You wrote:
I must say I am taken aback by your response. Perhaps we misunderstand each other. What I was saying is that the natural desires of the flesh can be satisfied within God's will (i.e. we keep his moral commandments and positive commandments. This does not mean we are satisfied to the point we will never be tempted to sin. But temptation itself is not a sin, only when we give in to temptation. Scripture informs us that Jesus was tempted in every way, just as we are.That doesn't make sense to me. In fact - strong language warning - that's ridiculous! Going beyond "the perimeter" is the temptation, and you cannot satisfy the sinful desires within the perimeter. If you could, they wouldn't be sinful desires!
Paul, I believe, speaks of this in 1 Corinthians, chapter 7, where he says that if a person has the gift of being single as he was that's great but if you burn with passion the be married. Marriage is life within the will of God (the perimeter).