by Mark Gregston,
founder of
Heartlight Ministries
Teen Sexual Behavior: Issues &
Concerns -
A Father's Critical
Role
The Range of Teenage Sexual
Behavior
Your Teen's Friends: Peer Influence &
Peer Relationships
Teenagers today live in a world of seduction and permissiveness.
Sexual images are everywhere, not just in an occasional movie or
magazine. Younger than ever, they are being torn between
living a lifestyle that is deemed acceptable and desirable by their
peer group, and
doing what has been taught them by their families and church.
More times than not, the pressure to “fit in” with their culture
wins out when they are away from home.
While teens do understand and
welcome (most of the time) their parent’s messages about modesty and
abstinence, the overwhelming influence of their peers and their
culture will dwarf those positive messages. They are feeling a
pressure to give in and “belong” that you wouldn’t wish on anyone.
Easy access to
pornography, the
display of sexual images and themes across all forms of media, and
the promotion of alternative sexual lifestyles, coupled with
messages of instant gratification and a “do what you want”
mentality, all set young girls up for a fall. By overexposure,
they are being convinced that sex is as natural and healthy for them
to participate in (before marriage) as breathing or eating, so it is
simply no big deal.
What Parents Can Do
If you learn your teenage girl has
become sexually active, first try to understand those pressures and
why it may be happening. Then, I encourage you to take a couple of
steps back and don’t respond with your first inclination. Let
things sit for a time. Gather your thoughts, think through
what you want to say, and seek counsel from someone you trust. Just
having someone else hear your thoughts and respond to your emotions
with a sense of wit and wisdom is always helpful.
You will undoubtedly look at their
sexual activity differently than they do. You’ll think of it as a
loss of something, like their virginity, innocence, purity, or
childhood. But your teen will feel that they’ve gained
something, like experience, a stronger relationship, or coming into
womanhood. The friction between your sense of loss and your
teen’s sense of gain may cause so much heat that your relationship
can go down in flames.
I’m not trying to justify your
teen’s sinful actions, nor am I buying into this seductive culture,
but I do know that if handled wrong, you can make your teen feel as
though they are unforgivable, forever unclean, and “out of the club”
because of their poor choice. It’s where we lose so many teens
from our families, from our churches, and from our communities
today. Shame on us, for shaming them.
Consider what God
does
Instead, maybe we should think about
how God would approach it. God assures each one of us of His
presence always. He doesn’t leave us when we make a mistake,
nor does he turn His back on His children when they sin. He
doesn’t disappear when the road gets dark, nor does He abandon us
during a time of need. He moves toward us, in hopes of change,
restoration, forgiveness, and reconciliation. I would
encourage you to “Go thou and do likewise” when facing your teen who
has fallen into sexual sin.
It does no good to shame the teen.
Consequences for sinful and inappropriate behavior? You bet!
Stronger
boundaries or even a major change in the teen’s life to keep it
from happening again? Absolutely! But not a demeaning
presentation of judgment and shame. This type of approach only
destroys your relationship, and builds walls of resentment.
This is no time to be burning bridges. Your daughter needs you
to help her understand that there is a better way. You’ll have
no way to do that if the relationship is destroyed.
It’s easy to love a teen when
they’re doing well. It’s harder to love them when they’re
struggling and making mistakes. But it may be the time that
they need it the most. We are never more like Christ than when
we give our teen grace in the face of a struggle. And, giving
grace when it surely is not deserved may change the direction of the
struggle, or even bring it to an end.
ABOUT THE
AUTHOR:
Mark Gregston is
an author, speaker, national radio host, and the founder of
Heartlight,
a residential counseling opportunity for struggling adolescents
where he and his wife live with 50 high-schoolers. For more
information, call 903-668-2173.