What does the Bible say about sex choking/strangulation?

What does the Bible say about sex choking/strangulation?
Fall Sin

TL;DR:

The Bible presents sexual intimacy within marriage as loving, honoring, and protective. Practices like sexual choking distort God’s design for intimacy by replacing selfless, covenantal love with domination, danger, and selfish gratification.

from the old testament

  • Sexual intimacy is consistently framed as something good, covenantal, and life-giving within marriage, not something that involves harm or domination. God created marriage as a “one flesh” union between husband and wife (Genesis 2:24), and the joy of marital love is celebrated as something pure and life-giving (Proverbs 5:18–19; Song of Solomon 4:1–10). Strangulation or choking does not match those values.
  • Throughout the Old Testament, God also emphasizes the value and sanctity of human life (Genesis 9:6) and condemns violence and abusive treatment of others (Psalm 11:5; Malachi 2:16), principles that should shape how spouses treat one another in every aspect of marriage, including sexual intimacy.
  • God repeatedly forbids violence against others because human life is sacred (Exodus 20:13). While this is about murder, the principle shows God’s stance that intentionally harming another person is outside His design for human relationships.

from the new testament

  • Love is selfless and seeks the good of the other (1 Corinthians 13:4–5). True love never seeks pleasure at the expense of another person’s safety or dignity.
  • Marriage is modeled on Christ’s love for the church (Ephesians 5:25). This is sacrificial, protective love, not love that risks harm or exerts domination.
  • We are commanded to seek the good of others. First Corinthians 10:24 says, “Let no one seek his own good, but the good of his neighbor.” This is even more important and relevant in marriage, where the spouse is not a “neighbor at a distance” but one’s closest earthly covenant partner.
  • The body is not meant for harm but for the Lord (1 Corinthians 6:19–20). This includes honoring your spouse’s body as something to be protected, not endangered.

implications for today

A culture saturated with pornography and distorted views of intimacy has increasingly normalized sexual practices that are harmful and degrading. But these distortions move sex away from God’s design and reshape intimacy into something centered on self-gratification, power, or extreme stimulation rather than selfless love and covenantal unity. Violence and sexual deviance cannot coexist with genuine affection.

God designed marriage to be a safe, honoring, joyful, loving, selfless, and life-giving relationship where a husband and wife cherish one another as image-bearers of God, pursuing intimacy marked by trust, tenderness, faithfulness, and sacrificial love. Biblical love does not seek to overpower, degrade, frighten, or harm another person; it seeks to protect, honor, and sacrifice for them.

A relationship that reflects Christ should leave people feeling cherished, secure, and deeply valued — not degraded, controlled, or endangered. The more our culture celebrates intimacy stripped of love and holiness, the more it reveals how far we have drifted from the beauty of God’s design for marriage and intimacy.

understand

  • God designed sexual intimacy within marriage to be loving, safe, honoring, and life-giving, not harmful or degrading.
  • True love seeks the good, safety, and dignity of the other person rather than control, domination, or selfish gratification.
  • Practices like sexual choking distort God’s design for intimacy by introducing danger and harm into what was meant to reflect selfless, covenantal love.

reflect

  • How are you encouraged by God's design for sexual intimacy?
  • What encourages you to uphold God's design for sexual intimacy in a world with a degraded view of sexuality?
  • In what ways are you guarding your mind and heart from distorted messages about intimacy, pleasure, and relationships?

engage

  • What factors have contributed to modern culture increasingly confusing domination, danger, or degradation with genuine intimacy and love?
  • How should a Christ-centered understanding of marriage reshape how couples think about intimacy?
  • How does upholding a biblical vision of sexuality serve as a public testimony to God’s character, design, and true, selfless love?