My take: the song is critical of catholic standards of a chaste priesthood and nun(hood?). He points out how natural sex is, millions of small holes, and compares the weight (an apple--forbidden fruit) of the "sin" of natural sex ("harmless sparks") in the priesthood to the travesty of molesting alter boys. He also examines the impact of the Catholic policies: if sex is taboo then men will doubt their God given nature to have sex, doubting God's own creation--breaking down the family function that the Church was originally trying to protect. This is another attack from Bazan on the religious establishment.
My take: the song is critical of catholic standards of a chaste priesthood and nun(hood?). He points out how natural sex is, millions of small holes, and compares the weight (an apple--forbidden fruit) of the "sin" of natural sex ("harmless sparks") in the priesthood to the travesty of molesting alter boys. He also examines the impact of the Catholic policies: if sex is taboo then men will doubt their God given nature to have sex, doubting God's own creation--breaking down the family function that the Church was originally trying to protect. This is another attack from Bazan on the religious establishment.