Parenting the Porn Generation
5October 22, 2012 by mattfradd
For the past several years I have worked with those affected by pornography. Allow me, then, from my experience, to offer three strategies that you as a parent can implement in parenting the porn generation.
1 – Affirm the goodness of their sexuality
Sometimes Catholic parents, especially when they themselves were brought up with a standard of chastity that focused on a list of sins and temptations to be avoided, may feel unprepared to provide their kids with an affirmative view of sex and the body.
But raising them to value their sexuality as something good and holy is essential to protecting them from exposure to porn, and to inculcating in them a positive desire for purity generally.
They will be trained to see clearly the great difference between the lies of porn and unchastity and the great truths of God’s plan for human sexuality.
It is also useful when it comes to teaching modesty and self-control, even at a young age. It is precisely because your child’s body is good and wonderful that he is not to treat it like a toy; it is precisely because your child’s body is sacred that she should veil what demands the reverence.
Even when they’re very young, my wife and I make it a priority to affirm our children’s sexuality daily—teaching them that God created them male or female so that they can become a gift in self-donating love.
Each night before bed I lay my hands on them and offer this prayer:
Dear Heavenly Father, I thank you that you have created [name] to be a strong boy/ beautiful girl. I ask that he/she would grow up to be a strong man/beautiful and strong woman to give his/her life away as a priest or a husband/nun or a wife.
2 – Be a parent, not a buddy
I know that you know this – or that you think you know this, but it bears repeating. Your child needsyou to parent him. And a large part of parenting means saying “no!” In fact, if your child hasn’t gotten angry at you over the past week because you would not let him have his way – you’re probably not doing a very good job parenting him.
In the sphere of chastity, saying “no” is the flip side of affirming your children’s sexuality. It doesn’t mean to shelter kids from every possible bad influence in the world; rather, it’s about exercising prudent vigilance.
There never was a teenager who couldn’t survive without a smart phone, but there are countless thousands whose internet-connected phones become personal porn terminals. Laptops behind locked bedroom doors might help a little with homework, but they’re also inviters of temptation. Your child was invited to a sleepover: do you know what kind of supervision the host family exercises over the computer or cable box? If you’re not prepared to say “no” you might find all your vigilance undone by another family’s carelessness.
3 – Use Filters and Accountability Software
We have talked first about giving kids a foundation that affirms God’s gift of their bodies, then about circumstances in which we must be prepared to say “no” in order to protect that gift.
As a supplement to rather than a replacement for our work of forming and parenting our kids, internet filters and other content-blocking tools can be useful, especially when your children are young. As they grow older, however, it’s important that you not simply block them but continue to teach them.
This is how accountability software differs from filtering. Instead of blocking certain websites, it monitors all the sites that your child visits and then sends a report to an accountability partner (you). This changes the mentality of the child surfing the internet. Rather than him wondering how he could get around a filter to visit some forbidden-fruit website, he will know that he could visit the website, but that he will have to answer for it.
When you think about it, isn’t this how the heavenly Father acts towards us? He could “block” us from turning our backs on him and from the pain our sins bring, but he does not. Rather he teaches us right from wrong, and implores us to do what’s right (while giving us the grace necessary to do it). He does not censor our every thought and action because he desires us to grow up to be responsible moral agents: sons and daughters who freely choose what is good. We parents ought to follow his example.
(In my opinion, the best accountability software can be found at www.covenanteyes.org. Use the promo code “pureinheart” for a free 30-day trial.)
We as parents have a grave responsibility to protect the purity of our children.
We will be answerable to almighty God if we fail to protect and guide them, particularly in the face of the unprecedented evils that porn poses to their minds, hearts, and souls. “Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin,” Jesus said, “it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened round his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea” (Matt. 18:6). As Peter Kreeft once noted, there are no Styrofoam millstones.







Great post Matt!
If I could suggest one other: Be a Spiritual-Warrior for your child; especially Dads. I was a confused and lonely little boy who was touched by evil at a young age. I needed someone to fight the devil for me. My parents loved me, but they were very busy and didn’t really know what was going on with their youngest son. I got sucked in, and later on ended up a gay porn star. Thankfully, when I was ready to get out of the life, my Dad and Mom, having gone through their own conversions back to the Faith, where there and took me back in, no questions asked. They just loved me and gave me a safe place to heal.
I’m so glad, Joeseph, that you found your way out of the evil that touched you as a child, and that even though your parents didn’t realize that you were in trouble at that time, they were instrumental in helping you heal–what a wonderful success story.
Too many people are only concerned with their child’s success in the material sense–like making sure they do well in school so they can eventually get a good job, or wanting their peer group to see them as a “winner”, etc.–but then they totally miss the importance of guarding and guiding their child when it comes to the very real dangers to their souls, which are literally everywhere at this point.
Have two preteen boys, so this is 100% pertinent.
Many thanks for the post.
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