Too often, conversations about relationships—especially in religious spaces—focus only on whether something is morally right or wrong, like labeling cohabitation as fornication. But what gets overlooked is something far more urgent: safety. Living together does not automatically mean a relationship is healthy, consensual, or safe. Many women and men find themselves feeling obligated to have sex simply because they are in a relationship or share a home. That sense of obligation is not love—it can be a sign of sexual coercion.
- Posted on March 20, 2026
Consent is not defined by relationship status. It is not owed, assumed, or guaranteed. True consent is freely given, without pressure, fear, guilt, or manipulation. If someone feels they cannot say no without consequences—like arguments, withdrawal, or threats to the relationship—that is not genuine consent. That dynamic can fall under sexual abuse, even if it doesn’t look like what people traditionally expect abuse to be.
When we reduce these conversations to sin alone, we risk silencing people who are struggling in unsafe situations. We teach them to feel shame, but not how to recognize harm. We warn them about moral failure, but not about emotional or physical danger. A truly responsible conversation must include both: values and safety. Because a relationship can be labeled “wrong” and still be safe—or labeled “acceptable” and still be deeply harmful behind closed doors.
It’s time to shift the focus. This is not just about right versus wrong. It is about safe versus unsafe, respected versus pressured, and chosen versus forced.