Chapter 10 – Kinsey and the Sexual Self

Alfred Kinsey, a biologist turned sexologist, sparked a cultural revolution with his studies on human sexuality in the 1940s and 50s. His work shattered taboos, challenged religious norms, and reframed sex as a matter of biology and personal freedom rather than morality and divine design.

This chapter explores how Kinsey’s vision contributed to the modern redefinition of identity, ethics, and the body.

The Kinsey Reports and Their Shockwaves

In Sexual Behavior in the Human Male (1948) and Sexual Behavior in the Human Female (1953), Kinsey presented data from thousands of interviews, suggesting that “deviant” behaviors—masturbation, homosexuality, premarital sex—were far more common than previously acknowledged.

To Kinsey, morality had to yield to empirical observation. What people do became the standard, not what they ought to do. Normal was redefined statistically, not ethically.

The shockwaves were immediate: sexual norms were no longer sacred, but cultural constructions ripe for revision.

The Body Without Transcendence

Kinsey treated sex as purely biological—a drive like hunger. He denied any higher moral or spiritual significance to sexual acts. Love, covenant, or purpose were irrelevant.

In this view, the body is not a temple, but a mechanism. Sexuality is not sacred, but instinctive. This flattened vision paved the way for the broader sexual revolution: if sex is only natural, then restrictions are only repressive.

Children, Consent, and Controversy

Kinsey’s methods were deeply controversial. He interviewed pedophiles, blurred ethical lines, and treated all sexual behaviors as data points, regardless of harm.

By avoiding moral judgment, Kinsey advanced a form of scientific amoralism—a stance that still haunts contemporary debates on sex education, childhood innocence, and the limits of consent.

Legacy: The New Moral Compass

Kinsey helped secularize sexuality. His influence is evident in how sex is taught in schools, portrayed in media, and understood by the public.

Desire became self-justifying. Orientation became identity. The moral compass shifted from fidelity and restraint to authenticity and exploration.

Biblical Response: Covenant and Holiness

The Bible offers a radically different vision of sexuality—rooted not in statistics or preference, but in covenant and holiness. Sex is a gift from God, ordered toward union and procreation, and governed by love and fidelity.

It is not just biological—it is theological, a sign of Christ’s love for the Church (Ephesians 5). The body is not a playground—it is a temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:19).

Desire and Discipline

Scripture acknowledges desire, but calls it to be disciplined and sanctified. The call is not to suppress sexuality, but to redeem it.

True freedom is not indulging every urge, but ordering our loves rightly—toward God and others.

The Image of God in the Body

Kinsey’s materialism eroded the sacredness of the body. But the biblical story restores it: the body is created by God, for His glory, and destined for resurrection.

We are not statistics—we are souls with bodies, made in God’s image. And that changes everything about how we see sex, self, and salvation.

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