Parenting involves taking the oversight of children including what they are allowed to interact with. In our world of social media, television, music, magazines, etc. the job can seem overwhelming. However, keep it simple. Make your home a haven from the world by filtering out the dangerous influences of the world. PARENTS, YOU ARE THE FILTER!
Take charge and maintain daily oversight of your home. From a young age children should understand they must have parental consent to watch, listen to, or read various materials. This is quite natural for children with diligent parents.
As children enter the teen years the same applies and parents must not drop the ball during these years. The diligent parent should strive to sit down daily with children around the word of God and teach children why evil must be avoided. There is right and wrong. We all must fear God. As well, children must have clear guidance since they are unaware of the dangers that exist in the world.
The headline of this post is another example of how parents must review what their children are consuming. This magazine should not be in the home of any Christian family. Here is the information Ken Ham of Answers Magazine recently posted concerning the outrageous position of Vogue on prostitution:
You just can’t make this stuff up. Teen Vogue, a magazine directed towards young girls (12 and up), published an article by a medical doctor entitled, “Sex Work is Real Work.” Yes, you read that right. This article is arguing that there’s nothing wrong with sex work—it should be completely decriminalized and treated like any other legitimate profession. The author even goes as far as to call her work as a doctor that of a “sex worker,” and adds, “in some ways, aren’t we all?”
This article was published back in April, but was recently retweeted by Teen Vogue and is therefore back in the news. The article itself is rather explicit, describing the work sex workers engage in—certainly not something appropriate for the young audience this magazine is targeted towards!
An “Affirming” Service?
The author writes,The idea of purchasing intimacy and paying for the services can be affirming for many people who need human conn ection, friendship, and emotional support.
So, the ethics of paying a prostitute for something God designed to be an intimate, one-flesh union between a husband and wife is inconsequential to this doctor. All that matters is that people find something “affirming” to participate in. It’s the secular, arbitrary ethic showing itself again.
As long as there are consenting individuals involved, it’s okay in the secular sexual ethic. What we’re seeing here is a theme we’ve seen played out again and again—the only (and I really do mean only) sexual ethics is consent (which is itself an arbitrary ethic because, ultimately, why should consent matter?). As long as there are consenting individuals involved, it’s okay in the secular sexual ethic.
But secular ethics is arbitrary. It’s based merely in ever-changing human opinion—and who’s to say which opinion is correct? Ultimately, there’s no foundation for morality, so anything goes (as is clearly seen in this article!). Once you’ve abandoned the Bible as the foundation for one’s thinking, “everyone does what’s right in their own eyes” (Judges 21:25).
Would the Elephant in the Room Please Stand Up?
Interestingly, this article never even mentions the $20 billion-dollar-a-year “elephant in the room”—sex trafficking. Prostitution (and pornography) is fueled by sex trafficking—often of increasingly young victims. It’s a heinous abuse and devaluing of those made in the image of God.
This doctor never once mentions the trail of broken, enslaved individuals that sex trafficking and prostitution leaves. The average life expectancy of a trafficked sex slave is only seven years—and half of those drawn into prostitution here in the US started at age 12. Let that sink in a moment: twelve years old.
An article from our Answers magazine gives just a glimpse into the horrors of prostitution and its fuel, sex trafficking:
Although it may seem unbelievable, half of those drawn into prostitution in the United States entered at age 12, and nearly 70 percent entered before they were age 16 . . . one study revealed that 80 percent of women in prostitution are assaulted, including death threats.
Foreign victims are usually vulnerable because they are poor and lack opportunity for work in their home nation. Deceptive criminals convince them and their parents that they can provide the girl with a good job and a better life in the United States or in another developed country. Once the girls are in the destination country, however, their passports are taken away; they are housed in a place where they cannot contact anyone else; and their basic human dignity—as descendants of Adam and Eve, made in God’s image—is violated in ways too horrible to describe.
The girls are told they must work to pay off their transportation and living costs. Of course, that debt is never paid. Usually, in order to endure the ordeal, the girls become drug dependent, and their lives spiral downward until rescue is the only way out.
With American victims, the criminals typically seek out a vulnerable child—usually a runaway—because a child is easy to spot and easy to control. When the child is befriended and treated like a girlfriend, she becomes bonded to the man. Once under his control, however, the girl is forced into the same downward spiral as the foreign victims.
According to a study by Donna Hughes, a professor at the University of Rhode Island, most victims (estimated at about 75 percent) who are recruited and trafficked are unaware that they are destined for this sleazy slave trade.
If the girl is attractive, she will sometimes be promised a movie or modeling career. Hollywood markets the “Pretty Woman” myth of the glamorous prostitute earning big money from handsome customers. That rarely proves true. The vast majority of them end up drug addicted, bruised, and battered. They quickly get old, tired out, and used up.
It’s a dreadful, stomach-turning industry that abuses young girls and boys while satisfying the depraved desires of sinful men. This doctor should be utterly ashamed of herself for promoting this lifestyle to young girls—and Teen Vogue (which publishes all kinds of horrible trash) needs to pull this despicable article.
You can learn more about a biblical response to the horrible crime of sex trafficking in this article: Human Trafficking: The West’s New Slave Trade.
“Evidence, not morality”—But, Really, It’s Whose Morality
When we start with God’s Word, we have a foundation to denounce sex work—and those who would pay for such “services” and enslave others in it—as sinful and exploitative.
She concludes her article by stating, “evidence, not morality, should guide law reforms and sex work policy for full sex work decriminalization.” But what she’s really arguing is not that “evidence” guide law reform—the evidence is overwhelming that the sex worker industry is rife with abuse and exploitation. She’s arguing that her subjective morality governs law reform. But her morality is arbitrary, grounded in nothing but her own opinion.
When we start with God’s Word, we have a foundation to denounce sex work—and those who would pay for such “services” and enslave others in it—as sinful and exploitative. As Christians, we should seek to rescue young women and men from this industry and share with them the good news of Jesus who died to pay the price for their salvation. We should stand strong against the normalization of prostitution and advocate for sex trafficking victims.
As Scripture says,
The body is not meant for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body . . . Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them members of a prostitute? Never! Or do you not know that he who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For, as it is written, “The two will become one flesh.” But he who is joined to the Lord becomes one spirit with him. Flee from sexual immorality. Every other sin a person commits is outside the body, but the sexually immoral person sins against his own body. Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body. (1 Corinthians 6:13, 15–20)
Keep in mind this same anti-Christian, depraved magazine also featured articles for these teen girls on how to send naked selfies and how to get an abortion without your parents’ consent. This magazine is what you expect to find in ancient pagan Greece or Rome—not our once very Christianized, and now, sadly, very secularized culture. (unquote)
Remember, the way to keep up with such things is to know what your children are interacting with. If they desire to interact with something you need to review it first and if it is not suitable explain why. Proceed to keep it out of family life.
Take charge and maintain daily oversight of your home. From a young age children should understand they must have parental consent to watch, listen to, or read various materials. This is quite natural for children with diligent parents.
As children enter the teen years the same applies and parents must not drop the ball during these years. The diligent parent should strive to sit down daily with children around the word of God and teach children why evil must be avoided. There is right and wrong. We all must fear God. As well, children must have clear guidance since they are unaware of the dangers that exist in the world.
The headline of this post is another example of how parents must review what their children are consuming. This magazine should not be in the home of any Christian family. Here is the information Ken Ham of Answers Magazine recently posted concerning the outrageous position of Vogue on prostitution:
You just can’t make this stuff up. Teen Vogue, a magazine directed towards young girls (12 and up), published an article by a medical doctor entitled, “Sex Work is Real Work.” Yes, you read that right. This article is arguing that there’s nothing wrong with sex work—it should be completely decriminalized and treated like any other legitimate profession. The author even goes as far as to call her work as a doctor that of a “sex worker,” and adds, “in some ways, aren’t we all?”
This article was published back in April, but was recently retweeted by Teen Vogue and is therefore back in the news. The article itself is rather explicit, describing the work sex workers engage in—certainly not something appropriate for the young audience this magazine is targeted towards!
An “Affirming” Service?
The author writes,The idea of purchasing intimacy and paying for the services can be affirming for many people who need human conn ection, friendship, and emotional support.
So, the ethics of paying a prostitute for something God designed to be an intimate, one-flesh union between a husband and wife is inconsequential to this doctor. All that matters is that people find something “affirming” to participate in. It’s the secular, arbitrary ethic showing itself again.
As long as there are consenting individuals involved, it’s okay in the secular sexual ethic. What we’re seeing here is a theme we’ve seen played out again and again—the only (and I really do mean only) sexual ethics is consent (which is itself an arbitrary ethic because, ultimately, why should consent matter?). As long as there are consenting individuals involved, it’s okay in the secular sexual ethic.
But secular ethics is arbitrary. It’s based merely in ever-changing human opinion—and who’s to say which opinion is correct? Ultimately, there’s no foundation for morality, so anything goes (as is clearly seen in this article!). Once you’ve abandoned the Bible as the foundation for one’s thinking, “everyone does what’s right in their own eyes” (Judges 21:25).
Would the Elephant in the Room Please Stand Up?
Interestingly, this article never even mentions the $20 billion-dollar-a-year “elephant in the room”—sex trafficking. Prostitution (and pornography) is fueled by sex trafficking—often of increasingly young victims. It’s a heinous abuse and devaluing of those made in the image of God.
This doctor never once mentions the trail of broken, enslaved individuals that sex trafficking and prostitution leaves. The average life expectancy of a trafficked sex slave is only seven years—and half of those drawn into prostitution here in the US started at age 12. Let that sink in a moment: twelve years old.
An article from our Answers magazine gives just a glimpse into the horrors of prostitution and its fuel, sex trafficking:
Although it may seem unbelievable, half of those drawn into prostitution in the United States entered at age 12, and nearly 70 percent entered before they were age 16 . . . one study revealed that 80 percent of women in prostitution are assaulted, including death threats.
Foreign victims are usually vulnerable because they are poor and lack opportunity for work in their home nation. Deceptive criminals convince them and their parents that they can provide the girl with a good job and a better life in the United States or in another developed country. Once the girls are in the destination country, however, their passports are taken away; they are housed in a place where they cannot contact anyone else; and their basic human dignity—as descendants of Adam and Eve, made in God’s image—is violated in ways too horrible to describe.
The girls are told they must work to pay off their transportation and living costs. Of course, that debt is never paid. Usually, in order to endure the ordeal, the girls become drug dependent, and their lives spiral downward until rescue is the only way out.
With American victims, the criminals typically seek out a vulnerable child—usually a runaway—because a child is easy to spot and easy to control. When the child is befriended and treated like a girlfriend, she becomes bonded to the man. Once under his control, however, the girl is forced into the same downward spiral as the foreign victims.
According to a study by Donna Hughes, a professor at the University of Rhode Island, most victims (estimated at about 75 percent) who are recruited and trafficked are unaware that they are destined for this sleazy slave trade.
If the girl is attractive, she will sometimes be promised a movie or modeling career. Hollywood markets the “Pretty Woman” myth of the glamorous prostitute earning big money from handsome customers. That rarely proves true. The vast majority of them end up drug addicted, bruised, and battered. They quickly get old, tired out, and used up.
It’s a dreadful, stomach-turning industry that abuses young girls and boys while satisfying the depraved desires of sinful men. This doctor should be utterly ashamed of herself for promoting this lifestyle to young girls—and Teen Vogue (which publishes all kinds of horrible trash) needs to pull this despicable article.
You can learn more about a biblical response to the horrible crime of sex trafficking in this article: Human Trafficking: The West’s New Slave Trade.
“Evidence, not morality”—But, Really, It’s Whose Morality
When we start with God’s Word, we have a foundation to denounce sex work—and those who would pay for such “services” and enslave others in it—as sinful and exploitative.
She concludes her article by stating, “evidence, not morality, should guide law reforms and sex work policy for full sex work decriminalization.” But what she’s really arguing is not that “evidence” guide law reform—the evidence is overwhelming that the sex worker industry is rife with abuse and exploitation. She’s arguing that her subjective morality governs law reform. But her morality is arbitrary, grounded in nothing but her own opinion.
When we start with God’s Word, we have a foundation to denounce sex work—and those who would pay for such “services” and enslave others in it—as sinful and exploitative. As Christians, we should seek to rescue young women and men from this industry and share with them the good news of Jesus who died to pay the price for their salvation. We should stand strong against the normalization of prostitution and advocate for sex trafficking victims.
As Scripture says,
The body is not meant for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body . . . Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them members of a prostitute? Never! Or do you not know that he who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For, as it is written, “The two will become one flesh.” But he who is joined to the Lord becomes one spirit with him. Flee from sexual immorality. Every other sin a person commits is outside the body, but the sexually immoral person sins against his own body. Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body. (1 Corinthians 6:13, 15–20)
Keep in mind this same anti-Christian, depraved magazine also featured articles for these teen girls on how to send naked selfies and how to get an abortion without your parents’ consent. This magazine is what you expect to find in ancient pagan Greece or Rome—not our once very Christianized, and now, sadly, very secularized culture. (unquote)
Remember, the way to keep up with such things is to know what your children are interacting with. If they desire to interact with something you need to review it first and if it is not suitable explain why. Proceed to keep it out of family life.