Infidelity
Recently, Paul Sheehan had an extremely silly article encouraging bored and frustrated middle-aged women to be unfaithful to their husbands. A few days later in The Sydney Morning Herald, Andrew Cameron, ethics lecturer at Moore College, responded:
In his clarion call for “middle-aged” women to leave their arid marriages, Paul Sheehan effects the posture of gallant ally to unhappy women in the struggle against “routine, obligation, fear, guilt and the dogma of the Judeo-Christian-Islamic religious tradition” (“In praise of desire and infidelity”, February 18).
But sexual politics can blind us to the obvious. Put his rhetoric of liberation on hold and consider: what would we have thought if the cardigan-wearing cynic, and the fat slob with the remote, were women? What if men were urged not to pretend they are “middle-aged”, and to go forth and renew their sensuality with nubile young things?
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In an argument throughout the Gospels, Jesus attacks his contemporaries for their divorces of convenience to remarry young things, and “everyone who looks at a woman to lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart” (Matthew chapter 5, verse 28). The point is not to amplify male guilt. He wants men to direct their sexual energy toward their wives, as in the ancient proverb “Take pleasure in the wife of your youth ... be lost in her love forever.”
There are many other good things in Andrew's response so make sure you have a read.








