OVERCOMING PORN
		
		Kirk Franklin's Freedom
		
		By Shannon Woodland and Scott 
  Ross  
  The 700 Club 
        
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com 
   Kirk Franklin has sold more than 10 million albums in less than 
  10 years. He's a three-time GRAMMY Award winner and a seven-time Dove Award 
  winner. His hit "Stomp" from the triple-platinum album God's Property 
  made him a star amongst the MTV crowd. But Kirk's career came to a screeching 
  halt a few years ago when his private-or should we say secret-life was no longer 
  a secret. Kirk came clean and confessed his addiction to pornography in this 
  interview with Scott Ross. 
              KIRK FRANKLIN: There's always the boy who has the big brother who 
    has the magazine under his bed. That's how it starts. So the first time I 
    ever saw one, I was around 8 or 9. I saw my first magazine, and from there 
    I was addicted.
 
              SCOTT ROSS: Did you bring that into the marriage? 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: Yes, I did. 
  SCOTT ROSS: Was she aware of it? 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: Not the first year but the second year. 
  SCOTT ROSS: (to Tammy)When did you find out? 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN (Kirk's wife): Once he realized that he was having 
    problems, he just came to me and he said- 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: -No, no, no, Baby. Let's aim to make it more real. 
    Let's aim to keep it real. I tried to when we got married because I still 
    had those single male ways. 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: I would say in our second year of marriage he tried 
    to implement it into our marriage-'Watch this with me, Honey.' It made me 
    feel dirty. It didn't make our intimacy sacred. I would say, 'I'm not watching.' 
    I would get angry. 'I'm not watching that with you.' 
  SCOTT ROSS (reporting): Kirk's secret life ran amuck while he traveled 
    to promote his latest releases. At home Tammy had no idea of the extent of 
    Kirk's problem. 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: I didn't see any evidence that he was doing it at 
    home. He knew how I felt about it so
 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: But I was. 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: 
I would think that he was hiding it from me. 
  SCOTT ROSS: So you had a secret life? 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: Yeah, I was doing it at home. When she was asleep, 
    I would go upstairs. 
  SCOTT ROSS: How did you finally get to a point where this thing has 
    got to be dealt with? 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: We were in Los Angeles. We were in the bed that morning 
    in the hotel, and we were lying there, and I said, 'Baby, I need to tell you 
    something. I'm struggling with pornography. I mean, it is a struggle and I 
    have a problem with pornography. It's a problem.' 
  SCOTT ROSS: And your response, Tammy?  
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: My response was to immediately be sensitive. What 
    blessed me was he did look at it as a problem. A lot of guys, it's normal 
    for a man- 
  SCOTT ROSS: -It's a man thing. 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: Yeah, it's a man thing. The fact that he wasn't coming 
    to me like that blessed me so that I just began to pray for him consistently. 
    I knew that I wanted him to know that this is something I wanted to work through. 
  SCOTT ROSS: Together? 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: Together. 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: That's what so weird about porn. You have different 
    people even in the Body feeling differently about it. There are some Christian 
    men I know who say, 'I'd rather do that than cheat on my wife.' I've had to 
    shed light on, 'Dude, 'We're cheating on our wives because whatever a man 
    thinketh, so is he'.  
  SCOTT ROSS: You have a woman now who's willing to walk it through 
    with you. What about the people who are in it now? You are leaving this secret 
    life. You're scared to death somebody will find out about it. 
   KIRK 
    FRANKLIN: It's weird because you're talking about the dude who was the 
    minister of music at a church when I was 11. I have to check myself because 
    there's an anger that rises up in me. I get evangelically ticked off by the 
    fact that I wished somebody would have taught me a long time ago about the 
    repercussions of sex and flesh and lust and vanity and pride and ego. I wished 
    somebody would have been holding my little behind accountable years ago. But 
    let me tell you what happens to the gifted. The gifted in the church slip 
    right through. 
  SCOTT ROSS: Why? 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: Because the gifted are able to naturally and emotionally 
    control the atmosphere of the service.  
  SCOTT ROSS: So we relate to you based on the gift rather than the 
    man? 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: There you go, brother. No one asks the minister of 
    music whether he's killing when everyone is crying and speaking in tongues. 
    Nobody asks him, 'Are you going home tonight? How's your marriage? What's 
    going on with you and your wife?' Nobody's holding the gifted accountable 
    in the Body. 
  SCOTT ROSS (reporting): Even though Kirk's wife knew about his problem 
    and prayed for him, no one held him accountable. That is until he met Pastor 
    Tony Evans, a man who wasn't dazzled by Kirk's celebrity.  
  KIRK FRANKLIN: When I first went to his church, it was 1998, and I 
    had an album out called Stomp. I was traveling to Dublin, Ireland, doing songs 
    with Bono, I was getting flowers from Arsenio Hall, I was getting letters 
    from Mike Tyson, I was hanging out with Denzel and all these big time celebrities, 
    and I was walking on a TV pilot for ABC. 
  SCOTT ROSS: I'm impressed, man! I didn't realize you were that famous. 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: You know it's all that garbage. None of that junk you 
    can take to heaven, but I was bathing in it. And a lot of my Christian community 
    was bathing in it with me. 
  SCOTT ROSS (reporting): But when Kirk and his family started attending 
    Pastor Evan's church, Kirk didn't receive the same treatment he was accustomed 
    to. 
  TONY EVANS: You come here the same way everyone comes here-through 
    the Cross. At the Cross the ground is very level, so you're treated like everyone 
    else. We recognize your gifts. We honor people. The Bible says to give honor 
    where honor is due. But there's only one celebrity. That's Jesus Christ. 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: But Tony Evans, he didn't care who I was. If I didn't 
    get there in enough time, I would sit where everybody else sat. I got mad 
    at it, but then there was something that was pulling me to it. I was crying 
    out to be discipled. I called him one night and told him that I needed help, 
    I have a problem.  
  TONY EVANS: Since the sexual area so defines men and is so accessible 
    to men, it's easily reached after as a defining point. It has to do with who 
    you are and if you're really a man, all of this wrong definition. Once we 
    can clarify a person's identification in Christ, and once we can help them 
    to understand how to walk in the Spirit, they can discover that the law of 
    the Spirit is indeed greater than the law of the flesh.  
  SCOTT ROSS (reporting): Kirk told Pastor Evans everything. In turn, 
    this helped Kirk be honest with the people who mattered most in his life. 
  SCOTT ROSS: (to Kirk) And that started the journey to healing with 
    Tammy.  
  (to Tammy): You saw the change in the man? 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: Definitely. 
  SCOTT ROSS: And he's clean now? 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: (half serious) You clean? 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: Four years.  
  SCOTT ROSS: So people can get free, but they have to admit they have 
    the problem and they have to come clean with somebody who'll hold them accountable. 
  TAMMY FRANKLIN: There's a process. 
  KIRK FRANKLIN: If I have been set free from this one, anybody can 
    be set free because I questioned for years whether I could be set free. Dude, 
    I was doing albums, albums that people were getting blessed by, and I was 
    struggling with pornography. "Why We Sing" came out in '93, and 
    I was struggling with pornography. Stomp came out in '97, and I was struggling 
    with pornography. These albums God was speaking through and everyone was getting 
    their victory except for me. I used to question and almost began to wonder, 
    What's going on? What was happening, and this might help people: my victory 
    didn't come by my emotional experience; my victory came through truth. When 
    I was taught truth, that's when I got my freedom. 
  
  
  
		  
				 
				 
 
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