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Home > 2007 > November (Web-only)Christianity Today, November (Web-only), 2007  |   |  
HIV/AIDS: S.L.O.W. It Down, or S.T.O.P. It?
Saddleback's Kay Warren offers a dual framework for fighting the virus.



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In an interview with CT deputy managing editor Timothy C. Morgan, Kay Warren spoke about whether abstinence really works and a new way of looking at HIV/AIDS prevention. It's so distinctive that Saddleback has placed it under copyright protection.

Probably what you are most familiar with is A.B.C. [abstinence, fidelity, or condoms]. Let me address that and then tell you the way that I look at it.

I have yet to find anybody who will look me in the eye and say, Being a virgin is not the best protection.

Virginity is the best protection against HIV, if you look at it sexually. What happens is that people say, "That's absurd. Nobody can control that. Women are raped. Girls are vulnerable to men who beat them, force them to have sex. Women can't tell their husbands, if they suspect them of being unfaithful, to wear a condom."

Yet when you really look at them and say, "Okay, can you tell me that virginity is not the best protection?" They have to grudgingly say, "Yes." And I say, "Great, we agree on that one."

How about each partner being faithful to each other in their relationship? Isn't that an incredible protection for people? And they have to say, "Yes." They'll quickly say, "That's not possible."

I say, "Let's just start with the ideal."

Being a virgin is a protection. A monogamous relationship is a protection. We can all agree on that. And—this is where very conservative people will disagree with me—condoms used consistently, correctly every single time, add a measure of protection against the transmission of HIV.

Because A.B.C. is so controversial, we've reframed it.

If you want to S.L.O.W. down the spread of HIV:

S Support the correct use of condoms every sexual encounter.
L Limit the number of partners, because studies have also shown that the greatest risk is in multiple partners.
O This is very controversial. Offer needle exchange. Studies have shown that in some places clean needles can slow down the transmission of HIV.
W Wait for sexual debut. Studies have shown that the younger a person is at their his or her sexual encounter, the more likely it is that he or she will be infected with HIV. So if you can encourage people to wait until they're older, eighteen, nineteen, twenty, before they have their first sexual encounter you can slow down the spread of HIV.

I have an even higher goal: I don't want to just manage HIV. My goal is to end HIV. I want the world to be rid of this evil virus.

So to STOP it requires a different strategy.

S Save sex for marriage.
T Teach men and boys to respect and honor women and girls. If men continue to treat women with such disrespect, HIV will be on our planet for a long time to come. So there's a discipleship element.
O Offer treatment through churches. We think that those things that I told you about, those six things that churches can do, when the church is involved, it can stop the spread of AIDS.
P Partner with one person for life.

When we reframe it like that, barriers go down. We want to do the best for people, which is to stop it.



Related Elsewhere:

Kay Warren spoke further about her ministry in "Q&A: Kay Warren," also posted today.

S.L.O.W. and S.T.O.P. are copyrighted terms of Saddleback Church. Learn more about the terms of use from their website.

See our AIDS/HIV section for more.

Purpose Driven's AIDS section has more on Kay Warren and how to S.T.O.P. AIDS.

Dangerous Surrender is available from ChristianBook.com and other retailers.

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[Reader Reviews]
Average User Rating: 

Kristyna   Posted: November 11, 2007 12:51 AM
Although STOP has many difficult standards the necessary sacrifices and training needed to follow this Biblical standard can only lead to more freedom. The combination of people making personal decisions for purity and the training on how to treat women is presented in a well thought out plan, STOP. I am looking forward to the upcoming Global Summit on AIDS & the Church at the end of November at Saddleback Church where more training, tools, and guidelines on how to get more involved with HIV will be presented. I hope you all will join me there - find out more details at www.purposedriven.com/globalsummit.

Billy Reed   Posted: November 05, 2007 4:47 PM
I hope this does not get edited but AIDS is transmitted primarily by anal intercourse. It does not get transmitted by "skin rubbing" which tranmits most other sexually transmitted problems. Teach people to not have anal intercourse and you will rapidly slow the spread of AIDS. This is not to be considered an endorsement of sex outside of marriage. The Bible says no to that idea from beginning to end.

Greg   Posted: November 05, 2007 3:21 PM
STOP as THE END to AIDS might only create cognitive dissonance, which encourages fatalistic non-compliance. If we married as teens, no sex until marriage would be a practical command and expectation, but we marry fairly late in life. Teen marriages are quite discouraged. Almost every woman in the Bible had been a teen mother, or wished she had been. How shall we live now? Career comes first, today, then marriage. Some people have given up on ever affording the ideal; creating a sexual anomie. Seeing a vast desert before you, a decade or two of unwanted chastity could tacitly encourage a fatalism about sex...to be swept away in forbidden romance, to fall hopelessly and helplessly into a love discouraged by society's seemingly unrealizable ideal. Also, it's one thing to tell teens what to do, but another thing to tell adults what to do. Slowing AIDS in complex adults is better than accidentally encouraging reckless non-compliance to ideals of purity.

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