When “Innocent” Church Plays Aren’t So Innocent
I remember being in a teen church play. One line: “You can do a whole lot of good to me”—in a flirty tone. All Black teens, all trying to act “innocent,” all being watched by adults who thought it was harmless. But it wasn’t innocent.
This is what subtle sexualization looks like. A line like that seems cute on paper, but when a teen delivers it, it’s loaded. The tone, the body language, the context—they all add up. And here’s the thing: in a Black church context, these lines do more than just sexualize teens—they feed into harmful stereotypes, especially the myth that Black girls and women are hypersexual.
Think about it: Black teen girls perform flirtatious lines in front of peers and authority figures, and suddenly the community, even unintentionally, is reinforcing an idea that Black girls are “naturally” sexual. It’s subtle, but it sticks. Teens pick up on it, internalize it, and it shapes how they see themselves—and how others see them.
Even when adults mean “fun” or “cute,” these scripts send a message: sexuality is something Black teens are supposed to act out, even in a “safe” church environment. It normalizes sexualized behavior before teens are ready and pressures them to perform in ways that intersect with long-standing, damaging stereotypes.
It’s not about blaming the church—most leaders genuinely want to protect teens—but about noticing the patterns. Lines, scripts, and performances need more than a quick read-through. They need to be examined through the lens of cultural context, power, and stereotypes.
Teens deserve creativity and fun without having to carry the weight of sexualized expectations—especially Black teens, whose bodies and behavior are already policed and misrepresented by society. When adults write suggestive lines for teens to perform, it raises questions.
Why is that language comfortable in a youth setting?
Who thought that tone was appropriate?
What does it normalize?
Even if the intention was humor, lines like that can:
- Normalize adult-created sexual innuendo in teen spaces
- Blur boundaries between innocence and suggestiveness
- Signal to unhealthy adults that subtle sexual language is tolerated
And that’s where it gets serious.
Churches often focus heavily on policing teen behavior — modesty talks, purity sermons, dating rules. But sometimes they overlook how adult-created content may quietly introduce the very sexual undertones they claim to guard against.
When teens are trained to perform flirtation for laughs, especially Black teens who already battle stereotypes of hypersexuality, it creates a layered risk:
- It reinforces harmful societal narratives about Black girls being “naturally” sexual.
- It conditions teens to be comfortable performing sexualized language in front of authority.
- It may make it harder to recognize when boundaries are being crossed later.
Predatory environments don’t always start with overt abuse.
They often begin with subtle normalization.
That doesn’t mean every writer is malicious.
But it does mean we should examine who feels comfortable scripting sexuality into youth spaces — and why.
Because protecting teens isn’t just about telling them what not to do.
It’s also about ensuring adults are creating environments that don’t quietly compromise them.