Fifteen people sat around the conference table. Fourteen were
educators teaching junior and senior high students about sexual
abstinence until marriage. One person, Mr. Boss Man, at the head of
the table, was a state leader in charge of setting the educational
focus for programs in the public schools.
Fourteen voices told about the high school students who wanted
educators to return to their classrooms next year. These students,
even the juniors and seniors, want to hear the truth about sex. They
want to receive encouragement to be abstinent as a way of fulfilling
their personal goals and securing their good health.
At the conference table, from the front of the room, Mr. Boss Man
with his one voice answered fourteen. "Isn't that too late? Aren't
they already having sex?"
He might as well have said, "Hey, everybody, let's give up!"
Maybe Mr. Boss Man hadn't heard that over 50 percent of high school
students persevere under considerable pressure from a society that
pushes sex at every turn. These students haven't given up. They are
sexually abstinent.
Mr. Boss Man's name isn't important. He is not alone. He is only
one of many community and national leaders who are heading the parade
to give in to failure.
Yes, they concede. Sexual abstinence until marriage would indeed
prevent untold negative personal and social consequences of adolescent
sex. But before they can take one deep breath, they raise their flags
of failure and begin chanting.
On the left, they cry, "Teens can't be abstinent. They can't, they
can't. Rah, rah, shish boom bant!"
On the right, they answer back. "Teens don't need to be abstinent.
Sex is natural. Rah, rah, bish boom pow!"
Imagine. What if this mentality had ruled the coaching staff for
the San Francisco 49ers? From 1979 to 1992, they were led by one of
the top quarterbacks of all time. Joe Montana earned the nicknames
"Joe Cool" and "Comeback Kid" due to his ability to rally his teams
from late game deficits, including 31 fourth quarter comebacks.
Montana made his career proving that losing is not inevitable ...
no matter how many minutes ... or seconds ... are left in the game.
His comeback from a 28-point halftime deficit to a 38-35 overtime
victory against the New Orleans Saints still stands (as of 2006) as
the most points ever overcome to win a regular season NFL game. It was
the first of Montana's 26 fourth-quarter comebacks with the 49ers.
Imagine. Montana could have had a coach tell him, "Relax. You're
losing. Don't worry. Save your energy. We'll try again next week." But
he didn't. Winning was the point of playing the game. And he played
until the last second on the clock.
Imagine, instead, the coaches of the losers, the teams that played
against Montana, the Saints, Bengals, Lions, and Dolphins ... maybe
they should have saved all the blood, sweat, and tears of coming in
second. If they had known the 49ers would come back and win, maybe
they would have given up earlier in the game and saved a lot of
strained muscles and broken bones.
Imagine if Mr. Boss Man coached football with the same confidence
he coaches teenagers. "Chance are you're gonna lose. Give up now."
Give up does not make winning teams in football. And it does not
build winning lives for people either. In the famous Oak School
experiment, Harvard professor Robert Rosenthal's research into the
"Pygmalion phenomenon" showed the impact on students of a teacher's
expectations.
"Simply put," as reported in The National Teaching and Learning
Forum, "when teachers expect students to do well and show intellectual
growth, they do; when teachers do not have such expectations,
performance and growth are not so encouraged and may in fact be
discouraged in a variety of ways."
Regarding our youth and sex, success is closer at hand than what
many would have us believe. Parents want their children to understand
the benefits ... the physical, emotional, social, educational, and
economic benefits ... of saving sex for marriage.
Students increasingly want to be encouraged to succeed in their
relational and educational goals by adults who help them maintain
their commitment to sexual abstinence.
For those adolescents aged 12-19 who have had sex, 63 percent of
them wished they had waited. They are prime candidates for hearing
that they can return to a sexually abstinent lifestyle. Change is
possible.
And for all of these parents and students, there are many dedicated
educators who are able to undergird these personal desires and goals
with medically accurate information and lessons that build student
confidence and give students the skills to maintain their personal
commitment to abstinence until marriage.
The parade is ready. They are ready to march. The only thing
holding them back from success is Mr. Boss Man and his fellow leaders
at the front.
"Sure, we can start marching toward success," the leaders tell the
group. "But why bother? You're never going to make it."