Sexual Shame: An Urgent Call to Healing

Sexual Shame: An Urgent Call to Healing

by Karen A. McClintock
Sexual Shame: An Urgent Call to Healing

Sexual Shame: An Urgent Call to Healing

by Karen A. McClintock

eBook

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Overview

This is the book that will provide pastors and congregational leadership the tools to identify the assumptions, behaviors, and structures that promote, while masking, sexual shame and to begin healing sexual shame both individually and corporately.

Chapter one provides a historic overview of theories of sexual shame; chapter two provides a theological framework for exploring issues of sexual shame; chapter three reviews Judeo-Christian biblical perspectives on sexuality; chapter four identifies twentieth-century cultural shifts in perspectives and attitudes on human sexuality and marriage that provide the context for the experience of sexual shame; chapter five identifies shame-based distortions of human sexuality; chapter six delineates the congregational context of sexual shame; chapters seven and eight offer models of recovery from sexual shame for both individuals and congregations.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781451412147
Publisher: Augsburg Fortress, Publishers
Publication date: 02/28/2001
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 457 KB

About the Author

Karen A. McClintock, MDiv, PhD, is a clergywoman and psychologist. She is a national lecturer, congregational consultant, and workshop leader. She teaches courses on trauma-informed care for clergy, laity, mental health professionals, and chaplains. She has written six books about congregational care. Her newest is When Trauma Wounds: Pathways to Healing and Hope (Fortress, 2019). She lives in Ashland, Oregon.

Read an Excerpt

From the Preface (pre-publication version):
The Many Faces of Sexual Shame
Perhaps you have picked up this book because you have experienced sexual shame. The feeling of shame underlies sexual dysfunction: impotence, lack of sexual drive, sexual compulsion, and incest. The experience of sexual shame underlies obesity in women and contributes to anorexia and bulimia. Shame in men may be experienced as impotence, depression, and addiction. Sexual identity shame is at the core of the hiding or "closets" that homosexuals and their families often live in. Sexual shame affects individuals, families, congregations, and communities.

Sexual shame erodes individual self-esteem, relational health, and congregational life. The parents of gay sons feel shame. People who don't live up to their own ideals as perfect lovers feel shame. Christians who live in committed partnerships without the contract of marriage feel shame about, "living in sin" in the eyes of the church. Congregations that restrict conversation about sexuality or repress it with taboos and stigmatization remain shame-bound.

Within each community and congregation there are members who have been living in deep shame. Shame may be reinforced through preaching and teaching about immorality and sin. Shame may be underneath an individual's hesitance to become active in a congregation. Shame may be the reason someone sneaks into the back row and sneaks out to the parking lot with a hope to not be noticed.

This book is offered as a resource for congregational discussion and for the personal liberation of those who have experienced shame in their families or in the church. I write it believing that we are all created in God's image, male and female, and that we were intended from the time of creation to live without shame. When God created the first man and the first woman they were created in God's perfect image. They were also "both naked, and [they] were not ashamed." (Gen 2:25 nrsv).

Some of the stories you will find in this text may produce discomfort. The experience of shame is deep and can become overwhelming. I encouraged you to talk with someone about the reading of this book, to invite dialogue with others in a church study or meeting. If you experience repressed memories or painful feelings as you read these stories, you are encouraged to call your local church or mental health help-line and seek support.

A Few Stories of Personal Shame:

Jenny, started running away from her family home when she was eight. Her stepfather often beat her. He wore big steel pointed cowboy boots and kicked her with them-on the legs, in the groin, in the face after she had fallen down. To get away she fled to her older cousin's house. They lived a quieter life. The cousin would play games with her and wrestle with her. And when they wrestled, he'd start touching her. He'd ask her to sit on his lap when he had erections. That's how it started. And it got worse. Jenny coped with it all by imagining herself to be a princess and him the prince. She imagined that someday he'd divorce his wife and marry her. When she grew up, he told her, she would be his forever. He wouldn't beat her or hurt her like her stepfather had. They would live happily ever after.

Jenny goes to church on Sunday. She sings in the choir. And she goes home and struggles with depression and physical pain. No one knows this about her. There is no where in the church for her to begin her healing. She is ashamed that she had sex with a married man. She is ashamed that she doesn't even have any sexual impulses as an adult. But somehow she experiences in church a little bit of God's grace, a little bit of love. The congregation members look at her and just think to themselves, "she's rather strange." She doesn't get invited to potlucks in people's homes. She imagines that none of the others who go to church could be as "bad" as she is.

Bill wants to be a better father and husband, and he asks for a Christian therapist. He wants to know how to improve his relationship with his wife. He talks about his marriage, his work, and his low level of depression. With a sadness I haven't seen in our first few sessions, he nervously says to me, "I think we need to have a little more romance." Okay, I ask, what are some romantic things you'd like to do? We make a list, but he is still restless. My intuition tells me that he can go deeper. "Would you feel comfortable telling me what your sex life is like?" He shifts a bit in the chair. "Well, its, you know, umm, we don't do it very often. Sometimes it's just fast and like we just do it, because well, you know I need to." He's shaking his head side to side. "Not very satisfying?" I asked. He has cast his eyes downward. They are glued to the floor. He quietly says, "No." As we explore this further I realize that he is ashamed of his own needs, ashamed of the way he uses his wife to release the tension, but doesn't really exchange pleasure with her. He so obviously values sexual intimacy, but he hasn't learned how to achieve it. His shame falls into the gap between the pleasurable mutual sexuality that he longs for and the fast release of physical tension that he engages in.

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