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Proximity Doesn’t Create Sin — Character Does

  • Posted on February 21, 2026

There’s an assumption in some Christian spaces that if an unmarried couple gets “too close,” sex is inevitable.

As if desire automatically overrides discipline.
As if privacy guarantees failure.
As if adults lose all agency the moment a door closes.

But here’s a question:

If we assume a dating couple will automatically have sex when alone, isn’t that similar to assuming a married couple will automatically commit infidelity when they’re apart?

Both assumptions send the same message:

You can’t trust people with freedom.

Yet Scripture teaches something different.

In Galatians, self-control is listed as fruit of the Spirit. That means believers are not powerless. We are not animals driven only by impulse. We are capable of restraint.

And in 1 Corinthians 13, love is described as patient. Patient love does not rush physical intimacy. It does not demand proof through sex. It does not collapse under desire.

So why do we assume it will?

When we say,
“If you two go on a trip, you’ll end up sleeping together,”

we’re not just warning about temptation.

We’re quietly declaring a lack of trust in:

  • their character
  • their discipline
  • the Holy Spirit’s work in them

Now let’s flip it.

Would we say to a married person traveling for work:
“Be careful — since you’re alone, you’ll probably cheat”?

No. Because marriage is supposed to represent covenant, commitment, and integrity.

But integrity doesn’t magically appear at the wedding altar. It’s developed before it.

If someone cannot exercise self-control while dating, marriage won’t suddenly install it.

Rules can protect, yes. But fear-based assumptions don’t build holiness — they build suspicion.

Temptation exists whether someone travels together or not. Infidelity happens whether spouses are apart for a day or not. Sin isn’t created by opportunity.

It’s revealed by character.

The real issue isn’t proximity.
The real issue isn’t distance.

The real issue is maturity.

And mature love — whether dating or married — understands that faithfulness is a choice, not a coincidence.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: Church culture, Dating, Facts, Marriage, Sex, Truth
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