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Society|Sun, Oct. 26 2008 07:02 AM EDT

Americans, Pastors Urged to Speak Out Against Porn

By Lawrence Jones|Christian Post Reporter

Several anti-porn groups fed up with the number of children and marriages that have been harmed as a result of porn addiction are urging Americans to fight back during a pornography awareness event this week.

During the 20th annual "White Ribbon Against Pornography Week" (WRAP), which runs Oct. 26 to Nov. 2, Americans are being called to speak out on the detrimental effects of pornography and inform others about ways to remove the "garbage" from the lives of families and local communities.

For one week, people are also asked to wear or display a white ribbon in solidarity against pornography.

WRAP Week is being promoted by Morality in Media (MIM), Concerned Women for American (CWA) and American Mothers.

Dr. Janice Shaw Crouse, director and senior fellow of CWA's Beverly LaHaye Institute, says the pornography industry has "exploded" in recent years.

In just a few years, internet pornography has grown around 19-fold. In 1998, there were less than 80,000 internet porn sites, notes Crouse. That figure grew to 1.5 million in 2003.

Today, over 15,000 new adult movie titles are released every year, Crouse reports. Furthermore, recent figures reveal 35 million visits to porn sites from American computers every month.

Anti-porn activists say a higher supply of porn means more accessibility and greater exposure to the public, and some of those viewers include children.

Forty-two percent of internet users, aged 10 to 17, said they had seen online pornography within a one-year period, according to a 2007 study by University of New Hampshire. The study also found that over one-third of 16- and 17-year-old boys surveyed said they had intentionally visited X-rated sites in the past year.

“Since pornography is a $5 billion industry annually, it affects us all. It harms women and children, it destroys families, and it weakens communities," says Crouse.

"It is especially a threat to children when 85 percent of prisoners convicted of possessing child pornography admit to abusing at least one child," she adds.

In 1973, the Supreme Court ruled in California v. Miller that obscene material or hardcore pornography is not protected by the First Amendment.

Robert Peters, president of Morality in Media, however, says the United States has "failed miserably" at protecting juveniles from pornography.

The Supreme Court has handed down ruling against the Communications Decency Act of 1996 and the Child Online Protection Act of 1998, which would make it a crime for commercial Internet sites to make pornography available to minors.

For Crouse, the fight against pornography is not matter of legality but of enforcement.

"Obscenity is illegal and has been since 1973," says Crouse. "The problem is that State Prosecutors and United States Attorneys cannot prosecute unless violators of the obscenity laws are brought before them."

Peters has sent a letter to presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama, urging them to state their support for vigorous enforcement of federal obscenity laws.

"If elected President, will you nominate individuals to serve as Attorney General, Director of the FBI, and U.S. Attorneys who will enforce federal obscenity laws?" asks Peters in the letter.

The backers of WRAP Week are asking people to complain to businesses that distribute pornography, write letters to the editor, distribute information to the community, educate community leaders about the negative effects of pornography, contact their State Prosecutor and U.S. Attorney to complain about violations of state obscenity laws, and ask state and local legislators to curtail "sexually oriented businesses."

WRAP supporters are also encouraging pastors to preach about pornography as sin in their sermons this week.

"Our pastors need to preach about the 'wages of sin' regarding objectifying women and sexualizing children," states Crouse in her latest opinion piece.

"Religious institutions should also be at the forefront of efforts to make persons of all ages understand that from a 'faith perspective,' viewing pornography is morally wrong (sinful, if you will) and that use of pornography is destroying countless marriages and contributing to other harmful sexual behavior," says Peters.

Morality in Media has sample sermons on its Web site that address the issue.

More information on WRAP Week and obscenity laws are available at www.moralityinmedia.org and www.obscenitycrimes.org.

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  • Mon Nov 10, 2008 8:33 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    priest, plus do some research on people who had been involved in the porn industry and have left and the reasons why they left and what they experienced while in that industry.

  • Mon Nov 10, 2008 8:31 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    priest, tell that to the marriages as well as families who have been damaged and destroyed as a result of a spouse becoming addicted or caught up to and with porn. Research done by both Christian and Secular researchers alike have validated this. But if your ID is any indicator of your worldview I'm not the least bit surprised with your view in this matter.

  • Tue Nov 04, 2008 7:03 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Since pornography is a $5 billion industry annually, it affects us all. It harms women and children, it destroys families, and it weakens communities," says Crouse.

    First off, pornography is not able to destroy anything. It is a lifeless object. Those who CHOOSE to let it destroy their lives and those around them are the problem.
    So, if this is the case, what is the point in fighting against pornography itself, if pornography is NOT the problem? Why not organize something to HELP those who have pornography addiction problems?

    This one is in regard to "believer's" post....

    "Then the "safety" factors for keeping kids off these sites is silly, a "warning" comes up that says if you are not 18 please stop here, but if you are 18 feel free to continue. We must encourage parents as a minimum to get filter programs that will hopefully help them keep there kids off these sites and I'd suggest that Mom install them so it will keep Dad from being able to go to these sites if indeed the temptation comes."

    Safety blocks are no solution. If DAD wants to look at porn, then why should'nt he be able to? There is nothing wrong with pornography. Once again the problem is with these people who let it become a problem.

    All im trying to say is that there is NOTHING wrong with pornography. The problem is YOU PEOPLE who let it consume and destroy your lives. By the way, don't look to God to solve your problems. Why not fix them by yourself?
    peace.

  • Thu Oct 30, 2008 5:14 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    schucks, studies say 96% of us men struggle with this. But a word of caution please don't totally count on your girlfriend because if someday she becomes your wife it could inadvertently give you license to stray back to porn. I know you know this already, but first off we need the Lord's help if we are to have victory in this area, but I believe God would want us to have accountability partners who love us enough to have the courage to ask us the tough questions and I'm talking about other guys, guys who we can be blatantly honest with, guys who can totally relate to what we're struggling with. I thank God He has blessed you with a girlfriend like you have but it is not fair to her to give her that responsibility and as I said especially if God sees fit to have you two become one in Him. My wife and I have been married for 33+ years and there was a time I made her responsible for some things I had no business doing and God let me see it was not only unfair to her, but it wasn't fair to our marriage, although I did have her put a program on my computer that only she has the password for that keeps me from going to porn sights.

  • Tue Oct 28, 2008 12:40 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    whalver,
    Yes I know. I pointed that out in my post. Our church is very complacent/apathetic/comfortable. And no amount of preaching will change a person without the Holy Spirit's power. And even then, the Spirit cannot go against a person's will. If a person purposely resists the Holy Spirit's pressing on their life, He will cease from convicting them any further.

  • Mon Oct 27, 2008 8:03 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Prophet

    Please remember that without the Holy Spirit there can be no conviction.

    Appearently you are in the midst of a congregation that prefers to be very comfortable. And there are many others.

    But I can assure you that if the Pastor(s) of the church are not able to communicate the Word of God, the Author Himself will do it.

    King David preferred the judgement of the Lord to the judgement of the world.

  • Mon Oct 27, 2008 5:16 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Yes, Porn is a very big deal right now! I work for a Christian company working to beat Porn at all levels--Porn Addiction, Laws, Illegal use of child pornography. I have had the chance to speak with a lot of different men and women about the issue who use our software, SeeNoEvil.
    I admire the courage of all individuals who have sought help and pray for all those individuals who contact me through my work. Together, we can take back control of the Internet and work to stop this tool of the evil one!

  • Mon Oct 27, 2008 4:31 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Creation,
    I am with you brother. I am a recovering sex and porn addict. I still struggle...not so much with porn anymore, but with lust in general. I thank God that I have a wife that I can speak openly about it to, who won't condemn or judge me, but will pray with and for me. Now I know what God meant in Genesis when He told Adam that He would make for him a help mate. My wife has been a woman of faith and love beyond her years.

  • Mon Oct 27, 2008 4:28 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    whalver,
    I tend to be on the other end of the stick. Coming from a church of people who are spiritually lazy, I've discovered how almost futile it is to convict them. The preachers could preach until they pass out, and not one person will turn from their ways....until God moves upon them. And then again, it's still a person's choice whether to react positively towards the conviction of the Holy Spirit or not.
    But even if they take a stand at church (which many do just because it's in a controlled environment where the Spirit is moving mightly and so on and so on), it doesn't mean that once they get home, away from the emotionality of it all, that they will remain faithful. I've seen it happen countless times. There's a great church service or revival where God moves and people are brought to repentance and tears and chokin on snot, and they are all fired up....until they get home. Then it's back to the way it was. And nothing changes. I've been there myself.
    What we do when we are home alone on the internet will have more affect on you than what happens at a church service surrounded by hundreds of other pumped up Christians. It's what you do behind closed doors that makes the difference, not what happens in the public arena of a church service.

  • Mon Oct 27, 2008 10:21 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    I've been struggling with this for years. It's hard, it really is! Some days are good and some days are outright horrible. The lord has blessed me though with a great girlfriend and it encourages me to stop completely for her. Only God can get me to stop. It has gotten A LOT better than it used to already.

    www.xxxchurch.com

  • Mon Oct 27, 2008 5:15 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    LostInTranslation71

    If Believer's comments are true, then it makes no difference whether we attempt to tackle the issue starting from within the family or from within the church community.

    The people in the pews are the same. If they are not going to take a stand at church, then they won't at home.

    But honestly, if Americans and Pastors are not speaking out against it, then they must be for it.

    And if I may use a rather crude comparison....driving a car requires as much if not more responsibility than controlling porn.

    Yet it remains the most widely accepted practice amongst all family members.

  • Sun Oct 26, 2008 11:38 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Don't you think it would be easier to control this within the family than to go and attack an industry that you have no hope of shutting down? With the advanced nanny programs and the love, devotion and faith that seems to be a constant theme in everyone's post don't you think you would have a better chance of talking to your families about this and restricting the possibility of it affecting your loved ones? Do you realize that even if by some miracle you managed to shut down all those who produce porn in America that it will still be available online through websites in other countries that you can't influence? Instead of trying to change the world I suggest changing the way you communicate with your children.

  • Sun Oct 26, 2008 9:20 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    wr, I wouldn't say the blame but rather the responsibility, if it isn't coming from our pulpits the people in the pew will not rise up and do something about it and too many of those sitting in the pews may very well be ignorant or even afraid to admit the problem does exist.

  • Sun Oct 26, 2008 8:59 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I'm not sure why the blame is being left at the feet of church Pastors.

    Although I agree that many local churches have been silent within their own communities, the fact is that Christians can't go to church every week looking for continous confirmation that the wages of sin are death.

    How many times does that have to be spelled out?

    And if a local Pastor is not preaching that message, then it is the responsibility of the local membership to confront that Pastor.

    This is being faithful and obediant, not judgmental.

  • Sun Oct 26, 2008 5:47 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    believer,
    Amen. Being a former sex addict, I know how easy it is to get ensnared to such a sin. It needs to be ended. Christians have been too complacent about it for too long.

  • Sun Oct 26, 2008 8:03 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    As easy as it is with the internet to get access to hardcore porn it is imperative that Pastors speak out against and ensure they guard their own lives as well in this area. The sad thing is that I personally know several Pastors who were called on the carpet for speaking about this in a sermon. Plus, even sadder I know there are many Pastors who are giving in to this temptation and feel they have no where to turn to get help in this matter. Then the "safety" factors for keeping kids off these sites is silly, a "warning" comes up that says if you are not 18 please stop here, but if you are 18 feel free to continue. We must encourage parents as a minimum to get filter programs that will hopefully help them keep there kids off these sites and I'd suggest that Mom install them so it will keep Dad from being able to go to these sites if indeed the temptation comes. Porn is destroying families, marriages, ministry careers, and churches and it must be stopped.

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