As college students around the country kick off a new school year,
one national organization is working to change prevailing campus
attitudes that accept casual sexual encounters as the norm.
Cassandra Hough, founder of the Love and Fidelity Network, explained
that “on the majority of college campuses, there’s a one-sided view” on
questions of marriage, family and sexuality, “and there’s a lot of
pressure for students to conform.”
“The Love and Fidelity Network looks to balance that conversation and
challenge the sexual norms on campus by providing an alternative,” she
told CNA.
Hough founded the network in 2007 after helping to start the Anscombe
Society, a Princeton University group promoting chastity and sexual
integrity on campus.
“It became apparent when I was a student leader at the Anscombe Society
that a national organization was needed to provide college student
leaders with the resources, arguments, leadership training, support and
the network to start student groups and effectively defend marriage,
family and sexual integrity on their college campuses,” Hough explained.
Since its beginnings with two student groups on two college campuses,
the Love and Fidelity Network has grown in the past six years to have
active student groups on 23 campuses nationwide, with 10 additional
schools in various stages of forming student groups.
“We have a growing membership” and a continually expanding range of
conferences, campaigns and resources for students, Hough said.
Caitlin Seery, director of the Love and Fidelity Network, said that the
group’s mission “is to challenge the sexual orthodoxy that has a
foothold on American universities.”
The prevailing mindset, she told CNA, “separated sex from any meaning,”
and since it was adopted by many members of the university community, it
“has had a transforming influence on the rest of the culture.”
Seery said that she is excited about the organization’s growth, and is looking forward to the coming school year.
The group held a leadership seminar for the first time this past summer,
gathering more than 20 student leaders from 15 campuses in order to
learn from one another and from scholars in the field about reasons and
methods to promote traditional sexual ethics on campus.
“Up until this point, I think people felt connected to us, but not to
each other,” Seery stated, adding that after the summer conference,
there has been “really a growing sense of a national movement.”
Now, going into the fall semester, she said, “the students are so
motivated.” The first nationwide campaign this fall will involve hanging
posters during student orientation sessions to display “a positive
message that there is an alternative to the hookup culture.”
“A lot of people do want more” than casual sexual hookups, Seery said,
and they should be able to “expect more than the message they usually
receive during freshman orientation week.”
Other initiatives throughout the year will include a Valentine’s Day
poster campaign and the 6th annual National Love and Fidelity Conference
this November.
However, even with several annual campaigns and a growing corps of
dedicated students, the university setting is a challenging battleground
for the organization.
Some ideas that came out of the sexual revolution “really got a foothold
in American universities,” Seery said, explaining that this “orthodoxy
of the sexual revolution” has permeated the culture in which young
people are formed, and is supported by established leaders in the
academic field.
“We’re dealing with a culture that is becoming a lot more hostile to
voices defending marriage as the institution between one man and woman,”
she observed. “In some ways it’s becoming more difficult to promote
sexual integrity on campus because our vision is an all-encompassing
one,” including not only abstinence, but also marriage, fidelity, and
other issues that create controversy on college campuses.
Seery said that it is “inspiring” to see students face the challenge of campus dialogue in a respectful yet firm manner.
She added that it is heartening to see the network’s campus groups
offering alternative community and “a uniquely safe space” for students
with same-sex attractions whose viewpoints in support of chastity and a
traditional understanding of marriage are “discriminated against in
other circles.”
“That’s something that our groups offer that no one else does.”
Despite the many challenges within university communities today, Seery
said that the organization has high hopes. She would like to see
colleges “actually help encourage healthy behavior that will help lead
to the flourishing of individual students and the student community,”
just as they try to promote healthy lifestyles regarding stress, tobacco
and alcohol.
Such changes will take time, Seery admitted. “We know that we’re playing
for the long game, and that the culture is not going to be changed
overnight,” she said.
However, she continued, “ideas form culture, and if we change the ideas
that are false but taken for granted at these universities, then we can
actually in the long run have a meaningful impact on the culture.”