Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Regarding Shelia Wray Gregoire

 

Regarding Sheila Wray Gregoire

I recently googled “harmful things about Sheila Wray Gregoire” and couldn’t find anything, so decided to write my own piece.  While her book The Great Sex Rescue does have helpful things in it, there are also dangers and a note of warning needs to be struck.

But first, the positives.  Sheila Wray Gregoire is the most popular Evangelical marriage blogger on the internet, and her blog has helped many women in the area of sex.  Indeed, from reading The Great Sex Rescue, my wife and I were assisted in various ways.  The book takes a look at sex mainly from the evangelical women’s perspective, for the stated reason that most of the other evangelical books on sex are written from a male point of view. 

Due to its perspective, The Great Sex Rescue provided quite a few “aha moments” and insight into the female sexual experience.  It was helpful to hear about women’s need for arousal, and to hear various women speaking about how due to dissatisfaction in relationship sex was just not enjoyable for them.  It was also very appropriate to be reminded that sex should be enjoyable for the woman as well as for the man, and if it’s not, something is wrong. 

Finally, it was healthy to explore the idea that sex should not only reflect a physical connection, but an emotional and spiritual one as well.  Evaluating my relationship with my wife in these three areas was a good barometer check. 

Having listed these helpful aspects of the book, I also need to sound a few warning bells in light of her exploding popularity, lest the evangelical world swallow the bones with the meat.  For one, it seems a little more humility would become Mrs. Gregoire.  In this book, she takes on all of the heavy hitters in the evangelical marriage book world – and effectively disses them all.  Classics such as Love and Respect, The Act of Marriage, His Needs, Her needs, and The Power of a Praying Wife are roundly disregarded and attacked for being written from a male point of view – and therefore invalidated.  No-one is off limits: even widely respected authors and organizations such as Tim Keller and Focus on the Family receive her ire. If a book said things such as “Sex is a male need”, “Men struggle with porn”, or “Women should have sex with their husbands to keep them from looking at pornography or having an affair,” it was deemed insensitive, sexist and harmful.  The cumulative effect of all this loud criticism was like a prolonged scream. 

I do not think the classic books on marriage are perfect and beyond critical bounds.  For example, like Mrs. Gregoire I had a hard time with the flippant and cavalier tone of the book Sheet Music.  But let us remember that Sheila Wray Gregoire is a blogger, writing from her house somewhere in Canada.  Boggers are not vetted by anyone; they can put out whatever they want on the internet; education, credentials, and approval are not required for them to spout their views.  By contrast, the men and women who wrote the books she critiques had to progress through the ranks of churches and denominations and publishers  - a tough vetting process that Gregoire has not had to face from behind her keyboard.  Anyone can have an opinion – it is much harder to get that opinion published and recognized in the traditional way.  Gregoire would do well to show a more respect towards those the evangelical world has recognized and been helped by.

Another weakness of Gregoire’s book is the basis of its research.  All her research was done with women, with the occasional man (maybe 2 or 3) talked to and quoted.  Based on talking with women, she comes up with such ideas as, “Lust is his problem, not hers”, “Men do not need sex every three days,” “Men should not be tempted with what they see,” and “Not having sex should not lead to an affair or porn.”  While her concern that women are a part of the sex equation needs to be heard, all she had to do was talk with a couple of men (other than the 2 or 3 weird examples she found) to hear that well, yes, lust is a huge problem, no, I can’t really help it, and lack of sex in marriage does lead to a myriad of problems including porn use, and affairs.  In her attempt to present sex from the women’s side, she misrepresents and stigmatizes the male experience.

Thirdly, her biblical theology and exegesis is shoddy at best, and at points wrong.  She does not believe in biblical male headship in the family, but does not give Scriptural basis for her views; rather an egalitarian marriage is advocated because it prevents divorce and fosters better sex. (p. 33)  In a footnote on the chapter where she makes this claim, she claims Ephesians 5:22 does not contain the word “submit” in the original Greek, when actually, it does (hupotasso).  In her explanation of 1 Cor. 7:2-5, she posits that sex should not be used to combat a porn addiction; rather, that addiction should be fought by the man apart from sex with his wife.  This, despite the fact that Paul uses such language as “do not deprive each other…so that you may not be tempted.”  One gets the impression from reading this book that she is letting emotion dictate her interpretation of the Bible, rather than allowing Scripture to shape our experience. 

Sheila Wray Gregoire is a blogger from Canada who has become famous by publishing the woman’s perspective on sex on the internet.  However, she does not take the male perspective into account, she is not a careful theologian, and she should show more respect for the authors she attacks.  Let’s listen to what she has to say, because there are some helpful correctives.  But let us not forget that there is a dangerous dose of bones in there with the meat. 

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

 

Seasons

January

 In the winter of my heart

the season of my discontent

you came, called my name

set my soul

aflame

 

February

In the dull pulses of dormant earth

struggles the flower

buried to break forth

 

March

Sings more hopefully the song

of winds and lilies

forget-me-nots and spreading grass

the first notes

of all things new

 

March (2)

Hello, yellow daffodils.

I have waited for you so long;

it is good to see you again.

 

April

Gentle comes the month,

friend of lovers

and children, brushing

her sweet clouds

across a care-less sky.

 

May

Purple azalea scent wafts

into a friendly sky

 

 June

From the rain-soaked earth

glisten hydrangeas

white, violet, and painful blue.

 

July

Shining also spreads the verdant rice

drinking a rain-dipped

misty sky.

 

August

In the shaded mountains

beneath cedar trees,

we walk wooded paths.

 

September

Heart!  Emerging from the shade and

ocean spray, colors sharpen

days in relief, and a blue sky

enfolding mountains.


October

And from the trunk that holds the leaf

pulses the color of the year’s descent

symphony of yellow, orange, and vermillion

her strongest song

before the death.

November

Red berries on a dark bough

beneath the clouded sky.

 

December

The Christ child came

on such a night as this

snowflakes landing

half-melted on the thread

of a velvet scarf

falling on the thatched and tarred roofs

covering in white

washing our stain away.