If I were "full of me" I'd be backsliding.
One of the terrible consequences of being backslidden is that those who are often have no idea that they are. This is especially the case when, all around, the backslidden person sees only other backslidden people. In any case, a man full of himself can be very religious, very pious, very careful of the rules, as the Pharisees were. But their hearts were far from God, as Jesus pointed out. So, too, the heart of a pious, religious man of today who thinks to accomplish a godly end by means of his own human powers.
Be sad if you like, I rejoice over God's grace, for He has set me free.
Has he? I don't think this is the case, from what you've written. You don't understand God's "way of escape," as it's laid out in Scripture, at all, it appears.
I'm only emptying myself of you, who contradicts his own warning about the "desires of the flesh" by teaching that "God has made us sexual beings".
God hasn't made us sexual beings? Is God not our Creator, then? From what other source do our sexual organs, hormones and interest derive? It was God who said to Adam "be fruitful and multiply." It was God who shaped Adam from the dust of the earth into a being who could do so.
Well how can you be a "sexual being" without "desires of the flesh"?
??? The desires of the flesh are not
intrinsically evil. When they are under God's control, subordinated to His will and way, as they're supposed to be, they are entirely right and good. God made us capable of, and wanting to, eat food, and rest, and procreate, and enjoy beautiful vistas, and splash about in the ocean, and delight in music, art and good stories. Only when we partake in these things out from under God's control do these desires of the flesh grow inordinate and evil.
A "sexual being" doesn't belong to God's kingdom, 'cause we'll all be made new, from corruptible to incorruptible, and there'll be no sex in resurrection (Matt. 22:30).
An infant is weak physically, vulnerable and dependent, unable to communicate except in the most primitive manner, unable to control his/her bowels or bladder, entirely occupied with him/herself. Is the infant, then, a wicked creature, because of its immaturity to be despised and avoided? Of course not. The baby is in a continuum of growth and change and will, in due time, grow strong physically, able to speak and feed him/herself, and do all the basic things an adult, mature human being can do. No reasonable person, then, looks upon an infant and thinks that, because it will in the future be more than it is at present, it is an evil thing.
And so, the fact that one day our "corruptible" physical bodies, susceptible to disease and injury and moving inevitably to death, will one day be "incorruptible" and forever impervious to these things does not mean our bodies are therefore presently evil. Our temporal, physical forms are made fit for a temporal, physical existence by God and are, as such, just as they ought to be, sexual impulses and all. When we move on to another supernatural, eternal existence, our bodies will be made by God fit for that existence. But this change to our bodies doesn't indicate that the first "corruptible" temporal condition of our bodies is intrinsically evil, only, like the infant yet to grow into adulthood, in a weaker, less durable, less advanced condition.
As long as you phrase your advice by calling it a "battle", you're still fighting sexual immorality instead of fleeing from it, and you don't seem to understand what porn really is, why it's evil and how it defiles us, you're just reacting to it like all those Christian teachers you disparaged, and those teacher at least offered some practical tips instead of being self-righteous.
There is no fleeing your natural, God-given, sexual drive, the temptation of the devil, and the pull of the sin-nature you've inherited from Adam. You can avoid places where temptation might be magnified, but you cannot avoid these other things. So, the "battle" is very real and unavoidable - but it can be won for you by the Holy Spirit as you walk in loving, faithful submission to Him.
The "way of escape" I've described in the first several posts to this thread is far more practical than anything you've offered. God's "way of escape" is so because it is His way, the way of the One who knows better than us all how best to deal with sin. That you deny this simply exposes the depth of your spiritual understanding and so, the character of your walk with God.
I'm not being self-righteous, by the way, but simply stating what God's word says, faithfully and directly. My hope, my motivation, is to aid my fellow siblings in Christ to a deeper, fuller enjoyment of their holy Maker and all the wonderful things that result from fellowship with Him. But, we live in a time when the idea that some believers might be more mature, more knowledgeable, more seasoned in the faith, than others, enjoying better, richer communion with God than other believers is abhorrent. No, we must all, no matter how long we've walked with God, admit to being no farther along with Him than anyone else. The idea, I suppose, is to make the spiritually weaker, immature and ignorant believer feel better about their condition, but the result of doing so is a widespread belief in the Church that spiritual growth, real transformation by the Spirit, doesn't actually ever happen. And so, many Christians have grown very confident and complacent in their spiritual immaturity, thinking that real, concrete change at their core is impossible, and that those who claim they've had such a change are just "self righteous."
In any event, you can certainly spurn what I've shown you, stubbornly holding to your ideas about Christian living. The only one who loses out when you do is you. Okay. If that's fine with you, so be it. - *Shrugs* - I'm only a messenger, responsible solely for delivering the truth faithfully and clearly and living in it myself. I have no responsibility for what anyone else does with the truth.
Tell you what, those poor men you claim you have counseled still lust for their Jezebels in their heart, but not me.
Uh huh. I've heard this sort of thing before - usually from those guys most badly caught in porn. Addicts often deny they've an addiction, you see. You may, though, be as you claim to be. I hope so. But neither God's word, nor personal experience incline me to think that you are.
I have zero desire to possess anybody as a "sexual being“.
Uh huh.