Sunday, November 23, 2014

The Moral Insanity of a Kim Kardashian 50 Shades of Grey World

   If you’re unaware of Kim Kardashian’s most recent exhibitionism, count your blessings. That she’s famous at all is an indictment of our dumpster diving culture, yet, it’s not a real surprise. Her “career” has been built on manipulating the media to garner attention for the salacious and perverse.  
  Personally, I feel tremendous pity for her. When her 15 minutes are finally up, she’ll be discarded by a heartless world like innumerable sexpots before her. The countdown has started. Kim is already 34. Even the beautiful people can’t escape the ramifications of a sin cursed world. They, too, must submit to physical atrophy. Exercise gurus, diets and plastic surgeons can only postpone it, yet all wave the white flag in the end. That’s not even considering the potentiality of a debilitating disease. Her father, Robert, succumbed at 59 to cancer. A few cells amiss and it’s game over.
  Kim Kardashian’s super star status is but another example of the bipolar values of contemporary culture. She’s now on husband #3 and is the fodder of late night TV comedians, ridiculed for her wanton lifestyle. But the Duggars and the Robertsons of Duck Dynasty are also mocked for their morality. While I’m not suggesting the Duggars or Robertsons are models of normalcy, it’d be more edifying to watch their reality shows rather than Keeping up with the Kardashians. It reveals our bipolar values that Kim Kardashian is somehow famous and yet disdained for her lack of morals, yet the Robertsons and Duggars are also famous yet scorned because they do have morals. It’s moral bipolarism.
  Our irrational world fails to connect the dots – you can’t have your cake and eat it too. It’s commonly known that our culture has a problem with obesity. Can you imagine how much worse it would be if there was no discouragement to overeating? What if there was a Krispy Kreme on every corner? Not only that, every time that you turned on the TV, a half dozen glazed donuts popped out on the coffee table next to you. You turn on your computer, start surfing the Net and Hershey’s Kisses, Mounds Bars and Reese’s Peanut Butter cups magically appear. Every song on the radio is about steak, lobster, pasta, beer and brats. Everywhere you went you’re ambushed with tantalizing free food. If that were the case, Butterball wouldn’t just be a brand of turkey. It’d be descriptive of nearly everyone, with a few exceptions.  
  So where do you not find porn and graphic sex today? The sad reality is that Kim Kardashian’s escapades are what’s labeled “soft porn” in an insanely eroticized world. Consider though the bipolar rational of all this. When sex is everywhere, should we really be shocked that there are sex addicts? Please understand, I’m not rationalizing or justifying sex crimes. Yet, isn’t it hypocritical to have graphic, sexualized images everywhere, available 24/7 but then feign surprise that some have no control. There are so many cases today of child porn and/or molestation, we’re becoming desensitized to it. Do you want a registered sex criminal in your neighborhood or near your child’s school? Go online. You’ll be appalled at how many are in your neighborhood. If the trend continues, (there’s no reason to think it won’t), where are we going to put them all? In light of that problem and our cultures increasing acceptance of deviant behavior, it’s not shocking that there’s a growing movement to decriminalize sex crimes with minors. Incest is now legal in Switzerland.
  Another example of bipolar values is that natural marriage is constantly belittled while cohabitation is increasingly valued and consequently, is on the rise. Yet, it’s rare that anyone talks about the increase of child molestation and abuse in cohabitation relationships. Social workers who monitor America’s families see the abusive-boyfriend syndrome as part of a broader, deeply worrisome trend. As more children grow up in homes without both biological parents, the risk of crimes against children is markedly higher in these nontraditional family structures. University of Virginia sociologist, Brad Wilcox, says, “This is the dark underbelly of cohabitation…Most people think, 'What's the harm?' The harm is we're increasing a pattern of relationships that's not good for children.”
  One more example – this coming Valentine’s Day, the film version of 50 Shades of Grey is to be released. That in itself is nauseating. The book has nothing to do with either romance or love. Personally, I thought April 1st would be more apropos. Someone is probably asking, “Have you read it?” No, but I’ve never sipped Draino either but I know it’s deadly. This book and now film, are just another example of our bipolar values.
  There’s continual rhetoric about the glass ceiling, that women are underpaid and don’t have opportunities of advancement that men do. Yet, some of the same women who’d rightfully decry this double standard, think that 50 Shades is a wonderful love story. If you’re a feminist, how can you rationalize that a wealthy pervert physically dominating a woman is somehow considered acceptable? In a world concerned about the rights of women, how can trash like 50 Shades even be published, much less become a bestseller? Only a morally vacuous person could think it’s somehow acceptable for a woman to be manhandled and abused by an emotionally stunted perverse playboy.
  Space keeps me from pointing out the bipolar values of a nation obsessed with health care, yet will set few limits on pornography. How can there even be a debate about teaching teens abstinence and to wait until marriage because such teaching is somehow “religious”? The eroticization of a culture carries a steep healthcare price – teenage pregnancies and an increase in STDs that’s astronomical. Just a few years ago do you think anyone thought that there would be commercials about medications to counter the effects of genital herpes on primetime television?
  Let me end though with hope. When it comes to sex, a biblical worldview is the only place of safety and sanity. That means we must know what the Bible teaches about sexuality. It means that we must love and be committed to natural marriage and our spouses. It means we must teach and model for our own children a healthy view of sexual intimacy from a biblical grid. We’re not the human animal driven by bestial drives; we’re image bearers of God. Sex is a wonderful gift from God that’s to be celebrated in a committed, natural marriage. It’s an act of love, an act of giving, to be shared after vows of lifelong commitment have been made before a loving God. Sexual temptation, like all temptation, is to be resisted and can be defeated by the power of God’s grace. And wonderfully, no sin or failure is beyond the healing power and restoration of the Cross.

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