By Tim Bloedow
In light of our earlier post today, “Why do adults promote sexual activity among youths?”, this report on teachers condemning their principal for inviting a pro-abstinence speaker to the school is shocking. CitizenLink.com reported today that “a principal in Richmond, Va., is coming under fire from her own staff after inviting a pro-abstinence speaker to talk to students today.”
More than 10 faculty members, aligning themselves with the perversion-promoting groups, NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia and the local chapter of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, have raised questions about the integrity of the relationship with their students and their commitment to the physical, sexual and emotional health of their wards.
As noted in the earlier post: “A new study yet again confirms older evidence of the physical damage to young people caused by sexual promiscuity. ‘Sexually spread diseases continue to rise, with reported chlamydia cases setting yet another record in 2008, government health officials in the United States said Monday,’ reported the Canada News Wire. ‘Last year there were 1.2 million new cases of chlamydia, a sometimes symptomless infection that can lead to infertility in women. It was the most ever reported, up from the old record of 1.1 million cases in 2007′.”
The guest was Pam Stenzel, founder of Enlighten Communications. CitizenLink.com noted that “principal Anne L. Poates gave parents the choice to opt their children out of the session. But she was committed to the health and well-being of her students: “‘No, it does not present all sides of this issue,’ [she] wrote in an e-mail to staff. ‘It presents one choice – abstinence – as an important choice for teenagers in a way that seems to reach them and have a lasting impact’.” And if you don’t like it, go and become a chimney sweeper instead of a teacher whose life has such a significant impact on young people.




November 18, 2009
And if you don’t like it, go and get an education degree so you can teach only one side of a subject, andhave speakers who don’t believe what they talk about come and talk to your students about their religious agenda.
Judging by the content on your site, I’m sure you’ll feel her following comments are just fine. I don’t.
“At Reclaiming America for Christ, Stenzel told her audience about a conversation she’d had with a skeptical businessman on an airplane. The man had asked about abstinence education’s success rate—a question she regarded as risible. “What he’s asking,“ she said, “is does it work. You know what? Doesn’t matter. Cause guess what. My job is not to keep teenagers from having sex. The public schools’ job should not be to keep teens from having sex.“
Then her voice rose and turned angry as she shouted, “Our job should be to tell kids the truth!“
“People of God,“ she cried, “can I beg you, to commit yourself to truth, not what works! To truth! I don’t care if it works, because at the end of the day I’m not answering to you. I’m answering to God!“
Later in the same talk, she explained further why what “works” isn’t what’s important—and gave some insight into what she means by “truth.“ “Let me tell you something, people of God, that is radical, and I can only say it here,“ she said. “AIDS is not the enemy. HPV and a hysterectomy at twenty is not the enemy. An unplanned pregnancy is not the enemy. My child believing that they can shake their fist in the face of a holy God and sin without consequence, and my child spending eternity separated from God, is the enemy. I will not teach my child that they can sin safely.“”
November 18, 2009
A York University Professor stated that sex-ed is a human right, and should be provided by the state in order to avoid the icky sensibilities of interfering parents.
November 20, 2009
I have often commented on this site, but I am not the Jon who wrote the earlier comment. I appreciate Pam Stenzel’s emphasis on doing what is right regardless of whether it works. After all, Christians believe in objective morality, morality grounded in the character of God Himself. The happy truth is that what pleases God is also good for man, i.e. it “works.” After all, the chief end of man is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.