The Sinful Marriage
Judaism believes that marriage must be
built on deep desire and covetousness. The holiest book of the Bible, Song of
Solomon, is an erotic lust poem that describes the burning yearning between a
man and a woman: "Your breasts are like two fawns, like twin fawns of a
gazelle that browse among the lilies. (4:5)" "Your stature is like
that of the palm, and your breasts like clusters of fruit. I said, "I will
climb the palm tree; I will take hold of its fruit." (7:7-9)
For us, lust is hot, sexy, and holy.
The tenth commandment is clear:
"Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife," which means, by direct
implication, you ought to be coveting your own. About eighty percent of
husbands who cheat on their wives claim to love their wives, but lust for
another woman has trumped that love. Lust is, quite simply, much stronger than
love. So why aren't we using this powerful tool in our marital arsenal?
And this is true for women as well as
men, as is exemplified by the phenomenal success of Fifty Shades of
Grey. Why are liberated, educated women reading a book about a
woman who voluntarily submits to being a 'dominant' billionaire's 'submissive'?
Because the essence of the novel is a man who lusts after a woman so mightily
that he wants to have her above all else. Utterly smitten, he cannot live
without her. And for most married women who feel loved but not desired, the
novel became a form of wish-fulfillment.
How do we recapture erotic lust? By
focusing on its three laws, which I present here and which are the subjects of
my upcoming book Kosher Lust.
The first is frustrated desire and
erotic obstacles. Lust is enhanced through an inability to attain the object of
your longing, the failure to satiate human yearning. It's the reason why Plato
argued for unconsummated, 'Platonic' relationships, so that desire would never
wane. And it's the reason why the Torah makes a wife sexually unavailable to
her husband for 12 days out of every month (laws of Niddah), so that sexual
hunger may increase. But it's also true of every other area of life. The fare
in every fast-food restaurant always tastes bad. The reason: nobody made you
wait for it. But in an upscale restaurant they purposely delay your food, even
if you ordered the ready-made special of the day, because appetite is enhanced
through denial.
The second law of lust is mystery. Lust
is enhanced in darkness and shadows. Ironically, the more the body is covered
the more one lusts after it. The most boring place on earth is a nudist colony
(er... so my friends tell me) because it leaves nothing to the imagination.
When a wife came to me once for advice as to how to entice her newly-wed
husband into having more sex, I told her to undress in the bathroom rather than
in the bedroom. She accused me of prudishness. I responded, "Disregard my
advice if you wish. But then you face the nightmare scenario: You and your
husband are married for four years. You come into the bedroom. You take all
your clothes off... And he continues to watch television."
The third law of erotic lust is
sinfulness. You're walking along a beach. You see beautiful women in bikinis.
Is that sexy? Perhaps. Is it erotic? Definitely not. What do most men do at a
beach? Either fall asleep, or play Frisbee.
But now you're walking home from the
beach. A woman has accidentally left the blinds to her bedroom open and she's
walking around in her undergarments. Same amount of clothing as a beach
exposing the same amount of flesh. Except this time it's not a bathing suit,
it's her underwear. What's the first thing that comes to mind? Where's my
Frisbee?
Now why is the second scenario so much
more erotic than the first? At the beach you are seeing something designed for
public consumption. But peering into the privacy of a woman's bedroom you are
witnessing something you're not supposed to see. It's forbidden. It's sinful.
It's erotic.
A cursory glance of world classics
demonstrates that it is not the righteous, loyal wife who fires the literary
imagination but the unfaithful, sinful wife, like Anna Karenina, Madame Bovary,
Tess, and Lady Chatterley, which explains why some women intentionally use
other men to make their husbands jealous. To be sure, adultery is the most
painful transgression of marriage and men who target married women because of
their attraction to the sinful aspect are pathetic, desperate failures
incapable of sustaining erotic excitement in a committed relationship. Still,
this debauched mindset reveals the enticing nature of sin. But now you know why
the Torah made a wife sexually forbidden to her husband for a portion of every
month, thereby injecting erotic sinfulness into a relationship. It's
specifically the person who is off-limits to you that you lust after. That's
why Sir James Goldsmith famously said that when a man marries his mistress he
leaves a vacancy.
The many who complain that religion creates sexual taboos in relationships forget that such taboos can often enhance lust, while a permissive society that makes sex so available turns it from chocolate to vanilla.
The many who complain that religion creates sexual taboos in relationships forget that such taboos can often enhance lust, while a permissive society that makes sex so available turns it from chocolate to vanilla.
Unlike the 'love marriage,' which is
based on closeness and constant intimacy, the 'lust marriage' is based on
separation, renewal, and a measure of distance. When Abraham is descending into
Egypt with Sarah, he says, "I now know that you are a woman of exquisite
beauty." I now know. Obviously, married to her for decades, he knew
before, but not completely. Sarah always maintained some mystery, some barriers
in their relationship.
When Rebecca meets Isaac for the first
time, she "took the veil and covered herself." Her first action was
to create mystery and ensure she never become fully revealed to her husband.
Why don't porn magazines save money by
doing a package deal that would pay one centerfold for all twelve of the year
rather than switching monthly? Because were it to do that no one would buy the
magazine. Once a woman is overexposed men lose interest and require someone
new.
The success of applying the Torah's
laws of lust to one's marriage and intimate life leads to a relationship
suffused with passion and excitement.
Rabbi Shmuley
Boteach, "America's Rabbi," is one of the world's most celebrated
relationships experts and is the international best-selling author of 29 books.
He was the host of 'The Shmuley Show' on the Oprah and Friends' Radio Network
and his national TV show, 'Shalom in the Home,' won the National Fatherhood
Award. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley
True talk @tobijolugbo. we all must know our role in a relationship.
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