On the occasion of a new advertising campaign Promoting “accountability” app Covenant Eyes, founder Ronald DeHaas is warning fellow Christians about the harms of online erotica – with the help of a porn-addicted superhero.
Enter Colossal Man.
Related:
“Porn was really affecting you,” says the Crusader’s attractive “accountability partner” in one of the new TikTok videos advertising the service, which sends reports of a user’s Internet activity to another person in order to so it can see if the user has viewed adult content online. “You would be gone for days while Hamster Man was out saving the town.”
Never miss a beat
Subscribe to our daily newsletter to stay up to date with the latest LGBTQ+ news and policy ideas.
“It was kind of a career low point,” the colossally ripped superhero replies, and the two laugh incredulously at the thought.
“💪 Ability = Super Strength”, in Covenant Eyes calculation. “Weakness = Pornography. »
And for some receptive viewers, Colossal Man = homoerotic.
However, in DeHaas’ design, advertising is all about work, because work is epidemic.
Boys as young as six are “marinating” in pornography, DeHaas says, and widespread online addiction is “a crisis of civilization” making young men incapable of maintaining a relationship with “a real woman.”
“If men can’t have children, it’s a problem of civilization,” he said. The Christian Post.
Referencing a 2016 study titled “The Porn Phenomenon,” which found that online addiction is rampant among fellow Christians, DeHaas said 57 percent of pastors and 64 percent of youth pastors have personally struggled. with this problem, whether currently or in the past.
Among pastors who were still “using,” 87 percent said they felt great shame about it, and 55 percent said they lived in constant fear of being found out.
DeHaas points out that 70 percent of youth pastors who participated in the study had at least one teen talk to them about their addiction in the past year. The majority were high school or college students.
“We’re talking, by and large, about Christian families and 12-year-olds who are struggling with pornography,” the CEO said. “It became their sexual training.”
But DeHaas also says there’s hope: The Covenant Eyes app has helped more than 1.5 million users in their quest to “beat porn,” he says.
Shortly after his election as House speaker in November, Republican Mike Johnson of Louisiana was revealed in a resurfaced video to be a client of Covenant Eyes, with her teenage son.
“It sends a report to your accountability partner,” Johnson says in the clip.
“My accountability partner at the moment is Jack, my son. He is 17 years old. So he and I get a report on everything on our phones, on all of our devices, once a week,” he continued. “If something wrong happens, your accountability partner receives immediate notification. I am proud to tell you, my son has a clean slate.
Josh Duggar, anti-LGBTQ+ activist from the TLC series 19 Kids and They Matter Also used Covenant Eyes software to monitor your Internet usage. He is currently in prison for possessing child sexual abuse photos after finding a technical solution to circumvent the software’s reports. His wife was his accountability partner.
DeHaas said “there’s no doubt in my mind” that demons are associated with pornography addiction and says spiritual attacks have even afflicted his team.
“It’s about demonic attacks, it really is.”
“I don’t know if Satan controls the servers,” he said. “I have a hard time thinking that’s the case, but sometimes I think, ‘Boy, there’s just trouble.’”
Colossal Man understands.