We live like twitchy rodents raised in a labyrinthine minefield, constantly fearful of setting off a social or cultural IED.
A reader emailed me a link to an article about new curriculum mandated for public schools in California. Curriculum which has the potential to create a hostile atmosphere for families with a biblical worldview. She asked if I could write something about how Christians can navigate and be salt and light in our public schools. It’s not just schools. In workplaces, employees are required to take specialized training covering a myriad of social concerns. Transgender sensitivity training, LGBT education, gender spectrum orientation, cultural awareness and hate speech warnings have become standard.
I confess I’m pretty lame at working my way through this cornfield. I’m as twitchy as the next Christian. Maybe more. I work in social service in Rhode Island. When I explained to one state social worker that a family were evangelical Christians, the worker replied, “What kind of whacko fringe group is that?” At the time, I laughed it off but that happened over four years ago and the escalating atmosphere is making it harder to laugh. Some meetings open with a round of applause when legislation I don’t support passes into law and I’m the only one not clapping. State trainings on cultural sensitivity where the only culture it’s okay to mock is mine. Discussions of community resources where people exchange glances at my mention of one or two churches that may be helpful. Yeah, it’s getting weird out here.
But as hard as it is for us adults, it’s even more challenging to consider our children subjected to an organized indoctrination into a culture so antithetical to biblical beliefs. Some parents homeschool, others enroll their kids in private Christian schools but many are forced to or choose to contend with public schools relentlessly using their captive audience for social experimentation.
I may not be much help but I do understand (and live) the problem. Here are some things I do:
support of solid teachers, internalize a solid understanding of who Jesus is and what God commands. We can’t rely on others to give us the truth! We need to pan for our own gold in His Living Waters. Likewise, we need to read and teach His Word to our children. It’s on parents and extended family to pass on the truth of God’s Word to the next generation. “And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.” Deuteronomy 6:6-7 The world is relentless and persistent at exposing our children to its agenda, can we be any less?
I refuse to spend time gazing into the fun house mirror the world puts up to reflect (deflect) the church. We are not sketch material for Saturday Night Live. We are not the worst caricatures of stereotypical believers. I know real, sincere, loving, faulted, bumbling, hard-working everyday believers and I focus on them, not Hollywood’s version of us. I tell their stories more often than I listen to the lies of others about them.What about you? How do you navigate these times? What are your questions? Your struggles with our current culture? Where do you go for answers and ideas?
How not to live like a twitchy rodent! https://t.co/NR6C5YEilV navigating culture and faith #amwriting #culturewars #livingfaith
— Lori Roeleveld (@lorisroeleveld) October 13, 2016
The Conversation
Descriptive gems that keep me coming back for more: (a hearty thank you)
the evil one pipes deception into the air like an essential oil
We need to pan for our own gold in His Living Waters.
If we live by the Spirit, we’ll be attuned to the proper time for each. Likewise, we can teach our children this same confidence.
I didn’t discover God – He found me.
We are not sketch material for Saturday Night Live.
We must be committed to a prayer-filled life both for communion with Christ and warfare in the battle for souls.
The one that particularity resonated with me was 8:
“I am always open to learning better ways to communicate truth, speak with humility and boldness, and open my heart to God so I don’t worry about what’s pouring out of it into my speech”. I plan to stop and check myself if my speech turns south, for it is an indicator that I may be closing my heart toward God and trying to ‘fit in’ with the world. Thank you, Lori.
This post really resonated with me, Lori. I am teaching kids in a county with well over a million residents. Every year I grapple with jumping ship. How much longer do I teach in the public school systems when I’m so opposed to the indoctrination the “powers that be” are forcing upon these young minds? I try to be salt and light, but some days it really is hard. I have to start every morning by crying out to the Lord, asking Him to help me get through it. I ask that He show me who I can help and how I can help. At the end of the day, I remind myself that these kids won’t remember much of what I teach them, but they will remember how I treated them. Blessings to you, Lori.
Thank you, Lori, for truth practiced.
I, too, have found the verse from Micah to be especially meaningful in this season. That “humility angle that hangs [us all] up,” I agree, “is key.” Just recently I read that the “walk humbly with thy God” part is more accurately translated, “humble thyself to walk with God.” That subtle shift in the wording has had such an enormous impact on my heart and understanding.
Might it be that there are times when a subtle shift in our wording, the way we explain (and live out) our hope and faith will speak more clearly to the hearts of those we strive for? Praying for the “better ways to communicate truth” – first and always, in love.