| COMMENTARYSex Education: What Are Your Kids Really Learning?Courtesy of BreakPoint Online 
                with Charles Colson
 CBN.com  
          Recently Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine made a decision that must have Planned Parenthood  officials dancing in the streets: He cut off state funding for abstinence-based  sex education programs. Why  would Planned Parenthood be so happy about this? Because they were the ones who  urged Kaine to do it. But the objections of the country's biggest abortion  provider to abstinence programs are proof, in a sense, that these programs  really do work. Kaine's  communications director said the governor believes that the state should fund  sex-ed programs that talk about contraceptives. She also said that Kaine  "wants to see us funding programs that are evidence-based." As  a Planned Parenthood spokesman helpfully added, "There is no evidence that  abstinence-only programs equip teens with the education they need to delay  sexual activity" and prevent pregnancy and the spread of disease. Nonsense:  There is abundant evidence that these programs work, and work well—including a  study that took place right in Virginia under the governor's nose. This study,  conducted by the Institute for Research and Evaluation, concluded that Virginia  teens who receive abstinence education are half as likely to initiate sexual  activities as students who did not receive this education. And contrary to what  Planned Parenthood suggests, Virginia's abstinence programs do include information  about contraception and sexually transmitted diseases. But they put it in the  proper context: that abstaining from sex is the only way to avoid the dangers  of casual sex. Valerie  Huber, executive director of the National Abstinence Education Association,  notes that "when teens are taught how to build relationships and set  boundaries they choose to abstain." These  are skills teenagers themselves say they want. One survey of 1,000 sexually  active teenage girls found that what they want most is to learn how to say  "no." Too  many adults today accept adolescent sex as normal and inevitable. They are oblivious  to the fact that teens who engage in sex often regret it. These kids learn the  hard way that sex is more than a physical act: As God designed it, sex also  brings about an emotional closeness—which means teens pay a high emotional  price when the relationship is over. The  folks at Planned Parenthood are working hard to shut down abstinence-oriented  sex-education programs. And that's not surprising: After all, if teens do not  have sex, Planned Parenthood will not make as much money aborting their babies  and treating their diseases. Virginia  State Senator Ken Cuccinelli says he will lead efforts to get the General  Assembly to reverse Kaine's decision in January. If you live in Virginia, urge  your representatives to re-fund abstinence-based education. Christians  in every state should find out what schools are teaching teens about sex. If  they are simply teaching kids how-to, then Christians ought to do an end-run  around the schools and offer programs that teach kids how-to—build  relationships, that is, and set healthy boundaries. Christian teens can invite  their friends to come.Our kids should not have to pay the price for adult foolishness—or  political agendas. They have a right to be given the truth: that the people who  are happiest about their sex lives are those who reserve it for marriage. 
 From BreakPoint, Copyright  2007 Prison Fellowship 
                Ministries. "BreakPoint 
                  with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of 
                    Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison 
                    Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, DC, 20041-0500." 
                    Heard on more than 1000 radio stations nationwide. For more information 
                    on the ministry of Chuck Colson and Prison Fellowship visit their 
                    web site at http://www.breakpoint.org. 
               This commentary was delivered by PFM President Mark   Earley.
 
 
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