Having been working with teenagers forever and also assisting at our local church as often as possible (180), and the twenty and thirty somethings (Paradigm) on a regular basis, I can strongly relate by personal experience that age (I am on my way to being 56 this July.) does have its advantages. They thrive on mentoring and even more so when I allow for reverse mentoring . . . that is as long as I am open, honest and authentic and will accept this younger age group as they are and allow them space and opportunity to grow in their own spiritual journey on their own terms. This younger generation is definately loaded with talent and possibilities. They are extremely interested in making positive changes and impact on the world that we live in. We should do everything pssible to invest ourselves in them. I am a believer in them!!!
“We Live in a Circus”: The Culture of Pre-Adult Women
Today my wife Janet and I spent two hours at a Starbucks (that’s a whole ‘nother blog) in Illinois interviewing three young women. All were Christians living in the seam between their late teens and their early twenties. Our new friends answered one question after another fueled by the caffeine and sugar supplied by ‘Bucks. It was heartening to know that Trisha, Debbie, and Lisa (their new code names) recognized that their responses were conditioned by their Christian experience. They did not regard themselves, or their answers, as necessarily typical, and that made them all the more credible to us. Here are some of the key words and concepts that I distilled from our Q&A session...
1. 50-year old youth pastors?: The notion of telling young women not to do things because the Bible says so just doesn’t wash in this culture. Pre-adult women are looking for a real live person who can demonstrate the wisdom of biblical concepts from the story of their own life. Interestingly, our friends commented that a 23-year old youth pastor simply may not have lived enough life to be able to supply this kind of credibility. Their comments made me wonder if we need a generation of youth ministers in their 40s and 50s who have enough personal history to be witnesses to the truth they proclaim.
2. It’s all about the power: We spent considerable time discussing sexuality, relationships and eating disorders. Debbie summarized some of our dialogue by pointing out that the mania to control body image among younger women is really about power. Perfecting a certain look gives them power with men and peers, and, if my world is out of control, at least I can regulate what I eat and how much I weigh. She even drew the parallel to Eve offering Adam forbidden fruit—something to eat—as an illustration. I found this description heartbreaking. Our message to the young must offer them a new form of power that is achieved by surrender, not manipulation. We should raise the bar, not lower it.
3. Life as a laboratory: The word that really jumped out at me during our talk was “experimentation.” Lisa pointed out that, especially in middle school, young females are now sorting out their ethics and morals by trial and error. This includes “friends with benefits,” and being what I would call omnisexual, neither gay nor straight, but a fully functioning sexual being. In three to five years, this critical mass of experimental behavior will arrive in high schools and colleges, although the leading edge of it has already been there for some time. Rather than deduce principles of good conduct from authoritative sources like scripture and parents, some Millennial women are using an inductive approach in which they simply try things out until they find a combination that works—for now. This model of ethical development is doubtless fueled by the failures they observe in conventional institutions like marriage. The platform for Christian teaching is a credible Christian life.
4. Mentors as parents on “turbo”: Our three interview partners were unanimous in the view that young women are looking for mentoring relationships with older women. They often compared this sort of person to a spiritual “mom” and noted how much different their lives would have been had that person been around during their teen years. We were cautioned, however, that perseverance is absolutely essential. The mentor has to seek out the mentee, then stick with it, sometimes for a year or more, until the relationship solidifies. Often, the young women will prove resistant to a commitment simply because other commitments have proven disappointing. Perhaps we have made a lot of this much more complicated than it needs to be. Are we willing to set aside some other things to learn how to be a spiritual family, a “household of faith”?
So I heard Trish, Debbie, and Lisa saying of young women: “We live in a circus” (Debbie’s words)
They were asking us, not for more high-tech programming, but for something else:
If what we believe is true, we should be able to demonstrate it in someone’s life
The young have to get in touch with the power of God
The older should be intentional about teaching the younger
The older have to live the kind of lives the younger will admire and emulate
Imagine. Christianity."
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