When Christian men struggle with pornography or sexual sin, the language they use to describe this battle matters more than they realize. Recently, some Christian ministries have adopted the term “unwanted sexual behavior” (USB) to describe what the Bible clearly calls sexual immorality, adultery, or fornication. While this softer terminology may seem compassionate or clinically precise, it fundamentally undermines biblical repentance and genuine freedom from sin. The shift from biblical language to therapeutic euphemism is not merely semantic—it represents a dangerous departure from how Scripture addresses sin and shapes our understanding of God’s holiness, our accountability to others, and the very nature of repentance itself.
Sin Reduced to Mere Activity
The phrase “unwanted sexual behavior” strips sin of its moral dimension and reduces it to a neutral activity that simply happens to be undesirable. It’s language borrowed from psychology, not theology. When we call pornography us
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