True Love Project: How the Gospel defines your purity
By Clayton King and Sharie King
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About this ebook
Answering that question is the life mission of Clayton King—a pastor and professor born to an unwed fifteen-year-old girl. King sets out to prove that there is a better way, a way that is more pure, more satisfying, and more fulfilling than any “love” that society is selling. He offers teens a mirror that allows them to reflect God through their relationships and the tools to fight for the redeemed purity offered by the sacrifice of Christ.
With the presentation of biblical relationships, scientific facts, and faith-building Scripture, the True Love Project is a call to embrace the true love that God has intended for us all.
Clayton King
Clayton King, a pastor, evangelist, missionary, and author, has been dedicated since age 14 to proclaiming the gospel and calling Christians to live out the life of Jesus. He has spoken to millions of people in 30-plus countries and written numerous books, including Dying to Live, Amazing Encounters with God, and 12 Questions to Ask Before You Marry, coauthored with his wife, Sharie. Clayton loves good books, the outdoors, strong coffee, dirt bikes and four-wheelers, and especially his wife and children.
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True Love Project - Clayton King
Copyright © 2014 by LifeWay Christian Resources
All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America
978-1-4336-8433-3
Published by B&H Publishing Group
Nashville, Tennessee
Dewey Decimal Classification: 248.83
Subject Heading: CHRISTIAN LIFE \ LOVE \
INTIMACY (PSYCHOLOGY)
Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture quotations are taken from the Holman Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2009 by Holman Bible Publishers.
Also used: New International Version (niv) copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society.
Also used: New King James Version (nkjv), copyright © 1979, 1980, 1982, Thomas Nelson Publishers.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 • 18 17 16 15 14
This book is dedicated to Joe and Jane King, my parents who adopted me when I was just a few weeks old. They didn’t have a perfect marriage, but they stayed faithful to Christ and to each other all the way until death. They taught me more about love through their example than I could learn from a thousand books.—Clayton
Is anything better in this life than a Krispy Kreme doughnut?
The absolute best are the ones straight from the Krispy Kreme store, fresh out of the oven, warm and gooey, before the glaze even starts to crackle.
And did you know that most Krispy Kreme stores turn on a red sign in their front window when a fresh batch of doughnuts has just come out of the oven? It says, HOT NOW.
When you see that sign, get in there as quickly as possible. Waiting just beyond that red neon is an explosion of tasteful bliss that’ll cost you less than a latte at Starbucks.
If you’ve ever had a Krispy Kreme doughnut, your brain is now reminding you of how good it tasted and how warm it felt in your mouth. If you’ve seen the HOT NOW
sign before, that glowing red image flashed in your mind. And at this moment you’re considering throwing this book down and running into town to grab a box (and a half gallon of milk).
You’re welcome.
Of course, it sounds innocent enough when I’m talking about doughnuts, but the scary thing I’ve learned is that this is the same way many young people think about sex. It’s appealing; it beckons. It’s tempting because you know it’s good (or at least you’ve been told it is), but you also know it can hurt you. It doesn’t cost you anything because, if both people want to, it’s free. And you can see HOT NOW
signs everywhere you look. On Facebook. On billboards. On TV. If you’re burning with desire, you can have sex now. A hookup. A booty call. A few clicks on the screen or taps on the phone, and you’re in business.
Our culture has devalued sex to the point that it’s considered with the flippancy of buying a box of doughnuts. It’s no more serious to most people than an impulsive turn into a doughnut shop. As much thought goes into sex as it does into the flavor of doughnut you want. And honestly, most people take more time to consider the negative effects of buying a dozen doughnuts than they do sleeping together, experimenting sexually, or looking at porn.
Why Not?
So what’s so bad about it?
Why should I abstain when everyone else is doing it?
If I’m smart enough to use protection, what’s the big deal?
If both of us agree, what’s wrong with it?
It’s my body. Who are you to tell me what I can do with it?
These are all valid questions. I’ve asked every one of them myself. And together we will explore answers to every one of them. But the main reason we should get serious about sex and what we do with our bodies boils down to one thing. Paul explains, Don’t you know that your body is a sanctuary of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought at a price. Therefore glorify God in your body
(1 Corinthians 6:19–20).
To his friends in Corinth, Paul points out the single most essential truth regarding sex. He wants them to understand that even though their entire culture was enjoying free and frequent sexual experiences, they were Christians, and they were different—they had been purchased by Jesus on the cross. Jesus paid a high price to liberate them from the slavery, guilt, and bondage of sexual sin. He gave His life for their freedom, and He gave them new purity, new holiness, and new identities.
The Backstory on Corinth
You understand that what God is asking of you seems impossible. If you’re even considering following His standard for love and dating and sex, it means you’re choosing to swim upstream against a tsunami of cultural pressure and expectations. It means you are defying the odds. You have the audacity to go against the tide. You may be singled out, and you will wonder if you’re missing out on all the fun of experimenting with your sexual curiosities. You may feel like you’re all alone.
But you’re not alone.
Moreover, you’re not even living in the most sex-obsessed culture that’s ever existed. Things have been worse before. Way worse.
Almost two thousand years ago, a small group of Christians lived in the city of Corinth. These are the same people Paul was speaking to in the verses above about their battle for sexual purity and holiness. Much as I’m writing these pages to help you, he wrote page after page to his Corinthian friends to help them. He encouraged them. He instructed them. He corrected them. He even rebuked them. Because he loved them and wanted the best for them, he admonished them to live lives that were set apart for the mission Jesus had given them to be witnesses of His gospel.
Corinth sat on the ocean, so it became a strategic port city for ships to dock. These ships would come from all over the world bringing goods to trade like gold and salt and silk and spices. Visitors and sailors were constantly coming into the city on ships and by road to bring goods to trade.
Along with the trade industry, another major business developed: prostitution. The ancient Greek and Roman worlds viewed sex as a commodity. People felt no shame in public displays of sexuality. Censorship did not exist. Sexual self-control was unheard of. Sexual appetites were meant to be fulfilled, and sexuality was celebrated and flaunted. So as Corinth became a major economic hub that attracted men from all over the world, those men often expected to have lots of sex when they arrived in Corinth.
The men got sex. The pimps who ran the industry got rich. And the prostitutes got used.
When I visited the remains of the city in 2004, the museum there contained artifacts and pottery and statues that testified to the prominence of the sex industry. Without going into too much detail, let’s just say that they were so obsessed with sex that the cups they drank out of and the plates they ate off of celebrated sexual encounters.
That was two thousand years ago. Their culture was depraved and confused just like ours. They were sinners just like us. And Christians had to swim upstream just like you. God didn’t change His standards or expectations for them just because it was hard. He won’t change them for your generation either.
God loves you and wants the best for you. He will continue to call you to holiness and purity. He will always be leading us and empowering us to live lives that are set apart for Him and His mission of redeeming and restoring the world.
You’re a child of God, dearly beloved, and on a mission in a culture that’s lost and confused. You’re part of God’s rescue mission to bring people into His kingdom. You represent the gospel in everything you do and say, especially in how you conduct your relationships and handle your body. The way you treat the opposite sex, the ways you entertain yourself, the images you view, the temptations you flee, and the sexual standards you live by are all ways you testify that you belong to Jesus Christ.
Not Now
Throughout this whole cultural sex war, we tend to forget one thing: God didn’t say sex was bad—quite the opposite. He created woman so that man would not be alone and commanded them to multiply! God made sex, and sex is good.
But God did say sex should happen within certain healthy guidelines. Outside of those guidelines we can expect consequences. So God isn’t saying no; He’s saying not now.
As a young, unmarried person, although you may have both the desire and the availability for sex, God’s Word offers a healthier approach than HOT NOW.
Hence the True Love Project.
Within the pages of this book, we’ll talk about those guidelines and the consequences for not following them. We’ll see the scientific evidence that backs up God’s Word and discuss the real reasons for staying pure. I’ll show you the power you’ve been given to make it happen and offer hope to those who feel they’ve already ruined their chances. Above all that, we’ll discover that the ultimate goal has little to do with sex and everything to do with Jesus.
Project: Impossible
My mother was fifteen and unmarried when she had me. I was practically born knowing the struggles with sexual sin. I know that this mission for purity, this True Love Project, is impossible to do alone.
But we are not alone.
We have the Creator of the universe—an all-powerful, all-knowing God—on our side, fighting for us, encouraging us to hold on, to fight.
Our lives matter, and so does what we do with our bodies. If you are just beginning to understand and explore your sexuality, this is for you. If you feel dirty and condemned because you didn’t wait, this study is for you too. This project is for all of us, to strengthen our lives and to help us come together in a closer walk with God, to guide us in glorifying Him with all we do.
I pray that wherever you are in your journey, this book will help to light your path. I hope you will find a solid basis for maintaining your purity and that it will be anchored in Christ—our only pure example of true love.
For I know the plans I have for you
—this is the Lord’s declaration—plans for your welfare, not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.
—Jeremiah 29:11
Few people can resist a good story.
A riveting book, a blockbuster movie, or a friend at school telling what happened last weekend—there’s something about a great story that draws you in and keeps you there. Sure, some people prefer adventure; others prefer a good mystery. I enjoy historical documentaries, and my wife enjoys adventure and drama. But whether you’d rather watch a romantic comedy or read a fantasy novel, the magnetic pull is the same. To be a good story, it must first contain some basic, essential elements.
The Plot
This is the big idea that everything revolves around, and you can usually tell what it is pretty early. A guy is trying to win the love of a lady. Two people who were separated are desperately trying to be reunited. A detective is solving a crime. Mystical creatures are on an epic quest to throw a powerful ring into the fires of Mount Doom. The Nazis are trying to capture the ark of the covenant (my personal favorite, Raiders of the Lost Ark). Or a werewolf and a vampire are fighting over the same girl (not that I know anything about that . . . a friend told me).
The Characters
These are the people who move the plot along. The more involved the characters are with the plot, the more invested you become in the story. Often you can tell who the good guys are and who the bad guys are. Other stories leave more ambiguity with traces of both good and bad in the main characters. You can also call them the protagonist (good guy, main character) and the antagonist (bad guy, the enemy). You could even boil it down to the hero and the villain. Then the other supporting characters come alongside the hero and villain and play specific roles in the overall plot. As the story moves along, the characters develop, and we begin to learn about them: their backstories, their strengths, their flaws, and their fears. We connect with these characters as they play their roles in the bigger story.
The Conflict
Without conflict there is no story. That’s what makes a movie worth paying money to see. Early on in any good book, you recognize