Have you ever received mixed messages? In high school a friend included me during
youth group but at school… not so much.
Our social groups were far too different. Many of us have had bosses that told us how
great we were only to say something completely different during our annual
review in order to justify crappy raises.
Of course, politicians do this all the time. It’s hard to know what we should do when the
folks who preach about “reducing our carbon footprint” live in gigantic
mansions and fly on private jets.
Mixed messages are confusing and undermine credibility.
So why do we send mixed messages to our children
about church?
We take our children to church, we make sure they
get to Sunday school and Vacation Bible School, we take them to youth meetings,
Christian concerts, missionary programs, to church camp in the summer. We tell them that their decisions about
church and Jesus Christ are the most important decisions that they will make in
their lives. We tell them that it is
important to live our lives like Jesus.
And then we act as if none of that matters.
You don’t think so?
What about all the times that we complain about being
overcharged and stand in line for 20 minutes to get a dollar back from customer
service, but when we get undercharged
we simply rejoice and go home?
What about all the times we do questionable math or take
sketchy deductions on our taxes?
Or react in anger instead of “turning the other
cheek?”
Or insist that the poor are just lazy so that we don’t
have a reason to help them.
Or say that church attendance is important… unless
we have a sporting event, or a cultural event, or a work conflict, or voluntary
overtime, or a family event, or a thousand other things that we have shown our
children are more important by our actions, if not by our words.
We can't teach that abortion is evil and then condemn single moms who decided not to have one.
What about the political candidates (and parties)
that we support despite their obviously unbiblical positions, character, morals
and actions?
We teach our children that pornography is bad, but
half of all Christian
men and one in five Christian
women view porn on a regular basis.
We proclaim that our church welcomes everyone but turn away people who don't fit in because they aren't like us.
Which is it?
We can’t teach our children one thing and do
something else.
They’re smarter than that.
Worse, we run the risk receiving the same
condemnation as the church in Laodicea to whom Jesus said, “I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I
wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot
nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth.”
Are we hot? Or
are we cold?
Pick one.
We need to quit giving our kids mixed messages. They hate it as much as we do and it
undermines our credibility.
We need to live like we believe.
John, you're singing my song -- and reminding me to walk my own talk better! I'm reposting this on United Methodist Insight. Thank you!
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