

thank you
Mike
"We have found in the Holy Writings no explicit references to masturbation, but there are a number of principles and teachings which can guide a Baha'i to the correct attitude towards it. In a letter to an individual believer, written by the Guardian's secretary on his behalf, it is pointed out that:
'The Baha'i Faith recognizes the value of the sex impulse, but condemns its illegitimate and improper expressions such as free love, companionate marriage and others, all of which it considers positively harmful to man and to the society in which he lives. The proper use of the sex instinct is the natural right of every individual, and it is precisely for this very purpose that the institution of marriage has been established. The Baha'is do not believe in the suppression of the sex impulse but in its regulation and control.'
"In response to another letter enquiring if there were any legitimate way in which a person could express the sex instinct if, for some reason, he were unable to marry or if outer circumstances such as economic factors were to cause him to delay marriage, the Guardian's secretary wrote on his behalf:
'Concerning your question whether there are any legitimate forms of expression of the sex instinct outside of marriage: According to the Baha'i Teachings no sexual act can be considered lawful unless performed between lawfully married persons. Outside of marital life there can be no lawful or healthy use of the sex impulse. The Baha'i youth should, on the one hand, be taught the lesson of self-control which, when exercised, undoubtedly has a salutary effect on the development of character and of personality in general, and on the other should be advised, nay even encouraged, to contract marriage while still young and in full possession of their physical vigour. Economic factors, no doubt, are often a serious hindrance to early marriage but in most cases are only an excuse, and as such should not be over stressed.'
"In another letter on the Guardian's behalf, also to an individual believer, the secretary writes:
'Amongst the many other evils afflicting society in this spiritual low water mark in history is the question of immorality, and over-emphasis of sex...'
"This indicates how the whole matter of sex and the problems related to it have assumed far too great an importance in the thinking of present-day society.
"Masturbation is clearly not a proper use of the sex instinct, as this is understood in the Faith. Moreover it involves, as you have pointed out, mental fantasies, while Baha'u'llah, in the Kitab-i-Aqdas, has exhorted us not to indulge our passions and in one of His well-known Tablets Abdu'l-Baha encourages us to keep our 'secret thoughts pure'. Of course many wayward thoughts come involuntarily to the mind and these are merely a result of weakness and are not blameworthy unless they become fixed or even worse, are expressed in improper acts. In 'The Advent of Divine Justice', when describing the moral standards that Baha'is must uphold both individually and in their community life, the Guardian wrote:
'Such a chaste and holy life, with its implications of modesty, purity, temperance, decency, and clean-mindedness, involves no less than the exercise of moderation in all that pertains to dress, language, amusements, and all artistic and literary avocations. It demands daily vigilance in the control of one's carnal desires and corrupt inclinations.'
"Your problem, therefore, is one against which you should continue to struggle, with determination and with the aid of prayer. You should remember, however, that it is only one of the many temptations and faults that a human being must strive to overcome during his lifetime, and you should not increase the difficulty you have by over-emphasising its importance. We suggest you try to see it within the whole spectrum of the qualities that a Baha'i must develop in his character. Be vigilant against temptation, but do not allow it to claim too great a share of your attention. You should concentrate, rather, on the virtues that you should develop, the services you should strive to render, and, above all, on God and His attributes, and devote your energies to living a full Baha'i life in all its many aspects."
(From a letter of the Universal House of Justice to an individual believer, a copy of which was sent to the compiler with a letter dated March 8, 1981; quoted in Lights of Guidance, no. 1220)
In a number of religious traditions and in Shí'ih Muslim practice semen has been declared ritually unclean. Bahá'u'lláh has here dispelled this concept. See also note 106 below.
Anonymous wrote:in my opinion: (as we as female or male)
- we must masturbate for hygenic reasons
- we must masturbate to know better our body and feelings, and to increase our curiousity about the body of the one(s) we like, and to having the sex as a nirvana reach
- we must masturbate for the good health of our mind - for de-stressing
- foreplay is very important on a sexual relationship, and this is not much more than discorvering the body feelings of the one we like by their masturbation needs
- having sex, physiologically, is not much more than sharing masturbation!
brettz9 wrote:This is not in reference to hygienic cleanliness. 'Abdu'l-Bahá, in the Secret of Divine Civilization, on the contrary, confirms that one should in fact perform ablutions (washing) after intercourse.
Baha'i Warrior wrote:My friend Guest, I am wondering, are you a Baha'i? You know, just because you do not understand a law does not automatically mean that it doesn't make any sense. Besides, technically laws don't have to make sense. The Writings say that if God instructs us not to drink water, we should abstain from water if we love God, even though we will die. However, all the laws are very rational. It would be a more accurate thing to say, "I am much less than God. His wisdom surpasses that of mine. Maybe, since God is wiser than me, His laws actually do makes sense, even though I do not understand them."
Technically, laws must make sense, or there is lack of justice. So in all cases, the reason the law exists is just not clear to us. Still, I can't help but not understand why the UHJ would say such a thing.
Yes, you are "doomed until you marry," if you want to put it that way. But, I didn't catch which part of that law did not make any sense. You have impulses for a lot of things; some good, some bad. Some are not inherently "bad," like sex, but are only legitimatly expressed between two married people. The UHJ: "Bahá'ís do not believe that the sex impulse should be suppressed but that it should be regulated and controlled." And the Guardian: "Outside of marital life there can be no lawful or healthy use of the sex impulse." As you can see, since masturbation is use of the sex impulse (outside of marriage), you should not do that either. It is not forbidden, and not even comparable to that of fornication, but it is still not beneficial to one's spiritual development.
I don't see how occasional (say 1/3 times) releasing of sexual tension in the form of masturbation is "unlawful or unhealthy". If anything, its healthier than keeping the tension built-up and acting as a constant stressor. I can't help but feel this is a law tailored to the masses who would probably abuse the right to masturbate outside of marriage, if the writings said somewhere that it was lawful, even in moderation.
As you know, cleanliness is a virtue. Cleanliness is so important that Baha'u'llah states:
"Should the garb of anyone be visibly sullied, his prayers shall not ascend to God, and the celestial Concourse will turn away from him."
To me, the Baha'i Faith is all common sense at the very base of it. Hence, I don't take the above statement literally. Say I'm a homeless person with dirt on my shirt that I can't get out. God knows, and you know, if you've done your best to keep your shirt clean and be as clean as possible for the prayer session in question. I don't get why it doesn't work the same way with masturbation. If I know I'm doing it purely for stressor reasons, and not to fantasize or what not, then what's the big deal. It's funny how God gives me this impulse that is totally dominating my physical being because He made it that way, in terms of hormones and such, and He expects me not to relieve the tension in a purest-possible fashion. I'm not gonna just sit the stress out days after days.
Now let me ask you, is dirt itself "unclean," or is it rather considered unclean having dirt on your clothes? Dirt is good if it stays in the pot, bad if it gets on your clothes. Or are stains inherently "evil," or is it just that having a stain on your shirt is not in accordance with cleanliness? Being clean, though material, has a great spiritual effect. 'Abdu'l-Baha says that organization is very important; things have to be in their proper places and have to be clean. Order and cleanliness are very important things.
You're talking to a super clean, super organized person. Everything should have its place. This does pertain to sexual things as well, but I really don't see why masturbation is a bad thing, for the purposes mentioned above.
You said: "Anything ritualized just doesn't make sense." Again, if I were you I'd try to be open-minded and reexamine what you are saying, especially if you are a Baha'i. If you are going to say something doesn't make "sense" without any kind of logic, perhaps you shouldn't say it.
I feel that ritualizing anything can sometimes lead to superstitious outlook in people over time. "Hey baby, that was great, but sorry I can't cuddle now, I gotta go shower, so do you... we're dirty, and that's bad." So God gives us this gift of sexual impulse, yet we can't even express it to the fullest without having to worry about staying physically clean?
This is not in reference to hygienic cleanliness. 'Abdu'l-Bahá, in the Secret of Divine Civilization, on the contrary, confirms that one should in fact perform ablutions (washing) after intercourse.
...the purpose of His consummate wisdom was to free the people from the chains of fanaticism which had bound them hand and foot, and to forestall those very objections which today confuse the mind and trouble the conscience of the simple and helpless.
(page 29)
"Should the garb of anyone be visibly sullied, his prayers shall not ascend to God, and the celestial Concourse will turn away from him."
To me, the Baha'i Faith is all common sense at the very base of it. Hence, I don't take the above statement literally. Say I'm a homeless person with dirt on my shirt that I can't get out. God knows, and you know, if you've done your best to keep your shirt clean and be as clean as possible for the prayer session in question.
Cleave ye unto the cord of refinement with such tenacity as to allow no trace of dirt to be seen upon your garments. Such is the injunction of One Who is sanctified above all refinement. Whoso falleth short of this standard with good reason shall incur no blame. God, verily, is the Forgiving, the Merciful.
brettz9 wrote:Thanks BW for the welcome back, and your comments here as well.I should make a disclaimer that I still may not be able to stay consistetly.
To respond to one tangential point of one of the guests..."Should the garb of anyone be visibly sullied, his prayers shall not ascend to God, and the celestial Concourse will turn away from him."
To me, the Baha'i Faith is all common sense at the very base of it. Hence, I don't take the above statement literally. Say I'm a homeless person with dirt on my shirt that I can't get out. God knows, and you know, if you've done your best to keep your shirt clean and be as clean as possible for the prayer session in question.
Baha'u'llah refers to this in effect in paragraph 74:Cleave ye unto the cord of refinement with such tenacity as to allow no trace of dirt to be seen upon your garments. Such is the injunction of One Who is sanctified above all refinement. Whoso falleth short of this standard with good reason shall incur no blame. God, verily, is the Forgiving, the Merciful.
best wishes,
Brett
Anonymous wrote: In fact, I doubt it's even physically healthy to ignore it, assuming you're really good at it and never masturbate. I've taken some psychology, biology, and human sexuality courses, and they all state that not masturbating can be physically unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Can hunger not also be classified as a "carnal" desire?
Anonymous wrote:He said, when you masturbate, what are you thinking about? A horse?
How did he know...?!No, you are thinking about a girl! Is this in line with keeping your mind pure of defilements?
Well, less defiling than thinking about the horse...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He said, when you masturbate, what are you thinking about? A horse?
How did he know...?!No, you are thinking about a girl! Is this in line with keeping your mind pure of defilements?
Well, less defiling than thinking about the horse...
Hahaha that's actually a funny point, but he could have said say "sky" instead of "horse". The idea is to get his point that it's a natural inclination to fantasize about a member of the opposite sex in the process of masturbation.
CJ wrote:i will just put my 2 cents worth in here, speaking as a woman.
women definitely have this masturbation issue to deal with too, but the point I wanted to make is that in the past, I have been hit on by guys who have said they have fantasized about me, etc, as if I would think it was a comliment or something. in short, this really disturbs me and grosses me out, the fact that someone who is not my husband or a man I am in love with is using my image in his mind, without my permission. really creepy, if you ask me. if you are masturbating you probably have an image in your mind of a woman who is not your wife. that means that in a way, you are messing with someone else's wife, or future wife
CJ wrote:this shows that they are more aggressive. however, it does not follow from this that they have higher sex drives than women. testosterone has shown to be related to increased aggression; show me a study that indicates that it increases horniness.
CJ wrote:the reason that women are not that crude is because they are socialized to be demure and docile and submit, not because they aren't all as horny as men.
Anonymous wrote:When viewing erotic films women actually became just as sexually aroused physically as men. Yet, when asked, many of these women denied (or were unaware of) their sexual responses (Heiman, et al., 1976).
if women appeared horny all the time, it doesn't necessarily follow that men would want to copulate them more. in fact the woman who is assertive about her desire for sex scares a lot of men, while the woman who acts all docile and virginal, like they don't want it, is the one that these men go after. they chase women not so much because they are have a greater sex drive, but because of the conquest and because it makes them feel powerful.
More and more women are escaping this oppression of sexual sensitivity and are learning to "turn on" easily (like men do).
I've wondered how the "guidance" against male masturbation would be weighed vis-a-vis a medical recommendation in favor of it. For example, the widely-reported findings of a 2003 study suggesting that ejaculating at least 5 times per week has a measurable effect on preventing prostate cancer (see for example http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/3072021.stm ). The study indicated that this preventative effect was most pronounced for men in their 20s -- earlier than many men marry, and hence earlier than they can ejaculate in a married sexual relationship, as required by the Faith.
For more articles on that, see http://google.com/search?q=prostate+cancer+masturbation
Throughout recorded history, human consciousness has depended upon two basic knowledge systems through which its potentialities have progressively been expressed: science and religion. Through these two agencies, the race's experience has been organized, its environment interpreted, its latent powers explored, and its moral and intellectual life disciplined. They have acted as the real progenitors of civilization. With the benefit of hindsight, it is evident, moreover, that the effectiveness of this dual structure has been greatest during those periods when, each in its own sphere, religion and science were able to work in concert.
(Propserity of Humankind, par. 36)
The study indicated that this preventative effect was most pronounced for men in their 20s -- earlier than many men marry, and hence earlier than they can ejaculate in a married sexual relationship, as required by the Faith.
"The proper use of the sex instinct is the natural right of every individual, and it is precisely for this very purpose that the institution of marriage has been established."
(Shoghi Effendi, A Chaste and Holy Life, p. 56)
"Sex is a very individual matter, some people are more passionate by nature than others, and might consequently suffer more if forced to be continent."
(Light of Divine Guidance Vol.2, p. 71)
"Regarding your questions: by holiness in our Baha'i teachings is meant attachment to God, His Precepts and His Will. We are not ascetics in any sense of the word. On the contrary, Baha'u'llah says God has created all the good things in the world for us to enjoy and partake of. But we must not become attached to them and put them before the spiritual things. Chastity in the strict sense means not to have sexual intercourse, or sexual intimacies, before marriage. In the general sense it means not to be licentious. This does not mean we Baha'is believe sexual relations to be impure or wrong. On the contrary they are natural and should be considered one of God's many blessings.
(Light of Divine Guidance Vol.2, p. 71)
"The Baha'i Teachings do not only encourage marital life, considering it the natural and normal way of existence for every sane, healthy and socially-conscious and responsible person, but raise marriage to the status of a divine institution, its chief and sacred purpose being the perpetuation of the human race--which is the very flower of the entire creation--and its elevation to the true station destined for it by God.
"That there should be, however, certain individuals who by reason of some serious deficiency, physical or mental, would be incapacitated to contract marriage and enjoy the blessings of an enduring and successful marital life is only too evident, but these constitute only a very small section of humanity, and are therefore merely an exception, and their condition cannot possibly invalidate what an all-wise and loving Providence has decreed to be the normal way to a fruitful and constructive social existence.
"The exact conditions and circumstances under which such incapacitated individuals should be advised or even prevented perhaps from entering into any sort of marital existence have not been specified in the Baha'i Writings, but will have to be defined later on by the Universal House of Justice. In the meantime, those believers who consider themselves as falling into the above category would do well, before taking any final decision themselves, to consult medical experts, who are both conscientious and competent, and to abide by their recommendation.
"This is what the Guardian would advise you to do, and he will pray that you may be guided in reaching the right decision in this assuredly delicate and indeed most vital matter confronting you at present. Whether your illness is the result of any inherent constitutional weakness and inherited predisposition is a question which you should refer to experts in the medical field, though even expert physicians themselves may in very few cases find it exceedingly hard, if not altogether impossible, to give a final and decisive answer."
(From a letter written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi to an individual believer, April 15, 1939)
"Your problem, therefore, is one against which you should continue to struggle, with determination and with the aid of prayer. You should remember, however, that it is only one of the many temptations and faults that a human being must strive to overcome during his lifetime, and you should not increase the difficulty you have by over-emphasising its importance. We suggest you try to see it within the whole spectrum of the qualities that a Baha'i must develop in his character. Be vigilant against temptation, but do not allow it to claim too great a share of your attention. You should concentrate, rather, on the virtues that you should develop, the services you should strive to render, and, above all, on God and His attributes, and devote your energies to living a full Baha'i life in all its many aspects."
(From a letter of the Universal House of Justice to an individual believer, a copy of which was sent to the compiler with a letter dated March 8, 1981; quoted in Lights of Guidance, no. 1220, emphasis added)
More and more women are escaping this oppression of sexual sensitivity and are learning to "turn on" easily (like men do).
CJ wrote: it is aggression, unfortunately, and when I hear other things such as Bahai Warrior express his opinion that sex offenders are that way because of their sex drive, when it is an established psychological fact that is about power and control, drives me mad.
CJ wrote:I still see that many Baha'i men have not educated themselves on women's issues. it is sad when I see that organizations such as 'Men Against Violence Against Women' springing up all over the place, but never meet any Baha'i men who are a part of these groups. INdeed, in our Faith we are to dispel ignorance, are we not?
CJ wrote:this is not what I means. what I was protesting about was the extremes in 'man is strong and woman is weak' we see this dynamic all the time in such people as, say, Jessica Simpson, who admits that she acts stupid, weak and helpless around men because they like it and makes them feel more manly (not to blast her, she's great, just balked when I read this)
CJ wrote:no, this is not what I meant. what I meant was that women have been repressed from exhibiting NORMAL sexuality, that is, enjoying sex, etc. it has been seen as something unchaste for her to exhibit normal sexuality. a chaste woman doesn't admit she likes sex etc.
CJ wrote:no, this is not what I intended. I just hate the stereotype where many people say 'men have a higher sex drive than women' I just don't believe it's true. and it is not proven scientifically. I was targeting what I see as harmful stereotypes, which many who deal with rape victims know play a major role. and rape also does happen in marriage, so it's not just that these types of dynamics are between single people only
CJ wrote:all I read from this sentence was that women have actually been able to enjoy sex more than they were allowed to in the past. what good does it do if you're married but can't enjoy sex because society tells you you shouldn't? The Baha'i Faith recognizes the value of the sex impulse.
Baha'i Warrior wrote:Brett makes a good point. You are accusing us (men) of wanting power over women, etc., that is a stereotype you have.
Anonymous wrote:so Baha'i Warrior, how are you tackling the issue of the equality of men and women through Baha'u'llah's Revelation? explain this to me please. What have YOU done, personally?
Anonymous wrote:if a non-caucasian person was upset about racial stereotypes and was complaining to a caucasian person about this, does that mean that they hate all caucasians? not necessarily. it just means that they are tired of the stereotypes.
Anonymous wrote:Baha'i Warrior, if you think that there aren't Baha'i men aren't like this, you are sadly mistaken. the Baha'i community is certainly influenced by society around them and are not perfect; you are fooling yourself if you think that we are immune to the problems of the world.