Are you sexually satisfied? Forgive me if that is not the kind of question you expect as the opening to a post here, but given how important sex is to life, to most people’s lives, and to the notion that if it matters in our lives, it matters to The Wisdom Daily, it feels totally appropriate to me. That, and it’s not like I am standing in front of you demanding an answer, after all. I am simply asking if you are sexually satisfied, and happily admit that I hope the answer is yes.
However you answer the question though, it turns out that if you bring God into bed with you, you are more likely to report greater sexual satisfaction, at least under some circumstances. There is actually a name for this phenomenon — a name I did not know until reading a new study which confirms the phenomenon, with which I was familiar. It’s called “Sacred Bed” and it describes the double edged experience of self-identified religious people, when it comes to sexual satisfaction.
Religious people report greater feelings of guilt and lower feelings of sexual satisfaction when they deem their behaviors to be out of line with their generally held religious views. On the other hand, those same people report higher levels of sexual satisfaction than reported in the general population, when the sex they are having falls within whatever their religious beliefs dictate. That’s the sacred bed effect, but I am not sure it’s as much about religion or God as it is about integrity and integration.
First, could it not be that people who were once more guilt-ridden regarding having what they considered to be illicit sex, now feel great simply by virtue of having licit sex? It’s kind of like running with ankle weights. When they finally come off, you feel so much lighter than the runner who never had them on.
Second, could it be that people in least sexually positive communities have lower expectations regarding sexual satisfaction and therefore report higher satisfaction than peers who bring greater expectations to bed with them? I am just asking…
To be clear though, for me, and for many other people who think of themselves as religious, or who try to live up to that adjective, all four of those things mentioned above – religion, God, integrity and integration – are related, so I think this whole Sacred Bed thing is great. I also think that we can probably expand our understanding of sacredness so that it works for people whether they consider themselves “religious” or not.
It makes sense that sex is more satisfying when you are having it in a context that integrates all of who you are, and is done with a sense of integrity regarding how you live your life even when you aren’t between the sheets. In fact, that should be the goal for all people, regardless of what they do, with whom they do it, or whatever powers they worship. The more present we get to be, the better the sex, no?
It’s also probably no accident that so many people shout, “Oh my God” at peak sexual moments. And if taking those shouts as seriously as I think we should is what we mean by being religious, I am definitely all for that!

Listed for many years in Newsweek as one of America’s “50 Most Influential Rabbis” and recognized as one of our nation’s leading “Preachers and Teachers,” by Beliefnet.com, Rabbi Brad Hirschfield serves as the President of Clal–The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, a training institute, think tank, and resource center nurturing religious and intellectual pluralism within the Jewish community, and the wider world, preparing people to meet the biggest challenges we face in our increasingly polarized world.
An ordained Orthodox rabbi who studied for his PhD and taught at The Jewish Theological Seminary, he has also taught the University of Pennsylvania, where he directs an ongoing seminar, and American Jewish University. Rabbi Brad regularly teaches and consults for the US Army and United States Department of Defense, religious organizations — Jewish and Christian — including United Seminary (Methodist), Yeshivat Chovevei Torah (Modern Orthodox) Luther Seminary (Lutheran), and The Jewish Theological Seminary (Conservative) — civic organizations including No Labels, Odyssey Impact, and The Aspen Institute, numerous Jewish Federations, and a variety of communal and family foundations.
Hirschfield is the author and editor of numerous books, including You Don’t Have To Be Wrong For Me To Be Right: Finding Faith Without Fanaticism, writes a column for Religion News Service, and appears regularly on TV and radio in outlets ranging from The Washington Post to Fox News Channel. He is also the founder of the Stand and See Fellowship, which brings hundreds of Christian religious leaders to Israel, preparing them to address the increasing polarization around Middle East issues — and really all currently polarizing issues at home and abroad — with six words, “It’s more complicated than we know.”