Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church

PG-13 Movies

Posted: under Jack's Corner.
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QUESTION:  I am 13 years old and my parents don't let me see PG-13 movies.  I think that's unfair!  What do you think?

ANSWER:  I don't know for sure what is going on in the hearts and minds of your parents, but I bet I can make a pretty good guess.  Let me warn you, you probably won't like my answer.  My prayer for you is that you are grown up enough in your walk with Jesus to at least read and think about what I write below.

Because parents have seen far more of the garbage of life than you, and because they know how that garbage can effect a person's relationship with Jesus, they want to spare you as much of it as they can.  By setting this limit, they are loving you!  They know that they cannot stop all the garbage, but their job is to try to stop as much as they can.  Please don't tell me:  "I can handle seeing those things and hearing that language", or "It doesn't effect me."  Those statements tell me how immature and naive a person is.  Of course the attitudes, scenes, and language effect you….they effect people of any age.  Those scenes, that language, the attitudes are designed to make lasting impressions, to suck you into the movie, to make you want to see and hear just a little bit more garbage the next time.  The more you see, the less it looks and sounds like garbage.  That's the danger your folks want to keep you from.

I bet your parents have seen or heard enough about many (not all) PG-13 movies to know that most of them are garbage.  These movies often have violence, language, and sex scenes that they don't want you exposed to.  Once your eyes take in those pictures, and your ears take in those words, it is impossible to get them out of your brain.  Just because you are "old enough" doesn't mean you should go.  I'm old enough to legally go to R-rated movies, strip clubs, adult movie and book stores, but I know that such actions are not pleasing to God.  I don't want that kind of garbage to enter my mind.  Enough of the world's garbage comes into my life as it is.  I don't want to actively seek more.  1 Corinthians 10:23 says:  "Many things are lawful–but not everything is helpful.  Many things are lawful–but not everything builds a person up."  (That's a 13-year-old paraphrase.)   Do those movies "build you up" in your faith?  Do they help make you into a better person for Jesus?

I think it is awesome that your parents have the courage to take such a stand.  Too many parents are unaware, lazy, or simply don't care what their 13-year-olds watch.  They watch worse themselves.  They rent worse from the video stores and bring it into their homes.  Once in a while, a movie comes along that is worth seeing.  With your parents' permission and blessing, go to those movies and trust they are loving you well by setting godly limits for you.

What is truly unfair is 13-year-olds who have parents that abdicate (look it up) their responsibility to be moral guides for their children…..now, some 13-year-olds AND their parents won't like what I've said.

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Jan 13 2012

Compliant Child

Posted: under Jack's Corner.
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QUESTION:  We have never had much trouble with our 12-year-old son.  He is always obedient and really wants to please.  Until now, I have been happy we don’t have to discipline him much, but I have this nagging feeling his father and I are missing something.  Any thoughts?

ANSWER:  I place high value on a mother’s intuition, and I believe you very well may have “missed something”. 

Usually parents are thrilled with a compliant child.  It seems too good to be true.  While other parents are working hard to get their kids to behave, you seem to be on easy street.  Let’s just say that you are on a different street.  The challenges parents of a compliant child face are frequently hidden and subtle.  It is tempting for parents to just relax and enjoy the seeming ease of parenting.

Parents of such a child need to actively resist this temptation, because their child is headed for spiritual danger.  Smugly, or naively, these parents often attribute their ease of parenting to their own ability to do the right thing, their fervent prayers, and their good Christian home.  Are these factors important?  Without question!  But raising children is not that simple.  It is not formulaic; there are no guarantees, just generalities.  Life in a fallen world means that technically we can do everything right, and we still might get crucified.  Most of us know this.

The spiritual danger most compliant children (or adults) face is an unappreciative attitude toward forgiveness and the Cross (a subtle “works righteousness”).  Remember, all behaviors have a function.  The function of compliance is to (1) make life run smoothly and (2) to protect self.  The former is impossible; the latter is selfish. Both speak to a lack of reliance on and trust in God.  A compliant person is usually dutiful toward God, but rarely devoted.  He loves what God can do for him, more than he loves the person of God.  Deep down, he has nagging doubts that God is unfair.  The “road bumps” of life often anger and frustrate him, but he dares not let it show.  He is burdened with a heavy load.  Life becomes a chore, not a joy.  A compliant person believes that most of life is a function of his own power and ability.  He passionately believes that in most instances he can succeed and keep himself safe through his own actions (Even though the actions are usually passive.).  Therefore, how much deep, transforming gratitude and awe will a compliant person have for the wonder of the Gospel when deep down he continues to trust in his own strategy?

The compliant person is an obedient student, a dutiful spouse, or a cooperative employee. Quietly and passively, he expects cooperation, praise and recognition for his behavior, and often reaps the rewards of his behavior.   This expectation of reward overflows into his relationship with God.  At some level in his thinking, the compliant person expects (even demands) cooperation, praise and recognition from God because of his good behavior.  See the danger?

Sadly, God will rarely have this person’s profound love; basically, he will have this person’s obedience, dedication and cooperation.  From the outside, this behavior appears indistinguishable from profound love.  Often these people are great church workers, spouses, children, employees and volunteers.  They work hard, but lack spiritual joy.  They are doing what they are supposed to do, but lack spiritual freedom.  They accomplish and survive, but there is “deadness” rather than spiritual life.  Compliant people tend to embrace the Law, not the Gospel.  In their minds, the Law is safe and doable; the Gospel is dangerous and risky.  The Law is fair; the Gospel isn’t.  See the danger?

Most compliant people have an underlying anger that smolders deep beneath the surface of their outward behavior  (“Why doesn’t this behavior bring me freedom and joy?  Why does life often seem flat and dead?”).  Like the Pharisees, this anger is most clearly observed when they are called upon to forgive, when their true motives are exposed, or when they encounter people who are truly alive.  The parents of a compliant child need to work hard at exposing sinful motive, not so much sinful action.  (Remember how Jesus handled the Pharisees by exposing the sin in their thoughts and attitudes.)  They must help such a child understand (cognitive) AND feel (affective) the enormous need for heartfelt repentance and forgiveness, because “he who is forgiven little loves little.”  He who believes he needs little forgiveness will have little appreciation for the Cross.

This kind of godly exposure in parenting is an art (Pragmatic parents won’t like the following list.). It must be done with surprise, strength, conviction and a motive of compassionate love.  It must be wise and relentless.  It demands integrity and character from the parents.  You have a difficult job ahead.  You cannot relax.

  • Pray for an awareness (biblical wisdom: see Proverbs) of the moral failures in the life of your son so God can help you turn them into opportunities to appreciate and deeply value the Cross. 
  • Seize opportunities to expose sinful motive and thoughts.
  • Have on-going, heart-to-heart talks and prayers with your son about your concerns.  Affirm that which is good; expose that which is bad.
  • Teach him to recognize the function (and danger) of his behavior. 
  • Let the wonder of the Gospel in your life overflow into his.  Open your heart to him.
  • Help him understand the “spirit” of the law and the importance of motive.
  • Use stories, movies and music to touch his heart.

I wish I could recommend some great reading material, but I know of no material that directly addresses the spiritual dangers faced by a compliant child (There is material on the social-psychological dangers of compliancy in relationships.).  In many respects, parenting an openly defiant or strong-willed child is far easier.  There is less subterfuge and exposure is straightforward.

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Mar 24 2011