Just a Little Sex Talk

A few weeks ago, we launched our Awkward series.  This is a 4 week teaching series on sexuality.  We call it Awkward because talking with students about sex is, well, awkward.

Our kickoff teaching was one of my favorites of the year.  We focused on the story of Joseph and Potiphar’s wife  the truth is that sometimes when we follow God’s design we get punished, at least for the short term.

I thought I would share my notes.  I’m also willing to share the entire 4 week series for an outlandish sum of money.  OK, actually, you can just have it.  Just email me.  Enjoy…

Awkward 1. Normal

Awkward_LOGO

 

What Our Students Are Waiting to Hear

Last night we kicked off a teaching series on sexuality.  We’re calling it, “The Awkward” series because talking about sex with students is, well, awkward.

Logo_V1

While I was landing my teaching last night, I experienced one of the highlights of my ministry year.  I began bringing my talk to a close by encouraging our students to think about their boundaries.  Specifically, I challenged them to verbalize their boundaries.  “Look, if you don’t tell him what your boundaries are, don’t blame him for crossing them!”

After this section, I turned my attention toward those in the room, students and small group leaders alike, who had boundaries.  Sadly, I think that is most of us.  The sexual tension created by our over-sexualized culture along with the extension of adolescence that most emerging adults experience, the task of perfect purity before marriage is practically impossible.  At the very least, I am realizing, we need to adjust our language.  We are often guilty of creating an unrealistic expectation for our students–an expectation, that when broken leads to unspeakable shame.

And so, I said to our students, “Many of you here tonight had boundaries.  At some point, maybe a few years ago, maybe last week, you found yourself in a situation and, well, you crossed some lines.  What do you do now?  Do you just throw in the towel?  ‘Well, I guess it’s too late for me.  I guess it doesn’t matter what I do.’  Is it too late for you?  Are you ruined?  I want to remind you that in the Gospel stories, every time Jesus encountered a person who had failed morally He responded with love and grace.  I’m not talking about little mistakes either.  He responded with kindness and grace to prostitutes and other people who had made a complete mess of their lives.  He never responded with guilt or anger.  Please understand that God loves you deeply.  He’s not angry.  He’s calling you back to Him and back to boundaries.  It is never to late to begin again.  It’s never too late to begin following God’s design again.”

As I spoke these words, I saw one of our girls in the audience burst into tears.  They weren’t tears of shame, they were tears of gratitude.  It was almost as if she had been waiting for someone to tell her that she was still OK, that she wasn’t ruined and that she had a future–that there was hope.  How long had she been carrying that weight of shame?  In that moment, I almost couldn’t continue.  I recognized the power of God’s grace intersecting with human brokenness.  It was a beautiful moment and I realized again, how important student ministry is.

Here’s my question:  How many of our students are waiting for someone to tell them that God still loves them, that they still have a future, that there is grace?  When we talk to student about sexuality, let’s balance expectations with grace.  Too often we talk about boundaries like they are a cliff.  If you cross them, well, then it’s all over.  You’ve lost everything.  I understand the deep consequences that come with sexual sin but we have to understand our audience.  Because of the prevalence of pornography and the intense pressure placed on our students, they will make mistakes.  We must realize that many of our students have already made mistakes and are already living with profound shame.  Let’s change our language and let’s walk with them through their mistakes and missteps.  Let’s speak the powerful words of God’s grace.

 

 

 

My Body is My Value

Elisa Talmage absolutely rocked this teaching.  Among other things, she did a great job describing how ridiculous it is that we compare ourselves to models on  magazine covers.  I’ll probably make my daughters watch this video tomorrow.

Awkward: Lies About Sexuality – Body Image from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

The Only Way to Defeat Porn

Back in the day I attended a conservative Christian college–one of those colleges that you only apply to if you want to be a pastor, missionary, play the organ or marry someone who does.  It was elite.  The average incoming GPA of a freshman student when I graduated was 3.9.  It was like the Hogwarts of ministry except that Harry Potter was obviously out of bounds, what, with that devilish magic and all.

Anyway, I loved it.  I remember looking out from my chapel seat overlooking a crowd of a thousand future leaders thinking, “These people are going to change the world.  This is army.  These people are going to take Jesus to the darkest of places.”  And they did.  My classmates planted churches in the most forsaken places on earth.  They became undercover missionaries in closed Islamic countries.  They flew missionary planes  into remote jungle outposts and they’ve planted and led churches all over the world.  My classmates were and are an extraordinary group of men and women.  And yet, they are incredibly ordinary and broken–just like you and me.

My junior year I was somehow approved to be an RA.  To be honest, I was probably the worst RA ever to patrol the halls of my storied dorm.  But, my new position exposed me to privileged information.  I discovered early in the fall semester that our dorm had a massive problem…pornography.  As it turns out, the facilities staff was finding an alarming amount of pornographic material in the garbage.  I suppose it was a good thing that it was in the trash but it’s very presence exposed a problem.  Many of us who were training to be the future leaders of the church were struggling with varying degrees of porn addiction.

The thought of pastors, missionaries and other ministry leaders hiding in the dark with unseen porn addictions terrified me.  This insidious monster would destroy what God was planning for our generation of leaders.  Before we took Jesus to the darkest of places in the world we needed to take him to the darkest places in our own hearts. .

In college I played volleyball.  Yes, they have this sport for guys.  I was the captain of my team and so enjoyed a degree of influence.  I decided I would do something desperate and awkward.

After practice one day, as we sprawled across the gym floor stretching our aching legs, I dropped a bomb.  I announced that I knew we were all struggling with pornography.  I told them about the garbage in the garbage that was worse than garbage.  I told them that this couldn’t go on.  We had to rid ourselves of this darkness now before it embedded itself in our hearts.  We couldn’t carry this monster into ministry.  We decided that every Monday after practice we would get naked.  Not like that.  I mean we would sit around and confess–starkly and uninhibited.  We would tell each other what we looked at, how often and what we did.  We would systematically drag our darkness out into the light.  We would expose ourselves.  Naked.  No more hiding in the dark.

The first couple of weeks were a mess.  Our meetings took forever as each of us stared at the floor, mumbling through our dirty laundry. There were moments of helplessness and utter shame.  We dug up garbage from the past and dragged it into the light.  We prayed.  No, we begged for help.

Then, with gentle love and unwavering commitment we began to look each other in the eye.  We reminded each other of grace and unconditional love but demanded repentance.  “I love you but you can’t stay here.”  Our sessions began to get shorter.  The darkness was being pushed back.  Then there was the week when no one messed up.

“This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but people loved darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil.  Everyone who does evil hates the light, and will not come into the light for fear that their deeds will be exposed.  But whoever lives by the truth comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that what they have done has been done in the sight of God.” (John 3:19-21)

Sin, hidden in secret darkness has immense power.  The shame is paralyzing.  But sin, pulled into the light of community through confession loses its power.  We experienced freedom and victory because we painfully and systematically dragged our sin into the light.

If you want freedom there is but one way–confession and accountability.  Drag it into the light.

 

image credited to nkzs via stock.xchng

What GQ Magazine Is Saying About Porn

This morning I ran across a post on one of my favorite blogs.  A guy named Walt Mueller has a great site for youth workers and parents.  You should really check it out.

In his latest post, Walt links to a GQ Magazine article by Scott Christian.  The article describes how even secular culture is beginning to admit that pornography might not be so great for your mind.  Here’s the link to Walt’s post:  Learning My Lines… 

You can check out the GQ post itself from Walt’s blog but it has a rather provocative picture in it.  Just giving you a heads up.

Also, Walt’s The Center for Parent/Youth Understanding is a great resource.

Lastly, I’ve personally blogged quite a lot about the dangers of porn.  You can check out a few posts if you’re interested:

Real Talk about Pornography

4 Traps That Will Derail a Girl’s Dreams

Pornography Will Find You

 

image credited to hankinsphoto.com

And How Sex is Like Glue

The other night I was helping my son Keegan with his homework.  The fact that my 2nd grade son has homework every night is crazy talk.  When I was in 2nd grade, my homework was to pit my He-Man and G.I. Joe figures against each other in epic combat for hours on end on end.

Anyway, he was attempting to glue words that he had cut out on a piece of paper in alphabetical order.  You might say he was struggling.  Elmer’s glue and 2nd grade fingers aren’t a great combination.  And, the funny thing about glue is that it is quite effective at cementing two pieces of paper together.  This is great except for when you’re in 2nd grade and you keep putting the words in the wrong order.

Once the glue has been applied, pulling the two pieces of paper apart is a rather nasty affair.  The funny thing is that the papers become one and trying to pull them apart results in ripping the papers and spilling glue everywhere.  The end result was papers glued to the table, fingers stuck together, and a seven year old repeatedly banging his head against the table

2942357392_5b21676d29

In his defense, the entire episode was technically my fault.  He was working as fast as he could because I had just purchased the new Lego:  Marvel Super Heroes video game and promised him that we could play it as soon as his homework was done.  He was essentially doing his homework at ludicrous speed which is never a good idea unless your name is Dark Helmet or Colonel Sanders.

It was about this time that I realized that sex is a lot like the glue my son was using for his homework.  I didn’t come to this realization during the homework session of course…that would have been weird.  Nor did I realize it while we were playing Lego:  Marvel Super Heroes because that game is so fun that any sort of distraction, even thinking about sex is impossible.

I came to this realization about sex and glue over coffee with one of our small group leaders as he talked about a student in his group.  His student had slept with his girlfriend and now he was struggling because things hadn’t turned out like he thought they would.  As it turns out, things were getting pretty complicated.

Often, I think I’ve had a genius idea and then realize that I actually stole the idea from someone else.  This happens in our office all the time, usually after someone reads my blog and realizes that I stole another one of their ideas and played it off like it was mine.  I assure you this is unintentional.  I’m terrible with names and intellectual property.

With this whole sex and glue image, it turns out I’ve stolen the idea from someone fairly high up…God.  In the book of Genesis, God describes sex as forging two people into one person in a way that can’t be broken apart.  There is something incredibly powerful about sex.  It’s like glue.  It cements two people together.  There is no undoing the unity that sex brings.  That’s why when people talk about how so and so still has a piece of their heart they are speaking the truth.

The thing that bothers me is how our culture presents sex as just something fun to do that doesn’t have lasting consequences.    Based on what I’ve read from the Inventor of sex and what I’ve observed over and over again in the lives of friends and students, sex is like glue.  It forges a bond between bodies and souls.  It creates beautiful and lasting unity and intimacy in the context of marriage but when two people who have been cemented together are pulled apart there is lasting emotional and relational damage.

 

image credited to me and the sysop

 

An Open Letter to Fathers

A few weeks into this whole blogging thing I wrote a post based on a teaching I gave to our students during our spring sexuality series.  The post blew up.  Women were posting it all over Facebook, Twitter and even Pintrest.  I was shocked and sort of embarrassed about being on Pintrest.  I still feel like I lost a few man points there.

The post was all about identity and value.  The central idea was, “You are immensely valuable and beautiful because God made you and loves you. Your sexuality is a precious gift.  Protect it.”  You can read it here if you like.

I received so much positive feedback from this post and I still can’t believe how many people have read and shared it.  The question is…why?

THE TRUTH

Here’s the thing:  I’m no expert on girls or sexuality.  I’m married and have two cute little daughters but I would consider myself to be a novice at understanding girls.   I haven’t remotely figured out my wife either.  Every time things get emotional at my house you can find me in a corner with a pillow over my head.  And don’t even get me started on the ridiculous idea that someday my daughters will want to date.

All this is to say, I really don’t think my blog post went “Pintrest” because I’m an eloquent writer or because I have some newfangled understanding of girls and sexuality.  It must be something else.

I think the answer lies in a question: Why do so few girls feel good about themselves?  Why are so many girls susceptible to guys who are interested in nothing more than a few hours with their body?

I know that we live in a messed up culture that uses sex to sell everything from cologne to cereal and that girls are conditioned through advertising to find value solely in the way they look but honestly, I’m not sure that culture is the biggest problem.

I CAN’T HEAR YOU

I think the problem has less to do what girls are hearing through culture and more to do with what girls aren’t hearing at home.  Why is it that the only guys who are communicating value to girls are men who want to take advantage of them?  Where are the fathers, brothers, uncles and grandfathers who are supposed to be communicating value to our girls?  This, I believe is the core of the problem.

The feedback I’ve received over and over from girls is: “I wish someone would have told me these things before…”  Speaking as a father, we need to start speaking up!  Our daughters, nieces, and granddaughters need to be told over and over again that they are beautiful and valuable, that God created them just the way they are on purpose, and that only a guy who will love them on a heart level is worth their time.  The first, “you are beautiful” should not come from some punk looking to take advantage of her.

SPEAK UP

I think we are guilty of making assumptions.  We believe that somehow our girls just know.  We assume that how we feel about them is obvious.  It isn’t.  In the absence of positive words they assume the worst.  Tell her that she is beautiful.  Tell her that she is special.  Tell her that only guys of the highest quality are worth her time.  Tell her that her sexuality is a precious gift.  Tell her that you’re proud of her and that God loves her.

God put you in her life to guide her.  Speak up.  I think you’ll be amazed by how much impact your words will have.

 

image credited to jjpacres

Where Real Sex Begins

I read in a book one time that sex starts in the kitchen.  Umm…what?  Personally, I believe that real sex–meaningful sex the way it was designed to be experienced–begins long before a look or a kiss or anything like that.  Let me explain.

A MIRROR

I think healthy and meaningful sexuality begins with looking in the mirror.  It starts with being satisfied with who you are.  Am I comfortable with who is looking back at me?  Too many people use sex as a way to feel good about themselves.

“He wants me.  That must mean I am valuable.”

“She is willing to give herself to me.  That must mean I am worthy. “

Sex will never be meaningful if we aren’t at peace with who we are.  It begins with understanding our identity in Christ.  As beloved creatures of the creator, we have already been declared to be beautiful and good.  As redeemed sons and daughters we have already been told that we are loved and valuable.

Sex could never make you more valuable or loved than you already are.  Sex was not meant to make us feel these things.  Using sex as a tool to feel better about yourself is dangerous and ultimately pointless.  Misusing sex actually makes you feel worse about yourself.

Real sex begins by looking in the mirror and understanding who you are in Jesus—not only understanding but becoming comfortable and at peace with your declared value and worth.  Only from this place can you experience sex as it was meant to be experienced.

A FENCE

God designed sex.  Whoa…that’s a weird thought.  But, it’s a true.  Sinful humans didn’t invent sex.  Sex isn’t dirty or gross.  It’s good and beautiful.  In fact, sex is beautiful because it was God who invented it and gave it to us as a gift.

With all that said, sex is also incredibly dangerous because God designed it for a specific context.  According to the biblical account, sex is for marriage and nowhere else.  And, the biblical writers gave us a bazillion warnings about misusing sex.

Why?  Because God designed sex as a way to forever cement two people together.  Sex literally and symbolically unites two people—physically, emotionally and spiritually.  There is no going back on the union either.  “Just kidding” or “oops” doesn’t do anything to erase the connection.

I have also seen evidence of this reality in the people around me.  I have never met anyone who is actually happy about having sex before they were married.  All I’ve ever seen and heard is massive regret.

I’ve seen many marriages struggle and end in divorce because of sexual baggage.  I’ve talked to guys who are terrified to tell the girl they intend to marry about their sexual past.  I’ve talked with people who can’t stop comparing their spouse with previous sexual partners.

Real sex begins with a fence.  We need boundaries.  Why?  Because God designed sex for marriage and when we use it in any other way we invite pain, regret and brokenness.  It isn’t that God is trying to rob us of fun.  It’s that He wants us to experience life, meaning and joy.

Real sex starts with a mirror and a fence.

 

Image Credited to susivnh