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PASTOR'S
PERSPECTIVE ON
PORNOGRAPHY AND OUR CHILDREN
By Ligon Duncan
I had the privilege of teaching
the Lifelearners Sunday School Class last week, and talked about
the way that technology is challenging our parenting, particularly
in the area of purity (and the exposure to readily available pornography).
It brought to mind a good article on this subject written by my
friend (and web guru) Tim Challies. I freely excerpt here what
Tim observed.
First, Tim commented on a new American
Psychological Association study that shows that both boys and
girls are hurt by porn:
The saturation of sexualised images of females is leading to body
hatred, eating disorders, low self-esteem, depression, high rates
of teen pregnancy and unhealthy sexual development in our girl
children. It also leads to impaired cognitive performance. In
short, if we tell girls that looking 'hot' is the only way to
be validated, rather than encouraging them to be active players
in the world, they underperform at everything else.
This APA report goes on to say:
The sexualisation of girls is not just shattering the lives of
girls and women, it is preventing boys and young men from relating
to girls and women as complex human beings with so much to offer
them. It is preventing boys from forming healthy friendships and
working relationships with girls and women.
Tim goes on to say:
Pornography does prevent boys from forming normal and healthy
relationships with girls. Implicit in pornography is the understanding
that women exist to be exploited, and exist primarily for the
pleasure of men. They do not need to be embraced as friends or
wooed or admired. Rather, they are to be conquered, used and left
behind. Boys that immerse themselves in pornography are not able
to fulfill their God-given roles as leaders and protectors. They
are, instead, exploiters.
Then Tim shared some analysis from a second study, based on information
from 13 and 14-year-olds.
'(The researcher) asked about their exposure to and use of sexually
explicit material on TV, DVDs, movies and the Internet, as well
as about their interaction with their parents about such material.'
She found that 35% of boys and 8% of girls had already watched
pornography more times than they could count. Even more alarmingly,
the parents of these children were completely oblivious to their
kids' addictions.
This is the culture we live in. Our children
will be exposed to this; if not through school, it will be through
the church. It may be through a seemingly-innocent Google search.
But sooner or later our children will see pornography movies and
images. It is going to happen. And we, as parents, need to be
prepared. Here are just a few suggestions:
Prepare to take preventive measures
on behalf of your children. The best thing you can do is to
ensure that the computer is in a public, high-traffic area. Password
the computer so the children can only use it only when other people
are around. I have found most porn-prevention software to be utterly
useless (either it blocks everything or it blocks nothing) but
you may be able to find some that is useful. Do not allow your
children to have a computer in their rooms and do not allow them
to have their own televisions.
Monitor the use of instant messenger
software and web browsers. Let your children know that you
will be monitoring what they see, do and say on the computer and
that they will not be able to view pornography without you knowing.
Be sure you know how to look through a computer's history to see
what your children have been looking at.
Be especially careful with sites like
Google Video and YouTube. In many ways these sites, which
can seem innocent (and most often are) feed the porn industry.
It is a small step from videos of girls kissing and other exploitive
videos to pornography. Many of the videos on these sites exist
only as a bridge to other sites that are far less innocent.
Talk to your children about pornography
and do so before they encounter it for the first time. In
my generation, most boys were probably thirteen or fourteen before
we were introduced to pornography, and even then it was typically
difficult to obtain. Today it is as close as a Google search,
and most children will be introduced to it far earlier. Teach
your children about real sex, and about pure sex, and about God's
plan and desire for sex. Talk to them about pornography, not leaving
it as 'pornography is filthy and disgusting,' but discussing why
they might be interested in it, what it will do to them, and how
they should react when (not 'if') they are exposed to it. This
is not a traditional 'birds and bees' discussion that you can
have once, but an ongoing conversation you need to have time and
again. Continually talk to your children, know your children,
and challenge them.
Model purity and love and respect in
your own marriage. Let your children see healthy relationships
in action so your words about the devastation pornography and
the objectification of women brings will be set against what is
good and true and natural.
Pray for your children. This is
a strange and awful and topsy-turvy culture we live in. We are
reaping the 'rewards' of generations of feminism run amok and
are seeing with clarity that we cannot continue to exploit women
and allow boys to exploit girls, without suffering serious consequences.
Our children are at risk, and only God has the power to save them.
Dr J Ligon Duncan III is Senior Minister
of First Presbyterian Church (PCA), Jackson, Mississippi. This
'Pastor's Perspective' appeared in the the Church's weekly publication
The First Epistle Vol. 41, No. 25 (June 27 2008).
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