Socyberty > Sexuality

Big O, Akin to Religious Experience

(Female) orgasm, that very much sought-after climax of sexual intercourse, is oftentimes likened to a religious experience. But do you know that the Church has a word on even intercourse? Do you think it's because of this "religious experience"?

For facility of treatment of our subjects, there is a need to first identify the big terms that we are to use.

Big O, or orgasm, is when a female sexual arousal is followed by engorgement and is signalled by muscle contractions that last from 4 seconds to 15 minutes, with an interval of .8 seconds.  The experience of it is subjective, since our brain comes to interpret physical stimuli subjectively (or so, as psychology tells us) -- that is, solely based on individual's perceptions.  However, accounts of how an orgasm feel mention a sensation of tingling in the spine, brain and genital areas.  Some women say they experience like being on verge of passing out, while others tell of a level of bliss.

To understand what is religious experience, the characterizations of William James (The Varieties of Religious Experience) about mystical or sacred or holy experience.  Religious experience is transient (that is, temporary, or after the experience the individual soon returns to his/her normal frame of mind), ineffable (i.e., cannot be adequately captured by words), noetic (that is, the individual feels that he/she is able to learn something from the experience), and passive (it means to an individual without control over it, or to -- in a manner of speaking -- turn it on and off).

Diverse, though, these two experiences are, there are some  who hold that one is a concrete, if not a usual, form of the other.  Orgasm is said to be an instance of religious experience.  At the superficial level, one says an orgasming lady is very often calling on "Oh, God!," while an in-depth probe would compare the enjoyment that accompanies the two experiences. 

This position is obviously debatable, especially if one considers religious experience to be an experience involving the sacred while orgasm is -- as "sexual" is normally construed -- mundane or of flesh.  And, precisely, this leads me to the meat of this article.

The Church defines its competencies: morals and faith.  In morals, the object of study is human act.  Human act has the elements of freedom, knowledge and free will.  Thus, by this definition, the Christian Church actually wants to say that there is no aspect of human existence that could be free from its "interference" -- at least, this is the term used by most people who are unsympathetic to organized religion.  And -- needless to say -- even the sexual act of couples naturally falls within the "competence" of the Church.

Not surprisingly, one finds official declarations from the Church about this subject.  In particular, even the use of what kind of contraception is categorized by the Church as either morally acceptable or not.  There is also a prescription concerning who can do it and with whom.  Not to mention that -- well, at least, to date, this is no longer given emphasis as before -- before the act starts the couples should clear their minds of other intentions aside from the desire to share in the procreative action of the Divine.

According to Cultural Anthropology, sex and sexual symbols are satiating most of the cultures.  This is true viz. that fact that every culture is also said to exercise a sort of "police control" over the sexual behavior of the members of society -- something which is said to be inherent in all cultures dealing with all other social behaviors insofar as cultures are bound for self-preservation.

I am tempted to think that the Church intends to control what happens in the bedroom because it is akin to, if not a, religious experience. 

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Comments (7)
#1 by cluves, Sep 21, 2008
The big O you are referring to in this article with a detailed description of how it is experienced by female is the objective of a sexual desire, while that of the "religious ecstasy experience" is spiritual. And yet true enough, they have similarities in at least two aspects - symptoms are manifested physically as well as emotionally and both are said to be the highest expressions of happiness in material and spiritual existence of a human being. On the other hand, while sexual desire is inherent to man, religious ecstasy experience is not afforded to everybody not even to all men and women in the religious life.

Big O's similarity to religous experience perhaps is not all the reason why the Catholic Church is imposing its influence and rules on the sacredness of the matrimonial bed. Or not simply because of the climatic utterance of "Oh God", which is not a general expression, I believe, opted the Church to be in charge in one way or another on this matter. To understand the spiritual aspects we cannot do away with the material point of view because material influences greatly affect our spiritual standing.

Sex in its purest sense should be use for begetting children within the sanctity of marriage between a man and a woman. But man as he is, exercising his free will, indulge in sexual activity to express his emotions of love and affection or just to satisfy his lust. The need for love and affection which he considered already as one of his basic emotional-physiological needs, carries with it the need for sex. And because of this propensity of man to justify his behavior to gratify his senses due to his insatiable needs and desires, the Church has its duty to provide guidance towards morality. I therefore post a positive note on the Church competencies to deal with this aspect. It is not only the Catholic Church that imposes some particular behavior or prescribed regulative principles in sexual activity but also holds true with other religions and culture.
#2 by Moron Savant, Sep 21, 2008
Yes, you are right that control or regulation is being exercise over sexual activities by different cultures and religions.
But, I would just like to bring to the fore that we have this kind of propensity to think respectful of the demarcation line between -- at least in this topic -- spiritual and material. Obviously, the spiritual is the category for the religious experience; the material is the category for the sexual experience. Many thanks to the Greek philosophers in particular to Plato who came up to their theories on dualism.
While justifications we will not run out for theoretically espousing dualism, I would like to put forward that one can also think along the line of holistic integration of things. Of course, we can likewise conceive of the spiritual side of the material or the material dimension of the spiritual -- emphasizing not their distinction, but their unity.
At the surface level, that the Church regulates even bedroom activities does not spring from the fact that sexual union is also a spiritual event. But, my intent is to point out that the Church has a view on sex and sexuality that is tied to olden philosophy and biology.
Is sex only really for married couple? Is its only reason is procreation? Does it mean that should couple enjoy the act, it comes only as accident to the act?
If only we can collapse the walls that we have erected to distinguish between things, we can all the more appreciate that God is truly Emmanuel...
#3 by Tortured Brainless, Sep 22, 2008
You are saying that a certian lady who reach orgasm says \" Oh God\",.It is true. Somehow, it is different aspect when saying those words in the sexual intercouse when reaching the orgasm..and saying those words also in praising God.When having sexual intercourse, one biologist said you come into a certain point that you are in the manner of animal instinct ..meaning you becomes wild..while in religious, the moralist said it is for sacred and religious purposes for deepening of faith.i come up with a certian point that sexual intercourse and on religious experience have something in common that is the still continiung search and you\'ve longing for. A certain people having sexual intercoure doesn\'t mean that he/she always satisfied and fullfilled. There is also a moment that it is dull and dry. Like in the church goers, very minimal who are in serious for their intentions.
#4 by Moron Savant, Sep 23, 2008
Thanks, Tortured Brainless, for pointing out that a common denominator between a religious act and a sexual act is a search for what is desired. Too, humanly speaking, it is not always "heaven" as you said. For there are dry moments in spiritual exercise (see the dark night of the soul mentioned by Christian mystics), as there are occasions in sexual intercourse when one is unsatisfied.
#5 by mundanely sacred, Sep 29, 2008
What you wrote brought to my mind what I learned in our Psychology class, i.e., per MRI/CAT scan results, the parts of the brain that are active during an intense religious experience are the very same parts that are active during orgasm. Interesting, isn't it?
#6 by Marion Suarez, Nov 14, 2008
you are a real savant! i thought you are writing only about politics and social issues but you still successfully connect sexual things into a deeper sociological perspective on society and sexuality. Now you are making me more curious if we already met somewhere in Diliman and chugged around for some beer in Sarah's, lol!
anyways, keep on writing good articles.
#7 by Moron Savant, Nov 14, 2008
i\'d been to diliman, marion. but i was not \"iskolar ng bayan,\" as i am short of what it takes to be in state university.
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