Sex & the iWorld of the Internet

width=70By Chuck Colson This commentary contains material that may not be suitable for children. A few years ago a pastor named Dale Kuehne took some college students to work in a farming village in Costa Rica a poor village that lacked electricity and running water.  The locals did have a generator however; once a week they fired it up to watch a raunchy American television program Beverly Hills 90210. Kuehne was shocked to see village teenagers mimicking the behavior of the characters in the show. And he was floored when village men asked him what was wrong with the women whod come on the trip.   Why dont they want to have sex? they asked. We thought all American women want to have sex. Kuehne relates the story in his new book Sex and the iWorld: Rethinking Relationships beyond an Age of Individualism. What happened in Costa Rica he writes shows how far iWorld messages have spreadand how little the Church has done to engage the iWorld culture. Kuehne says that we are witnessing in the West the collapse of the Judeo-Christian worldview. Replacing it is a worldview that some call postmodern individualism but Kuehne calls it iWorld. iWorlders are dissolving long-established boundaries because they believe that people are happiest making their own moral and relational choices width=180outside of the family community and faith traditions into which they were born. And the iWorld promotes a desire for immediate gratification as illustrated in the huge levels of consumer debt and the tendency to become sexually involved at the very outset of a romantic relationship. Sadly iWorlders often unwittingly sacrifice what they want in the long run contentment and fulfillment by succumbing to their immediate desires especially when it comes to sexual relationships. Perhaps even more sadly the Church has done precious little to present to iWorlders a vision of true fulfillment. Thats partly because the Church itself has turned a blind eye to sexual immorality within the body of Christ. Even worse writes Kuehne is the degree to which the historic orthodox understanding of sexual morality and marriage is being ignored or revised by clergy and laypeople alike. This has enormous consequences for the Churchs ability to be salt and light in a culture suffering from the after-effects and social ills of the sexual revolution. width=109The Church needs to be reminded and needs to make the case that the biblical teaching that limits sexual relations to a marriage relationship between a man and a woman is actually beneficial to all. And thats exactly what Kuehne does in his book in a direct challenging but ultimately compassionate way. Every human he says is on a never-ending quest for acceptance love and fulfillment. But these things can never be found in the iWorld by asking Whats in it for me? So instead of being subsumed by the iWorld culture the Church has the rWorld to offer. The rWorld understands that God created people for relationships and that we find our deepest fulfillment in relationship with Him and in living a life rich in self-giving not self-satisfying relationships. And that makes Kuehnes book Sex and the iWorld a worthy read. Visit BreakPoint.org and well show you how to get a copy.
by is licensed under
ad-image
image
03.13.2025

TEXAS INSIDER ON YOUTUBE

ad-image
image
03.11.2025
image
03.10.2025
ad-image