|
 |
| A
Story of Degenerating Generations
|
|
It certainly
is not clear that Proverbs 30:11 is written to our generation
specifically, but it certainly has an application to us. The
inclinations here mentioned are so obviously present in our
time that it seems as if Solomon were looking down our street.
It behooves us to take a serious look at them. Let’s read:
“There is a generation that curseth their father, and doth
not bless their mother. There is a generation that are pure in
their own eyes and yet is not washed from their filthiness.
There is a generation, O how lofty are their eyes! And their
eyelids lifted up. There is a generation, whose teeth are as
swords and their jaw teeth as knives, to devour the poor from
off the earth, and the needy from among men.”
There is a generation without respect for parental
government. It seems clear that we are immersed in
the aggrandizement of youth and because of that fact, most
young people have no inclination to listen to their parents
nor to accept any sort of parental guidance. The word of God
speaks graphically to this youthful tendency. The total
diminishing of morality is described in Romans the first
chapter, and one of the signs of such moral decay is seen in
verses 30-31, “Backbiters, haters of God, despiteful, proud,
boasters, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents.
without understanding, covenant-breakers, without natural
affection, implacable, unmerciful.” That gets awfully close
to who and what we are. “Children obey your parents in the
Lord, for this is right. Honor thy father and thy mother”
(Ephesians 6:1-2). But there is a generation given to
diminishing that command.
There is a generation that judges poorly what
constitutes authority. Respect for authority has
suffered a serious blow in our age, mainly on account of the
rise and continued popularity of subjective reasoning. The
fact of that is obvious in all areas–parental authority is
demeaned, as we have seen; cheating is rampant in every level
of education; the prisons are full of people who consider
themselves no different than anybody else, except that they
got caught; people cheat at all levels of government, ranging
from little league baseball and soccer, to the major sports,
to the Congress of the United States. Even religion has
adopted a subjective appeal by affirming that “it doesn’t
make any difference what you believe, just as long as you’re
honest and sincere. “If any man speak, let him speak as the
oracles of God,” we are told (I Peter 4:11); and “the
powers that be are ordained of God” (Romans 13:1), and Peter
speaks eloquently of those who “despise government” (II
Peter 2:10). “Presumptuous are they,” he says, and
“self-willed, that they are not afraid to speak evil of
dignities.” There must be an authority outside of man or
we’re doomed to destruction.
There is a generation dedicated to their own
accomplishments. Pride! The fuel for humanism. We
live in a time were God is questioned, where creation is
answered by evolution, and where the major themes in our
Universities and Colleges are concerned with giving specious
arguments as to both our existence and our destiny. It’s
sad. Proverbs 21:2 is an apt description of our present
society. “Every man is right in his own eyes.” We live in
a time where excuses run rampant and reasons for failures are
almost non-existent. “How lofty are their eyes! And how
their eyelids are lifted up.” Foolish pride likes nothing
better than unrestrained independence, being free from
restrictions, free to choose without fear of being wrong. And
that describes our generation, don’t you think? We best read
the latter part of that passage: “But the Lord pondereth the
hearts.” We need to understand that our pride does not fool
him. He knows.
There is a generation set upon greed. Their
teeth are sharpened in order have more and more, even if it
means devouring the poor. Nothing will get in the way of
financial procurement–not family, not friends, not the Lord.
“More! More! More!” That’s cry today; and whatever it
takes to make more, we seem willing to do it, even if it means
sacrificing some of our principles. The philosophy has crept
unawares into the church, too. Business excuses for a lack of
involvement are common today. “I had to work. After all, I
have to make a living for my family—God said so.” And
that’s true, but greed is not part of His plan. And an
insatiable appetite for more and more things is not, either.
“Better is little with the fear of the Lord than great
treasure with trouble therewith” (Proverbs 15:16). And I
doubt there could be a greater or more imposing thought than
having to meet the Almighty with nothing to defend yourself
with but the almighty dollar.
Let’s not be lulled into a state of indifference and
lethargy. We cannot afford to be a part of the generations
here described. There’s just too much at stake. God will not
be fooled, folks. He knows.
Dee Bowman
|
|
Copyright (C)
2008
Southside Church of Christ
All rights reserved.
|
|
|