[BBC List] be a man
Mike Abendroth
bbcpastor at bbcchurch.org
Thu Jul 5 02:38:45 EAST 2007
How I Have Helped My Boys
to Become Christian Men
Vern S. Poythress, Ph.D., Th.D.
1999 [unpublished]
God gave me two boys to raise, Ransom and Justin. Ransom is now 14 years old
and is already a Christian man. Justin is a Christian boy 12 years old, and
is training to become a man before he is 13.
What is going on here?
Something special. I believe that God has given to my wife Diane and me a
special idea about raising boys, an idea that may be of use to you if you
have sons in your family. We have created a special celebration and ceremony
to introduce them to Christian manhood. This celebration we call "Bar
Jeshua," that is, "son of Jesus." This celebration marks the point at which
a boy becomes a man, a mature disciple of Jesus.
Is such a thing weird? We don't think so. Let me tell you about it.
The Idea and the Challenge
Almost every culture in the world has something to mark the difference
between a boy and a man. A boy goes through a "rite of passage," after which
he becomes officially a man. The rite of passage may involve an ordeal, a
test, or a training period of some kind. The boy who has reached a certain
age must kill a crocodile, or train with a bow and arrow, or go on a long
journey alone, or join in a dangerous hunt with the men.
When does a boy become a man in white American culture? When he gets a
driver's license? When he graduates from high school? When he moves away
from his parents? When he can vote? When he gets his first full-time job?
When he is 21? When he gets married? When he owns his own home?
No one can say. There is no clear point of transition. There is no one "rite
of passage." One of the unfortunate effects can be that boys are insecure.
They don't know when they are men. Again and again they may try to prove
that they are "grown up." Sometimes they may choose destructive ways-join a
gang, go hotrodding, learn to smoke, get drunk, take a girl to bed.
What do we do to give proper guidance? I know and you know that there is no
magic formula. God must be at work in teaching us and our boys, and he must
be the one who causes them to grow (1 Cor. 3:7). But you and I can plant and
water.
I decided that one way I could help my sons was by showing them what it was
to be a man. What is a man? What marks maturity? In the Bible, true maturity
does not consist in being able to kill a crocodile! The true maturity is
spiritual. It is wisdom in knowing God and his will, and being able to carry
it out in your life (Prov. 1:1-7).
I must set an example by my manhood. I must be like Paul, who said, "Follow
my example as I follow the example of Christ" (1 Cor. 11:1). That is an
awesome challenge. I fail to live up to the biblical standard. But part of
being a man is being able to admit it when I fail and then to ask
forgiveness.
Passing to Manhood
In addition to all the regular things that must go into Christian living, I
decided that my boys should have a rite of passage. It involves training and
testing. It is not easy for them. They must prove themselves to be Christian
men.
My son Ransom, 13 years old, has been through it. He knows that he is a man.
He knows it not only because he worked and sweated at it, but because we had
a celebration at the end. We sent out invitations. At the party, in the
presence of about 90 people, his friends and our family friends, we reviewed
some of the testing, and then I declared in front of everyone that he was
now a man. "As your father, I declare that you are no longer Master Ransom
Poythress. You are Mr. Ransom Poythress. You are now a man."
The change of name is significant. White American culture still has a tiny
fragment in which it recognizes manhood. According to formal etiquette, a
boy is "Master" until he is 12; after that, he is "Mr." (Mister). One of my
Latino friends tells me that they have a celebration of manhood at the 12th
birthday. The Jews have a "Bar Mitzvah" for a boy when he is 13.
The Jews became a model from which we attempted to learn. Though Diane and I
are not Jews by birth, Jesus is a Jew. The Jews of the Old Testament are
therefore our spiritual ancestors. In addition, we live in a neighborhood
with many Jews. So in our neighborhood the idea of having a ceremony for
manhood was not strange. We created a celebration called "Bar Jeshua," "son
of Jesus," by analogy with "Bar Mitzvah," son of the commandment, the Jewish
celebration for entering manhood. We can also point to the incident recorded
in Luke 2:41-50. At 12 years old Jesus, our Savior and Representative, shows
his manly maturity in his understanding of the Bible and his understanding
of his role.
The Bible does not require us to imitate slavishly any one culture. But we
see wisdom here.
So what did we do? We tried to do the normal things that go into Christian
parenting. But in addition, we told the boys from an early age about the Bar
Jeshua we were planning for each of them. We told them that they would
become men when they were 12. They were going to have to train for it
beforehand.
The Training
In what does the training consist? Christian manhood is the goal. The
training must match the goal. So we set for them projects. They acquire and
demonstrate skill in each of several overlapping areas.
1. Knowledge of the contents of the Bible.
o Know the names of books of the Bible in order.
o Know Bible history.
o Read the Bible all the way through.
o Know main themes of biblical books.
o Understand how Biblical teaching centers on Christ.
o Know Greek and Hebrew (amount of knowledge tailored to the child's
ability)
2. Memorization of selected verses and passages of the Bible.
3. Knowledge of the major teachings of the Bible (doctrine).
o Memorize a children's catechism as a summary of doctrine.
o Be able to explain doctrines and respond to questions using one's
own words.
4. Personal piety.
o Using devotional materials
o Prayer diary
o Day-long personal retreat for prayer and fasting with Daddy
o Growth in understanding of means for overcoming sin
5. Projects of service and mercy.
o Serving the church; serving the needy.
6. Wisdom in dealing with various spheres of life.
o Finances: tithing, drawing up a year-long budget; checkbook
balancing; investing.
o Etiquette: table etiquette, greeting etiquette, letter etiquette,
conversational etiquette, sexual etiquette.
o Apologetics: answering questions and objections about Christian
faith; understanding the Christian world view and the main competing
worldviews and ideas in the United States.
o Sexuality: knowing Christian teaching and standards for thoughts
and actions. Understanding how God designed male and female bodies.
They work on these areas over a period of years. Many times we just
integrate the work into our family devotional times. At other points we have
periods where they have concentrated study in one area. When the boy is 11
years old, we assess progress. If our boy is honestly far from ready, we are
willing in principle to put things off for another year. But if he is
showing more maturity, we have a time of more concentrated preparation.
In the two or three months before the Bar Jeshua celebration, we enlist our
pastors, young people's leaders, and (in my case) my seminary professor
friends to test the boy privately in each of the areas (1)-(4). I am present
at these tests to provide moral support, but not to coach my boy on the
answers. We also reserve the fellowship hall at our church as a site for the
coming celebration. We send out invitations. We draw up a program sheet and
buy decorations and food.
The Celebration
The day of the Bar Jeshua celebration is a Saturday, so that more people can
come. I explain the celebration to all present.. Our boy reads a short
passage from the Hebrew Bible and explains it (as does the Jewish boy at Bar
Mitzvah). The boy reads a short passage from the Greek Bible and explains
it. The people who previously tested our boy come and give a "mini-test" as
part of the celebration. But our boy already knows that he has passed the
private tests, so he does not have to fear the result. We sing our boy's
favorite hymn. We pray for him. I declare that he is a man. Then we eat and
converse. That's it. Many of the guests bring gifts for the boy, because
they can see that it is like a big birthday celebration.
Thinking It Through
What do our boys think of it? They are intimidated. At times they get
discouraged. "It's too hard," they say. "I don't like it." "Why do I have to
do this?" We did make it hard. Manhood is not easy. This life is not easy
for a Christian. We keep encouraging them. But we also challenge them. And
we avoid showing any sign of giving in to the pressures around us. "Why are
we different?" they say. "This is what Mommy and I have decided to do. God
has given us a responsibility to train you to be a man. Because you are in
this family, this is what you have to do."
We have to strike a careful balance. We have to match the projects to our
children's capabilities. We can't make the work so hard or so time-consuming
that it exasperates our children or is just an oppressive burden (Eph. 6:4).
On the other hand, we don't want to give way to the lazy feeling of much of
American culture, where many people just float along, without clear goals,
and seek to be entertained and avoid hard work. Other people in America work
very hard, but for unworthy goals: to be "successful," to get fame or
wealth. We encourage hard work toward the worthy goal of serving Christ. We
try to hit the positive note of encouragement many times for every one time
that we have to criticize them. But we don't hide the fact that we are
swimming against the cultural tide.
Having Another Man in the House
What happens after our boy becomes a man? He has the privileges of a man.
The privileges must be real and meaningful. This part is scary for Diane and
me. But we told ourselves, "It is better to give our young man lots of
freedom now, while he is still at home. At 14 he is still young enough to
come and ask us for advice. He is young enough to know that he doesn't know
everything. For him to explore under these conditions, when he is still in
our home, is far better than waiting until he goes away to college and we
don't see him or talk with him about all the challenges."
When our boy becomes a man, lots of changes take place in many areas, some
big, some small. As a man, he no longer needs a baby-sitter. He can baby-sit
younger children himself. He sets his own bedtime and rising time. He
decides when he does his homework and how long he works on it. He decides
what TV programs he watches and how long he watches. He can (at first with
supervision) teach a children's Sunday school class. He participates in the
"family council" when my wife and I discuss, plan, and make important
decisions. He can buy and care for his own pet. He excuses himself from the
table rather than being asked to be excused. He buys his own clothing,
school supplies, and gifts. He pays rent once a month, based on an estimate
of his share in the utilities, food, and other costs. And he has an
allowance to match these new responsibilities! In addition, if I pay him to
do an extra job, I pay him at a going rate-at least the minimum wage, and
more than that for jobs that are demanding.
But even when our son is a man, he is still part of the family and still
lives with us. We love him just as much. We kiss and hug him just as much.
We play together. We have certain rules that we would have for anyone living
with us, even people outside the family. We expect him to be at meals on
time. We expect him to be considerate of other members of the family. If he
goes somewhere, we expect to know where he is. On Saturday night we meet as
a family and assess the week. We continue to talk with him about where he is
spiritually. If we see sin in his life, we will exhort him as we would
exhort an adult who was on intimate terms with us. We continue to encourage
one another and teach one another as fellow believers in Christ (Col. 3:16;
1 Thess. 5:14).
Christianity, after all, does not isolate adults from one another, but puts
them in the body of Christ (1 Cor. 12). In that body we are answerable to
one another. So Ransom's freedom is not freedom for immorality. If I were to
see my brother in Christ filling his mind with raw TV programs, or
neglecting his homework, or even just staying up too late every night and
then dragging in the morning, we would sit down and talk. We would ask, "Is
this really wise for a Christian man?"
I must say that, so far, we are pleased. It has been work for us. But Ransom
is a man now. Sure, he has energy and interests like many other
fourteen-year-olds. But in matters that count, he acts like a man. Not
perfectly. Not without some stumbles and signs of immaturity. But he does.
We noticed a big change right after his Bar Jeshua.
Some Resources That We Used
* Larry Burkett, Surviving the Money Jungle: A Junior High Study in
Handling Money (Gainesville, GA: Christian Financial Concepts, 1995).
* Catechism for Young Children: An Introduction to the Shorter
Catechism (Philadelphia: Great Commission, n.d.)
* Paul Little, Know What You Believe (Colorado Springs, CO: Chariot
Victor, 1987).
* Paul Little, Witnessing; How to Give Away Your Faith (Downers
Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 1996).
* Susan S. Macaulay, How to Be Your Own Selfish Pig (Colorado
Springs, CO: Chariot Victor, 1982).
* Theodore C. Papaloizos, Alfabetario: Pre-School Reader (n.l.:
Papaloizos Publications, 1990). (Introduction to Greek letters and
pronunciation.)
* Amye Rosenberg, Alef Bet Mystery (New York: Behrman House, 1980).
(Introduction to Hebrew letters and pronunciation.)
* R. C. Sproul, Choosing My Religion, tape series (Orlando, FL:
Ligonier Ministries).
* R. C. Sproul, Objections Answered, tape series (Orlando, FL:
Ligonier Ministries).
Charis,
Mike Abendroth
"Make us choose the harder right instead of the easier wrong, and never to
be contented with half truth when whole truth can be won. Endow us with
courage that is born of loyalty to all that is noble and worthy, that scorns
to compromise with vice and injustice and knows no fear when right and truth
are in jeopardy."
- West Point Military Academy Cadet Prayer
<http://www.bbcchurch.org> www.bbcchurch.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.bbcchurch.org/pipermail/bbc_list/attachments/20070705/a296de46/attachment.htm
More information about the Bbc_list
mailing list