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Sexuality and Harmony: A Theological and Neurobiological Reflection 

Within the anthropological vision of the Universal Christian Church, sexuality is neither relegated to taboo nor confined to mere reproductive function: it is recognized as an essential component of the human being’s psychosomatic equilibrium—a bodily language that expresses tension, desire, and spiritual potential. The sexual act, when lived with awareness, respect, and dignity, becomes a profound expression that engages the totality of the person—mind, body, and soul.

Contemporary neuroscience confirms what spiritual wisdom has long intuited: regular, consensual sexual activity contributes to neuroendocrine regulation, promoting the release of oxytocin, dopamine, and serotonin—neurotransmitters associated with well-being, trust, and the reduction of stress. In this sense, sex is not merely pleasure, but also medicine: a natural mechanism for emotional and physiological rebalancing.

The Universal Christian Church, in its theological openness and its commitment to the integral health of the human being, affirms that sexual desire is part of divine creation—not a deviation from it. When experienced in harmony with the ethics of love, reciprocity, and responsibility, sex becomes a sacramental act, capable of generating not only biological life, but also relational, spiritual, and communal vitality.

In an age marked by repression, distortion, and alienation, it is urgent to restore sexuality to its rightful place within a theology of the body—not as an impulse to be suppressed, but as an energy to be understood, integrated, and sublimated. The Universal Christian Church thus invites a mature reflection, grounded in science and elevated in spirit, in which sex is neither denied nor idolized, but recognized as one of the deepest languages of the human condition.

In this perspective, sexual release—understood as the conscious and non-compulsive expression of desire—can help prevent psychological disorders, relational tensions, and forms of alienation. It is an act of reconciliation between body and spirit, between biology and transcendence. And as such, it deserves respect, education, and discernment.

The Universal Christian Church proclaims that holiness is not achieved by denying the flesh, but by understanding it. The body, far from being an obstacle, is the first temple of the divine presence.


Eleazar Majors, Founder of the Universal Christian Church

 
 
 

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