elohiym
Well-known member
"I don't feel like it," means she is not aroused. That is a good enough reason to say no.
I disagree. That's simply not how debts work. "I won't pay up because I don't feel like paying" isn't good enough.
You are implying sex is a currency within the marital economy that is owed like a debt. However, Romans 13:8 states: "Owe nothing to anyone except to love one another; for he who loves his neighbor has fulfilled the law." Nothing but love is owed, and sex isn't love.
elohiym said:Why should sex be obligatory when she is not aroused?
That's the nature of the marital obligation. Each party is required to accede to the demand of the other unless grave circumstances intervene.
If one demands yes and one demands no, why does the one not aroused have to accede to the other's demand? It's not logical. For your idea to work, a man would have to posses the right to reject his wife's reasonable demand to pass for lack of arousal.
(Note: She's probably not aroused because her husband thinks he has the right to demand sex whenever he wants and would force her if he has to. You would have to probably spend some time in prison to know what that's like.)
"You owe me five dollars." "Eh...my wallet's in my pocket...I don't feel like pulling it out..."
When she's not aroused there is no wallet and no pockets.
The only way that "I am not in the mood" could possibly fly is if this indicates a physical impossibility. For example, in the case of male dysfunction and a bad heart, he easily could say "no."
A woman not being aroused can be equivalent to male dysfunction, so you shot yourself with that concession. See female sexual dysfunction.
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