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STATEMENT
ON PORNOGRAPHY
Diverse courts
and cultures may debate the definitions and consequences of pornography
(the literature of sexual deviance), but on the basis of eternal
principles, Seventh-day Adventists of whatever culture deem pornography
to be destructive, demeaning, desensitizing, and exploitative.
It is destructive
to marital relationships, thus subverting God's design that husband
and wife cleave so closely to each other that they become, symbolically,
"one flesh" (Genesis 2:24).
It is demeaning,
defining a woman (and in some instances a man) not as a spiritual-mental-physical
whole, but as a one-dimensional and disposable sex-object, thus
depriving her of the worth and the respect that are her due and
right as a daughter of God.
It is desensitizing
to the viewer/reader, callousing the conscience and "perverting
the perception," thus producing a "depraved person"
(Romans 1:22. 28, NEB).
It is exploitative,
pandering to prurience, and basally abusive, thus contrary to the
Golden rule, which insists that one treat others as one wishes to
be treated (Matthew 7:12). Particularly offensive is child pornography.
Said Jesus: "If anyone leads astray even one child who believes
in me, he would be better off thrown into the depths of the sea
with a millstone hung around his neck!" (See Matthew 18:6).
Though Norman
Cousins may not have said it in Biblical language, he has perceptively
written: "The trouble with this wide open pornography . . .
is not that it corrupts but that it desensitizes; not that it unleashes
the passions but that it cripples the emotions; not that it encourages
a mature attitude, but that it is a reversion to infantile obsessions;
not that it removes the blinders, but that it distorts the view.
Prowess is proclaimed but love is denied. What we have is not liberation
but dehumanization."Saturday Review of Literature,
Sept. 20, 1975.
A society plagued
by plunging standards of decency, increasing child prostitution,
teenage pregnancies, sexual assaults on women and children, drug-damaged
mentalities, and organized crime can ill afford pornography's contribution
to these evils.
Wise, indeed,
is the counsel of Christianity's first great theologian: "If
you believe in goodness and if you value the approval of God, fix
your minds on the things which are holy and right and pure and beautiful
and good" (Philippians 4:8, 9, Phillips). This is advice
that all Christians would do well to heed.
This public statement was released by the General
Conference president, Neal C. Wilson, after consultation with the
16 world vice presidents of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, on
July 5, 1990, at the General Conference session in Indianapolis,
Indiana.
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