These are tough days
to be a boy!
·
Boys are falling behind girls in virtually every
area of education from pre-school to college
·
The average reading skills of a 17 year old boy
have declined in the last 20 years
·
17-18 of the top 20 growing professions favor
the verbal and relational skills of women over men
·
Boys are growing up in a world without a
compelling vision for noble manhood
These are tough days
to be the Church:
·
Sex scandals in the Catholic Church
·
The numbers “nones,” those reporting no
religious affiliation, are growing
·
Pastors of mega-churches caught in various
scandals of their own making
·
Church and denominational splits over
gay/lesbian issues
·
Church attendance in decline, especially among
young adults
·
70-90% of all boys leaving the church in their
teens and early 20’s…and most not returning.
So it may seem cavalier or reckless to suggest that the
Christian Church could be the best
hope for our boys.
Having spent over 30 years as a pastor, and having worked
on the boy crisis for the last 9+ years, I believe the Church could be best positioned to help us
solve the boy crisis for the following reasons:
·
The Church
is rooted in a deep, rich, sacred view of men and women. The Bible says that men and women
are created in the Image of God.
Both male and female are good.
Both are equal. But they
are also different. Take off our
clothes and we see the difference.
Take the clothes off of our brains and we see the difference (at least 100 differences between the male and female brain have been identified so
far). The male is not better than
the female, just different. The
female is not better than the male, just different. Both are rooted in the sacred view that they are created,
male and female, in the Image of God.
Based on that, the Church can rise above political correctness and
stereotyping to draw out the best in our boys and our girls. It can take the lead in reshaping the
discussion, moving us from antagonism of one sex toward the other to a
comprehensive, sacred appreciation of the equality and uniqueness of both.
·
The
Founder of Christianity offers a vision for compelling manhood. Jesus
offers boys a vision of what it looks like to be a man: Courageous,
compassionate, a warrior against injustice, an advocate for the voiceless, a
friend, passionate, committed, a man of his word, a man of action, gracious,
humble, gentle, tough, forgiving, purposeful, commanding, strong, fully in tune
with who he is, and ultimately a man willing to lay down his life not just for
his friends, but for his enemies.
Imagine our boys growing up into that kind of manhood.
·
The Church
understands the primal need of every boy for a blessing from his father.
Part of what makes a boy a man is the blessing of his father—that moment when
dad looks his son in the eyes and tells him he loves him and that he is proud
of who his son is becoming. Sadly,
most boys never hear those words from dad. For some it’s because dad isn’t around. For others it’s because dad never
received that blessing from his father and so has no idea how to give it to his
son. The ministry of Jesus began
with the blessing from his Father.
Armed with his father’s love and approval, Jesus had the masculine power
he needed to change the world. The
Church stands in a unique position to train men to give that blessing to their
sons and to boys in general.
·
The Church
has an army of men who can pour masculine energy into our boys. In a time when our boys have few men
investing in them, the Church is loaded with potential male mentors, who, with
a bit of training, can begin to pour good masculine energy into our boys who
desperately crave men in their lives.
That’s why the Church could
be the best hope for our boys. Why
could be? Because the Church has a
checkered record, at best, when it comes to raising boys into honorable
men. Too often the Church has
raised boys to lord it over women rather than serve them. Too often the Church has devalued
women, treating them as inferior to men.
None of this is Biblical.
None of this is in line with Jesus and his agenda. Yet sadly, it’s still happening today.
If the Church can
get its act together and embrace its deep, sacred understanding of male and
female, if the Church can let go of
its past sins and truly follow Jesus, the one who is the vision for manhood,
and more than that, the vision for humankind, then the Church can take the lead in changing the storyline of our
boys.
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