Disaster in Connecticut

Disaster in Connecticut* By Jay Ferris, originally posted December 2012

After a weekend in Connecticut that made the rest of the world disappear, where the media is concerned. I couldn’t help but think about why these kinds of things are happening in our world.

Back in the early days of our history as a nation – days when it seems everyone was carrying guns, this kind of thing never happened except between cowboys and Indians. It wasn’t human decency then, and it is less so now.

WHY???

My wife is a retired grade school teacher. She taught from the mid 60s until 2010 – almost 50 years. During that time she had an opportunity to observe up close and personal, the deterioration of the American family. By now dysfunctional parenting has become the norm. It’s hard to say what might have come first, dysfunctional relationships or dysfunctional families, but by now the problem on both counts has become epidemic!

Government continues to come to the rescue by subsidizing the dysfunction, and demeaning the historical normal. This now has us to the place where dysfunction has become an entitlement.

Let me say that one more time just to be sure I’ve made myself clear on the matter. We now live in a country that is enjoying or suffering, (depending on one’s point of view) entitled family dysfunction.

By now children are being raised by children who themselves were not parented. We are so far removed from functional parenting that there is no longer any plumb line against which to measure how a healthy life is built.

Family relationships, and almost all relationships, for that matter, have been taken over by the relative safety of hand held digital devices – less danger of rejection and attendant wounding. That might not have resulted in the present outbursts of maniacal atrocity, but it provided an excellent pathway to that end.

It isn’t rocket science to appreciate that children are always wanting to have better toys than the next door neighbor. Where hand held computer “games” are concerned there is no exception. “My latest version of kill the enemy has better graphics than yours.”  (No need to bother touching on the present immorality on the sexual front, at least not in the present context.)

A passage of Scripture in connection with the effect of video games in combination with a lot of media support, and little or no parental oversight is”

“The Spirit clearly says that in later times some will abandon the faith and follow deceiving spirits and things taught by demons. Such teachings come through hypocritical liars, whose consciences have been seared as with a hot iron.”

1 Timothy 4:1 & 2 – NIV

As I understand it a “seared” conscience is one that is no longer able to tell the different between right and wrong. The Love of Christ is always RIGHT – always TRUTH!

Enter the severely wounded child, who, no matter the source of wounding lives in a chronic identity crises. Their need for identity – recognition – validation becomes even greater than that which is normal in all of us. Depending on the depth of the wound, it can be a small step from cyber violence/atrocity to atrocity in real time and space.

“That should get their attention.”
“That should get me some recognition.”
“I’ll show them for not giving me the attention I deserve!”

By now this has become an entitlement. I’m entitled, whether I “built that,” or I destroyed that. At this point it looks like this is the majority outlook, which strongly suggest that it is beyond democratic remedy. It seems, but for the grace of God, we have nowhere to go but down from here.

It would take a miracle to go from holding things responsible to holding people responsible, beginning with marriage partners who appreciate the value of commitment and integrity, to parents who are willing to lay aside our own entitlements on the receiving end, and begin to become the supply side of things that properly belong to our children – things like love, commitment, discipline, training, teaching, guiding, etc.

There is a perspective in the Scripture on all of this that doesn’t hold out much hope for change. It is presented in two places, Romans 1, and 2 Timothy 3.

Romans 1 is more complete, but perhaps at this point in human history 2 Timothy is more to the point for present purposes:

“But mark this: There will be terrible times in the last days. People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God—having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with such people.”

2 Timothy 3:1-5 – NIV

It’s well worth reading the context in both passages.

P.S. As for me, I think, the last phrase in the quote above has to do with not taking them seriously, not validating them with our approval. That still leaves room for us to be God’s redemptive agents in their bankrupt lives. After all that’s the difference that Christ came to make.

Love!

Posted in J.Ferris: Current Events | 3 Comments

The Morning After Pill

The morning after pillOne of the problems with the morning after is that there is a whiplash that comes with it.  Where the night before, the partner of our intimacy could do no wrong, the morning after, it feels like they can do no right.  At this point there is a temptation, a very strong temptation to abort the whole experience, and the person or persons with it.  “Throwing the baby out with the bath water.”  “The morning after pill,” this is a bitter pill to swallow.  Hebrews tells us, See to it that no one misses the grace of God and that no bitter root grows up to cause trouble and defile many,”  Hebrews 12:15 NIV.

This can be a very big problem in The Church, because for new believers the high of “new love” can be a set up for great disappointment.  The greater the high, the worse the crash.  A very big problem for the uninitiated is that our old man is not very discerning.  It can be very difficult to tell the difference between the high or chemistry of the flesh, and the high or chemistry of the Spirit.  The former is fleeting – the latter is ever lasting.  We are not talking about an earthly romance here, but a heavenly one.  The first love of the heavenly romance is meant to be everlasting,  Revelation  2:4, 5:

“Yet I hold this against you: You have forsaken your first love.
Remember the height from which you have fallen!
Repent and do the things you did at first.
If you do not repent,
I will come to you and remove your lampstand from its place.”

Love!

  • By Jay Ferris, originally posted December 2012
Posted in J.Ferris: Reposts with Notes | Leave a comment

The Champagne of Intimacy

The Champagne of Intimacy
I was thinking about the desire in the heart of all of us for intimacy. It is kept inside us like the pressure in a bottle of champagne. When suddenly we find ourself in circumstances where we feel safe to share with others at a deep level, it’s like releasing the wire that holds the cork in the bottle. With the release of the cork, comes the celebration of intimacy.

In moments like this, it seems altogether lovely and wonderful, even intoxicating. According to Tom and Beverly Rogers:

“Neurobiologists have found that there is a chemical released in the brain when a couple falls in love. This chemical is called ‘phenylethylamine’ and it functions in the body much like an amphetamine, thus explaining the superhuman feelings of a couple falling in love. They often make statements like ‘I feel like I can walk on air,’ ‘I don’t need to eat,’ ‘The grass is greener,’ and ‘The sky is bluer.’ Since phenylethylamine is released in the presence of your partner, you want to spend every waking moment with him or her, and most couples do just that. Amazingly enough, during this stage of their relationship, they never seem to tire of one another.”

This is the champagne of intimacy.

Isn’t it wonderful that Jesus is able to turn water into champagne, and in the Spirit we never have to run out?

Love!

  • By Jay Ferris, originally published December 2012
Posted in J.Ferris: Reposts with Notes | Leave a comment