In the view of many Christians, the teenage years are
simultaneously the most dangerous and the most promising. At the
very moment when teens are trying to establish a sense of identity
and belonging, they are beset by temptation on all sides--from the
pressure of their peers to the nihilism and materialism of popular
culture. Add the specter of homosexuality to the mix, and you've
got a situation ripe for worry, sermonizing, and exploitation.
In "Recruiting Young Love," Mark D. Jordan explores more than a
half century of American church debate about homosexuality to show
that even as the main lesson--homosexuality is bad, teens are
vulnerable--has remained constant, the arguments and assumptions
have changed remarkably. At the time of the first Kinsey Report, in
1948, homosexuality was simultaneously condemned and little
discussed--a teen struggling with same-sex desire would have found
little specific guidance. Sixty years later, church rhetoric has
undergone a radical shift, as silence has given way to frequent,
public, detailed discussion of homosexuality and its perceived
dangers. Along the way, churches have quietly adopted much of the
language and ideas of modern sexology, psychiatry, and social
reformers--deploying it, for example, to buttress the credentials
of anti-gay "deprogramming" centers and traditional gender
roles.
Jordan tells this story through a wide variety of sources,
including oral histories, interviews, memoirs, and even pulp
novels; the result is a fascinating window onto the never-ending
battle for the teenage soul.
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