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Superior Court Judge Explains Impacts of Pornography on Next Generation
It is a major miscalculation to think you can handle sexual sin on your own
Cambria, California – Drag queens in public libraries. Public schools allowing sexually explicit R-rated movies during class time. Indoctrination by LGBTQ activists and advocates. No place is safe. No places are sacred and kids as young as kindergarten are groomed by those who should be protecting them. The long-term effects are clear: addiction, depression, social anxiety, self-injury, confusion, suicidal ideation, and increased need for stimulation.

At a time when sex is delivered 24/7 via the internet. Without parental controls on computers, phones or televisions, children can avail themselves of a vast menu of “junk food,” or toxic sexual imagery. When children are exposed to pornography, arousal is imprinted via epinephrine. For those in the Church, the news is not any better. Nearly two-thirds of Christian pastors and youth leaders have struggled with pornography.

Superior Court Judge (Ret.), Kent “Buck” Levis is the author of Coming Clean, a look at his own struggle to break free from the grip of sexual sin. Without going into sordid detail, Levis explains the progressive nature of sexual sin and how it acts like a cancer in one’s life, marriage, and work. Eventually, Levis was caught with pornography on his computer at work and forced to deal with an addiction that had taken over his life.

The solution, says Levis, is not to believe you can handle it on your own. When he finally gave up the secrecy and confessed, God met him and healed him. In a culture where sexual imagery is everywhere, Levis says we must be vigilant about protecting ourselves but also our children from the addictive nature of pornographic images. It may start small, but Levis says sexual sin is always progressive and develops a bigger appetite.

Levis encourages us to submit ourselves one to another as the Bible admonishes. We can’t overcome sin on our own. We think we can but that’s exactly what the enemy wants us to believe. We need one another. We need community. We need accountability. We need to give up our pride. Coming clean, he says, is never easy. But coming clean is the only way to restore a right relationship with God and find lasting freedom from any sin.

SOURCES: www.barna.com/the-porn-phenomenon
https://psychcentral.com/blog/growing-up-too-fast-early-exposure-to-sex#4

 
 

To schedule an interview contact Don Otis at 719.275.7775
 
 

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