Gen-Life heads for the beaches and boardwalks to promote chastity
By
NADIA POZO
CS&T Staff Writer
Have
you ever felt used, sexually? Or regretted being sexually active, and believed
it was too late for you to embrace a life of chastity? You’re not
alone.
“The message of chastity is one that today’s young people so
desperately need to hear,” said 20-year-old Christine Friedrich, a
Boston College sophomore. “It’s clear from the increases in
the numbers of sexually-transmitted diseases and abortions that the sexual
revolution of the ’60s and ’70s has wreaked havoc on our generation.”
Members of Generation Life are leading a counter-revolution, seeking to
dispel the lies and to return sexual self-control to teenagers and young
adults.
Generation Life, an organization of young people dedicated to promoting
chastity and pro-life, hit the New Jersey shore to spread the word during
the two weeks that mark Senior Week celebrations for Philadelphia’s
public and Catholic high school students — week-long celebrations
that often include underage drinking and “hooking up”.
In all, 45 high school students, college students, recent college grads,
all of whom are devoted to chastity, descended on Avalon, Stone Harbor,
Sea Isle City and Ocean City with one purpose: to comb the beaches and walk
the boardwalk handing out pro-chastity pamphlets and “I’m Worth
Waiting For” stickers.
Several said the reaction they found was undeniably powerful — one
way or the other.
“I had one talk with a young man who was struggling with homosexuality
[who] started attacking our message of chastity, and accused us of discriminating
and hating homosexuals,” said 22-year-old Pennsylvania State graduate
Cristina Barba. “It was a ‘them-against-us’ debate. We
were discussing homosexuality and marriage rights as these general and somewhat
distant issues.”
But soon Barba realized that the real issue wasn’t the abstract concepts
they were discussing: “He wanted to find meaning to his life, and
was seeking Christ and His Love just like the rest of us.
“I could see the hurt in his eyes, and that he just longed to be loved
and accepted,” she continued. “I started to realize that having
all of the facts and right answers for him wasn’t what he needed —
it wasn’t up to me to convince him that chastity was the right lifestyle.
Put simply, my job was to just love him.
“I needed to stop objectifying him as an argument that needed to be
won, and just start loving him as a person and my brother in Christ,”
Barba said. “ And then, by God’s grace, everything changed.
He and I started having a deep conversation, and starting connecting person-to-person,
heart-to-heart, and not just as opponents trying to win an argument. ...
“It was such a beautiful moment,” she said. ”I honestly
just shared my heart with him, and told him of the joy and happiness that
embracing a life of chastity has been to me, and of the fulfillment and
completeness that Christ and His Church have been to me. And it was all
that I had to offer him.
“He started to share his heart with me, and tell me a little bit about
his already challenging young life and his struggles to find God,”
she said. “By the end of our talk, he was thanking me, and said that
he wasn’t so sure about Jesus and all of this chastity stuff —
but that he wanted some of the joy that I had. And all I could do was
offer him an invitation to this lifestyle, give him a big hug, love him,
and assure him of my continued prayers.”
Melissa Kurtz, 21, had a different, but equally powerful experience.
“There was one girl who started out with a smart comment, but ended
up, to a certain extent, considering the possibility of re-committing herself
to the lifestyle of chastity,” Kurtz said. “When I asked her
if she ever felt used, she became very timid and looked like she wanted
to disappear. She quietly said, ‘Yea.’ … I knew, then,
that she was really hurting. I could tell not only from her responses,
but also her body language. I did not push anything on that topic,
but took it and turned it around, and made the conversation a little more
personal. … I was able to relate to her, and to let her know that
she is precious and valuable, and not made to be used, but treated with
respect and dignity …,” Kurtz added.
“She explained how she even stopped going to Church. … I just
stressed how a lifestyle of chastity can truly provide happiness. …
She ended up saying she was definitely going to call the Generation Life
number. God paired us up perfectly that evening, because her interests
paralleled somewhat with mine — she was looking to go to college where
I went to college …,” the Gen-Life evangelist said. “
I pray that she comes back to church, and returns to a more godly lifestyle.”
For herself, Kurtz said the sight of hundreds of young people wearing the
“I’m Worth Waiting For” stickers along the boardwalk ,and
reading the Generation Life literature as they stretched out on the beach
inspired her to continue.
“Songs of praise were being played and sung by members of Generation
Life — and many other teens and families who spontaneously joined
in,” said Kevin Burke, a student at Cabrini College.
Burke said he knew his mission on the beach over the two weeks would not
be easy: Talking to strangers about sex, and offering the counter-cultural
choice of chastity to peers looking to have a good time is unnerving.
But Burke said he and and the other members of the Gen-Life outreach team
understand that “in order to transform our society from a culture
of death to a culture of life, it is important for Christians to actually
be present in the public square, proclaiming the truth.
“I think seeing over 30 young adults committed to chastity strengthened
the resolve [of] and inspired the young people who already believed in the
message — and also opened up the hearts and minds of the others who
either disagreed with the message or had never even heard of it before.”
The Generation Lifers realized that the opportunity to serve as witnesses
was just as beneficial for them as for those they spoke with, said 18-year-old
Joseph Cunningham.
“After telling girls that they are beautiful, and truly worth waiting
for, I’m excited about living purity from just seeing the happy blushes
on their faces,” Cunningham said. “I’m looking forward
to courageously reaching out to others, challenging them to keep their standards
high. And I’m looking forward to coming back again next year.”
The Generation Life team ended its shore ministry with a sidewalk prayer
vigil outside an abortion clinic in Atlantic City. There Catherine DeCamara,
21, shared her faith with prostitutes, who asked her for her rosaries.
“They told me about their children, and one of the women said she
had chosen life because of people like us outside of the abortion clinic
she had gone to [which she] ended up leaving,” DeCamara said.
“There are many more stories like these that we have from the week,”
she said. “They are encouraging, and help to remind us that our efforts
are not in vain. God used each one of us in different ways, because
we were open to Him and to the call He placed on our hearts to do this type
of evangelizing.”
The “new sexual revolution” is in effect.
“Pope Bendendict says our Church is alive and well, and it is young,”
said Mountain MacGillivray, the Generation Life Senior Week outreach coordinator.
“How right he is.”
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