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From
ABC News:
Purity Balls — events where fathers vow “to protect their daughters
in their choices for purity” – are now a full-fledged national
phenomenon occurring in 48 states and in as many as 17 countries. In October, our team was invited to attend the Super Bowl of Purity
Balls at the regal Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs, Colo. It was the 14th annual Father-Daughter Purity Ball, and 60 fathers signed a purity covenant, promising, “before God to cover my daughter as her authority and protection in the area of purity.”
I first contacted Randy Wilson–the founder of the first of these
balls–over the summer. He invited us to spend a few days with his wife
Lisa and his seven children. They were an exceptionally warm group,
greeting us with homemade cookies and glitter-strewn cards.
The Wilson kids were all home-schooled and the purity lifestyle was
evident everywhere, from the blessings Randy conducted with them in
their backyard to the purity rings all the kids over the age of 12
proudly wore. Some of the older Wilson children were already married and
had all experienced their first kisses at the altar on their wedding
days.
In such a tight-knit community of other like-minded young people,
they claimed to be at ease with their choices, their views seemingly
unchallenged in their daily routines. We tagged along for ballet
rehearsal with 17-year-old Kameryn, and hung around the house while the
girls all did each others’ hair in preparation for the big ball. I had
never met a group of siblings (at least with the cameras around!) who
were so nice to each other at seemingly every moment.
Through the Wilsons, we met a second family, the Johnsons from
Indiana. Like the Wilsons, this was an exceptionally welcoming, sweet
family with seemingly no harsh words shared between them. Unlike the
Wilsons who were homeschooled, the Johnson girls went to school with
other kids, many of whom did not subscribe to the purity lifestyle. They
played on sports teams and planned to attend school dances (with
platonic dates, of course). (Read more.)
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1 comment:
Attention, intervention and interaction in a child's life is on-going until they have children of their own. Then it is time for attention, intervention and interaction in one's grandchildren's life...God willing.
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