In Focus Archive
Moral Reflections on the Merits of Universalized Health Care
In Focus Special: The Pro-Life Movement: Has Our Strategy Failed?
Jihadism, Reason & 9/11: Seven years later
Faith in America - Romney, Religion and the Public Life
Reprogramming - Tremendous Breakthrough in Stem Cell Research
Chimera - Merging Human Cells with Animal Eggs
Preimplantation genetic diagnosis
NaPro Technology - Advances in Women's Health
Stem Cells - News, Federal Funding, Research
American Eugenics - History, Culture and Resources
Gonzales v. Carhart Examining the Supreme Court Decision
The Death Penalty - Essays, Commentary, News, Statistics
Egg Donation - Fertility Tratment and Embryo Research
Unsound Therapy - The Ashley Experiment
Stem Cells - News, Federal Funding, Research
Pope Benedict XVI - Apostolic Journey to Turkey
Bioethics Organizations on the Web
2010 Archive
- A Legal Bombshell Hits Stem Cell Science
- Have Stem Cells Become Passé?
- Illegal Immigration and Catholic Social Teaching
- The Difference God Makes
- How are Christians to Engage the Culture?
- In Vitro Fertilization - Why Not?
- The Long Ascent to Calvary
- Healthcare, Human Life and America
- Why I Didn’t Give Up Facebook for Lent
- Our Sex-Crazed Culture
- The Unimportance of Sex
- Recovery in the Big Easy
- Catholic Teaching on Assisted Nutrition and Hydration
- Haiti
- What’s Wrong With Us?
- Challenging Totalitarianism in 2010
| Our Sex-Crazed Culture |
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How we got here and where we are going Nearly half (46%) of all 15–19-year-olds in the United States have had sex at least once;
The bottom line is that safer sex can be fun. It is a great way to explore who we are sexually, express our feelings, bond with others, and have a good time. Practicing safer sex can enhance our pleasure — and who doesn't want more pleasure? Such “education” is to the moral fiber of our culture what sulfuric acid is to the skin and cyanide to the central nervous system. In the course of the conversation, they also spoke about the importance of abstinence until marriage. At one point, his daughter passed a rose around the room and asked each student to remove a petal from the rose as they passed it from one kid to the next. As the students were picking away, she described how the rose represents the heart of a woman, and how, with each different sex partner she has, part of her heart is left with that person, leaving—like the tattered rose—only a badly damaged heart for her eventual husband. Even weeks after their presentation, my friend assures me, his eighth-graders can’t stop talking about it. ***
Fr. Thomas Berg is Executive Director of the Westchester Institute for Ethics and the Human Person.
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Such statistics are driven by what can only be described as a sex-crazed culture. And may I ask: Have we not grown dangerously accustomed to that fact that we can’t sit down to our coffee and morning newspaper without reading something about sex? In the New York Times two weeks ago, it was about the growing phenomenon of “
Consider too a new book/documentary that is, hopefully for the better, raising quite a few eyebrows these days: