Welcome
to the December Value of the month — Fidelity and Chastity.
We define this value as: the value and security of fidelity
within marriage and of restraint and limits before marriage.
The commitments that go with marriage and that should go with
sex. A grasp of the long-range (and widespread) consequences
that can result from sexual amorality and infidelity.
In the age of AIDS it is easier
than it has been for many decades to agree as a society on
the desirability of fidelity in marriage and the good sense
of abstinence before marriage. Those who now agree practically
are added to those who have always agreed philosophically
and religiously.
Whether or not you agree morally
with this value, you do, as a parent, have the responsibility
to deal in your own way with these critical issues.
Many parents who did not practice
chastity or abstinence in their own youth are nonetheless
hopeful and even anxious that their children will. This is
not hypocrisy and shouldn’t cause guilt. Today is its own
time — with its own concerns and its own reminders. And the
fact that some of us have learned from our mistakes ought
to be the best reason why our kids do not have to do likewise.
It is hard to argue against the
mental logic and the emotional benefits of restraint before
marriage and fidelity within marriage. And positive commitments
toward it can start to form in very small children.
*
When our children have their
eighth birthday, they undergo something of a rite of passage,
going from a kid to a semi-grown-up, from a tutee to a tutor,
from someone who knew almost nothing about sex and reproduction
to someone who could probably teach a course on the subject.
We begin several weeks before
the child’s eighth birthday, “priming” him by indicating that
when he turns eight, he will be given some new privileges,
some new responsibilities, and will learn about “the most
beautiful and wonderful thing on earth.”
When the big day arrives,
we take the new eight-year-old on a private daddy-mommy date
to a nice restaurant, making every effort to treat him with
a new maturity and respect. As mentioned earlier, we give
him some added responsibility in areas such as choosing his
own clothes and earning more money by doing family chores.
We express our pride in him and our appreciation of him.
Then we go home for the much-anticipated
highlight of the evening — our private talk about “the most
wonderful and beautiful thing on earth.” In upbeat, positive
terms we explain the facts of life using diagrams and pictures
to explain reproduction. (We particularly like the children’s
book Where Did I Come From?) We encourage questions;
we ask him often if he understands, and we watch his expressions
to be sure he's not only comprehending but appreciating what
we are telling him.
Then we make a very strong
point of how smart and how right it is to be careful how we
use something as important and as miraculous as sex. We point
out that something that special should be saved for one person
— for the commitment of marriage, where it can be a wedding
gift that has never been given before.
Children accept this idea
very easily. It seems natural to them that something so private
and so beautiful (and something so magic and powerful that
it starts new babies) should be saved and used carefully rather
than spent indiscriminately.
It is also natural to them
to understand that after two people are married; sex is a
bond and a special, private way of expressing love between
them that should not be used outside of marriage.
Later, as a follow up, we
also talk about AIDS and the dangers of misusing sex. And
we use the standard “values formula” by discussing how and
who is helped by being careful about sex and how and who is
hurt when people are not careful about sex.
*
Eight may seem like a young age
for some of the discussion represented above, but it is the
right age for two very important reasons: 1) to wait longer
runs the risk (if not the likely possibility) that your child
will learn of reproduction and sex in the negative and silly
perspective of the other children who will tell them about
things before you do; 2) eight year old is a natural and curious
age when children can understand in a sweet, uncynical way.
One evening and one discussion,
of course, is not enough. An evening such as we have suggested
can establish the basics and open wide the door of trust that
permits the subject to be one of ongoing openness and discussion.
Certainly the underlying philosophy
involved in teaching children the value of fidelity and chastity
is that sex is too beautiful and too good to be given or used
or thought of loosely or without commitment. The opposite
view of sex as dirty or evil thing should be avoided and countered
at every opportunity.
*
I (Richard) sat in the library
one day, researching some quotations for a manuscript I was
working on. I was having a hard time keeping my mind on my
work because I was thinking about one of my adolescent daughters
and about my efforts to help her understand why chastity
and sexual morality was something to be sought and valued.
She was not rebelling against the notion or even disagreeing
with it, but she was at the age where any restriction bothered
her. She had asked, the night before, why there were so many
limits on so many things.
And I had wanted to tell her
that chastity, like any true value or virtue, is a positive
thing that you gain, not something that you give up.
I was looking through some
G.K. Chesterton essays (Chesterton, by the way, was a teacher
and mentor of C.S. Lewis) and I literally fell onto the words
I was wishing for. They were in an essay called, “A Piece
of Chalk,” in which Chesterton uses the metaphor of an artist
who was sitting on an English hillside drawing on brown paper.
He had all his chalks except white; he had forgotten to bring
the white. Could he do without it? No, because white is not
the absence of color. White spaces are not blank; they are
put on by the artist and can be the most important element
in his canvas. Should he return home for a piece of white
chalk? Then he realized that he is sitting on chalk. England
is made of chalk, he said. He broke off a piece from a white
chalk rock and completed the drawing.
Virtue, in Chesterton’s mind,
was not a void or the absence of a wrong. It was the presence
of a right. And he felt that values or virtues are the light
and the key to putting beauty into the rest of life. In Chesterton’s
words, “The chief assertion of religious morality is that
white is a color. Virtue is not the absence of vices or the
avoidance of moral danger; virtue is a vivid and separate
thing… Mercy does not mean not being cruel or sparing people
revenge or punishment; it means a plain and positive thing
like the sun, which one has either seen or not seen. Chastity
does not mean abstention from sexual wrong; it means something
flaming, like Joan of Arc.”
The two most important reasons
that parents should be the ones to teach children about sex
and sexual morality are: (a) parents can teach in a warm and
loving way that avoids the sterile, factual, academic tone
that predominates in school discussions and the silly or “dirty”
connotation that often accompanies peer discussion, (b) when
a parent teaches a child about sex, the intimate and personal
nature of the subject creates a mutual sharing of trust and
forms an emotional bond between parent and child.
General Guidelines
Make your own example of fidelity
as obvious and noticeable as possible. You can help your
children see the importance that you place on this value as
well as the happiness and security it gives you. Talk about
commitment in personal terms. If you are a two-parent family,
point out how the two of you belong to each other so that
you don’t need any other man or woman. Try to let children
see the basic physical signs of love and commitment, such
as holding hands, or a kiss as your leave for work.
Make sex and sexual maturity
an open topic in your family. Maximize the number of opportunities
you have to comment on the logic and benefits of chastity
and fidelity and to permit concerns and problems to surface
early rather than late. With children over eight (assuming
that you have had your initial talk with them as suggested),
do all you can to make sex an open and agreeable subject rather
than something that is secret or off-limits, or silly or embarrassing.
It may seem difficult and unnatural at first, but these feelings
are a sign that the subject needs opening up. Things you observe
on television, movies, and music — or in articles or books,
or in styles of dress — all present potential opportunities
to make comments about what you think is appropriate or not
appropriate, what things are moral in the sense that they
help and what things are immoral (or amoral) in the
sense that they may hurt someone physically, mentally,
or emotionally.
Look for chances to discuss the
behavior or young adolescents (your children’s acquaintances)
and bring up the possible connections of that behavior to
hormones and the effect of puberty.
Strive to convey the following
two impressions whenever possible: (a) sex, the feelings and
changes of puberty and the attractions and feelings they cause
us to feel are natural and good, even wonderful
and miraculous; and (b) because sex is natural and good,
and because its urges are powerful and have to do with
the creation of life, its use should be connected to love
and commitment — it is too beautiful to be made common or
to squander.
Some Much More Specific and
Direct Help for Parents
We know from experience that
parents need all the help they can get to have “the big talk,”
and, luckily, very detailed help is now available. Just go
to www.valuesparenting.com and click “How
to Talk to Your Kids about Sex” on the left.
Re join us here at Meridian for
age specific updates on this value throughout the month of
December. If you have kids eight or older, one truly lasting
present you could give them this Christmas is this kind of
early, preemptive talk about Fidelity and Chastity.