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PREAMBLE TO
THE SEXUALITY SERIES
WHY
THIS SERIES IS SO IMPORTANT AND YOUR HELP IS NEEDED.
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Sex
Ed and Global Values
by Berit Kjos (www.crosswind.to)
When fifteen-year-old Kevin walked into his American
History class at Cupertino High School in California,
he was given a handout. He glanced at the title: "Heterosexuality:
Can It be Cured?" Weird, he thought and looked
around. Some of his friends were studying it, too. He
read on:
Heterosexuality is a condition characterized by a sexual
attraction to members of the opposite gender. Many persons,
in all cultures, at all times, have been heterosexual.
Whatever the cause of this phenomenon, we can state
without doubt that there are many problems associated
with heterosexuality, both for the individual and society
at large.
Curious, Kevin scanned the list of problems. Women were
especially vulnerable, it said. They could face sexually
transmitted diseases and unplanned pregnancy as well
as mental and psychological hazards" such as "a
state of homophobia." The suggested treatments
included psychotherapy and wide-spread sterilization
of the heterosexual population. Was this a joke?
The next page gave the source of this bizarre "research".
It came from the American Public Health Association
Caucus of Gay and Public Health Workers. [Look what
is allowed in schools and we can't give good Christian
teaching on sexuality.]
Undermine traditional values
It's no secret that the gay and lesbian coalition have
waged an intense campaign to draw young students into
their lifestyle. Their demand for laws mandating classroom
sensitivity training designed to build "respect"
for their values has opened classrooms to unspeakable
propaganda. And they are not alone in the battle against
concerned parents who would block their "right"
to indoctrinate captive young everywhere.
Planned Parenthood and its partners around the world
also demand that children must be set free to indulge
in sexual thrills-without fear of pregnancy. So does
SIECUS (The Sex Information and Education Council of
the United States). Together they have prepared a titillating
display of films, textbooks, props, and promotional
material. Most of it is designed to promote rather than
deter sexual activity-and, more subtly, earth-centered
spirituality. The two go together.
It's not surprising that Sexuality and Man, a collection
of articles compiled by SIECUS board members, sports
a yin-yang symbol on the cover. One of its authors,
Dr. Lester Kirkendall unveiled the SIECUS philosophy:
"The purpose of sex education is not... to control
and suppress sex expression, as in the past, but to
indicate the immense possibilities for human fulfillment
that human sexuality offers. The individual must be
given sufficient understanding to incorporate sex most
fruitfully and most responsibly into his present and
future life."
The primary goal, however, is to change values. The
first steps are: "challenging the students' fixed
beliefs," shaking their moral convictions, and
breaking down modesty and inhibitions. The titillating
sex-ed films, suggestive classroom discussions, and
provocative literature serve the purpose well. Children
are forced to think the unthinkable and visualize the
forbidden-until sensuality has replaced Christianity
in their minds and hearts. Before long, sin looks cool;
and what God calls good seems boring.
A shocked father described some of sex education programs
in his home state, Massachusetts:
"A 14-year-old Beverly High School girl came home
and told her father that he was a 'homophobe.' She had
just returned from 'Homophobia Week' sessions at the
school."
"At Silver Lake High School, the ninth-grade health
text teaches: 'Testing your ability to function sexually
and to give pleasure to another person may be less threatening
in the early teens with people of your own sex.' Also,
'You may come to the conclusion that growing up means
rejecting the values of your parents.' Students were
told to keep the book in their lockers and not take
it home."
"In Brookline, a transsexual had been invited to
explain to a class of first-graders how a sex change
can take place. Parents had not been notified or prepared
to counsel their frightened, confused children."
"In Westford, thirteen-year-olds were asked on
a quiz: 'What is the best method against pregnancy?'
The choice of 'abstinence' was deemed incorrect."
What do students gain from these lessons? They learn
to question home-taught values and look with "open
minds" at dangerous alternatives. Many educators
know that when children are trapped in sensuous lifestyles,
they can no longer delight in God.
It makes sense. Remember, "the whole world lies
under the sway of the wicked one." (1 John 5:19)
Satan has always distorted truth, twisted facts, and
seduced people with enticing counterfeits of God's promises.
His latest argument is persuasive: Peace and unity are
good. War and conflict are bad. Religions that stir
guilt and bring division are dangerous. And Christianity,
the biggest culprit, blocks progress toward a more evolved
set of values based on all the world's religions.
Discuss alternative values
To understand this planned rebellion against biblical
values, look back to 1970. Education psychologist Dr.
William Glasser had just pioneered a "daring new
program" for changing attitudes. His book, Schools
Without Failure, introduced a manipulative strategy
for turning the class into an encounter and counseling
group:
"Children would share their feelings and air their
complaints under the guidance of a trained facilitator
with a politically correct answer. They learned to empathize
with another's lust and respect each other's feelings.
Soon, they had traded God's moral standards for self-made
choices. No longer would authoritarian parents impose
their values on submissive children. They would write
their own rules!"
Or so it seemed. Actually Glasser's tactics manipulated
students into yielding individual choice-along with
privacy and family loyalty. Consider the effect of the
following suggestion:
"Children will often become very personal, talking
about subjects that ordinarily are considered private
A child who discusses drunken brawls at home might quietly
be asked to talk about something that has more relationship
to school. Changing the subject in this way is sometimes
unwise, however, because it is just those drunken brawls
at home that have the most relationship to his school
progress."
Today, we know that those private "brawls"
become part of a student's computerized portfolio. A
child's "honest" sharing about family activities
gives school officials the needed data about family
values. It enables them to monitor every family member-not
just the kids in the classroom.
Professor Sidney Simon went a step further. His book,
Values Clarification-A Handbook of Practical Strategies
for Teachers and Students, added a more intrusive note
to the vast selections of manipulative values-changing
strategies used to speed the social transformation.
Among the classroom exercises which soon filtered into
textbooks and schools everywhere was a tactic called
"values voting."
The teacher simply asks questions dealing with personal
values. The students say "yes" by raising
their hands. They answer "no" by pointing
their thumbs down. They discuss their answers. Consider
some of the questions. For example, "How many of
you
- think there are times when cheating is justified?
- regularly attend religious services and enjoy it?
- think that women should stay home and be primary wives
and mothers?
- would like to have a secret lover?
- would choose to die and go to heaven, if it meant
playing a harp all day?"
For middle and high schools students, Simon added questions
such as: "How many of you think sex education instruction
in the schools should include techniques for lovemaking
and contraception?" and "How many of you think
you will continue to practice religions, just like your
parents?"
You may recognize some of these questions. They have
become standard fare in classrooms across the country.
Whether teachers or school counselors lead the encounter
groups, children are urged to share intimate details
of family life. Most parents are kept in the dark.
During this directed dialogue, verbal and written responses
are carefully monitored by watchful teachers, who are
required to assess each child's individual "progress"
toward the new attitudinal goals. Intrusive classroom
surveys, "private" journal entries, and classroom
writing projects all help expose personal beliefs and
values.
If teachers and school counselors see anything that
might hinder a student from meeting the new affective
standards for politically correct attitudes, the child
could be labeled "at risk"-meaning more monitoring,
state control, and possible removal of a child "whose
home environment was felt to have a malignant influence."
Establish target values
The rejection of traditional values happened with the
approval of our political leaders. Remember what President
Bush said in 1992 when he announced America 2000: "Nations
that stick to stale old notions and ideologies will
falter and fail. So I'm here to say, America will move
forward New Schools for a new world."
Actually, George Bush endorsed values clarification
long before he became president. In 1974, he helped
write a report titled, "Man, Education, and Society
in the Year 2000." Funded by HEW's Office of Education,
it concluded that "the 50 states should organize
a commission to establish the values that are significant
in approaching problems (e.g., population) that must
be faced in the future." The summary explained
that
"The traditional cluster of knowledge, skills,
values and concepts will not help our young face the
future in their private life, the international situation....
Perhaps there is a need for clarification of new values
needed to solve future problems."
He is not the only president who proved his loyalty
to global education before winning the White House.
In 1987, (then) Governor Bill Clinton served on The
Study Commission on Global Education with other education,
business, and New Age leaders. Together they prepared
a report titled "The United States Prepares for
Its Future: Global Perspectives in Education."
Its Foreword stated that "It now seems almost conventional
to speak of American citizenship in the same breath
with international interdependence and the planetary
environment."
These leaders envisioned a world without war - a global
village where young and old would share a common set
of values, fulfill their prescribed civic responsibility,
and consent to what Al Gore called "a wrenching
transformation of society."
In this new world, sexual experimentation would be okay,
but dissent and resistance would not be tolerated. Group
consensus and conformity to the planned changes ahead
would be essential. In the end, all would supposedly
live together in peace and unity.
Their vision of the new world order is not unlike the
managed society described by Aldous Huxley in his 1932
futuristic fantasy, Brave New World:
- Children are raised collectively according to the
needs of the global labor market.
- Group thinking has replaced individual views.
- Communal "Feelies" or sensory experiences
are encouraged.
- Casual sex is obligatory.
- Mandatory pills prevent pregnancy.
- People are kept too busy with work and trivia to think
or complain.
- All must participate in mystical group rituals invoking
a universal god.
- Peer pressure and constant surveillance ensure compliance.
The similarities between our schools and Huxley's Brave
New World is not as strange as it might seem. Aldous
Huxley's brother was Julian Huxley, the first Secretary-General
of UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organization). Promoting the same socialist
and humanist values as John Dewey, Julian Huxley brought
his brother's vision into UNESCO and laid the foundations
for the new international education system. Our Goals
2000 is little more than the American branch of what
UNESCO, in 1973, called a "continuous and integrated
process" of "lifelong learning."
Vital to the implementation of this monstrous system
are the deceptive marketing strategies needed to persuade
the public to submit to its oppressive rules and laws.
After all, this new tightly managed world system would
eliminate all the freedoms most Americans now take for
granted. It would own each child and control each person.
But it would sanction the sexual sins God forbids.
Today, this twist on freedom serves a purpose. As in
recent totalitarian regimes, well-chosen compensations
distract the masses from the anguish of tyranny. In
Brave New World, Aldous Huxley describes the seductive
"feelies" that compensate for the loss of
freedom. First among them is sexual license:
"As political and economic freedom diminishes,
sexual freedom tends compensatingly to increase. And
the dictator... will do well to encourage that freedom.
In conjunction with the freedom to daydream under the
influence of dope, movies and the radio, it will help
to reconcile his subjects to the servitude which is
their fate."
Sensual, earth-centered values are anything but new
to the human race. Pagan cultures have indulged in sexual
promiscuity along with occult rituals since the beginning
of history. And whenever God's people in Old Testament
times turned away from their Shepherd, they were soon
caught up in the same deadly lusts that corrupted their
pagan neighbors. We see the same cultural decay here
and now, and the New Testament explains the process:
- "although they knew God, they
- "did not glorify Him as God
- "became futile in their thoughts
- "claimed to be wise... became fools
- "exchanged the truth of God for a lie
- "worshipped and served created things
- "Therefore God GAVE THEM OVER to
1. "the lusts of their hearts, to dishonor their
bodies among themselves
2. "vile passions. committing what is shameful,
and receiving in themselves the penalty of their error.
3. "a debased mind being filled with all unrighteousness,
sexual immorality, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness.
they are whisperers, backbiters, haters of God, violent,
proud, boasters, inventors of evil things, disobedient
to parents, undiscerning, untrustworthy, unloving, unforgiving,
unmerciful; who not only do the same but also approve
of those who practice them." Our children are not
immune to the world's seductive messages. Many hear
the same tempting promises and the alluring voices that
others hear and follow. They, too, want friends and
fun. So when the tempting promises ring out day after
day, week after week, they start to sound both true
and natural.
Concerned about their spiritual safety, our Shepherd
reminds them: "Do not be conformed to this world,
but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that
you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect
will of God." (Romans 12:2-3)
Unless we help our children build a mental framework
and filter based on biblical truth, the world's philosophies
will probably squeeze them into its mold. It takes discernment,
diligence, and delight in God to stand firm in His truth
when friends choose to follow their feelings. But those
who have chosen to stand firm, wear His armor, trust
His promises, and follow Him no matter what, will be
led by the Shepherd in a peace and triumph the world
can never understand.
"If our churches and schools don't teach
the truth and quit saying it is not our place, no one
else will; especially what is happening in our schools
and home. And God knows, he'll hold you responsible.
Therefore, I press on your soul to copy and distribute
the Sexuality Series in your congregations, meetings,
school and other areas, as much as possible. Your eternal
reward will not go unnoticed, as we combat the hedonism
of our day and bring godly values in our children again"
- Oneil McQuick. |
| THERE
IS NO HATE, MALICE, RACISM, ETC., WRITTEN IN THE SEXUALITY
SERIES. THESE ARE TEACHINGS DIRECTLY FROM THE WORD OF
GOD (RELIGION). Therefore, the contents of these writings
are protected by the First Amendment of the United States
Constitution. "US Constitutional Amendment, Article
1: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press;
or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and
to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
This is also sanctioned by most laws of the countries
of the world. |
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