My friend Ken and I got into a conversation about religion the other day, which led fluidly to the subject of coitus interruptus.

I know what you’re thinking: isn’t it dicey to talk about religion? Not to worry. Ken and I are on the same page. We’re both apatheists (we don’t know and we don’t care). The coitus part came up in the context of the Bible. Ken said when he was a boy, he and his friends used to read the Bible to find the dirty parts. My first thought was that the porno scene in Kenya, where he grew up, must be pretty bleak.

But then I remembered my stock line when the Jehovah’s Witnesses come around and ask me if I’ve read the Bible. I tell them I tried, but there was too much sex and violence in it. So it makes sense after all.

Anyway, the part where the dude pulls out is in Genesis.

Of course, Genesis! That’s the book that starts with a bang (no word whether it’s a big one) and then it’s just one bang after another all the way through. The passage in question is in Chapter 38. Ken either looked it up on his phone or he had it memorized or that’s where the pages were stuck together. I didn’t ask. But I had a look.

Oh right, poor old Onan. I knew onanism means masturbation but I’d forgotten where it came from. Onan had the unhappy duty of having to follow levirate law and bang his brother’s widow in order to keep his brother’s lineage going. Them’s the rules, sonny boy. God had killed Onan’s brother Er, for some reason, and so Onan was supposed to knock up his widow. Any offspring that resulted would not be considered Onan’s, but his dead brother’s.

That’s not to everybody’s liking. According to the law, if, in fact, the surviving brother is not interested in the widow, she may tattle on him to the elders. And if that doesn’t work, then the widow is within her rights to come up to him right in front of the elders and pull off his sandal and spit in his face, and thereafter the brother will be called “Him whose sandal is removed.” The ignominy! Nobody wants that.

But Onan was not happy. Through no fault of his own, and only God knows why He took out his brother, Onan was put in a position he did not care for. Well, I don’t know what his actual position at the time was, but in any case he pulled out and spilled his seed all over the ground. He did not want to go to all that trouble to create a baby that would not be considered his. Personally, I don’t think it’s all that much trouble, but a woman’s opinion does not count for much in Genesis.

Now God was not happy. This never ends well, and it didn’t. God killed Onan. So much for the family lineage.

A few observations. One, God evidently likes to watch—eww. Two, of all people, “people” being used loosely here, wouldn’t God know that coitus interruptus isn’t a reliable method of birth control? Seems like young Onan should have been given another chance. But God does not like seed being spilled all over the ground. He takes it personally, even though he’s never the one having to clean up after the man has already started snoring.

Anyway, God, if you’re listening, it’s me, Murr. Honey? Pulling out doesn’t work. Ask Afghanistan. United States of America might have pulled out, but it’s still fucked.