Teaching Teens
the Truth about Sin
I never cease
to be amazed by what can be included in a high school “health” curriculum these
days. I was recently looking at a health course for ninth graders, which
included such topics as “contraception,” “decision-making” skills, “sexual
orientations,” as well as “what to know about health care facilities, costs and
sources of payment.”
A Smorgasbord
of Deadly Choices
Now, why would
the school system seek to educate a ninth-grader in how to pay “health care”
facilities? This particular school district has a problem letting the school
nurse give your teen a Tylenol for a headache, but has no problem inviting
Planned Parenthood in, with all their cajoling ways, to teach kids to pay for
their own “health care.” Once in, Planned Parenthood happily demonstrates for
the freshmen, in a co-ed setting, the various methods of contraception. As
disturbing as this is, what is more disturbing is that these teens, many of
whom are Catholic, will have likely been taught next to nothing about sin or
the deadly effect of sin on their immortals souls. And it is precisely this
ignorance that makes teens so very vulnerable to the call of Planned
Parenthood’s preaching. This article is not about the fact that parents have a
responsibility to know exactly what their children are being taught in “health”
class — though they do. Nor is it about the horrors that Planned Parenthood has
propagated on our young — great though these horrors may be. This is an article
about the dire need to begin to teach teens the deadly truths about sin.
Teaching about
sin is an ongoing process that ideally begins early in life. But if not begun
early then there is no better time to gently begin than right now. We forget
sometimes that teens are children searching for truth, and they need adults to
help them discover what life and truth are all about. They may bear an outward
confidence, but it’s good to remember that a mere 160 months ago, these
confident beings were little bundles who could not walk, or talk or sit up on
their own. Children are guided, not born, into adulthood.
Some guidance
of late has been directed at helping teens make “choices” for themselves. The
problem with this is not just that teens often lack the experience and
discernment to be making the plethora of choices thrust before them. The
problem is not just that God’s plan for their lives is often not included in
this decision-making process. These problems are compounded by the fact that
many of the choices thrust before today’s teens are gravely immoral. Thus some
“health” classes educate teens about their sexual “preferences,” or birth
control “options,” but fail to educate them in concepts of sin. Teens are
thrown in over their heads and left to make decisions about choices for which
they are ill-equipped to decide. Once a bad decision is made to sin, there are
those in society who seem to pop out of the woodwork to help turn a teen’s bad
decision into a truly dirty deed. Such individuals will happily take teens by
the hand and just as happily guide them down an evil and immoral path, loudly
tooting their “pro-choice” horns and ringing their “freedom” bells all the way.
The Truth That
Sets Us Free
Exactly what do
these bells of “freedom” mean if they are ringing for the “freedom” to commit a
mortal sin? There is nothing “freeing” about sin, or addictions to it. Just ask
any addict. He or she will tell you what it means to be enslaved. As Father
Richard Rego, STL, points out in his book Contemporary Adult Guide to
Conscience, “All sin, in some way, is addictive or habit-forming.” Society once
worked to keep kids from sin. Now, instead of protecting kids from sin, our
immoral media immerses kids in what our faith defines as gravely sinful:
immorality, impurity, licentiousness, idolatry, jealousy, selfishness (Gal
6:19), not to mention fornication, adultery and sodomy (1 Cor 6:9-10).
Teens need to
be taught exactly what sin is (an offense against God; see CCC 1871), how
easily we can stumble into it, and what the early church fathers and saints
have taught about how to avoid it. We are all sinners of one sort or another,
but there are sins of such a great magnitude that they can separate us from God
and His grace, perhaps for all eternity. These are called mortal or “grave”
sins in our Catechism. Over and over, Scripture mentions that people who commit
such sins, and die unrepentant, will not enter the kingdom of heaven. This is
not a fire and brimstone matter. It is a matter of truth. God will forgive any
sin, if we only repent and seek reconciliation in the Sacrament He designed
just for this purpose. This is the truth that sets us free.
The problem is
that the first step towards repentance and forgiveness is an awareness of sin.
If we don’t teach children about sin, then they may not know sin when they see
it. If children can’t recognize sin, we can hardly expect them to avoid it, or
to repent from having sinned. If they can’t repent, they can’t receive the
mercy and forgiveness that God is just waiting to pour upon them.
Telling teens
the truth about sin is an act of love that makes repentance, forgiveness and
thus union with God possible. Withholding that truth is like not warning teens
about a hidden and huge hole in the grass that is filled with deadly lions, and
allowing them to nonchalantly stumble in, only to be eaten up alive. If we tell
teens the truth about sin and they decide to sin anyway, that may be a grave
matter. But if we fail to tell the teens in our charge the truth about sin, and
they unwittingly fall into sin as a result of our neglect, then that is a horse
(or a sin) of quite a different color. In the former we have done what we can
to keep a child from sin. In the latter we are a culpable accomplice to a
child’s sin by our own negligence. As we recite in the Confiteor, we have
sinned by “what we have failed to do.”
They Have a
Right to Know the Danger to Their Souls
Our culture has
an unbalanced focus on “rights.” It is time to shift our focus on rights to the
fact that children who are created in the image and likeness of God Almighty
have a “right” to know what Section 1033 of the Catechism has stated so simply:
“To die in mortal sin without repenting and accepting God’s merciful love means
remaining separated from Him forever by our own free choice. The state of...self-exclusion
from communion with God and the blessed is called hell.”
Who will warn
teens to avoid like the plague the seven capital sins, upon which all other
sins hinge — of pride, avarice, envy, wrath, lust, gluttony and sloth? Who will
tell teens that we can sin not only directly but indirectly by protecting
evil-doers, by “ordering, advising, praising or approving of the sins of
another,” or by not hindering these sins when we have an obligation to do so
(CCC 1868)? Who teaches teens that if we are aware of having committed a mortal
sin, then we must not receive Jesus in the Most Holy Eucharist without first
receiving sacramental Confession (CCC 1457), and that to willfully do so is to
commit another and more grave sin called sacrilege?
Teaching teens the
truth about sin is arming them to stand up to the likes of Planned Parenthood
and similar organizations and individuals who would gladly lead them astray.
The problem is that few teachers teach about sin; few priests preach about sin;
and few parents talk about sin. It isn’t pleasant after all. It isn’t much fun.
And it sure doesn’t “feel” very good. It is a job that few want to tackle. So
who can tell teens the truth about sin? With Lent upon us, we can of course! We
can take up our crosses and do the work that our Lord is calling us to by
telling the teens in our charge the truth about sin, so that they may one day
reach heaven, and avoid hell. We should remember that we ourselves haven’t
reached heaven yet. We ought to stop acting like we were the Church Triumphant.
We are the Church Militant. The battle for the souls of our children looms
before us.
Mary Anne
Moresco writes from
Howell,
New Jersey.