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Curiosity Is Not a Sin

  • Posted on January 25, 2026

We often treat curiosity about sex as if it’s something dirty, something shameful—especially when it comes to children and young people who have already decided they want to wait until marriage. But curiosity itself is not rebellion. It’s not disobedience. It’s not sin.

Curiosity is human.

Growing up means learning about your body, your emotions, and how connection works between people. Questions don’t mean someone is planning to act on anything. They mean they’re trying to understand the world they’re stepping into.

In many spaces—especially faith-based ones—silence is confused with purity. We think that if no one talks about it, no one will think about it. But silence doesn’t erase curiosity. It just pushes it into the shadows, where confusion and misinformation can grow instead of clarity and wisdom.

There is a difference between learning and indulging.
There is a difference between asking and doing.
There is a difference between understanding and crossing boundaries.

Healthy, honest conversations can actually protect young people. When someone understands what intimacy is—emotionally, physically, and spiritually—they are more empowered to make choices that align with their values, not just follow rules out of fear.

Waiting until marriage, when it’s a personal choice, becomes stronger when it’s informed rather than enforced.

We don’t raise pure hearts by raising silent minds.
We raise them by teaching discernment, respect, consent, and self-worth.

Curiosity isn’t the enemy.
Ignorance is.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: Educate, Facts, Sex, Talkaboutit, Truth
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Young Faith: My Story, My Struggles, My Triumph, My Faith by Shalonda Falconer with Lorian Tompkins