Why in the church virginity/abstinence is only pushed onto young girls/women but not onto young boys/men?
This happens for cultural, historical, and power-related reasons, not because the Bible or Christian faith actually places sexual responsibility only on women. What you’re noticing is real—and many theologians and church leaders now openly critique it.
Here are the main reasons this imbalance exists:
1. Patriarchal culture shaped church practice
For centuries, churches operated inside male-dominated societies where:
- Women were viewed as property tied to family honor
- A woman’s sexuality was seen as something to “protect” or “control”
- Men’s sexual behavior was excused as “natural” or inevitable
These cultural ideas got mistakenly wrapped in religious language, even when they weren’t biblical.
2. Virginity became about “purity,” which was feminized
Churches often equated:
- Female virginity = moral worth
- Male virginity = optional or unrealistic
This created:
- “Purity culture” aimed almost entirely at girls
- Modesty rules focused on female bodies
- Silence or jokes when boys failed, but shame when girls did
That’s not holiness—that’s gendered shame.
3. Women bear visible “consequences,” so they’re policed more
Historically:
- Pregnancy exposed sexual activity in women, not men
- Churches tried to avoid “scandal” by controlling women
Instead of holding men equally accountable, responsibility was placed on women to prevent sin, temptation, and embarrassment.
4. Misuse of Scripture
The Bible does not teach sexual restraint only for women.
Scripture consistently says:
- “Flee sexual immorality” — to everyone (1 Corinthians 6:18)
- “This is God’s will… that you abstain” — addressed to men and women (1 Thessalonians 4:3–5)
- Jesus raises the standard for men, condemning lust in the heart (Matthew 5:28)
Yet churches often:
- Quote verses about women’s modesty
- Ignore verses that confront male desire, responsibility, and self-control
That’s selective teaching.
5. Control and silence
Focusing purity on girls:
- Trains women to be submissive and quiet about desire
- Makes it harder for women to name abuse or coercion
- Protects male authority by avoiding scrutiny of men’s behavior
This is especially harmful for survivors of sexual abuse, who are often blamed or spiritualized instead of protected.
6. Jesus never treated women this way
Jesus:
- Never shamed women for sexuality
- Held men accountable for lust and exploitation
- Defended women from public humiliation
- Valued women beyond sexual status
The double standard you’re describing is anti-Christ, even when it claims to be Christian.
Bottom line
Virginity and abstinence were never meant to be a burden placed on girls alone.
When churches:
- Police women’s bodies
- Excuse men’s lack of discipline
- Tie female worth to sexual status
They are teaching culture, not Christ.