A GUEST POST BY MY WIFE, Jenny Jo
I’ve been thinking a lot about the football players’ protests of the national anthem. On the face of things, I don’t like it. By any accounting, Americans are the most free, most wealthy, most generous people on earth, and we should be thankful for our citizenship here. I think that this method of protest (disrespecting the symbols of our country) in order to make an unrelated political point so clouds the issue that many patriotic Americans can’t see beyond it. And Trump’s nasty words had the result of making this past Sunday’s protests more about him than about anything else.
But, digging a little deeper to consider the protestors’ motives, I agree that this country has a police brutality problem. President John Adams once said, “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” As our society becomes increasingly more immoral, and as the citizens fail to restrain themselves, it follows that the heavy and inadequate hand of the government (the police) will do increasingly more of the restraining for us. In such a climate, a few policemen (sinners just like the rest of us) become tyrannical, and a few become so jaded that everyone appears as a law-breaker. Both situations lead to the abuse of the innocent. How many times have we heard, on TV, in the movies, or in real life, a policeman say, “I AM the law?” This perspective is very, very wrong. I think there is almost no justification for a policeman to use his weapon against a citizen: only in the case of an immediate lethal threat to the policeman or an immediate lethal threat to someone else. Unarmed people should never, ever be shot. It is far better to err on the side of criminals eluding justice than the side of innocents dying. This is an issue, a societal problem, worthy of our attention.
Whenever controversial issues like this one come up, I always do lots of mental gymnastics, trying to turn the situation around to see how I’d feel if the shoe were on the other foot. Would I approve of a professional athlete taking a knee to mourn the lives of all the innocent children murdered in abortion? Mmm. I might. I would also admit that doing so during the national anthem communicates an anti-patriotism that I do not support and distracts from (nay, even harms) the original point of the protest. And it downright angers people for whom love of country is a more important issue (than abortion, racial issues, or whatever). As mature, thoughtful people, we have to admit that all issues aren’t equally weighted for all people. Isn’t that one of the things pollsters are always asking in the run-up to elections? For me, abortion is more important than racial tension or school spending or minimum wage because if we kill a person as an infant, then his race, his education, his income are all completely moot. We have to ensure survival before we bother about secondary things. Now I have good friends, church friends even, who believe racial equality is the more important issue. While I disagree (and am happy to debate the essential import of abortion), I do refrain from accusing them of allowing their priorities to make them de facto supporters of abortion. As also, by the way, they should refrain from accusing me of being a de facto supporter of racism. This brings me back to the beginning. In our society, we seldom consider the other person’s perspective this way. Many voices in the public square these days are saying that valuing a love of country over a desire to end police brutality is the same as being racist. And that’s not true. Just because opposing racism isn’t a person’s highest ideal does not mean that it isn’t an ideal at all. I suspect that NFL players would find many, many more people would rally to their cause if they could make their appeal for the one thing without simultaneously disrespecting another.
And now for a note about the disproportionate percent of African American people being killed by police. African Americans make up 13% of the US population. 223 African Americans were killed by cops last year, which is 21% of those killed by cops. 315,000 African Americans were killed last year by abortion, and that’s 35% of abortions. Now, which of these is worse for African Americans, both in numbers of actual dead bodies and in percentages compared to other races?!?! You can check my math on this, but I’m pretty sure that if you’re an African American, you are a gazillion times more likely to be murdered as an infant than you are to be killed by a cop.
- Jenny Jo
Thursday, September 28, 2017
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Thoughts on the current protests - GUEST POST |
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
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Tales from the Box Office |
Tuesday, August 01, 2017
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13 Reasons Why And the True Tragedy |
Tuesday, July 04, 2017
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Hillbilly Elegy |
Friday, June 16, 2017
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Condemnation is Important |
Sometimes what is not said is louder than what is said. Consider this example of a parent with two kids. One kid hauls off and punches the other kid right in the face. The punch broke the child’s nose and required surgery to fix. What would you think the child who punched his sibling would learn if all his parent said was “My thoughts and prayers are with your sibling. I am glad the EMTs got him to the hospital quickly.” Do you think that the parent would have taught the child that it was wrong to punch? Did the parent discourage future punching? The parent’s failure to speak words of correction has a greater impact than the parents words of sympathy. Sometimes we have to be willing to say an act is wrong, vile, evil, or hateful. We just do.
I bring this up in regards to the amazing response of many to the recent shooting of Representative Steve Scalise, a Republican staffer, and some others at a baseball practice. What is amazing about this response is what was missing. Remember, this was a Democratic shooter hunting Republican lawmakers. Let’s look at some twitter responses from leading Democrats.
First Hillary Clinton:
2 sides take the field tomorrow, but we're all ultimately on one team. My thoughts are with the members of Congress, staff & heroic police.
Clinton offers no denunciation of the act itself. Interestingly, her Twitter statement lacks any hashtag, which seems to imply she does not want it easily found or widely read. For comparison, here is a Tweet from the day before from Clinton in which she remembers the anniversary of the Pulse Nightclub shooting:
My heart is with the loved ones of the 49 people killed at Pulse, the city of Orlando, & the LGBT community. #WeWillNotLetHateWin
The violent act in this case is a year old. Clinton does use a hashtag, and calls the shooting “hate.”
Now onto Joe Biden, former Vice President:
Jill and I are praying for the victims and their families. Grateful for courage of my former colleagues, first responders & Capitol Police.
Again, no denunciation of the act itself. Prayer and thoughts. No indication of violence being evil or wrong. Let’s look at his one year remembering of the Pulse Nigh Club shooting:
We meet unspeakable tragedy and hate with unbound resolve. I stand with the LGBTQ community, today and every day. #OrlandoUnitedDay.
Again this act was “hate.” And we see that the Vice President understands hashtags, which were absent above.
Tim Kaine is a senator from Virginia, and the latest VP candidate offered up by the Democratic Party:
Praying for Steve Scalise and all hurt in the outrageous attack this morning in Alexandria.
Again, no condemnation of anything. Just prayers for the hurt. He even uses the word Alexandria, which was the hashtag being used, but fails to make it a hashtag. If you go to his twitter feed you will see that he does link to an interview he gave with NPR where he says we need better political rhetoric. So, bonus points to Kaine for at least that much.
Nancy Pelosi, the highest ranking Democrat Congressman:
My thoughts and prayers with @SteveScalise, Capitol Police and staff at the shooting in Alexandria, VA this morning.
No hashtag, no condemning. Now her response to the one year anniversary of the Pulse shooting:
Hatred will never defeat #pride. #OrlandoUnitedDay
That was hate. It deserves hashtags. And there is a video message attached where she condemns the attacks even more.
Chuck Schumer, the highest ranking Democrat in the Senate:
Saddened by news of the shooting in VA this am. Thoughts & prayers for Rep @SteveScalise & others injured & hope for a speedy recovery.
No hashtag; no condemning the act. He did have a second tweet later that thanked responders, but again, no condemnation. On to his Pulse anniversary tweet:
Their names & faces will not be forgotten, nor will our promise to fight hate & intolerance & to honor them w/ action. #Rememberthe49
This one gets a hashtag and is condemned as hate.
Just in case you are wondering, the Republicans are not much better. Here is Paul Ryan, Speaker of the House:
This morning the hearts of the whole House are with @SteveScalise, the brave Capitol police, staff, and all those who were in harm's way.
No hashtag here either, and no condemning it as hate. He also had a Tweet on the Pulse anniversary:
Join me in taking a moment to remember the 49 innocent lives lost one year ago today in the #Orlando terrorist attack. #OrlandoUnitedDay
Hashtags, but no condemning this one, either.
Ted Cruz gets closer:
Praying for our friends, colleagues, and all hurt or impacted by today's terrible shooting.
At least he uses the word “terrible.” The first time we’ve found any sort of denunciation involved.
Bernie Sanders’s response stands out as different. The shooter volunteered for Bernie’s campaign, so the political pressure is greater on him, but his response was much better:
I am sickened by this despicable act. Let me be as clear as I can be. Violence of any kind is unacceptable in our society.
His tweet included a link to a speech he made on the floor in which he condemned it even further. He made a clear statement that shooting political opponents is wrong.
Sure, many, if not all, of these may have condemned the baseball shooting in their “press releases,” but who ever sees those? No one. Who sees Twitter? Everyone. It is not hard to recognize evil as evil, at least it shouldn’t be.
The Bible is clear that we should condemn that which is evil and refrain from doing it. Killing another person in thought, word, gesture, much less in deed, is forbidden by God. Yet, governmental leaders appear to have a problem saying such a thing.
This lack of condemnation is loud to my ears. Add in all the over-the-top rhetoric such as the assertion that the President is like a Nazi/Hitler or the Republicans are going to take away Granny’s healthcare. Or even the statement that the Republic would be over if Hillary Clinton had been elected. Such words are taken seriously by many people. When a citizen takes the call to “resist” to the level of armed violence, then such an action must be condemned, or we can expect it to be repeated.
Our nation’s leaders had a chance to restore civility, or at the very least to condemn violence in politics, and they failed to do so. God save us from the consequences.
Monday, May 08, 2017
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Skipping the Church |
This post over at A Cry for Justice is indicative both of what I like about the site and of what makes me deeply uncomfortable about it.
The site has published an open-letter type response to an allegedly real letter from a pastor to an abuse victim (non-physical abuse). I am not defending the pastor’s letter in any way. I don’t know enough to say anything about the pastor’s situation at all. So don’t misconstrue this as an endorsement of his letter.
What I appreciate about the open letter is how clearly the real pain is communicated. First, I do think pastors need to realize that often when a person speaks about a spouse’s emotional manipulation (I prefer that word to the term “abuse” so that we can keep the distinction between the crime of physical abuse and the sin of spiritual tyranny), he/she is already at the end of the rope. The sufferer has reached the tipping point. It is not a new problem in the marriage but a long-standing pattern. Hope has been lost. Second, I’m thankful for the reminder that when a pastor approaches marriage counseling, he ought to consider that one of the marriage partners could very well be a rank pagan. Pretenders and hypocrites exist within our churches. Pastors are probably the easiest to fool since we see the people the least. Spouses witness the hypocrisy the most. Third, divorce is a biblically acceptable outcome in some situations. Divorcing couples are not a sign of a failing church or ministry; sometimes they are just the by-product of the depravity of man.
What I find deeply troubling about the open letter is its low view of the church. And it’s regarding this point that I find myself unable to endorse this open letter (much less A Cry for Justice overall). This letter begs the pastor to listen. And he should. But what the author basically is saying is, “I tried all the Christian stuff already, please grant me a divorce, now.” Just as the pastor needs to understand that the wife (or whoever is the offended party in the marriage) is at the end of her rope, that person needs to understand that the church has only just now been apprised of the situation. The church cannot jump straight to the end and just say, “I am sorry for you, here is your divorce.” We can’t do that because ours is a “ministry of reconciliation.” We can’t do that because Jesus Christ’s grace is real and can change lives. It changed Saul into Paul. It can change anyone. We can’t jump to the end because, while the wife may have tried everything by herself, she has not tried anything with the backing and support of the church. That fact is important.
The open letter makes clear that pain and suffering are real, and the husband in that case needs to repent. He is acting sinfully. However, the author’s efforts to change her husband are not the same as the church’s. The church can add its voice to the call to repent, the call to recognize how much the husband’s behavior has hurt his wife and his kids, the call to turn to Jesus and away from sin. One of the important lessons from Matthew 18 is that the one who refuses to listen is not to be treated as an unbeliever or a tax collector until after he has failed to listen to the church. I do not see that attitude in the letter. And that concerns me.
Ultimately, what I am arguing for is to involve the church much, much earlier in the process. Go to your church well before you reach the end of your rope. If your spouse gives you the silent treatment at home, don’t endure it for months, involve the elders and pastor right then. Is he yelling and screaming and blaming you for financial problems that are not your fault? Call the pastor. Did he kill a beloved family pet? Tell it to the church. Did he hit you or wave a gun at you or threaten to kill you? Call the police. The church understands and will support you. Physical abuse is a crime and should be reported. You and the church can work out the details of divorce later.
The open letter is right: pastors should listen. The letter is right: the pastor was not aware. But that is because he was never told. And that is part of the problem.
Friday, February 17, 2017
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Misunderstanding love and hate |
1. Ben misunderstands hate.
I assume that he was motivated to write this article to address the hate he sees in the world. I wish he had given it some context, because it’s been my experience that people use that phrase, “Love the sinner, hate the sin,” in order to take sin less seriously, not in order to give freer rein to hate. Unfortunately, Ben did not define what he means by hate. He does assert that those with whom we have relationships (children, friends) are ineligible recipients of our hate. So from the outset, he conflates “hating the sin” and “hating the sinner” without offering any justification for doing so. I would wager that’s the point where he loses his argument with the people who are enamored of the phrase. Then he writes that since we are categorically incapable of hating our children, we should also refrain from hating people groups such as gays or Muslims. (I don’t see the thought progression, there.) Then he abruptly switches to talking about love.
The problem Ben has is that he’s using a worldly definition of hate in which hate appears to be the opposite of love. But this cannot be. God is love. Yet God hates (Psalm 5:4-6; 11:5; Romans 9:13). He hates things like lying (Proverbs 12:22), idolatry (Deuteronomy 7:25), and arrogance (Proverbs 16:6-9). He also hates people such as idolaters, evildoers, and lovers of violence. (Psalm 5:4-6, 11:5) So then, what can the Christian know of hate? Hate is an emotion, and it is not sinful. It is a God-given emotion. There is a time to hate (Ecclesiastes 3:8). Hate is an emotional opposing and a standing against something or someone (Psalm 26:5). Thus we are called to hate the enemies of God (Psalm 139:21). It can be easily misused, and when we direct it wrongly, we do sin. We ought not hate simply because we don’t like someone’s actions. Hate is rightfully directed against the unholy actions of those who stand against God. It is also directed against the unbeliever himself because the unbeliever stands against God, and that stand is disastrous for the unbeliever. I agree with Ben that it’s hard to separate the sin and the sinner; apart from Christ, the two are inescapably connected. In hell God won’t be punishing sin; He’ll be punishing sinners. Jesus reminds us of the dire state of the unbeliever when he tells us to love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us (Matthew 5:43-44). Hatred of the enemies of God does not rule out love. It does not rule out pity. It does not rule out prayer. We are emotionally opposed to those who stand against God, but we are also desirous of seeing them switch sides and come to faith in Jesus Christ. We are against the promotion of sin, but that does not mean we are against repentance unto life.
Now, this doesn’t mean that I’ll be marching in a parade with a sign that says, “God hates (fill in the blank with pet peeve).” The people at Westboro Baptist Church misunderstand hate, too. They use the world’s idea of hate and impute it to God. They seek to belittle, curse, demean, and vilify others. That is not Biblical. Our speech is still always to be seasoned with grace. We cannot condone or excuse sin, but that does not mean our language should be unkind.
I need to point out that we ARE capable of hating those with whom we have a close relationship, such as our children. People practice the worldly definition of hate on close family members all the time. Just think of the neglected children or the spousal abuse. Most crimes are committed against people the criminals know, and those could all be called hate crimes because love never motivates violent crimes. Turning back to the Biblical definition of hate, we see that people are capable of hating their children in that worldview, too. Proverbs 13:24 states, “Whoever spares the rod, hates their children.” From this, we understand that failing to discipline our children is being hateful to them. It is standing against them because it fails to drive the folly from them. Or, in other words, failing to hate the sins of your children leads to hating your children.
2. Ben misunderstands love.
For the record, I am closer to agreeing with the current article, not the previous one; you can’t show love to a distant person you’ve never met. How can I be patient and kind to someone I do not know or see or who is not near?
The central proof text for this article is taken from the account in John about the woman caught in adultery. Ben points out that Christ didn’t rebuke her sin until after he had publicly defended her and granted her mercy and after her accusers had left the two alone. Ben asserts that our encounters with sinful people should also follow this pattern. What about the time Jesus made the rich young ruler go away sad? Mark 10:21 tells us that, out of love, Jesus brought that man to sadness by openly and publicly exposing his covetousness. Verse 23 makes it clear that conversation occurred in front of at least his disciples. Or what of Matthew 23 where Jesus, speaking “to the crowds and to his disciples,” began to pronounce seven woes on the Pharisees? He openly called them hypocrites, a brood of vipers, and white washed tombs. There was no public support, mercy, or private rebuke there. Even the Sermon on the Mount is a public correction (Matthew 5-7). Take note of the phraseology: “It was said . . . but I say to you….” Take note of all the warnings on how not to pray or how not to practice righteousness in front of others. Jesus reminds his listeners, “Unless your righteousness does not exceed that of the Scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” And then, of course, there is the very public, very zealous, very merciless overthrowing of the money tables and the expulsion of the corrupt moneychangers from the temple.
Ben also references how Christ washed the feet of his betrayer, using that incident as a model for how we should always treat our enemies. But that isn’t the whole of Jesus’ interactions with Judas. Jesus also labelled him a devil in front of the other disciples (John 6:70), and there was neither mercy nor forgiveness nor brotherhood for Judas in the end. When we pick one or two incidents from Christ’s life and say this is how to love, we get a stunted understanding of love. If we’re looking for the Biblical definition of love, we must interpret the Bible using the whole Bible, not using cherry-picked bits that support our own definition.
Additionally, Ben says love must be “demonstrate[d] in a way [fellow sinners] feel and understand; and it requires us to treat them not as the ‘other,’ but as beloved brothers and sisters.” Truly we are to show love to our enemies and to everyone as God makes the rain fall upon the just and the unjust. As I’ve mentioned, this love includes pity, prayer, and patience. But loving someone as a brother and sister in Christ is reserved for actual believers in Christ. The only people groups Ben mentions in his post are "gays", who may claim to be Christians, and Muslims, who by definition are not. It seems that he thinks we ought to make homosexuals feel totally accepted before we ever mention repentance and forgiveness. But it is definitely not loving to let someone remain in a state of sin that will result in eternal damnation (Revelation 22:15, 1 Corinthians 6:9-10, Galatians 5:19-21, Ephesians 5:5). It seems that Ben thinks we should treat Muslims as those who are going to heaven despite their belief that God has no son (1 John 2:23, John 17:3). Again, it is a denial of reality to treat Muslims as beloved brothers and sisters when they are not.
I wonder what Ben would say if his example were changed to a people group whose sin he doesn’t dispute. What if we were talking about slave holders? In Ben’s view of love and hate, he advocates first publicly defending the slave holder, speaking out against anyone who would dare call the slave holder a sinner, and then, only after demonstrating love in a way the slaver can feel and understand and treating him as a brother would Ben dare to privately point out the abomination that owning another human being truly is. Does that seem right to you?
3. Conclusion
For Ben, love seems to be some sort of unconditional acceptance, maybe even support, of all things. But I can tell you this is wrong. Love does not mean the acceptance of everything. I love my children, but I hate it when they fight with one another. I hate it when they are selfish. I want them to hate it in themselves, too, so they can “mortify the deeds of their flesh.” After all, I hate sin in myself and seek to put it to death (Romans 8:13, Colossians 3:5). It does not mean I do not love my kids, nor do I dislike them. In fact, it is unloving for me to accept such sin in my kids or in myself. It is indeed love that leads to an unbroken relationship with my children, forgiveness when they sin, and it is love that prompts and empowers my children, and myself, to change and put off the sinful old man and put on the new.
This different view of love and hate leads to a different view on life. I can love the people groups Ben mentions (Muslims and gays) by treating them as people made in the image of God, showing respect, granting charity, mercy, and kindness. But, love also brings with it the biblical hate or standing against. I cannot accept those things that are sin, for the person’s own good. I must share the gospel of grace because they stand in need of it. I cannot be close or intimate with them because two cannot walk together lest they be agreed (Amos 3:3). What fellowship does light have with darkness or Christ with Belial (or, in this case, with Mohommed)? The answer is: none (2 Corinthians 6:14). Christian love cannot approve of that which God has not approved. And this Christian love changes the world. It is Christian “hate” that has chased out (or nearly out) of the world such things as slavery, human sacrifices, and bigamy.
I deviate greatly, not only from Ben, but from the “love the sinner, hate the sin” phraseology. It reinterprets the gospel by lessening sin. God is not just displeased with what you do, but with you! With me! What should strike us about our sins is not how awful they are, but that we’re the kind of people that do such awful things. I don’t need my actions changed; I need my heart changed. “And rend your hearts and not your garments, and turn to the Lord your God: for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and of great kindness,” (Joel 2:13). If the problem were only my sin, then tearing my garments might be enough. But the problem is I am a sinner, so my heart is what needs to be torn apart and built anew by the power of the Spirit. This is the beauty of the gospel. We are reconciled to God in Christ. While we are children of the world and sons of disobedience, God must stand opposed to (hate) us and our sin. But He sent His Son to die for our sins AND to change our sinful nature (redeeming the sin and the sinner), so that we might be received into fellowship with Him. No longer opposed, we are reconciled to God through the blood of Christ. No longer are we enemies, but instead we are citizens of the kingdom and sons of the King, eating forever at His table. It is this love that we must show, the divine love that reconciles through changing the sinner and paying for the sin. Everything else is just whistling in the wind.
Disclaimer: I know Ben. We attended school together until college.
Monday, January 16, 2017
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Lacking Hope |
There is a great need for the comfort and hope of the gospel today. We can see it in the culture around us. And no I don’t mean politics. Politics is downstream of culture. I think it is most obvious in young adult literature and movies.
Take a look at what is popular and for the most part is dystopian futures and zombies. Both have been around for a long time, but never were they so popular. You have your “1983” and “Fahrenheit 451”, but they did not start a rage in dystopian writings. Even 1993’s “The Giver” did not jump start the idea, although Lois Lowery’s book did have the main character as a teenager, which is what future dystopian writings would capitalize upon. Enter “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins in 2008 and we have our beginning. This series of books not only sold millions of copies, but launched a film franchise that made big time bucks. Also, it was followed by books like “Divergent” (2011) by Veronica Roth, and then the “Maze Runner” (2009) by James Dashner. Each selling millions and spawning movie franchises although not quite to the same level of success as Hunger Games. Those are just the big massive successes. We could also count “Uglies” (2006) by Scott Westerfield, “Across the Universe” by Beth Revis, and “The Knife of Never Letting Go” (2008) by Patrick Ness just to name a few.
All of those books have teenage heroes, fight against a corrupt system, everything is already ruined and will not get better even when the protagonist wins, and is easily comparable to aspects of high school (I am not the first to state such similarities).
Now add in the popularity of zombies. Again “Night of the Living Dead” has been around for sometime, but the genre has really taken off thanks mostly to “The Walking Dead” (2003) comic book, which is still on-going, and its resulting TV series, and “Resident Evil” (1996) video game, which has since become a film franchise as well. This has helped spawn both movies and books such as “I am Legend” and “World War Z”. The genre is popular enough that it also has some comedy books such as “Pride Prejudice and Zombies” (2009), which is now coming to a theater near you and “Shaun of the Dead” (2004).
The majority of these books, movies, and games have little to no real hope and often the real threat is not the zombies, who seem to be more of the setting than the problem, but other non-zombie survivors. “The Walking Dead” particularly dives into the idea of living in a world without morals because it is without structure. What does civilization look like in such a world and is it even possible are regular themes.
This is a change in what young adults have traditionally read. In times past people read “The Chronicles of Narnia”, which is full of hope and goes from disorder to order, or they read “Little House on the Prairie”, which is about hard work and finding a good life without things, or “A Wrinkle in Time” which is a good vs. evil fight. The difference in themes is stark and obvious.
It is not hard to see that this change reflects something lacking in our culture and something that speaks to young adults. They are hopeless. Just look at the ending of the Hunger Games Trilogy. They have fought this profound evil of making kids fight to the death for sport to keep people in line, and when the “good guys” win, they want to re-instituted the same thing. So, the heroine kills the new leader rather than the old one. They are both the same. No real hope. Even the brief glimpse of her future she and her husband suffer from the scars of their life mentally. Yes they have kids, but we learn nothing of the outside world then. There is no real hope in it.
Or if you want more proof look at what has happened to a beloved movie trilogy in Star Wars. “The Force Awakens” takes the original trilogy and makes it all for nothing. The original ends with the Emperor defeated, Anakin redeemed, and the Empire crumbling. Now we join in some 20 years later and what do we see? The Dark Side has once again ravaged the galaxy. Even Luke Skywalker could not stop the killing of Younglings again. The Empire appears fine in the guise of the First Order, which whatever government or Republic was put in place could not stop and indeed it was so bad that there is a group called the Resistance in this government. Han and Leia could not stay together, Luke no longer comes to the aid of his friends, and we are left to wonder how is the galaxy better off thanks to the Rebellion? This is the culture we live in.
Previous generations of both writers and readers have faced their share of hardships and toil, but produced far different literature, and literature with very different themes were popular. Tolkien, Lewis, and Milne (creator of Winnie the Pooh) all fought in World War I, all got seriously ill, and yet they created beloved children’s and young adult literature. Laura Engels Wilder lived life on a prairie, survived harsh winters, threat of Native American attacks, and illness without doctors, yet she wrote young adult literature that looked back on her life not with gloom, but with a sense of family, optimism, and hope. One could argue that this generation of writers and readers has had a much easier life, yet they have created and enjoy a much bleaker style or writing.
What does this tell us as the church? It should tell us that kids seem to believe they are in a hopeless situation. That young adults don’t trust the system (probably including church), and they seem in desperate search for meaning. Thankfully, Christ is the answer. We just don't seem to be communicating this truth the young very well. It is the young who are growing up for the first time in a post-Christian world. Their parents remember the vestiges of Christian civilization, but this new generation has been taught there is no truth in school, won't remember marriage before its redefinition, and live in a world that is hostile to the Christian faith. The challenge for the church is how do we communicate meaning and truth in Jesus to this generation of people who are floundering without hope in the world today? There is hope for the hopeless, and a name for the condition they rightly see the world suffers from: sin. But we must make sure we are communicating to young people as well as adults. This literature is telling us we had better not wait until they are adults to start communicating the gospel. They are in need now. They need Christ now.