's not clear,
00:55:28
right? It creates this distrust in your
00:55:31
body. It creates this like
00:55:35
icky feeling
00:55:37
that we're dealing with a decade out, a
00:55:40
decade away from learning these things,
00:55:42
from having these things implanted in
00:55:44
our minds. Okay, this is not just a flip
00:55:46
the switch kind of scenario. These are
00:55:48
things that go that last for a long,
00:55:51
long time and take a lot of work, a lot
00:55:53
of effort to get over them. All right,
00:55:57
we got to move on because I've been
00:55:59
rolling for way too long.
00:56:02
Chapter 10, guard your heart. Okay, main
00:56:05
theme of this one, fighting off lust,
00:56:07
infatuation, self-pity. Here's how this
00:56:10
chapter starts. Emily sprawled lazily on
00:56:12
the bed as she watched Jessica pack. I
00:56:14
bet I know what'll happen when you get
00:56:16
to school, she said suddenly. Oh,
00:56:18
really? Jessica replied distractedly.
00:56:21
She was more concerned now with how to
00:56:23
organize the mess of clothing, shoes,
00:56:25
and makeup that covered her bedroom
00:56:27
floor. "Yeah, really," Emily said as she
00:56:29
threw a pair of socks at Jessica. "You
00:56:33
uh" she could tell when she wasn't being
00:56:35
taken seriously. "You're going to get
00:56:37
there, meet some guy, and fall in love.
00:56:40
Then you'll have to crawl back on your
00:56:42
knees and beg me to forgive you for all
00:56:44
the hassle you've given me about dating.
00:56:46
Oh, I can't wait until you have a
00:56:48
boyfriend. If anyone besides Emily had
00:56:51
said this to Jessica, she would have
00:56:53
been angry. But coming from her best
00:56:55
friend, infuriating though it was, uh,
00:56:58
Jessica had to smile. Emily, I've told
00:57:01
you before that it's not a matter of not
00:57:04
wanting to fall in love, Jessica said as
00:57:06
she crammed another pair of jeans in the
00:57:07
suitcase. I'm just not interested in
00:57:09
playing games and chasing after
00:57:11
pointless relationships like some people
00:57:14
I know. Wink.
00:57:16
That was a terrible wink on my part. If
00:57:18
you're listening to audio, be thankful
00:57:19
you didn't see that. So, again, this
00:57:22
chapter, we're talking we're talking
00:57:24
lust. We're talking infatuation.
00:57:28
Right off the rip, we're still with this
00:57:31
rhetoric of pointless dating, pointless
00:57:34
relationships, right? Like there is no
00:57:37
value in dating, right? There is no
00:57:40
value in it because it's just setting
00:57:42
you up for failure after failure after
00:57:44
failure. There is value in friendship.
00:57:47
There is value in building relationships
00:57:51
with people, romantic and not. Okay,
00:57:53
there's value in that.
00:57:56
They might not all pan out, but saying
00:57:59
that they're pointless is just kind of
00:58:01
dumb. And you know, I think I would hope
00:58:05
that at this point Josh Harris kind of
00:58:07
understands that. He talks about in
00:58:09
these books multiple times how he had a
00:58:11
lot of girlfriends before he swore off
00:58:13
dating and he kissed it goodbye. Uh and
00:58:16
then he had one more uh relationship
00:58:19
that he married and unfortunately
00:58:21
they're no longer together. But
00:58:25
I I find it really interesting and I
00:58:28
would love to ask him personally, what
00:58:30
did you gain out of the relationships
00:58:32
that you had before um the woman that
00:58:35
you married? Because I'm sure that
00:58:37
there's life lessons that he learned.
00:58:39
Now, I understand there's an imparting
00:58:41
of wisdom, right? That's where we go
00:58:44
back to the mentor thing. We go back to
00:58:47
having parents involved. We go back to
00:58:48
older siblings being involved in our
00:58:50
romantic relationships. Of course, they
00:58:52
can help steer us in the right direction
00:58:54
and tell us this is worth it. This is
00:58:56
not worth it. They're they're not a good
00:58:58
for you, right? We need those things in
00:59:00
our life sometimes.
00:59:02
However,
00:59:04
it's also very human nature that we just
00:59:06
sometimes have to learn it on our own,
00:59:09
right? We got to break some eggshells to
00:59:11
make an omelette kind of a thing. So,
00:59:13
let's keep moving on right into the next
00:59:15
section of this book. When the rules
00:59:17
don't fit the game. Okay, now we're
00:59:20
still talking about Jessica and not so
00:59:22
much Emily cuz Emily was the friend, but
00:59:24
Jessica is now at college and she gets
00:59:27
there and has what she calls her rules
00:59:30
of romance. Like modern-day Moses
00:59:32
descending from Mount Si with the Ten
00:59:34
Commandments, she felt sure that her
00:59:36
list of dos and don'ts would solve the
00:59:38
world's relational problems or at least
00:59:40
keep her from experiencing them. First,
00:59:43
Jessica wouldn't allow herself to get
00:59:44
bogged down in short-term relationships
00:59:46
until she felt she could pursue
00:59:48
marriage. Dating was out. She would only
00:59:50
go out with guys in groups. Um, at that
00:59:53
point, at the point when romance was
00:59:55
appropriate, a guy who showed interest
00:59:57
in her would first talk with her
00:59:59
parents. From this point, Jessica had a
01:00:02
very deta every detail of the courtship
01:00:04
process planned, like a carefully
01:00:06
written screenplay. After checking out
01:00:08
the prospective suitor, mom and dad
01:00:10
would give the young man permission to
01:00:11
woo her, and the two of them would fall
01:00:13
hopelessly in love, and the sun would
01:00:15
shine on their outdoor wedding.
01:00:18
So, Jessica wants to wait until she's
01:00:20
ready for marriage before dating and
01:00:23
sets all these rules in place. Okay,
01:00:27
setting up rules for your relationship
01:00:30
might not seem like the worst idea, but
01:00:33
it puts a lot of pressure and a timeline
01:00:36
on stuff. And if you've ever watched
01:00:38
Summer House, we know that timelines are
01:00:41
bad and they fall through. Okay, if you
01:00:44
don't get that reference, watch Summer
01:00:46
House. Okay. Um,
01:00:50
the second thing that I find
01:00:53
so interesting about this, and this is
01:00:55
going to come up again and again,
01:00:57
asking for parents' permission to date
01:01:00
the daughter.
01:01:03
I've always found this kind of stupid
01:01:06
and
01:01:08
I don't know, this is kind of a debate.
01:01:09
I mean, tell me in the comments, I
01:01:12
guess. Like, let me know. Like, if
01:01:13
you're
01:01:15
do you want your parents approval to
01:01:16
date somebody? Do you want them to go I
01:01:18
don't know. But here here's why I find
01:01:21
it personally stupid. I knew a girl in
01:01:24
college who that was one of her one of
01:01:26
her deals. You wanted to date her. You
01:01:28
had to call her dad. You had to convince
01:01:30
him why you were a good guy to date his
01:01:33
daughter. I straight up to her face was
01:01:36
like, "That's stupid. and if I ever
01:01:37
asked you out, I would not be asking
01:01:40
your dad."
01:01:42
And she was like really taken aback by
01:01:44
that. And she's like, "Why?" And I was
01:01:45
like, "Well, I think you should be
01:01:47
trusted to make your own decisions."
01:01:50
And I told her, I was like, "I
01:01:53
understand maybe asking parents
01:01:55
permission when it comes to marriage.
01:01:57
Even that I still kind of find weird. I
01:01:59
did that technically. U my mother-in-law
01:02:01
was like, why are you even asking me?"
01:02:04
Um, but like
01:02:09
this kind of like sheltering again of
01:02:13
specifically women, but
01:02:16
that sheltering is kind of again
01:02:18
reinforcing this idea of like we can't
01:02:20
trust ourselves. We can't trust our
01:02:22
body. We can't trust, you know, what
01:02:24
what it's telling us, right? And so I
01:02:27
just find that such like a it's it's
01:02:30
just a really
01:02:32
it's a bad rule in my opinion. Like
01:02:34
again, you are your own person. You have
01:02:37
agency over your body. Make your own
01:02:39
decisions. If you want to go out with
01:02:40
me, great. If you don't, that's fine,
01:02:43
too. Like, I'm not going to be butt hurt
01:02:46
over it. You know what I mean? But me
01:02:48
having to jump through hoop after hoop
01:02:50
after hoop after hoop to like get you to
01:02:52
go out with me is like not attractive,
01:02:55
right? It makes you th this is going to
01:02:58
come off sounding like just pathetic
01:03:00
manosphere [ __ ] but like it makes you
01:03:03
unattractive to me as a man because I
01:03:06
don't see you as somebody who is
01:03:08
independent and can think for themselves
01:03:10
and that's attractive to me. And so it's
01:03:13
my own opinion, that's my own what I'm
01:03:15
attracted to, but you know,
01:03:18
it is what it is. Okay, let's move on.
01:03:21
Next up, the deceitful heart is this
01:03:23
next section. Oof. God. Josh says this.
01:03:27
The human heart doesn't like taking
01:03:28
orders from the mind. The time will come
01:03:31
for all of us when we don't feel like
01:03:32
doing the godly responsible thing we're
01:03:35
we've resolved to do. The question is,
01:03:37
how will we respond when our hearts lead
01:03:39
a full-scale rebellion? If we don't
01:03:42
prepare ourselves for an uprising,
01:03:43
you'll feel tempted to abandon our
01:03:45
principles and standards.
01:03:49
Okay, here we go again with the wicked,
01:03:52
deceitful, ugly, reprehensible heart.
01:03:56
Right? The core of any good Christian
01:03:58
argument. We are so inherently wicked
01:04:01
that we need Jesus because we can't be
01:04:04
trusted to do anything right because our
01:04:07
own evilness gets in the way.
01:04:10
We must wait. I was a little heated when
01:04:12
I wrote this, but this is what I wrote
01:04:14
in my doubts. We must wait for Daddy God
01:04:15
to show us the way. like grow up people.
01:04:18
We can make decisions on our own.
01:04:22
Um, and it all ties back to purity
01:04:24
culture because how can we be trusted to
01:04:25
date when we can't even be trusted to be
01:04:27
a good person.
01:04:30
That again ties back into daughters
01:04:33
being like, "You have to get my dad's
01:04:35
permission." They don't trust
01:04:36
themselves, right? And uh but never have
01:04:41
I ever heard a guy tell a girl, "Well,
01:04:44
you have to call my parents and ask if
01:04:45
you can ask me out." Never. Never have
01:04:48
we seen that. I have this additional
01:04:51
note that I kind of put in asterisk
01:04:53
because it pertains to everything we're
01:04:56
talking about, but it says this. I
01:04:58
genuinely think the peer culture was
01:05:00
pushed solely as a way to control kids
01:05:02
from dating. uh relieving parents from
01:05:04
having to have the sex talk or
01:05:06
relationship talks with their kids. It
01:05:08
set such a high expectation that it was
01:05:10
impossible to accomplish, right?
01:05:14
We lived in shame and doubt and fear
01:05:17
that we were going to get it wrong, so
01:05:19
we would never participate in it.
01:05:24
That's the reality of what it felt like.
01:05:27
All of us were being pushed to to not do
01:05:31
this thing because if we messed it up,
01:05:33
it would be not only detrimental to
01:05:35
ourselves, but detrimental to another
01:05:38
person or other people.
01:05:41
Like crazy. Okay, we got to keep going.
01:05:44
We got to keep moving. The cheating
01:05:46
boss. Oh my god, this story was insane.
01:05:49
So, he tells this story in the book of
01:05:52
Julie, who's a 19-year-old. She gets a
01:05:54
job as a receptionist and she finds her
01:05:57
boss attractive. She's attracted to him.
01:06:00
He also shows some attraction to her and
01:06:04
he is married. Um I believe it says he
01:06:07
has kids or whatever, but um yeah, he's
01:06:11
in a fully committed relationship and he
01:06:13
puts the moves on her and so she is like
01:06:17
convicted, leaves her job kind of a
01:06:20
thing.
01:06:22
What I find crazy is he goes on in the
01:06:24
story to to talk about Jessica
01:06:27
confessing her sins uh for finding a
01:06:30
married man attractive. And I was like,
01:06:35
is that a sin?
01:06:37
Like
01:06:38
is it? I I had I would never have
01:06:42
thought of it that way, right? Like I
01:06:44
look at people all the time and I go,
01:06:46
that's an attractive person. I don't act
01:06:48
on it, but it but I can see somebody and
01:06:50
go that's an attractive person. I don't
01:06:52
think that that's wrong, right? I don't
01:06:54
think that that's sinful behavior. Even
01:06:56
when I was a Christian, I didn't think
01:06:57
that that was sinful behavior to just
01:06:59
find somebody attractive. So, I find it
01:07:01
crazy that he's talking about this girl
01:07:02
needing to confess her sin of finding
01:07:05
her boss attractive when she did nothing
01:07:07
wrong. Her boss is the one who
01:07:08
instigated
01:07:10
an inappropriate relationship with her.
01:07:13
And so, her reaction is to say no. She
01:07:16
says no, she leaves. She quits her job.
01:07:20
Who's in the wrong here? It's not her.
01:07:22
She has nothing to apologize for. Like,
01:07:25
what are we talking about? Yeah. Crazy
01:07:28
crazy [ __ ] Okay. It this all plays into
01:07:32
this narrative again that like women
01:07:35
carry so much more of the burden of
01:07:37
purity than men do or men ever will, I
01:07:40
guess. Like it's this just kind of like
01:07:45
uh like I I don't like I'm sure we're
01:07:47
going to get into clothes at some point
01:07:48
in here. Um but like it it again is this
01:07:52
like why is it only their responsibility
01:07:56
and the men have no responsibility right
01:07:59
we are continually told
01:08:01
uncontrollable hormone monsters sex
01:08:04
drives crazy all of these things do
01:08:06
nothing about it it's the woman's job to
01:08:09
dress modestly uh to you know to
01:08:12
basically put us in our place
01:08:15
[ __ ] [ __ ] people it's [ __ ]
01:08:17
[ __ ] All right, got to keep moving.
01:08:20
Got to got to keep moving. All right,
01:08:22
here we go. The pure springs. So Josh
01:08:24
then goes on to tell this proverb and he
01:08:27
talks about this story of a quiet forest
01:08:32
dweller who once lived high above an
01:08:35
Austrian village um along the eastern
01:08:38
slopes of the Alps. Wow. And this guy
01:08:42
had one job and it was to come down into
01:08:45
this village and into the surrounding
01:08:47
area and he would clean these pools. He
01:08:49
would clean these, you know, just
01:08:50
natural springs kind of a deal and that
01:08:53
was his one job and he was paid to do
01:08:55
that. Now city council gets together and
01:08:59
they decide that hey there's this guy he
01:09:02
just comes down and his job is to
01:09:04
maintain the springs.
01:09:07
Why is he doing that? It's a waste of
01:09:08
our money. Right? And so they do away
01:09:10
with it.
01:09:12
And uh a few days later the water's like
01:09:14
all nasty, right? It's got like foam on
01:09:16
it. It's like disgusting.
01:09:18
And uh he says in the end, right, they
01:09:21
like, you know, they had they enjoyed
01:09:25
this thing and then they basically like
01:09:27
voted against their own interest in
01:09:29
getting rid of this guy. And um he said
01:09:32
we make the same mistake in our own
01:09:34
lives. Like the keeper of the spring who
01:09:36
maintained the purity of the water, you
01:09:38
and I are the keepers of our hearts. We
01:09:39
need to constantly evaluate the purity
01:09:41
of our hearts in prayer, asking God to
01:09:44
reveal the little things that
01:09:45
contaminate us. As God reveals our wrong
01:09:48
attitudes, longings, and desires, we
01:09:50
must remove them from our hearts. The
01:09:53
constant evaluation
01:09:56
of like our hearts and needing to check
01:09:59
the purity is like exhausting. Okay. It
01:10:03
it's part of what like led to me burning
01:10:05
out. Like in addition to the servitude,
01:10:08
it's this constant like
01:10:11
am I sitting? It's just this constant
01:10:13
checking of like am I doing wrong? Am I
01:10:15
doing wrong? Am I doing wrong? Am I
01:10:17
doing wrong? And living in this
01:10:18
perpetual fear of like I am doing
01:10:20
something wrong and that God is going to
01:10:23
be angry at me for it.
01:10:26
I can't tell you the number of times
01:10:28
I've like cried on the mats at church.
01:10:30
like we had these carpets in the front
01:10:32
and you could go kneel before God and
01:10:35
I've cried and I've sobbed and I've been
01:10:37
like I'm just a wicked evil person
01:10:39
because like I did this thing
01:10:43
and if you believe in Christianity I
01:10:45
understand there is going there
01:10:47
sometimes needs to be repentance of sin
01:10:50
uh within
01:10:52
that religion
01:10:54
but what I don't understand is that
01:10:58
Christianity teaches that we are given
01:11:00
this gift of
01:11:03
forgiveness, right?
01:11:06
Man fell short. We couldn't cut it. God
01:11:09
had to send his one and only son to come
01:11:11
and pay the ultimate price, which was
01:11:12
death on a cross. And if we believe that
01:11:15
and we ask him to come live inside of
01:11:17
us, uh, you know, we're forgiven and the
01:11:21
Holy Spirit comes and lives inside of us
01:11:23
and makes us better people. and
01:11:26
statements and stories like this, right,
01:11:28
that end with this kind of telling of
01:11:30
this like you have to constantly be
01:11:31
evaluating your heart and are you doing
01:11:33
something wrong, I think it diminishes
01:11:36
the power of what Christians believe God
01:11:39
is, what God did for them because if he
01:11:41
forgives you, he forgives you. That's
01:11:44
it, right? He knows that you're going to
01:11:47
mess up. And I don't know that there's a
01:11:49
necessity to constantly be living in
01:11:51
this state of I am wicked. I am evil.
01:11:54
I'm all these things. When you accept
01:11:56
that gift,
01:11:58
doesn't that transform you then into a
01:12:00
new person?
01:12:02
Just something to think about. Next up
01:12:05
in this book is the pollutants of the
01:12:07
heart. Okay? And there's three of them.
01:12:08
There's infatuation, there's lust, and
01:12:10
there's self-pity. Okay? We're going to
01:12:12
rip through them real quickly. Anytime
01:12:13
we allow someone to displace God as the
01:12:15
focus of our affection, we've moved from
01:12:17
innocent appreciation of someone's
01:12:18
beauty or personality to the dangerous
01:12:20
realm of infatuation. Instead of making
01:12:23
God the object of our longing, we
01:12:25
wrongly direct those feelings towards
01:12:26
another human. We become idoltors,
01:12:29
bowing to someone other than God, hoping
01:12:31
that this person will meet our needs and
01:12:33
bring fulfillment. Here's what I wrote
01:12:36
again with the possibility of knocking
01:12:39
God off their pedestal for infatuation
01:12:41
with a person. Like, is it not normal to
01:12:44
think about someone we find attractive?
01:12:46
Is it not normal for our minds to flash
01:12:48
to positive memories of that person?
01:12:50
This book seems to indicate that God
01:12:52
must always be top of mind. Earlier in
01:12:54
the book, Josh talked about the couples
01:12:56
that only wanted to spend time with each
01:12:58
other. Um, and they wanted to sherk the
01:13:00
responsibilities of their lives. It
01:13:02
seems like he wants to sherk the
01:13:04
responsibilities of his life to only
01:13:06
hang out with God. I know that some
01:13:08
people are going to be like, "But
01:13:09
there's nothing better than God. Like,
01:13:11
there's nothing better. If I could just
01:13:13
spend all my time with God, I just
01:13:14
would." That's not the reality of life,
01:13:16
right? But also, if you believe that God
01:13:20
put us here for a reason and purpose,
01:13:24
look at what that purpose should be.
01:13:27
Okay?
01:13:29
As someone who
01:13:32
for a long time
01:13:35
was a Christian, I I kind of believed my
01:13:37
purpose was to do what what Jesus did,
01:13:40
right? It was to to live in community
01:13:42
with people, to have fun, to mourn
01:13:46
together, to live life together. That
01:13:48
was like my purpose on this earth. Uh
01:13:51
and and I felt like through doing those
01:13:53
things with people, I would exhibit
01:13:56
god-like behavior and it would open
01:13:58
possibilities to have conversion talks
01:14:00
with people.
01:14:04
But I'll tell you what's not attractive
01:14:05
to a lot of people who aren't
01:14:07
Christians. somebody who only ever
01:14:10
[ __ ] talks about God.
01:14:12
It's boring. It's not interesting. It's
01:14:15
like, and if you have any preconceived
01:14:18
notion about Christianity, it's not
01:14:20
going to be attractive. It feels very
01:14:22
much like when you have the Jehovah's
01:14:24
Witnesses come knock on your door and
01:14:25
everybody groans and they go, "Oh, these
01:14:28
guys again. Like, I don't want to listen
01:14:29
to this spiel." That's how it feels when
01:14:31
somebody makes their whole entire
01:14:33
personality about God and it's just
01:14:36
that's all they want to talk about. It's
01:14:38
all they want to do. It's all their
01:14:40
Instagram is good for is these weird
01:14:43
like messages, prophesizing, preaching
01:14:48
tidbits. Like be a normal human being
01:14:50
for once in a while. Get a hobby that's
01:14:53
not God related and like be interesting.
01:14:57
It's not that hard. We all have things
01:14:59
we like to do. I like to read books. I
01:15:02
like to play with Lego. I play video
01:15:04
games. I really enjoy sci-fi movies and
01:15:07
sci-fi books and all this kind of stuff.
01:15:09
Those are things I'm interested in. I
01:15:11
have interest in old cars. I have
01:15:14
interest. I have a ton of interest. It's
01:15:15
crazy. Probably way too many. But
01:15:19
there are things that give me
01:15:21
opportunity to start conversation with
01:15:23
people, right? I know about certain
01:15:24
things. I know about music. I know about
01:15:26
this, right? and we can have a
01:15:28
conversation about those things
01:15:31
and it maybe gets us to a point in our
01:15:33
friendship where we can actually then
01:15:35
have a conversation about our belief
01:15:37
system and God and all of these things,
01:15:39
right? And so I just
01:15:43
I just get so frustrated with this
01:15:45
constant talk of like God is always
01:15:48
number one. Okay. Yeah, if you're a
01:15:50
Christian, I believe that he can still
01:15:52
be number one
01:15:54
and you can actually be an interesting
01:15:56
person who does other things. That's my
01:15:58
point that I'm gonna make there. Moving
01:16:00
on, let's talk about lust. Okay. Lust.
01:16:03
Lust. Lust. Lust.
01:16:06
The second poison that often threatens
01:16:07
the purity of our hearts is lust. To
01:16:09
lust is to crave something sexually that
01:16:11
God uh has forbidden. For example, when
01:16:14
I, as a single man, look on a woman who
01:16:16
is not my wife, which right now means
01:16:18
every woman, and immorally fantasize
01:16:21
about her, I'm lusting. I'm setting my
01:16:23
heart on something God has placed off
01:16:25
limits. Sexual desire within marriage is
01:16:27
natural and appropriate and an
01:16:29
appropriate expression of sexuality.
01:16:31
After all, God gave us sex drives. But
01:16:33
God also gives us specific commands
01:16:35
forbidding us to indulge in those
01:16:36
desires before we marry. This is my
01:16:40
issue with that last little bit. Sexual
01:16:42
desire inside of marriage is normal, but
01:16:44
sexual desire outside of marriage is
01:16:46
not. Again, it's this light switch idea,
01:16:50
right, of you flip it on and off. Okay,
01:16:52
so so when you're not married, it's
01:16:54
flipped off. Sex equal bad. And some
01:16:57
people will say it's not. You can't
01:16:59
generalize it quite like that. I I'm
01:17:01
going to Okay, I'm going to Sex equal
01:17:03
bad, right? We don't do sex because
01:17:05
we're not married. Get married, put a
01:17:08
ring on it, sign a piece of paper
01:17:09
legally saying we're married. light
01:17:11
switch turns on, we're good to go. Brain
01:17:14
doesn't work that way. Humanity doesn't
01:17:16
work that way. He's ignoring again what
01:17:19
our bodies are saying. He's shoving
01:17:21
those things deep down, right? He's
01:17:24
saying we don't touch them. Like those
01:17:27
are, you know, those are the nos, right?
01:17:30
He's telling us to ignore the things
01:17:32
that our body is telling us. And in
01:17:35
addition to that, we have to repent of
01:17:37
feeling that way. We have to repent of
01:17:40
having sexual attraction towards
01:17:41
somebody, right? Because it's sinful.
01:17:43
It's wrong. Here's what else I want to
01:17:45
talk about with the with the lust thing.
01:17:47
He attributes lust specifically to being
01:17:50
like a sexual thing, right?
01:17:53
As being this like uber strong like
01:17:57
desire, right, to crave something. And
01:18:00
you know, but people could also say
01:18:02
like, I lust after ice cream. Like,
01:18:03
right, I'm craving ice cream like so
01:18:05
bad. And so my question really is like,
01:18:09
is lust really all that bad or
01:18:14
is it what we do with
01:18:18
lust
01:18:20
that is bad? And maybe as I'm as I'm
01:18:23
talking about this, I'm thinking to
01:18:24
myself like maybe lust is bad because
01:18:27
maybe lust is a bigger version or a
01:18:30
stronger version of just attraction or
01:18:34
wanting, right? I can want somebody
01:18:37
sexually. I can find somebody sexually
01:18:38
attractive, right? I can want a bowl of
01:18:40
ice cream.
01:18:42
How do I act on that? Right? And maybe
01:18:45
lust is more of the like I fantasize
01:18:47
about it. I can't get them out of my
01:18:49
mind, right? And it it leads itself into
01:18:51
infatuation, which can be a negative uh
01:18:54
type of thing. I don't know. You let me
01:18:56
know. Is lust good, bad? Let me know.
01:18:59
Okay. Lastly, we're going to talk about
01:19:01
self-pity. So, this is the last
01:19:03
pollutant of the heart.
01:19:06
In a sense, self-pity is the worship of
01:19:09
our circumstances. When we indulge in
01:19:11
feeling sorry for ourselves, we turn our
01:19:12
focus from God, his goodness, his
01:19:15
justice, his ability to save in any
01:19:17
circumstance. And we when we turn away
01:19:19
from God, we cut ourselves off from our
01:19:21
only source of hope.
01:19:24
We can easily allow self-pity to se uh
01:19:26
to seep into our hearts when we feel
01:19:28
lonely or crave someone to love and be
01:19:31
loved by. It seems we have every reason
01:19:33
in the world to complain, to sulk
01:19:35
angrily because we've received a bum
01:19:38
deal. I just put this in my notes. I
01:19:40
said, "Quit feeling bad about yourself,
01:19:41
man. Don't you know that God died on the
01:19:44
cross for you and that should be
01:19:46
enough?"
01:19:49
Self-pity is it's an interesting one
01:19:52
because I think that
01:19:56
it's one thing to wallow in it for a
01:19:58
long period of time, right? And to be
01:20:00
like, oh, wo is me and I never get a
01:20:02
boyfriend or I never have a girlfriend
01:20:03
or I never d right wo is me, right? To
01:20:07
exist in that is probably detrimental. I
01:20:10
would I would agree with that.
01:20:14
But I would also argue that like there
01:20:18
is a level to which it's like okay to
01:20:20
sometimes feel sad, right? It's okay to
01:20:22
sometimes be like, "Man, I really just
01:20:24
wish I had somebody to hug. I really
01:20:26
wish I had someone to cuddle with at
01:20:28
night. I really wish I had somebody to
01:20:30
go to the movies with, to go to date
01:20:31
night with, to take to this restaurant
01:20:33
that I really love, to do all these
01:20:34
things that I I enjoy, right? It's okay
01:20:37
to feel that way because that's normal,
01:20:40
right? We crave connection. We're human.
01:20:45
So, I'm going to leave it at that. We
01:20:47
have one more chapter to get through. We
01:20:51
are now on to chapter 11. So, our final
01:20:53
chapter. It's called You Don't Date.
01:20:57
What are you nuts? And uh subtitle is
01:21:00
what do you do when people ask why you
01:21:02
don't play the dating game? Now, I'm
01:21:04
going to jump pretty much into the
01:21:05
middle of this chapter because he kind
01:21:07
of says the same thing over and over and
01:21:10
over again. And so, I'm going to jump to
01:21:13
what he's calling what he labels the
01:21:16
Sunday afternoon dilemma. And it's
01:21:18
basically this story that after church,
01:21:21
um, this boy named Paul is hanging out
01:21:23
with his friends and they all are like,
01:21:25
"Hey, we're going to go do this thing,
01:21:27
you know, we can give you a ride." And
01:21:29
this girl at church is like, "Yeah, like
01:21:30
I can give you a ride. We'll go back to
01:21:32
my house, get changed, we can, you know,
01:21:34
eat something quick and then we'll go do
01:21:36
whatever kind of a thing." And Paul's
01:21:38
really uncomfortable because he knows
01:21:40
that this girl, um, her mom works on
01:21:43
Sunday, so nobody's going to be at the
01:21:44
house. and he also knows that this girl
01:21:47
is kind of into him and rather than
01:21:49
communicate that he's just like, "Oh,
01:21:51
like no, like or figure out a ride with
01:21:53
somebody else, like he just kind of runs
01:21:55
away from the situation." He uses his
01:21:57
parents scapegoat to kind of be like,
01:22:00
"Oh, well, like my parents really like
01:22:01
when I'm at home on Sundays and like all
01:22:03
this stuff." And so he denies himself
01:22:05
the fun of like going out with his
01:22:06
friends because he doesn't want to deal
01:22:09
with this awkward situation with this
01:22:11
girl that he doesn't have romantic
01:22:12
feelings for. Uh but he knows she does
01:22:15
and also puts him in a compromising
01:22:17
position. And I wrote in my notes I was
01:22:20
like I really wish that he would have
01:22:25
talked. I wish that Josh would have
01:22:26
said, "No, it's okay to communicate."
01:22:28
And I understand not wanting to hurt
01:22:29
someone's feelings, but it's also okay
01:22:30
to communicate that you're not very
01:22:32
comfortable in that situation, right? Or
01:22:34
you don't want to do that or you want to
01:22:36
figure out a different ride situation or
01:22:38
maybe you meet up with them later or
01:22:39
whatever, he just encourages them to run
01:22:43
away. And so even if that is your
01:22:45
boundary, right, we talked about like
01:22:46
listening to your body and what your
01:22:47
body is telling you and like if your
01:22:49
body is telling you you don't want to do
01:22:50
this, like you don't want to do it,
01:22:51
right? Or you want to figure out a
01:22:53
different path. I'm guilty of this too.
01:22:55
Like my my parents let told me that I
01:22:58
could use them always as the scapegoat.
01:22:59
If I didn't want to do something at a
01:23:00
friend's house, I could always be like,
01:23:01
oh well my parents need me at home, you
01:23:03
know, because sometimes it was easier to
01:23:05
say that than to say like I just don't
01:23:07
want to hang out with you cuz that was
01:23:09
sometimes the reality too or I don't
01:23:11
want to do this thing. I had one
01:23:12
particular set of friends where their
01:23:14
parents made us do chores at their house
01:23:16
which I thought was kind of [ __ ] So
01:23:19
I hated going to their house um for that
01:23:22
reason. And so I would always figure out
01:23:24
a way to show up late and not have to do
01:23:26
anything. Um, and I could use my parents
01:23:28
as a scapegoat for that. But like
01:23:30
looking back on it, I'm like I do wish
01:23:32
that there were circumstances in which I
01:23:34
had been more forced to kind of be
01:23:37
honest about the way I felt about
01:23:39
things, right? And be able to say like
01:23:41
in this circumstance, be able to tell
01:23:43
this girl, "Hey, I don't really feel
01:23:44
comfortable like going to your house.
01:23:46
You know, maybe a couple more people
01:23:48
could come with us." That kind of a
01:23:50
thing. turn it turn the scenario into
01:23:52
something else or just say, "Hey, look,
01:23:54
I'm not really comfortable with that.
01:23:56
I'll just catch up with you guys next
01:23:57
week or something like that, but stick
01:23:59
up for yourself as opposed to kind of
01:24:01
using your parent as a scapegoat." I
01:24:03
think it's just it would have been a
01:24:05
cool learning opportunity. This last
01:24:08
section of this chapter is called
01:24:11
running out of excuses, right? And so
01:24:13
he's talking about there's only so many
01:24:15
times you can kind of like basically
01:24:18
lie about like not going on a date or
01:24:22
all these things, right? Because this
01:24:23
whole chapter is about these awkward
01:24:25
situations, right? Of you've decided not
01:24:27
to date at this point. And you know,
01:24:31
people are going to ask you, why don't
01:24:33
you date somebody? Why don't you have,
01:24:34
you know, for me it would have been why
01:24:36
why don't you have a girlfriend already?
01:24:38
And all these things, right? And it's
01:24:39
like, oh well, I've decided not to. Uh,
01:24:41
I always just said I just haven't met
01:24:43
the right person yet. But one of the
01:24:45
things that Josh kind of advocates for
01:24:48
here at the end of the book
01:24:50
is
01:24:52
sometimes communicating our beliefs on
01:24:55
dating or his beliefs on dating to
01:24:57
somebody, right? And he says this, our
01:24:59
primary purpose for communicating with
01:25:01
others should be their uh encouragement
01:25:03
and their growth. And so throughout this
01:25:06
chapter, he kind of he he gave all these
01:25:08
scenarios and he talked about, you know,
01:25:10
sometimes you need to explain to the
01:25:12
this person like I don't date for these
01:25:14
reasons, XYZ. Other times you just kind
01:25:16
of come up with more of an excuse of,
01:25:19
you know, I don't do this or I don't do
01:25:21
that, you know, or I just like I said, I
01:25:23
haven't met the right person kind of a
01:25:25
thing.
01:25:26
He then goes on later in this to talk
01:25:29
about an example from his from his own
01:25:32
life where he said, "I once made plans
01:25:34
to go to a movie with a group of
01:25:35
friends. At the last minute, everyone
01:25:37
backed out except for one girl, but
01:25:39
because she knew me and that I avoided
01:25:42
one-on-one dates with girls, uh, she
01:25:44
called to say we needed to reschedule.
01:25:46
Her feelings weren't hurt and I didn't
01:25:48
have to go uh into major explanation.
01:25:50
She respected and worked with my
01:25:52
beliefs."
01:25:54
So, at this point, he's advocating for
01:25:56
my friends all know I don't date. They
01:25:58
know my structure. They know my
01:26:00
boundaries. All these types of things.
01:26:01
Well, I think it's kind of stupid in
01:26:04
that Josh canceled plans with a group.
01:26:06
Uh, you know,
01:26:09
because like he just doesn't do
01:26:11
one-on-one dates. Like, I do think it is
01:26:15
important that if you do decide like
01:26:17
your dating rules that your friends
01:26:19
understand what those are, right?
01:26:20
They're not encouraging you to go down
01:26:24
a path that you're not comfortable with,
01:26:26
right? They're not telling you to hook
01:26:27
up with somebody. They're not telling
01:26:28
you to make up make out with somebody.
01:26:29
They're not telling you to do this,
01:26:30
that, or the other with somebody if
01:26:32
that's not within like your group. But
01:26:35
again, this is just movies. This is just
01:26:37
hanging out. It goes back to Josh can't
01:26:40
handle a situation in which like someone
01:26:43
of the opposite sex and himself are
01:26:45
alone, even though they're not alone.
01:26:47
They're at a movie theater where other
01:26:50
people exist. And I know they don't know
01:26:52
that, you know, these other people in
01:26:54
this scenario don't necessarily know
01:26:55
them. And so if they did start making
01:26:57
out or they did, people wouldn't
01:26:58
probably bat an eye at it. They'd think
01:27:00
it's normal. But I again find it so
01:27:03
weird in this book that Josh throughout
01:27:05
this whole last segment of this book, he
01:27:08
keeps talking about you can be friends
01:27:10
with the opposite sex, you can do all
01:27:11
these things with the opposite sex, but
01:27:12
then anytime that there's an opportunity
01:27:16
to do that, he like shuts it down and
01:27:18
runs away from it. Like
01:27:22
I just I just don't get it. The last
01:27:24
little bit of this book, he talks about
01:27:27
the key motivation for communicating our
01:27:29
beliefs about dating should be to serve
01:27:30
others. We want to promote peace, love,
01:27:32
and righteousness that will bring glory
01:27:34
to God. I put in my notes like it's kind
01:27:36
of like the invitation to the cult. And
01:27:39
I think one of the things that I think
01:27:41
Josh is guilty of a lot in this book and
01:27:44
in his own life is probably this better
01:27:47
than thou
01:27:49
situation of like creating all these
01:27:51
rules that he follows and makes himself
01:27:53
the golden boy by being like I'm doing
01:27:55
all these things and this is the godly
01:27:57
way to be and like if you don't do it
01:27:59
this way like you know he'll kind of
01:28:01
argue that like oh well you know maybe
01:28:04
it's okay maybe that's okay between you
01:28:06
and God but that's not how I interpret
01:28:08
God, right? And so it's like we have
01:28:10
been set up to believe that Josh Harris
01:28:13
is an anointed person by God to deliver
01:28:16
this message about dating. And if we
01:28:19
don't follow his rules to a tea, we are
01:28:21
dishonoring uh and going against God's
01:28:23
plan. That's how this book is painted
01:28:26
out to be because even though he won't
01:28:28
say you're doing it wrong, he's going to
01:28:31
heavily heavily imply it. It's no wonder
01:28:33
that this book caused so much pain in in
01:28:37
the [ __ ] Christian dating world
01:28:41
because like
01:28:44
imagine being 14 and reading this book,
01:28:46
being given this book, okay? Being told,
01:28:49
"Hey, read this book on dating."
01:28:52
And you open it up and you read it and
01:28:54
it reads as if this man is the authority
01:28:56
on this subject, as if he has years and
01:28:58
years and years of training and
01:28:59
knowledge and experience among these
01:29:01
things. And so, you know, he's the guy.
01:29:04
He's the guy we trust. You know, all
01:29:06
these things. And so, you set yourself
01:29:08
up to do exactly what this book says, to
01:29:11
follow all of the rules, right? To
01:29:12
remove the pollutants of your heart, to
01:29:15
follow the the the standards, right? And
01:29:17
all these things. And like, and then
01:29:20
it's just not fun. It's just not
01:29:24
good because you end up
01:29:28
hating yourself. You end up feeling
01:29:30
shame and guilt for anytime you get it
01:29:32
wrong. You feel uh you feel disconnected
01:29:37
from your body, right? Because you've
01:29:38
been taught to not listen to your body.
01:29:41
This book is brutal. I have to say this
01:29:43
book has been brutal to read and to
01:29:46
relive and to think through some of
01:29:47
these things. And I'm so happy that I'm
01:29:50
a healthier person, but I know that I'm
01:29:51
not a perfectly healthy person. But I
01:29:53
look at this and I read this and I just
01:29:54
I'm like blown away that so many parents
01:29:59
just willingly handed this over to their
01:30:01
child and said here and those kids read
01:30:04
this book and they implemented these
01:30:05
things and these parents walked away,
01:30:09
you know, wiping their hands of having
01:30:10
to have the sex talk of having to have
01:30:12
any conversations about relationships
01:30:14
with their kids and thinking I did the
01:30:16
right thing. When in reality you set
01:30:19
your kids up to fail. You set your kids
01:30:21
up to be ashamed of themselves, to be
01:30:23
ashamed of their bodies, to not know
01:30:26
what actual healthy relationships look
01:30:28
like. And so
01:30:31
it's it's just brutal. Like it's it's it
01:30:34
just is. And the fact that it's still
01:30:36
even happening to this day, I know this
01:30:38
book doesn't isn't in current uh print,
01:30:41
but like these teachings are things that
01:30:44
continually play out in the home school
01:30:47
world, in the Christian world. like we
01:30:49
are seeing them with young people today
01:30:53
and we need to push back. We need to we
01:30:55
need to help change the trajectory of
01:30:59
what that is. So that's what I'm going
01:31:00
to say on this section of the book. I I
01:31:03
hope you stuck with me. I know it was
01:31:06
long. I know I went all over the place
01:31:09
with this one, but we're almost there.
01:31:10
We got one more section left to go. The
01:31:12
next part of this book, I think, is the
01:31:15
marriage section. It's called Now What?
01:31:17
and it's going to talk on
01:31:20
those final steps, right? Knowing that
01:31:22
it's time, you're ready to get married.
01:31:24
And so, yeah, I hope this this series I
01:31:28
don't know, it's some it's my opinions.
01:31:30
It's some dude on the internet's
01:31:31
opinions on this book uh with having my
01:31:34
own life experience now and exiting
01:31:36
purity culture and exiting religion. And
01:31:39
so, I don't know. I hope it was helpful.
01:31:41
Uh, if you've got questions, if you got
01:31:43
comments, if you got concerns, if you
01:31:45
got push back on any of this stuff, you
01:31:47
can comment it down below or shoot me an
01:31:49
01:31:51
Shoot me a DM. Exhub on Tik Tok,
01:31:55
Instagram. Threads now has a DM feature.
01:31:58
So, those are the places I'm most active
01:32:01
uh for this. But yeah, all that's going
01:32:02
to be linked down in the show notes as
01:32:04
well. The stuff that is in this book,
01:32:07
the brainwashing that took place,
01:32:10
it doesn't just go away overnight, okay?
01:32:12
It takes years and years and years of
01:32:14
working really hard to get rid of it. I
01:32:16
hope we can change that in the future. I
01:32:18
hope we can open up the conversation
01:32:20
around these topics around dating to be
01:32:23
more inclusive and less rule follow,
01:32:29
you know, less of like this is the
01:32:31
perfect way to do it and more of we're
01:32:33
humans. we're going to mess up, right?
01:32:35
We're going to do things wrong. We're
01:32:37
going to get hurt along the way. We're
01:32:38
going to hurt people along the way. It's
01:32:40
what we do with all of that. Um, and how
01:32:42
we move forward from that that defines
01:32:44
who we are as people. So, with that, I'm
01:32:46
going to let you go. I hope you enjoyed.
01:32:48
Like, subscribe, do all the internet
01:32:50
things you know how to do. Uh, and I'll
01:32:52
see you next time. All right. Peace.
01:33:01
[Music]
01:33:07
[Music]

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 70
    Most controversial
  • 60
    Most shocking
  • 60
    Most polarizing
  • 60
    Most influential

Episode Highlights

  • Four Steps for Getting on Track
    Jacob discusses the four steps outlined by Joshua Harris for a godly lifestyle in relationships.
    “Start with a clean slate, make your parents your teammates, establish protective boundaries, and check who's whispering in your ears.”
    @ 04m 08s
    July 31, 2025
  • The Importance of Boundaries
    Jacob emphasizes the need for protective boundaries in romantic relationships.
    “Establishing boundaries allows you to respond with confidence in different situations.”
    @ 13m 04s
    July 31, 2025
  • Navigating Discontentment
    Consider cutting out media that encourages ungodly longings and discontentment.
    “Tune it out. Turn it off.”
    @ 20m 18s
    July 31, 2025
  • Just Friends in a Just Do It World
    Finding balance between friendship and romance can feel like a tightrope walk.
    “Finding that balance is anything but easy.”
    @ 26m 12s
    July 31, 2025
  • Understanding Friendship vs. Intimacy
    Friendship is about something outside the relationship, while intimacy focuses on each other.
    “CS Lewis wrote, "We picture lovers face to face, but friends side by side."”
    @ 32m 09s
    July 31, 2025
  • Navigating Friendships with the Opposite Sex
    Involving others in friendships can prevent isolation and misunderstandings. "We don’t want dating’s mindset of being alone to carry into our friendships."
    @ 40m 46s
    July 31, 2025
  • Understanding Natural Reactions
    Discussing natural bodily reactions is essential for healthy development. "Stop teaching kids that their bodies are sinful by having natural reactions."
    @ 52m 21s
    July 31, 2025
  • Jessica's Rules of Romance
    Jessica sets strict rules for dating, aiming to avoid short-term relationships until marriage.
    “Like modern-day Moses descending from Mount Si with the Ten Commandments.”
    @ 59m 30s
    July 31, 2025
  • The Deceitful Heart
    Exploring the conflict between heart and mind, and the struggle with temptation.
    “The human heart doesn’t like taking orders from the mind.”
    @ 01h 03m 27s
    July 31, 2025
  • The Pollutants of the Heart
    Discussing infatuation, lust, and self-pity as threats to emotional purity.
    “In a sense, self-pity is the worship of our circumstances.”
    @ 01h 19m 03s
    July 31, 2025
  • The Sunday Afternoon Dilemma
    A story about navigating awkward social situations after church.
    @ 01h 21m 13s
    July 31, 2025
  • The Impact of Purity Culture
    Reflecting on the long-lasting effects of strict dating rules on young people.
    @ 01h 32m 10s
    July 31, 2025

Episode Quotes

  • Repentance is a change of direction based on a change of heart.
    I Kissed Dating Goodbye Part 3: Purity Culture’s 4-Step Plan for Control | #45
  • Finding that balance is anything but easy.
    I Kissed Dating Goodbye Part 3: Purity Culture’s 4-Step Plan for Control | #45
  • Not every interaction with someone of the opposite sex is sexual.
    I Kissed Dating Goodbye Part 3: Purity Culture’s 4-Step Plan for Control | #45
  • Stop teaching kids that their bodies are sinful by having natural reactions.
    I Kissed Dating Goodbye Part 3: Purity Culture’s 4-Step Plan for Control | #45
  • I’ve cried and I’ve sobbed and I’ve been like I’m just a wicked evil person.
    I Kissed Dating Goodbye Part 3: Purity Culture’s 4-Step Plan for Control | #45
  • This book is brutal. It just is.
    I Kissed Dating Goodbye Part 3: Purity Culture’s 4-Step Plan for Control | #45

Key Moments

  • Four Steps Overview04:08
  • Reality vs. Fantasy21:24
  • Friendship Confusion28:31
  • Friendship Dynamics40:46
  • Jessica's Rules59:30
  • Heart vs Mind1:03:27
  • Purity Culture1:04:24
  • Awkward Situations1:24:25

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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