The New Marriage-Wrecker
Internet
Pornography Burrows Deeper Into Culture
By Father John Flynn, LC
ROME, FEB. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).- In Lent we should think of
fasting not only in relation to food and drink, but also from images,
recommended Benedict XVI. The Pope’s advice came during a question-and-answer
session with Rome’s clergy, held Feb. 7.
The question dealt with how best to evangelize people as to what is true beauty
in the context of contemporary culture. Part of the Pontiff’s reply dealt with
the use of images and also the problems created by mistaken ideals of beauty. During
Lent:, “we need a space that is free from the permanent bombardment of images,”
Benedict XVI commented.
One application of the Pope’s counsel would be to fast, not o nly during Lent,
but permanently, from the ever-increasing presence of pornography. A Feb. 12
article posted on the ABC News Web site cited data from a trade publication
that put at $14 billion the sales generated in the United States related to
pornography in one form or another. The article also reported that one estimate
puts at 4.2 million the number of pornographic sites online, with 40 million
visitors daily.
Federal government attempts to control the flourishing industry have not had
much success. Obscenity investigations into adult pornography by the FBI have
diminished due to other issues such as terrorism, reported Reuters on Sept. 19.
The FBI has, however, taken action in fighting child pornography.
As well, attempts to regulate the Internet pornography industry have run into
repeated legal defeats. Last year a federal judge upheld previous rulings
invalidating the Child Online Protection Act, on the grounds it denied
free-speech rights, reported the Washington Post on March 23.
The law made it a crime for those running Internet sites to let anyone under 17
have access to sexual material. The law, approved in 1998, never entered into
force as it was blocked by a series of legal actions.
Dangerous consequences
The increasing use of pornography is creating not a few problems. Late last
year a judge in Melbourne, Australia, sentenced a man to 11 years in jail on a
rape charge, reported the Age newspaper on Jan. 3.
Judge Damian Murphy, said that the Andrew Bowen had acted out a fantasy seen in
material downloaded from the Internet.
The article’s authors, Maree Crabbe and David Corlett, commented that one
consequence of Internet-based pornography is a shift to more extreme and
violent sexual imagery. Scenes that are so degrading and humiliating that they
would be banned from film and television are now freely available to anyone
with a Web connection.
Cra bbe and Corlett said that research shows a link between consumption of
pornography and male sexual aggression. Even when the pornography is not
violent, exposure to it tends to increase in the viewer tolerance of sexual
violence.
Earlier last year a report published in Australia revealed record numbers of
visitors to porn Web sites. According to a May 26 article in the Sydney Morning
Herald, a survey found that 35% of Internet users had visited an “adult” site
at least once in the preceding three months.
According to the article, psychologists and counselors say Internet pornography
is a growing cause of marital problems due to increasing numbers of men who
become compulsive users.
A lengthy feature article on this issue was published in the Age newspaper May
26. “The impact of internet pornography on sexual attitudes, practice and
relationships may prove to be as profound as the introduction of the
contraceptive pill in 1961," the article affirmed.
Terming it as the “new marriage-wrecker,” the article commented that not only
do large numbers of men become habitual users, but also that it causes
unhappiness and self-doubt for many women.
Mobile images
After the Internet, it is now mobile phones that are becoming an avenue for
pornography. Already widespread in Europe, the use of cell phones for this
purpose is set to take off in the United States, according to a Jan. 30 Reuters
article.
According to Reuters, pornography sales via cell phones in Europe reaped $775
million in 2007, compared to just $26 million in the United States. One study
cited in the article estimated that worldwide, the porn industry could generate
$3.5 billion in revenue by 2010.
Phone companies in the United States are planning to loosen controls on their
networks, allowing more gadgets and services. As well, newer phone models have
higher quality images and an impr oved ability to browse the Web. Video-sharing
sites are also expanding to offer services to those with more advanced cell
phones.
The spreading use of pornography via cell phones sparked off a confrontation
last year in the Church of England, when an ecclesiastical tribunal ruled
against the use of phone antennas in church spires and towers, reported the
Times on March 17.
Churches can make more than 10,000 pounds ($19,621) a year in rent from mobile
phone companies, the article noted. This was put in danger when a church judge
in Chelmsford, Essex, ruled against an application to install a mast in the
tower of St. Peter and St. Paul in Chingford. Judge George Pulman concluded
that some of the material transmitted “is not consistent with the Christian use
of a church.”
His ruling, however, was overturned shortly afterward by the Court of Arches,
the highest ecclesiastical body in the Church of England, reported the
Telegraph newspaper o n July 25. The court said that it must be remembered that
human beings are "imperfect" and to refuse the mast on that ground
would be an "unbalanced approach.”
Fortunately a saner view is prevailing in other circles. The Feb. 10-16 edition
of the National Catholic Register reported on action being taken by some
Catholic colleges in the United States to block pornography and gambling Web
sites.
Starting in 2006, St. Vincent College in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, put filters in
place to block access to such sites from all public and residence hall
computers. “As a parent of five children, I assumed that at a Catholic college
you couldn’t stream porn into your dorm room,” commented college president, Jim
Towey, who introduced the policy shortly after taking office.
Other Catholic institutions that filter access include Franciscan University of
Steubenville and Wyoming Catholic. Nevertheless, the Register article noted t
hat many other Catholic colleges do not put any filters in place.
Chaste living
Concern over pornography was expressed in a publication approved by the
November 2007 meeting of the U.S. episcopal conference: “Catechetical Formation
in Chaste Living: Guidelines for Curriculum Design and Publication."
Chastity, the document explained, “is not a matter of repression of sexual
feelings and temptations but the successful integration of the gift of
sexuality within the whole person.”
One of the pitfalls identified by the text is the misuse of the Internet that
enables easy access to virtual pornography. Sexually explicit content in blogs,
instant messages, and posting photos on social networking Web sites are also
other avenues that violate chastity.
“Pornography defames the intimacy of the marital act and injures the dignity of
viewers and participants,” the guidelines observed. “Christian s are to shun
all participation in pornography as producers, actors, consumers or
vendors."
More catechetical instruction and education is needed in order to help us
appreciate the value of chastity, the document commented. It might also help to
remember what Benedict XVI mentioned in his Feb. 7 remarks on images and
beauty.
God can liberate us from “the inflation of images,” the Pope said. In fact, he
continued, through Christ’s incarnation God has shown us his image. Convincing
the world of the beauty of the truth revealed in Christ may well be the key to
overcoming the allurement of impoverished images that only degrade our
humanity.