Notice the focus of these verses. Being chaste is not about “saving yourself” for a spouse, or having great married sex, or following some kind of approved formula. It’s about setting a godly example for others of a faithful and self-controlled Christian life.
In light of my previous post on Purity Culture, I want to delve a bit deeper into the subject and explore what the Bible really has to say about purity. Because itdoes have something to say, and what it says may surprise you.
The first surprising thing is how seldom the word “purity” appears in scripture. My Strong’s Concordance lists it as appearing only twice in the New Testament. Other scriptures (almost all in the Old Testament) instead speak of pureness, being purified, or purification. Notice that some of these words speak of purity as a process. It is not an initial state but, rather, a completed state.
Purity Culture, of course, promotes purity as an initial state. It also focuses solely on purity as chastity, or abstinence from sex outside of marriage. But that is only one meaning of the word “purity” in scripture. It more commonly refers to:
- Having been physically washed
- Being free from sin
- Showing complete faithfulness to God/shunning idolatry
In fact, the two New Testament scriptures that mention purity are virtually the only ones in the Bible that use “purity” to mean “chastity.” And those verses are 1 Timothy 4:12 and 1 Timothy 5:2:
Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith and in purity. ~ 4:12
Do not rebuke an older man harshly, but exhort him as if he were your father. Treat younger men as brothers, older women as mothers, and younger women as sisters, with absolute purity. ~ 5:1-2
Notice the focus of these verses. Being chaste is not about “saving yourself” for a spouse, or having great married sex, or following some kind of approved formula. It’s about setting a godly example for others of a faithful and self-controlled Christian life.
The second verse is particularly interesting. Here, the Apostle Paul tells Timothy to treat the women in his community with purity, viewing them not as temptresses or potential mates, but as mothers and sisters. Get this: a man is telling a man to refrain from sexually objectifying women!
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