A Christian Parent’s
Guide to Sexuality Education
For those who want to raise their child in the way they know they should have gone.
Let’s Get the Conversation Started! But how…what do I say…
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when do I say it? These are critical questions that most parents wrestle with at one time or another. You know the messages your kids are receiving are toxic yet alluring, and you must say something… but what? Whether you’re a Christian parent or just a practical-thinking parent, you know, if left unchallenged, those alluring messages can set them on a path to making poor sexual choices that lead to an unplanned pregnancy, which can lead to abortion.
This was written almost twenty years ago when names like Harvey Weinstein and Bill Cosby were headline news. The parents of little Bill and little Harvey would have never imagined the possibility that their child would be remembered for something other than their enormous talent.
“The foundation for healthy eating begins early, just as the foundation for healthy sexuality does. Allowing three-year-olds to train their taste buds for sugary, fatty foods can lead to a life with numerous health issues. Similarly, allowing kids to grow up saturating their minds with distorted beliefs about sex, left unchallenged, can develop a hunger that perverts their sexuality and lead to a life filled with poor sexual choices with hard lessons.The goal should be protection in childhood, direction in adolescence, and celebration in marriage. The biggest mistake we make is we start too late!
It’s packed with practical insights that will help you prepare a young child to enter a sex-obsessed culture and your older child to begin thinking about the importance of managing their sexuality in a way that leads to positive outcomes.
If our kids are to avoid an unplanned pregnancy that can lead to abortion or being the cause of one their IQ will be of very little help. It will rest primarily on their RQ. It’s their relationship intelligence that will prepare them to successfully navigate a dating landscape laced with landmines that have blown up many promising futures. Whether your child is a four-year-old or headed off to college, the information in this book will cause them, at some point, to come back and say, “Thank you.”
Mike Goss has dedicated years of his life to relationship education, which he considers his most significant life’s work to date. He is convinced that this is the starting point for reducing the number of lives lost to abortions and preventing the emotional aftermath experienced by both women and men.
Mike Goss is a minister, author, businessman, and unapologetically pro-life. With a mind for business and a heart for Christ, he recently founded istandwiththeforgottenwomen.org. He’s confident he’s found a better way to address unplanned pregnancies that empower women to choose life for their babies and abundant life for their families, and it begins with the church.
Our Betterselves
In every situation, we are confronted with a pivotal decision where we can choose to respond in a manner that reflects our better selves or succumb to the impulses of our lower selves. That decision influences not only the present moment but plays a significant role in shaping who we become.
Dear Friend,
Regardless of one’s viewpoint, the occurrence of 70 million abortions, with an estimated 40 million due to perceived insurmountable obstacles and millions left struggling in silence with the emotional consequences, cannot be seen as an embodiment of our better selves.
This story, just one of many, hopefully will capture the essence of this moral dilemma.
Janet, not her real name, was a young woman with dreams as vast as the sky. She was driven, compassionate, and full of life, with aspirations of making a difference in the world.
But life, as it often does, threw her an unexpected curveball.
At 22, she found herself facing an unplanned pregnancy.
Overwhelmed and afraid, she felt her entire future was slipping out of her grasp.
The pressure from her boyfriend, who was not ready for the responsibilities of fatherhood, and the anxiety of disappointing her parents weighed heavily on her.
Everywhere she turned, it seemed as though the world was telling her there was only one option: abortion.
She found herself isolated the following weeks, drowning in a sea of conflicting emotions. She loved the child growing inside her, but the fear of the unknown, of the life-altering changes that motherhood would bring, was overpowering.
She had always believed in doing the right thing, but now, she wasn’t sure what the right thing was.
Finally, after days of sleepless nights and tearful prayers, Janet made her decision. She walked into the clinic, heart heavy with sorrow. The procedure was quick, but the emotional aftermath was anything but.
The weight of her choice settled deep within her soul, a burden she would carry for years to come—and shame likely forever.
The world around her moved on, but she couldn’t.
She thought that abortion would bring her relief, an escape from an impossible situation, but instead, it brought profound emptiness, a void that nothing could fill.
She couldn’t shake the feeling that she had lost a part of herself in that fleeting moment of fear—a part that represented her better self.
If only someone would have explained to her that fear is temporary, but regret is permanent.
Janet’s story is by no means unique. It echoes the experiences of millions of women who, like her, felt cornered as though there was no other way. While it seemed to solve the problem, it left them with another.
The truth is, while abortion may eliminate the immediate crisis, it does not address the root causes—the fears, the lack of support, the societal pressures—that led to that moment of desperation.
In Janet’s case, and the cases of so many others, the decision to abort was not made from a place of empowerment but from a place of fear.
It was a decision born out of helplessness, not hope—weakness, not strength.
While it provided a temporary solution, she knew it did not represent her better self—it was a response to the combination of the whispering voice in her ear and the chorus in the public square that convinced her the best solution was to end the life she was carrying rather than allow it to interrupt hers.
But what if… there had been another voice?
What if…
Janet heard a voice offering compassionate help and hope she needed for making a decision that aligned with her core values?
What if…
Instead of feeling cornered, she had felt empowered to give her baby a shot at life, to embrace the challenges ahead, and to realize it was not the end of her world.
Instead, it was a temporary problem that didn’t demand a permanent solution.
At some point, we must decide…
…whether to continue yielding to our lesser selves,
which does bring temporary relief but erodes the dignity and value we place on our lives—bringing into question our ability to empathize with those whose consciences dictate a different choice.
Or chart a new way forward that inspires us to ‘our better selves’—representing who we truly are.
If you agree the time has come, then stand with us.
Regardless, the one area we all should be able to agree on is the fewer abortions, the better.
Not just for the sake of the unborn but for the sake of the women who carry them, for the sake of the fathers who conceived them, and for the sake of our own humanity.
Our better selves are demanding it.
Become a 10k member. We need 10,000 compassionate souls like yourself willing to set aside just $10.00 a month—or any amount. Your donation will help us prove to the Janets of tomorrow that not everyone has forgotten.
Mike Goss
Founder and President
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