The Metaphysical poets such as John Donne constantly try to connect the abstract with the concrete, the remote with the near, and the sublime with the commonplace in their poems. As T. S. Eliot mentioned, it is a poet`s role that amalgamates disparate experiences. Like Metaphysical poets, D. H. Lawrence tries to connect the seemingly heterogeneous experiences like sex and religion in his texts. To highlight significance and complexity of sexuality presented in The Rainbow, this paper pays attention to the similarity between Metaphysical poets` writing style and Lawrence`s approach to the world of senses. Although many Western readers have misunderstood Lawrence`s irrational and erotic approach to religion, his attempt offers a different point of view to the institutionalized Christianity, restoring the inner life that it originally contains. This paper examines Ursula`s struggle for reaching the original life force of religion against the moral and social repression of the day. In her struggle between the visionary world and the everyday life, we will find out how Lawrence restores sexuality as the source of life by connecting very different realms like sex and religion. The third section focuses on the world of senses to find how the human senses in this novel are significant in the way of restoring sexuality as a life force.