Sunday, December 20, 2009

The problem of Teen pregnancy

"More than one in 10 teenagers gets pregnant each year, and the proportion is rising. If patterns do not change, four in 10 young women will get pregnant at least once while still in their teens." So reports Teenage Pregnancy: The problem That Hasn't Gone Away. And what kind of girls get pregnant? Said the journal Adolescence: "School-age girls who become pregnant come from all socioeconomic classes..... All races, all faiths, and all parts of the country, rural and urban."
Few girls actually want to become pregnant. In his landmark study of over 400 pregnant teenagers, Frank Furstenberg, Jr.,observed that "most remarked repeatedly in the interviews, 'I never thought it would happen to me.' "

But observing that some of their friends had enjoyed sexual relations without getting pregnant, some girls figured they could do so, too. Furstenberg also states: "A number mentioned that they did not think it was possible to become pregnant 'right away.' Others thought that if they had sexual relations only 'every once in a while' they would not become pregnant... The longer they went without conceiving, the more likely they were to assume greater risks."

The truth is, however, that whenever one engages in sexual relations there is the risk of pregnancy. (Of one group of 544 girls, 'nearly one fifth became pregnant within six months after begining sexual intercourse.') Many, like an unwed mother named Teresa, deliberately chose not to utilize birth control. Teresa feared as do many youths- that using the birth control pill would damage her health. She further admits: "For me to obtain birth control, I would have had to admit to myself that I was doing something wrong. I couldn't do that. So I just blocked what I was doing out of my mind and hoped nothing would happen."

Such reasoning is common among unwed mothers. In Furstenberg's study, "nearly half of the teenagers stated that it was very important for a woman to wait until marriage to begin to have sex... Undeniably, there was an obvious discrepancy between the words and the deeds... They had acquired one set of standards and had learned to live by another." This emotional conflict "made it especially difficult for these women to deal realistically with the consequences of sexual behaviour."
Even using birth control is no guarantee that a girl will escape unwed motherhood. The book Kids Having Kids reminds us: "Every method has a failure rate... Even if unmarried teens consistently use birth control methods... 500,000 [ in the U.S.] would still become pregnant each year." A 16-year-old unwed mother named Rosa is then quoted as lamenting: "I took [ birth control pills] faithfully. I honestly never missed a day."

"Do not be misled," warns the Bible. "God is not the one to be mocked. For whatever a man is sowing, this he will also reap." Pregnancy is just one of the ways one can reap an unpleasant harvest from fornication. Fortunately, unwed mothers, like all others who have become entrapped in immorality, can turn around and come to God with the repentant attitude of King David, who prayed: "Thoroughly wash me from my error, and cleanse me from my sin." God will bless the efforts of such repentant ones to raise their children "in the discipline and mental regulating of Jehovah."

Better it is, though, to avoid premarital sex! Do not be fooled by those who say you can get away with it.

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