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"...The church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth."
I Timothy 3:15


The Opponents of Pornography

Are Losing

Compiled by Tom Strode, Washington bureau chief for Baptist Press

Taken from the Plains Baptist Challenger, 2011

The opponents of pornography are losing, and an onslaught of sexual attacks likely will result, Southern Baptist ethicist Richard Land believes. "We're los­ing this war. We haven't lost it, but we're losing it," Land, president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, said at a conference on porn and sex exploitation. "And if you don't think we're losing it, you spend time with college-age young people, and you'll find out we're losing."


A 2008 study of undergraduate and graduate students, ages 18-26, showed that 69 percent of the men and 10 percent of the women viewed por­nography more than once a month. The study was published in the Journal of Adolescent Research. In 2009, the fourth most searched word on the Internet for kids ages 7 and under was "porn," according to data by OnlineFamily.Norton.com. For all kids —those up to age 18 —sex was No. 4, porn No. 5.


(ELB: This is the devil's plan to utterly corrupt society. When pastors and members of their staff are involved in this corruption, it is even worse. A Time Magazine story about a 2003 meeting of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers showed that, of the 350 attendees, 62 percent said the "Internet played a significant role in divorces in the past year, with excessive interest in online porn contributing to more than half of such cases." It is wrecking our society and flows from the pit of hell.)


He described hardcore, online pornography as "the greatest danger this country faces."


"[I]t is destroying our culture. It is destroying our families. It is destroy­ing our children," Land said. Sexually graphic material online is destroying men's lives especially, he said.


"Their ability to be the husbands and the fathers God intended them to be is being shriveled and shrunk and stifled and twisted and distorted by exposure to ever more hardcore, Internet pornography," Land told conference participants.


The fallout in the next decade from the problem could be devastating to women, he said. "I believe that we are looking at, in the next 10 years, truly an ava­lanche, a tsunami of sex crimes against women and girls, because we've got a generation of boys that have been exposed at an earlier and ear­lier age to hardcore pornography," Land said. "And the mathematics are a certain number who view it will become addicted to it, a certain number who become addicted to it will eventually act out what they've seen on screen."


Land gave his warning at the Convergence Summit, an April 13-14 meet­ing in suburban Baltimore, focusing on the battle against sexual exploitation in a digital age. Government, business, education and reli­gious leaders from across the United States gathered to address solutions to pornography via new technology such as mobile devices, as well as the related problems of prostitution and sex trafficking.


Christians and the Gospel ministry have not escaped the reach of porn, Land said. "Internet pornography is in your church. If your church has got more than 50 members, it's in your church," he told the audience. "I can tell you hardcore pornography is on the seminary campus. It's on the Chris­tian college campus. It's in the pastorate. It's on the staff."


Its prevalence among staff members has been disclosed when some churches have decided to begin daycare centers to reach out to their communities, Land said. In preparing to provide coverage for churches, insurance companies typically research what is being viewed online in the church's buildings.


"I can't tell you the number of brokenhearted pastors who have called me when they have discovered what some of their trusted church staff have been looking at on church computers," he said.


His wife, Rebekah, and fellow psychologists focusing on marriage and family counseling say pornography is the leading cause of divorce in the United States, Land said: "They just routinely now ask the question, 'What have you been watching? What have you been looking at?' And the men are so surprised: 'How did you know?"


Statistics support Land's concern:






There is no debate about pornography's addictive nature, Land said. "We know it's addictive," he said. "We know how it's addictive. We know how it rewires the brain. It requires [viewers'] sexual response, so that they become focused on self-gratification as opposed to the gratification of their partner. It reduces their sexual partner to the level of an appliance."


Churches need to address the issue, and a grassroots effort must take hold to persuade the government to act effectively to address the problem, Land told the audience.


"Our pastors need to talk about it from the pulpit," he said. "We need to talk about it in men's groups and in boys' groups. And we need to talk turkey."


Resources on pornography and sexual exploitation recommended through the Convergence Summit website may be accessed at http:// www.convergencesummit.net/pdf/Recommended_Resources.pdf.


The Religious Coalition Against Pornography and the Christian organi­zation Pure Hope sponsored the summit.