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Many parents have no idea what kinds of temptations the Internet holds, especially with teenagers and pornography. How can a church get parents and teens on the same page?



Topics:Character, Culture, Education, Technology, Youth pastor
Filters:Elder, Shepherd, Technology, Youth ministry
Purpose:Discipleship
Date Added:December 02, 2008

Total Reader Responses: 8 (see below)
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The sad reality is that exposure to pornography is now nearly universal, even among Christian teens. As young boys develop, they are intensely curious about what a naked woman looks like. When all it takes are two clicks of the mouse, there are few boys who will resist. After experiencing a tremendous rush, they are inevitably drawn back, time and time again. And once they've seen a naked woman, they wonder, "What does sex look like?" and graduate from pictures to videos.

Pornographers who exploit the web keep inventing new ways for teens to access sexually explicit material, often in ways that parents find nearly impossible to monitor. For instance, file sharing, if erased after viewing, leaves no trace, and none of the most popular filters catch or report file sharing. When we eventually learn to monitor this, you can count on pornographers finding other ways—for instance, downloading video onto iPods and cell phones.

Parents need to be made aware of the latest "threshold" on the Internet, which now is file sharing. If you have Limewire or Kazaa programs on your computer, and you didn't put them there, it's likely that your son has already been viewing explicit images. The church is in great need of technically savvy people who can keep parents informed of new and expanding temptations.

Second, youth leaders should assume that this is an active and ongoing temptation in most, if not all, of their boys. Regular forays through books such as Every Young Man's Battle are now an essential component for a strong youth program.

Above all, we can't just give in and assume that pornography will become a part of our children's lives. Its effects are too harmful and pervasive for us to be either ignorant or passive in confronting this challenge.

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hurting mother   (Guest) Posted: August 29, 2009
we never allowed a pc in our childs room and we had it password protected, but our teen found a way around all of this, once cauught, she found another way, when caught again, she talked a 22 yr old christian to help her buy a pay to go phone, we have tried everything to help her with this addiction to text these evil men, my heart is breaking, please pray for us



Jaye   (Guest) Posted: December 08, 2008
Thank you for bringing up this issue. Many of our daughters, and sisters are finding themselves addicted to internet porn, and sexting (sex texting on cell phones), and they don't know how to get free. Our daughters are being approached by strangers on the internet through what seems to be harmless kids social networking sites, not to mention the well known teen social networking sites. Girls are putting out very revealing photos of themselves as well as writing very sexually explicit email and taking pictures with cell phones. They think that because it seems to be anonymous no one will ever find out. This problem is no longer just a problem for males. It is a sin issue with no gender. Our kids are technically savvy and no how to cover their tracks on a computer. When raising the topic of pornography please do not forget the preteen, teen and adult females that are bound and in need of teaching materials and deliverance. As parents of girls we need help too.



Rev. Samaila Mohammed   (Guest) Posted: December 06, 2008
I am so shure that what one thinks has something to do with what he thinks he will gain. I am not suprised that the youth have an appeal for something covered under a small cloth that the prostitutes will surely want to use. It remainds me of the book of proverbs of scripture with the word my son... I am sure that discussion of this areas of life can be useful in picnic and peer cells. The meeting will surely care a similar tension zone for those on the theraphy with the Pastor youth in control and praying all through the process. I noticed that lust is a case that these pictures create in the feeling zone of the person in contact and one is leave for fantasy, my expertience shows that even adults are caught, expecially that have not expereince the dirty side of sex.



Wilson   (Guest) Posted: December 05, 2008
Great information. As a youth pastor I have seen the detrimental effects of pornography on not only the lives of teens, but families. I agree, parents must not give up and must take every precaution in order to root out this grave sin. Another book of note that I have used often is "Not Even a Hint," republished under the title "Sex is Not the Problem, Lust Is" by Joshua Harris. I highly recommend this book because of the biblical stance that it takes on lust and the practical way in which it encourages victory through grace.



Tom - Vineyard Pastor   (Guest) Posted: December 04, 2008
Gary's right - this stuff is pervasive and growing. My wife is a marriage and family therapist and she said 90% of the men she sees struggle with this stuff. Our sons deserve better. I'd recommed the BSafe internet filter - it does a fantastic job of filtering, even Limewire and other file sharing programs if you set it up to do so. I have a 12 year old son and a 10 year old daughter. It's my job to protect them from porn in any way possible. What we pay for BSafe is an investment in my kids. We also offer "Freedom Ministries" through our church, which is an outgrowth of Dr. Doug Weiss' ministry at Heart to Heart Counseling center in Colorado Springs. We are seeing guys healed of their addictions to porn and marriages saved. It's very powerful. Check it out at www.drdougweiss.com.



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