A post by Nick Peters about young people and apologetics, at the Christian Apologetics Alliance blog.
Excerpt:
Now picture a teenage youth who is a Christian. Is he on the outs with his peers in any way? Well if he’s a good and observant Christian, he’ll be a virgin (since most teenagers in high school aren’t married). Will that lead to any shame to his peers? Yep. Especially since they consider “getting laid” to be a rite of passage and a sign that you are a real man or woman.
So what happens with a boy who’s seventeen and can drive and who is with the guys who are talking about their sexual exploits and the guy has nothing to contribute? If he is asked why he’s not “getting some” he replies that he is a Christian. Is that going to win him any friends? Nope. His “friends” there will most likely mock him for believing in antiquated ideas that science has disproven and tell him he needs to get with the times. Result? The young man is shamed.
Now imagine instead if he’s told the latter part about how his ideas are antiquated and instead, he’s able to make a rational case for the resurrection of Jesus from the dead. Do you think he’ll be able to be shamed the same way? Sure, his friends can still mock him, but he can take the mockery as a sign that they cannot answer his arguments. The young boy has honor then, rather than shame. He might not be sleeping around, but he can hold his head high knowing he can stand up against his peers.
[…]No one wants to be embarrassed, and that includes youth, but if our young people think they can do something that none of their peers can do, it will help them to have that honor that they seek, and there is nothing wrong with seeking honor. Remember the parable where Christ told us to take a lowly position at a banquet so our host would say, “Move up to a better place” and we would be honored? He was saying that that is the proper way to receive honor. Don’t just go out and try to grab it. Let it be given to you.
There are many things that a young person can be ashamed of, but if they’re intellectually unprepared, being a Christian is something that they may be shamed for. In the face of temptation, they need a reason to be obedient rather than just, “The church says so” or “Mom and Dad say so.” Neither of those will be seen as honorable positions. They need to know for themselves why it is that they hold the stance that they do. If they are waiting until marriage, they need to know why. If they believe a man rose from the dead, they need to know why.
That youth are eating this stuff up should tell us something. Youth don’t want to be shamed in the eyes of their contemporaries. They won’t mind holding a different position as long as they can defend that position. If they cannot, then the tide of social pressure could be enough to get them to abandon that and if their emotions and wills start acting against Christianity, it is only a matter of time until the intellect follows.
That excerpt is basically a summary of my life – that’s how I started out as a teen – with apologetics. I’ve been a Christian the whole time in between then and now. I think many parents and churches are wondering how it is that you get a young man to stand up to the culture and peer pressure. The answer is apologetics, and I think integrating Christianity with every other area of knowledge helps as well. Winning arguments over and over is an excellent way to build a suit of armor against temptation and peer pressure.
And in speaking to young people who were raised as Christians then fell away, the common denominator is that they were uncomfortable claiming to be Christians in a secular environment. We have to have a plan to help our young people deal with pluralism and peer pressure. Apologetics is the best answer I can think of.
“We have to have a plan to help our young people deal with pluralism and peer pressure. Apologetics is the best answer I can think of.”
Agreed.
Speaking of peer pressure, I think there’s a gender difference between how boys and girls, how young men and young women, and even how men and women handle and respond to peer pressure.
I don’t know acute and significant this difference is, but I’m speculating that it’s there. I don’t know if there’s any research or publications on what I’m intuiting, but it’s just my 2 cents worth.
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WK,
Take a look at this book review:
The End of Apologetics.
I just read the review. What do you think?
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I think the book is garbage, and the reviewer is far too lenient. It’s a garbage book written by a non-Christian masquerading as a Christian.
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I read your comment, WK, and I thank you sincerely for the good laughter that it prompted.
I wonder if Professor William Lane Craig would be as irenic and as kind as you were.
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Which is why I teach my youth not only what is true, but why as well.
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It’s not cool to ridicule people for their culture, and Christians should be able to stand up for their difference just as other people do.
You can’t make rude jokes about the Muslim woman wearing a head scarf. You can’t bully the homosexual boy for wearing pastel colors. You can’t ostracize the goth kid for his black leather and piercings. Everybody ought to chill out and get used to all these different cultures out there, because our differences make us interesting, and that’s part of being human.
I wonder if Christians can plug into this same narrative of tolerance that liberals have been using.
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Christianity isn’t a “culture”, it’s a worldview. A set of claims about the nature of objective reality.
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Well, it’s not cool to ridicule people for their worldview or their claims about the nature of objective reality. People shouldn’t do that. We should all try to get along peacefully.
Of course, you can’t expect other people to stop bullying you if you turn around and bully other people. But that’s not what Christians are doing, right?
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It’s not bullying to discuss facts. It is bullying to shame a young man who chooses not to treat women as consumer goods. And yet that is what the public schools teach young people to do, by insisting that recreational premarital sex is normal, and there is something wrong with you if you have the idea that sex is strictly for marriage.
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