Ideas about what works well, or different things you can try, are all great. Kevin Leman in Sheet Music gives very explicit, detailed instructions on sex, which sound voyeuristic. The problem comes when you add in emotionally laden words. It’s actually good! When you talk about different body parts, and how to stimulate them, etc., all is peachy keen. Main Segment: When Does Explicitness Cross a Line? So my intro is a little off! But you know what I mean. But there were some disturbing elements that we talk about today:īy the way, we recorded THIS one before we recorded the one on the Act of Marriage, and I originally intended that to be a 2-week podcast with both Becca & Connor, but it didn’t work out that way. It wasn’t a terrible book, by any means at all (The Gift of Sex scored really, really well, by the way!). In last week’s podcast, we read The Act of Marriage so you didn’t have to! And in this week’s podcast, we want to look at a broader theme about why sometimes you can be reading a book, and think, “eeeeFor our upcoming book The Great Sex Rescue, we read all the best selling Christian books about sex and marriage, and rated them on 12 different aspects of healthy sexuality teaching. Instructional sex advice is wonderful in Christian books.
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