In a recent interview an
actress who recently did her first nude scene in a movie explained her
discomfort the first time she disrobed on the set before the director,
cameramen, and other members of the cast. She explained how reluctant
she was, how awkward she felt — as though she at first felt a sense of
shame. She then noted how much more comfortable she became and how much
easier it was with each take and repeat of the scene as the director
worked to get it just right.
This illustrates how in
time, with continued practice, any person can become shameless and
insensitive to shameful actions. It has happened in this country with
fornicators, abortionists, homosexuals, lewd dancers, divorces for
frivolous reasons, and nudity and filthy speech on TV and in the movies.
Our sense of shame as a nation is all but lost and we, as Israel of old,
no longer know how to blush
(Jeremiah 6:15; 8:12).
But let's get back to the
subject of nudity. Shame has been associated with nakedness since the
sin of Adam and Eve, who hid themselves in embarrassment and tried to
cover their bodies with fig-leaf aprons. Jesus, in the book of
Revelation, joins shame to nakedness a couple of times
(Revelation 3:18; 16:15).
And in the case of Adam
and Eve, God replaced their inadequate aprons with coats of skin which,
according to Wilson's Old Testament Word Studies, were garments that
generally had sleeves and came to the knees (p. 81). It is also
interesting that God made undergarments for the priests that covered the
thighs to hide the nakedness that could be seen under their outer
garments when they climbed the high steps up to the altar
(Exodus 28:40-42).
All of this should be put
in the context of marriage — the honorable and pure relationship in
which men and women may view one another's bodies and join themselves in
a one-flesh relationship
(Hebrews 13:4).
Jesus made it clear that viewing the body of one to whom you are not
married and lusting after it is impure and adulterous in heart and
thought
(Matthew 5:27,28).
Men and women are, as a result, responsible to clothe themselves in a
way that such illicit thinking is not provoked.
This begins with a sense
of shame and sensitivity about exposing breasts, private parts, and
thighs to someone other than your mate. This, we believe, is the meaning
of nakedness in the Bible. Women need a sense of shame about wearing
low-cut and short clothing which expose areas of their bodies that only
their spouse has a right to look upon. And so it should be with the men.
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