The Editor speaks: Shouldn't we listen to our children?
We spend trillions of dollars on making weapons of destruction but none of that is permanent. It might kill a few evil people and at the same time killing the innocent. "Sorry about that. The innocent must die along with the guilty," is the cry. Not true! No innocent must die. No innocent has to die. And although man does this, God gets the blame. God is a puppet master – he pulls the strings. It's like a Punch and Judy show. But God is not like that at all. He shows us the right way and the wrong way and it is for us to decide which path to travel on.
You don't get rid of hate and evil by manually killing it. The only way to defeat evil is by good and the only way to defeat hate is by love.
The song “Bless the Broken Road” said, 'we all can take the broken road but it is glorious when we stop and take the unbroken right one' . That is where we will find love.
And talking of Punch and Judy shows.
They are mainly banned now because Punch hits people over the head
with his stick, even his wife and the baby. We adults surmise it
gives children ideas that that is OK behavior. However, children can
see it is all a game – make believe. Not once as a child did I
consider going out, after watching Punch and Judy, get a stick and
hit someone over the head with it. I knew better. The same thing with
the cartoon “Tom and Jerry”.
Computer games showing children how to
get points and win the game by blowing up buildings and killing
people with bombs and missiles – that is OK. Adults seem to have no
problem with that. The more violent – the more interest. And these
computer games get more violent and the so called ratings, like PG,
get watered down. PG ratings is where the business men make more
money. It puts the blame squarely on the parents. Parental Guidance.
Let parents guide their children. They watch first what their
children are watching. How many parents actually do that?
Ridiculous isn't it?
If Christ's disciples had been just
children. They would have believed in the Infant birth and Christ's
resurrection from the dead. There would have been no Doubting Thomas
among them.
Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead as he also did to a child. Jairus’s twelve year old daughter. Jesus loved children above anything else on this earth.
Jesus often presented children as an
example of the type of faith adults are to have. When Jesus blessed
the children, He told His disciples, “Truly I tell you, anyone who
will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never
enter it” (Mark 10:15). In another instance, when the disciples
were fighting about who would be the greatest in God’s kingdom,
Jesus brought a child to stand in their midst. He then chided His
disciples: “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like
little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.
Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the
greatest in the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 18:2–4). According to
Jesus, the qualities of children that are worthy of emulation are
humility and simple acceptance.
Jesus wants each of us to possess a
childlike faith; that is, a pure, unassuming, and humble faith. This
straightforward type of faith allows us to receive God’s gift of
salvation without pretension or hypocrisy. It allows us to believe
unswervingly that God is who He says He is. Like children who rely on
their parents’ provision for daily needs, we should humbly depend
on our Heavenly Father for provision in both the spiritual and
physical realm.
However, we live in a society today
where our children exist in fear. They do not feel safe in school, at
home or even in their churches. We have seen news stories where
children are killing children, where babies are being used as
financial negotiating tools, and where children have become the
object of sexual desire and perversion. Child-care workers who make
less money than fast-food employees are raising someone else's
children. Some teachers, make less money than grocery clerks do.
Parents have become ghosts to their families, often letting an older
sibling or complete strangers care for them. Today's parents sometime
use the TV, computer, or video games as baby sitting tools, figuring
that they can have a few moments peace while the child is occupied.
While television shows sometimes contain messages of hope, they are
often lost within a flurry of sex or violence. Super heroes today
defeat the bad guy (if you can tell good guys from bad guys) by total
annihilation. The news is full of people who want not justice, but
retribution. In our churches children are told that the end of the
world is near, often Pastors talk about these days as "end
days". Statistics are reported daily that tell inner-city
children in the USA t have little hope of living past the age of
twenty. When we look at this world, is it any wonder that our
children seem to have very little hope?
Isn't it time we listened to them?
What spurred me on to write this
Editorial was my wife, Joan, today reading the lyrics of a Isla Grant
song that, I expect few of you have heard. It is a shame it isn't
played more often. Grant has a beautiful voice, full of emotion, and
she writes from the heart.
Listen to the Children By Isla Grant
Listen To The Children Lyrics
They are crying out for peace around
the world
They are telling us to stop the hurt
and pain
Their smiles can melt the coldest heart
Their tears can pull your world apart
Why don't we listen to the children
*
Why can't you see the world their eyes
can see
There is no room for hate or jealousy
And color means nothing to them
To a child another is a friend
Why don't we listen to the children
*
Why don't we listen, to what they try
to say
Make a world of peace for them to live
in
Take a leaf out of the book
They read to us each day
Why don't we learn a lesson from the children
*
So everyone around the word join hands
And spread the word of love across the
land
Published July 24, 2019
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