We have a number of regular guests on the talk show. When they're not talking, many of them are writing. This is where you'll find their stuff.

The views expressed by our guest bloggers do not necessarily reflect the views of sane, moral and/or reasonably intelligent people. Jesus may or may not be pleased (or even care). And what's more, they certainly don't reflect the views of Steve Brown (I'm not even sure he knows any of this is going on).

Blog DescriptionThe Guest Room

Whatever happened to sin?

Terry Mattingly March 14th, 2008

Ashley Youmans Rae Maika DiPietro Alexandra DupreI have no idea if there is a religion ghost somewhere in the sad story of Ashley Youmans Rae Maika DiPietro Alexandra Dupre — the 22-year-old “escort” better known as “Kristen” in the icky story of Gov. Eliot Spitzer of New York.

I do know this. There are times when it is hard to cover the news and avoid the word “sin.”

Read the whole New York Times report that pulled her out into the spotlight. Doesn’t this leave you asking some questions? Is this whole story a parable for the post-feminist age or what? Has there ever been a responsible male in this young woman’s life? Would she know one if she saw one?

Her story is full of painful passages, but here is one that gets to me:

Ms. Dupre said by telephone Tuesday night that she was worried about how she would pay her rent since the man she was living with “walked out on me” after she discovered he had fathered two children. She said she was considering working at a friend’s restaurant or, once her apartment lease expires, moving back with her family in New Jersey “to relax.”

Or how about this?

On MySpace, her page says: “I am all about my music and my music is all about me. It flows from what I’ve been through, what I’ve seen and how I feel.”

She left “a broken family” at age 17, having been abused, according to the MySpace page, and has used drugs and “been broke and homeless.”

“Learned what it was like to have everything and lose it, again and again,” she writes. “Learned what it was like to wake up one day and have the people you care about most gone.

“But I made it,” she continues. “I’m still here and I love who I am. If I never went through the hard times, I would not be able to appreciate the good ones. Cliche, yes, but I know it’s true.”

Or how about this snippet of lyrics from a stereotypical song from her work as a dance-club singer?

I know what you want.
You got what I want.
I know what you need.
Can you handle me?

And on and on and on. Her side of the story is — naturallyunfolding on MySpace. Where else would it be?

But there are no issues in this tale linked to marriage, family, sexuality, sin, guilt, abuse, lust, greed, abuse of power or anything else. If there isn’t a religion ghost in this story, then there should be. Hypocrisy is just the starting point.

UPDATE: The Washington Post
says that these kinds of public scandals used to be about sin. But that was a different America.

clinton_lewinsky.jpgNo more. The major advice from the Style gods to women today. Do not trust politicians. Why? They are wired for this kind of thing.

Think Clinton. Bill. Or Hart, as in Gary.

One reason is because they’ve got the ideal personality for it. Psychologists believe that certain types of personalities are more likely to engage in infidelity — and that those traits uncannily overlap with traits common to politicians.

“Extroverted, prone to be socially dominant, those are traits associated with infidelity and with good politicians,” says David Schmitt, a professor of psychology at Bradley University. “The ability to compartmentalize — not necessarily to viciously lie, but to hold back some truths in one context and then tell those truths in a different context, that’s almost the definition of a politician.”

So there. Still no ghosts around here. Nope.

Top photos: From The Smoking Gun

Professor Terry Mattingly writes the nationally syndicated On Religion column for the Scripps Howard News Service in Washington, D.C., which is sent to about 350 newspapers in North America. He's also a regular contributor at GetReligion.org and the author of the book Pop Goes Religion: Faith in Popular Culture.

Print This Post | Email This Post | Digg This!

This entry was posted on Friday, March 14th, 2008 at 8:48 am and is filed under , , , , , , . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “Whatever happened to sin?”

Grampa Dan March 17th, 2008

I guess, I have to wonder if someone was to offer this young woman help with her life if she would really want it.

If she has come by easy money through prostitution it is doubtful that she would want a normal job that would be for normal pay or minimum wages.

If one would try to reach out to her as person how could that be done? Unless she already knows you, you are at total stranger so why should she listen to what you have to say or trust you in any way? Or share her struggles or emotional issues with you.

This is a common problem that I think about in all of life in my interaction with strangers or people I know on a surface level. They don't know me and why should they listen to what I have to say or trust me in way that would leave them vulnerable.

Has anyone out there been successful in reaching out and helping people like this young woman?

G.D.

Leave a Reply

Most Popular Stuff

Comments

greg from canada

Will definitely be listening to the Star Trek episode. My favourite of all the Start...

WT Update

Chemical Erik

V - Ger!!! Looking forward to the Star Trek episode. Specifically, what are you going to...

WT Update

Derek

“Derek: just read the book. Your questions are...

Why They’re Not Emergent - Kevin and Ted on SBE

Chemical Erik

After the talk of “Christianity from the crotch”,...

Etcetera - 06.24.08 - Better than Light

Kim

Wow! Talk about a “God thing”…I call them “God’s...

I’ve been remembering!