Wiki:
Page name: Pornoholic [Logged in view] [RSS]
2007-03-27 19:53:34
Last author: Child of God
Owner: Child of God
# of watchers: 3
Fans: 0
D20: 4
Bookmark and Share

Pornoholic



Many outside of the Christian community do not see a problem with pornographic material. Whether in art, media or literature, pornography, or porno, is often used by professionals in relationship counseling. To most Christians though, porno is a source of sexual impurity and sin. Why do Christians seem to view sexual impurity as being worse than other sins? Does the Bible not essentially tell us that all sins are equal in the eyes of God? When then do Christians condemn sexual impurity so much more? Why is there a stigma that people with pornographic and sexual addictions are worse than liars, hypocrites or slanderers?

And why is it that women with pornography addictions are looked down on so much more then men?

I ask this not out of a feminist mindset, but rather out of despair. Surely I am not the only girl on campus with a porn addiction…am I? And if I am, does that make me a slut? A whore? A failure as a Christian? Am I dirtier than others? More sinful? Am I a harlot? An adulteress? A temptress?

I would like to believe not. My virginity defends me against the accusations of being a slut/whore/harlot/adulteress. What about the accusations of being a dirty, sinful temptress? To those, I don’t know how to answer.

Gender aside, how many people (men, women, professors, students) within this community are currently suffering from this addiction in silence? How many suffer for fear of condemnation from their friends, peers and superiors. Some may even fear expulsion from the community. How many are afraid of the looks, the scoffing, the disgust in the eyes of those around them? How many are silently drowning in despair?

Those who don’t have this addiction may have difficulty understanding how something like watching porn could be addictive. How can something as sadistic as SM, as disturbing as furry fetishes, as dehumanizing as bondage be addictive? How can watching oral sex be a turn on? How can such activities cause arousal?

I don’t know, and I would dare to say that most don’t know either. Most of us don’t understand how something so grotesque can give us pleasure.

But it does, and with time it gets worse.

As with any addiction, it starts to overtake you. You may have started innocently enough; maybe you were curious. Maybe you wanted to open your mind to a new art style. Maybe you were looking for a new way to spice up your romance stories. No matter how it starts, it soon spirals out of control. You want to stop, you try to stop. You don’t want to do this; your mind and heart are screaming and crying for you to stop, you feel guilty, shameful and dirty, and every time your addiction wins, you can feel a piece of your soul dying. Paul nails it perfectly (no pun intended) when he exclaims in Romans 15-19:

“I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I do not do, but what I hate to do. And if I do what I do not want to do, I agree that the law is good. As it is, it is no longer I myself who do it, but it is sin living in me. I know that nothing good lives in me, that is, in my sinful nature. For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out. For what I do is not the good I want to do; no, the evil I do not want to do-this I keep on doing.”

Day after day, you come before God begging for forgiveness and help, and each day you feel more hopeless than the previous. Each day you feel dirtier than before, sometimes too dirty to com before anyone, let alone God. You start living daily with indescribable guilt and shame. These emotions start to affect your personality, your outlook and your relationships, most notably, your relationship with God. Chances are one of three things will happen: a) you continue the dreadful cycle until you become indifferent to the problem; b) the hopelessness becomes too great and you fall away from God, convinced you are too dirty and sinful, and that God is sick of forgiving you for something you continue to do; or, c) you overcome your addiction.

But how do you overcome an addiction? Support groups are seen as almost a necessity in the process. So why are Christian support groups for porn addicts so few and far between? Why are no PA, Pornaholics Anonymous, running in the churches or within Christian communities? Why isn’t the Christian community trying to help people with this addiction, rather than condemning them?

Yes, you need to acknowledge you have an addiction.
Yes, you need to bring your addiction before God and confess it.
Yes, you need to ask for forgiveness and help from Jesus.
Yes, you need to acknowledge your part in this addiction.

But what next? Where do you go from there? What happens when you relapse? I had been 6 months clean when my relapse occurred. It was sudden, spontaneous and it hit hard. What happened? What sparked my relapse? I thought God had freed me from this bondage so what happened? Am I such a horrible Christian?

While the spirit is willing, the flesh is weak. And that is why Christians need to be able to speak openly about this problem, for both men and women. We need to make an atmosphere here at Redeemer where people can come forward about this addiction and seek supported help. How can addicts gain help when there is no support? How can we get help when we are afraid to come forward about it? If we can’t help within the Christian community, where else are we supposed to look?

When the body of Christ condemns you, how can you not help but feel that Christ, Himself, does as well? 




Back to Articles

Back to Childs Writings

Username (or number or email):

Password:

2007-03-28 [Blasphemy]: the problem here does not lie in one's hobbies and interest but in one's interpretation of their religion and why one lets it dictate their own life

2007-03-28 [Child of God]: For some people, including myself, their religion defines their life and is not just merely another part of it that can be turned on and off at will. (Unfortunently sometimes.)

2007-03-28 [Blasphemy]: I am afraid you and I share a rather large conflict of interest then, I believe someone should always come before their religion

2007-03-28 [Child of God]: That's hard when your faith (I'm not going to use religion because I don't believe in religion), which you live by, tells you to put others before you because someone else has already done so for you. Humanism is based on selfishness, a psychological and philosophical fact. I don't ascribe to humanism, sorry.

2007-03-28 [Blasphemy]: Faith is an interesting concept, the unquestioning will to embrace the word of God as your own personal code to live by and to follow it through and through, yet as this wiki implies the word of God has caused some issues with your personal choices, because you infact are a person, the bible is not a recipe book for people to all become the same, your Faith is not lost if you slightly deter from the script of ages ago written with no possible conception of what the future may hold, live your life as if you only had this life to live

2007-03-28 [Child of God]: As a Christian, I would respond back that yes, my Faith is not lost if I deter but rather it is a feeling of guilt that goes along with that. And guilt about anything which could be considered a "sin," or morally unacceptable in humanistic terms, is signifying that you are human and you recognize what you did was wrong. I don't feel guilt or shame because a book told me to, the Bible doesn't say anything about pornography at all actually, nor does it say that this is worse than going out telling a lie. The point is that it is wrong, and many non-Christians can give you moral arguments as to why it is wrong. Self-gratification (no pun intended), that is, greed and selfishness are what have gotten our world into the state they are in, have caused all the wars (yes, even the "religious wars" though there's really no such thing). Just because something feels good doesn't mean that it is right or beneficial to yourself or others. I tend to look at things very differently from other people. I can't just look at surface level without seeing what is underneath, one of the reasons I became a Christian. And I find that a humanistic outlook tends to stop just below the surface to avoid getting to the nasty stuff it can't really answer without contradicting itself, whereas Christianity when it is understood without it's dogmas and semantics, I find dives head first into trying to deal with the nasty stuff below the surface.

2007-03-28 [Blasphemy]: Well, I am more then willing to argue you on that point, you see Christianity as truly digging deeper then the surface? Enlighten me, how is that proclaiming yourself as tied to one particular faith and being bound to the truth it holds give you the ability to dig deeper then the lack of such restrictions?

2007-03-28 [Child of God]: I will but if you wish I will do it through IM not here. I did not post this for a debate of religion, since this paper doesn't reflect a theory but a fact. I posted this merely because my friends on Elftown enjoy reading the articles I submit to my school, academic and paper wise. If you wish to continue this you are more than welcome to IM me.

2007-03-28 [Blasphemy]: oh ok, I thought this was like a issue you seeked help with lol

2007-03-29 [Child of God]: It is, but doesn't change that it was posted for those who wish to read it because they have requested regular postings of my articles and essays. Comments are welcome in IM form but it is inappropriate to debate something that is relative here.

Show these comments on your site

Elftown - Wiki, forums, community and friendship.