The first time I looked at pornography,” remembers John Cozart, “it
was exciting but yet I felt like I was doing something wrong. Something
that I was not supposed to be doing. It was difficult to put it down. It
was difficult to walk away from it. The addiction began to take root.”
John Cozart was a young boy when he first saw pornographic
magazines at a friend’s house. It wasn’t long before he had his own
stack of magazines and a secret addiction.
“So there was a lot of sneaking around. A lot of secrecy. A
cycle of self-gratification. looking at the magazines. It continued
throughout my teenage years.”
He married Joy at nineteen, and hoped his addiction was over. It wasn’t. And the internet made it easy to be discreet at home.”
“There was this euphoric feeling that just swept through me
and it took me to another place. Some of the stuff that was popping up,
it was a lot more graphic more sexually explicit than what I was exposed
to even as a teenager, than the magazines that I had looked at. I had
this feeling like, ‘Wow, here we go again. This thing’s followed me into
my marriage.’ I found myself retreating to my office and spending more
and more time looking at pornography on the computer, and once again
keeping it a secret from my wife.”
John became a Christian in his twenties but still felt powerless to overcome his porn addiction.
“Because of the guilt, because of the shame I began to
withdraw from the Lord, and looking back there was probably a withdrawal
from my wife even early on. And the guilt was telling me that I was
doing something wrong, and the shame was telling me that I was wrong,
that there was something wrong with me.”
His secret was revealed when Joy walked into his office. She was shocked to see pictures of naked women on his computer screen.
“It was almost like I had just put a knife into her. She had
that look in her face, in her eyes like, ‘You’ve just betrayed me,
you’ve just… How could you? After all that we’ve been through.’”
“The trust was gone. Everything that we had built over the
years of our marriage was gone. There was nothing I could say. My words
meant nothing. My apology meant nothing. ‘I’m sorry’ meant nothing.”
Hope finally arrived when a friend gave John a CD called Somebody’s Daughter - A Journey to Freedom from Pornography.
“I just wanted to be free. I wanted to be pure. I was a
Christian and I wanted to get back that intimacy that I had early on as a
new Christian, as a new believer. I remember the first day that I began
to listen to that CD. I felt like for the very first time that there
was hope. It was like somebody was saying to me, ‘I know where you’re
at. I know what you’ve gone through. I know what you’re going through
now.’ And they were telling me that, ‘You can get through this.’ And I
felt like at that particular point God was answering my prayer.”
John took the first steps on his journey toward freedom from pornography.
“It really started with me just being honest and being
vulnerable and saying, ‘This is where I’m at.’ The thing about sexual
sin is it thrives in secrecy, in darkness. That’s where it lives. Once I
began to verbalize my addiction, the power began to subside and it
started to diminish almost over night.”
“The intimacy that I once had with God has returned. There’s a
passage of scripture, Psalm 51 that says, ‘Restore unto me the joy of
thy salvation…’ and being free that joy has been restored. My wife and I
will be celebrating thirty years of marriage, and I’m proud of that I
really am. Man, she is the love of my life.”
John runs Unshackled Ministries. He is devoted to help men find freedom from pornography addiction, just as he did.
What a story. You too can decide to let go of that bad habit. Its all about determination.
Source: The 700 Club
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