
SUMMARY:
In a relational and theological climate where feelings are routinely treated as moral verdicts, Governing Desire: A Torah Response to Limerence, Lust, and Love confronts a quieter but more pervasive crisis: the collapse of moral categories.
This is not an argument against desire, attraction, or passion. It is a corrective to the modern assumption that emotional intensity confers ethical legitimacy. With careful distinctions and scriptural discipline, the article exposes how limerence, lust, and love—three fundamentally different realities—have been collapsed into a single emotional register, with destabilizing consequences for courtship, marriage, and covenantal faithfulness.
Drawing on Torah ethics, biblical psychology, and covenant theology, the article argues that:
- Limerence is a powerful but pre-moral psychological state—intense, unstable, and real, yet not self-authorizing.
- Lust is not attraction itself, but desire severed from covenantal responsibility and moral order.
- Love, by contrast, is not a feeling to follow but a covenantal posture—chosen, answerable, and proven through endurance and faithfulness over time.
The deeper danger addressed is not immorality, but moral misdiagnosis. When emotional fluctuation is treated as ethical failure, covenant itself becomes fragile. When attraction is treated as the foundation of marriage, its inevitable ebb is mistaken for permission to exit. What follows is not freedom, but instability—desire ruling where it was meant to be ruled.
This article is not therapeutic moralism, purity culture, or romantic cynicism. It is a recovery of Torah’s third way: governance. Desire is not the enemy. Disorder is.
The conclusion is unambiguous:
Desire must be ruled, not obeyed.
Love must be governed, not felt into existence.
And a covenant must never be held hostage to emotion.