marriage bed symbol

marriage bed symbol

Sunday, November 18, 2018

I've Always Been Temple Worthy, Why Would I Need To Be Tested For STDs?


Should  married couples in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints be tested for STIs? Is that really necessary?

While we are raised to be chaste before marriage, the reality is that many youth in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints have sex before marriage. There are also those who were not raised as members of the church but join later in life, and yes, some were sexually active before becoming the stalwart shining members they are now.

While they may sincerely make restitution and repent before serving missions or receiving their endowments in the temple, unfortunately confession and the repentance process don’t eliminate physical consequences.

Most people, when they think of “fornication” and abusing their “powers of procreation”, they think that the most important reason for avoiding this, and the worst thing that could happen to them, is pregnancy.

While out-of-wedlock pregnancy can be devastating to a family and a child’s life economically, psychologically and and even spiritually, physically it is far from the worst thing that can happen to you.

Statistically[i], one in 124 of all people age 10 and older in the United States carry an STI (sexually transmitted infection) of some kind today. In 1994, one in four adolescents had an STI before graduation from high school, and the CDC reports that number higher today.  Some of the many diseases we can contract are chlamydia, several varieties of HPV (also called genital warts), gonorrhea, syphilis, hepatitis B & C, herpes, HIV, AIDS, pubic lice, trichomoniasis, bacterial vaginosis, water warts, chancroid, scabies,  molluscum contagiosum, and lymphogranuloma venereum, to name a few.

Many of these we can get stuck with for life. Chlamydia is one of the most common and most dangerous because it’s silent, but most easily cured if caught early. Men can be a silent carrier, and if a woman is unaware, it can leave her sterile as the bacteria can severely scar her Fallopian tubes. None of these are a nice wedding present to surprise your new husband or wife with.

Several of these STIs can even be passed on to an infant. Because of this, even if you were abstinent before marriage (ie. no intercourse of any kind or any other contact with the genitals of anyone else), you could still be carrying an STI if you contracted one at birth.

If we have sexual contact with another person before marriage, repentance is possible, and we can be clean and worthy again, but please get tested and let your fiancĂ©/fiancee know. Ask them to also get tested and (because some STIs – like HIV- can stay hidden for months and even years), get tested regularly to make sure you are clean or at least able to manage the infection.

We can repent, but we can’t escape the physical consequences for transgression and sin. It’s best not to pass those consequences on to an unsuspecting spouse.  Another great reason for abstinence before marriage and full fidelity after marriage.  

Some may say “but I always wore a condom”.  Condoms prevent pregnancy, not disease. Condoms such as lambskin are porous and may allow STIs to pass through. Condoms can’t protect you from all STIs – such as HPV. Even the CDC says that the safest sex is monogamy, but even that isn’t 100% safe. Thus the importance of considering testing, even after marriage.  Ignorance is expensive, which is why I’m sharing this information with my readers.

Please be sure to share this with your children, spouse and anyone else you love. If you are unsure, get tested. Ask your spouse to get tested. And don’t keep secrets. Secrets can hurt everyone, physically and spiritually.

For additional information on what the General Authorities have said regarding this topic, I’ve put some links below for further reading.[ii],[iii],[iv],[v]


[ii] Hinckley, Gordon B. Reverence and Morality, April 1987 General Conference : https://www.lds.org/general-conference/1987/04/reverence-and-morality?lang=eng
[iii] Maxwell, Neal A., Take Especial Care of Your Family, Apr. 1994, Gen. Conf: https://www.lds.org/general-conference/1994/04/take-especial-care-of-your-family?lang=eng
[iv] “Obedience to the law of chastity would diminish cries for abortion and would go a long way toward controlling sexually transmitted disease.” Wirthlin, Joseph B., Fruits of the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ, Oct. 1991, Gen. Conf: https://www.lds.org/general-conference/1991/10/fruits-of-the-restored-gospel-of-jesus-christ?lang=eng
[v] “Your foes in a sordid society demean the sacredness of women and the sanctity of motherhood. Your world, sickened by unchastity and plagued with sexually transmitted disease, needs your righteous example.” Nelson, Russell M., Lessons from Eve, Oct. 1987, Gen. Conf: https://www.lds.org/general-conference/1987/10/lessons-from-eve?lang=eng

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