Trailblazer
Veteran Member
I agree that society has become more evil. That is because people want what they want and they do not care what God wants for them anymore. So regarding sex "anything goes" in modern day society, and if we speak out against that we are looked upon as some kind of freak, but that does not bother me because I know what God has revealed and that is what I will adhere to.Nowadays, oral sex is accepted as commonplace in relationships but that didn't use to be the case, and one has to ask themselves why. It's because society has become more evil. And the sad thing is, most people don't have the conscience to make a distinction between right and wrong. We all know the right way to have sex don't we? We know it. Who complains about having sex the right way? It's no point pretending that everything is up in the air and we don't have any sort of direction. If there's a right way to have sex, there must be a wrong way to have sex too and oral sex is a wrong way to have sex.
Following are some quotes from letters written by the Guardian of the Baha'i Faith.
"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."
Lights of Guidance (second part): A Bahá'í Reference File, pp. 364-365
“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 Bahá'ís do not believe in the suppression of the sex impulse but in its regulation and control.”
Lights of Guidance (second part): A Bahá'í Reference File, pp. 364-365
The following is from Bahá'u'lláh's Book of Laws.
“The Bahá’í teachings on sexual morality centre on marriage and the family as the bedrock of the whole structure of human society and are designed to protect and strengthen that divine institution. Bahá’í law thus restricts permissible sexual intercourse to that between a man and the woman to whom he is married.” The Kitáb-i-Aqdas, p. 223