11.25.2008

"It's JUST marijuana!"

False. At least, researchers are still proving that Marijuana does serve as a "gateway" drug, that is, it serves as a "gateway" to further (and harder) drug use.

Is marijuana a gateway drug?

“I don’t think so,” 18-year-old Katie Falkenberg says.

“I just have known kids who have done it and they don’t do anything else,” adds Randy Glance 17.

“I don’t think it’s gonna lead them into anything bigger,” 17-year-old Cody McGuire says.

But a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests these teens are wrong.

The study examined 311 sets of twins, with one twin in each set having smoke marijuana before age 17.

“And what they found is that the twin who began smoking marijuana at a much earlier age had a very high increase in the probability that that twin would go on to use other drugs other than marijuana,” says Dr. Robert Margolis, an addiction specialist.

Continue reading here...


'Twilight' leaves its box-office mark

A wildly popular vampire love story took a big bite out of the box office, helping deliver a banner weekend for the industry as Hollywood brushed off one of the most tumultuous weeks ever on Wall Street.

"Twilight," the film that drew legions of fans of Stephenie Meyer's vampire book series, more than delivered on the advance hype by generating an estimated $70.5 million in North American box-office receipts during its opening weekend. The movie rang up the fourth-highest November opening weekend of all time.

Continue reading here...

"Twilight" and True Love

The following excerpt is from blogger Jeffrey Overstreet's commentary on the theme of love as it is portrayed in "Twilight," the recent blockbuster teen vampire-heroine love story. I highly recommend reading this post in its entirety, especially if you have a teenager, or tween, that has seen or is planning on seeing this movie. These movies present very real and poignant opportunities for parents and youth workers alike to engage teenagers in a way that makes them think. Challenge their thinking. Point out the gaping holes in the story's depiction of love and romance. Help them understand the biblical concept of love as self-sacrificial and God-honoring, not as emotional emptiness.

One of the reasons that divorce is becoming to prevalent, I think, is the lost concept of love. Feelings dictate decisions, and feelings don't consider commitment. Commitment involves sacrifices at times, and sacrifice is a concept which the dangerously narcissistic upcoming generations do not understand and will not practice, unless we challenge their conceptual framework and explain what love truly is and involves.

Anway, now to Overstreet's blog entry:

"Sure, the basic “Beauty and the Beast” elements are at work here. They will always work. I’m not going to deny that the Power of Myth is at work in this story. What disappoints me is how poorly it is developed, how many opportunities for thoughtful storytelling are bypassed for the sake of including long sequences that amount to “How far can we go without actually fornicating?” If you want a good vampire story involving a fascinating, monstrous vampire and an engaging heroine, check out Robin McKinley’s book Sunshine. Now THAT would make an interesting movie!

But don’t tell me that this is a love story. This is a lust story. You have to get to know someone to really be “in love” with them. Otherwise, it’s just hormones. Good luck with everything after."

Continue reading here...

How to Share Your Faith During Thanksgiving Week

Thanksgiving. Turkey and stuffing. Pumpkin pie. Family gatherings/family squabbles. Football. These are the trappings that crowd our days and fill our conversation. The 'thanks' part of the deal sometimes seems peripheral to the whole production. Maybe God gets allotted a 30 second timeslot where heads are bowed and eyes closed - just before everyone digs into the feast spread out before them.

But what would it look like in our hearts and our lives if day-by-day, moment-by moment, we were thankful to God? After all, the Bible tells us,

Sing and make music in your heart to the Lord, always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ (Ephesians 5:19-20).

If you've ever felt beaten up by life, you know what it feels like to choke on those words. But did you realize the Apostle Paul wrote that sentence while he was locked up in a Roman prison, doing time for sharing the Good News with others, facing brutal treatment and harsh conditions. Yet from his prison cell he had the audacity to challenge followers of Jesus to "always give thanks to God the Father for everything." Makes it a little harder to dismiss it as irrelevant to our lives when times get tough.

Continue reading here...

Deodorant Kills Boy!

Sounds like the headline from a tabloid, right? You would expect to find this headline underneath the latest picture of Elvis singing "Devil in Disguise" with the aliens. But no, this story is from Fox News, the inerrant and infallible source of all things newsworthy. (I really hope you detected the sarcasm).

Anyway, this article could potentially be used to help you win the "Stop spraying Tag/Axe/Old Spice body spray all over the place" battle with you middle school son.

11.20.2008

Fervor builds for Friday's release of vampire flick 'Twilight'

This weekend, cold becomes the new hot. Cold, as in Edward Cullen, the vampire hero of the upcoming supernatural movie "Twilight."

Hot, as in how the love affair between Edward and his teenage -- and very human -- girlfriend Bella makes females from 16 to 66 flush.

Edward and Bella are at the center of author Stephenie Meyer's four-book "Twilight" saga, which has sold more than 17 million copies worldwide on its way to becoming The Next Big Thing.

The movie adaptation of "Twilight," the first book in the series, opens Friday, and the anticipatory buzz is almost deafening. The movie has sold out hundreds of midnight shows at theaters across the country, according to online ticket sellers Fandango and MovieTickets. 

Continue reading here...

The Child Trap: The Rise of Overparenting

We’ve all been there—that is, in the living room of friends who invited us to dinner without mentioning that this would include a full-evening performance by their four-year-old. He sings, he dances, he eats all the hors d’oeuvres. When you try to speak to his parents, he interrupts. Why should they talk to you, about things he’s not interested in, when you could all be discussing how his hamster died? His parents seem to agree; they ask him to share his feelings about that event. You yawn. Who cares? Dinner is finally served, and the child is sent off to some unfortunate person in the kitchen. The house shakes with his screams. Dinner over, he returns, his sword point sharpened. His parents again ask him how he feels. It’s ten o’clock. Is he tired? No! he says. You, on the other hand, find yourself exhausted, and you make for the door, swearing never to have kids or, if you already did, never to visit your grandchildren. You’ll just send checks.

This used to be known as “spoiling.” Now it is called “overparenting”—or “helicopter parenting” or “hothouse parenting” or “death-grip parenting.”

Continue reading here...

Teens turned aliens: How to communicate with kids in tough years

Parenting teens is a tough, stressful job these days, but the payoff can be huge with a reserve of patience and the drive to ask for help when needed.

Here are some strategies:

Declaration of independence

Adolescence is about struggle - for identity, independence - but the grab for power often competes with the intense need for reassurance at home and conformity among peers.

Teens may fight the leash while also taking comfort in it. Robin Goodman, a child psychologist and art therapist in New York City, suggests parents lengthen the tether, stay involved and step in sooner rather than later when newfound freedoms are abused. Remember, she said, defiance is a tool used by teens. It's nothing personal.

Continue reading here...

Twilight

I apologize for the lengthy post, but the original story had a photograph in it that I didn't think was appropriate, so I copied the whole article onto here.

Twilight is a phenomenon in youth culture today, and this article will help you think through the way love is portrayed and displayed in the movie and the books. Millions are reading the books, millions more will see the movie, and I'm pretty sure that one of the television networks will pick this storyline up for a string of television shows. In short, Twilight is everywhere.

"Seventeen million copies of the books have been sold worldwide, and midnight showings for the upcoming movie are selling out.

But what is this story really teaching young people about love?

Romeo and Juliet Meets Bram Stoker
When Bella Swan leaves her mom in sunny Phoenix to move in with her chief-of-police dad in dreary Forks, Washington, she meets Edward Cullens, the most mysterious and handsome guy she's ever seen. She couldn't take her eyes off him... and he couldn't take his mind off her. Not only was she smitten with love, but she was in danger of being bitten as well. After all, Edward was a vampire.

That's right, a vampire.

But that didn't seem to bother Bella very much. She says,
"About three things I was absolutely positive. First, Edward was a vampire. Second, there was a part of him - and I didn't know how dominant that part might be - that thirsted for my blood. And third, I was unconditionally and irrevocably in love with him."

The rest of the 512 page novel, Twilight, tells the story of these two star-crossed lovers as they seek to understand their emotions for one another, and engage in a life-and-death battle against a coven of evil vampires.

The story has captivated a global audience and has claimed some very prestigious accolades since its release in late 2005. It's been a #1 New York Times Bestseller and was voted "Best Book of the Year" by Publishers Weekly. Teen People made it their "Hot Pick," and since then, the novel has been translated into twenty different languages. This is worthy of some celebration in light of the recent decline in teen reading. Not since the Harry Potter books have so many teens had their noses in a book.

Edward and Bella's tale doesn't end on the last page of Twilight, however. When her first book sold millions of copies, Brigham Young educated author Stephanie Meyers did what any writer would do. She wrote another one....

and another one...

and another...

And so, the Twilight Saga was born, and teen and tween readers, mostly female, have been captivated since page one.

A Scary Love Story
I grabbed a copy of Twilight to see what the buzz was about, and I must say, it was a good enough read that I tore through it in a few hours. It's your typical "boy meets girl, saves girl's life, falls in love with girl, saves girl's life again" young adult romance novel... but with a vampire.

Meyers provides readers with a (somewhat) original twist on the whole vampire legend in her story. Her vampires have a "superfluous" amount of superhuman abilities and can survive in sunlight; plus, there are good vampires as well as evil ones. Meyers also does an excellent job with suspense and cliff hangers, so I stayed up past midnight feverishly flipping pages to find out what happens in the end.

If books were rated like films, Twilight would probably land at PG-13, with minimal swearing (a couple of "damns") and a wee bit of violence. The sensuality is what helped push Twilight to the PG-13 mark. The MPAA seemed to agree concerning the upcoming film, rating it PG-13 for "some violence and a scene of sensuality." You can watch one of the TV spots to judge for yourself.

Subtle Messages
Many people in religious circles are worried about the "vampire" elements in the books. But our chief concern gravitated more toward Bella's emotional vulnerability and the graphic sensuality described in the romantic scenes between she and Edward. We're not talking Harlequin Romance material, but it was enough to make me wonder how young readers would react to the content. For instance, in one scene in her upstairs bathroom, Bella found herself regretting leaving her Victoria Secret silk pajamas in Arizona while Edward waited in her bedroom. In the book, nothing sexual happens, but we catch a pretty accurate glimpse into the thought process of the modern teenager.

Today's young girls will most definitely identify with Bella's concern for self image and consistent need for validation. In the books Bella is portrayed as very plain. Most girls can relate to this. Seven in ten girls feel they do not measure up in some way, including their looks and in relationships.

What about the sensuality?

Parents are going to have to be the judge if they want their 12-year-old girls absorbing Meyers' descriptions.

In chapter 13 of the book, Bella describes a private moment in a meadow with Edward.
Slowly, never moving his eyes from mine, he leaned toward me. Then abruptly, but very gently, he rested his cold check against the hollow at the base of my throat. I was quite unable to move, even if I'd wanted to. I listened to the sound of his even breathing, watching the sun and wind play in his bronze hair, more human than any other part of him.

With deliberate slowness, his hands slid down the sides of my neck. I shivered, and I heard him catch his breath. But his hands didn't pause as they softly moved to my shoulders, and then stopped.

His face drifted to the side, his nose skimming across my collarbone. He came to rest with the side of his face pressed tenderly against my chest.

Listening to my heart.

And a little later in the same scene...
And then his cold, marble lips pressed very softly against mine.

What neither of us was prepared for was my response.

Blood boiled under my skin, burned in my lips. My breath came in a wild gasp. My fingers knotted in his hair, clutching him to me. My lips parted as I breathed in his heady scent.


Believe it or not, this scene is actually what prompted Meyers to write the book in the first place. On her official website, she gives an unusual explanation for the origin of the entire story line...a dream.
In my dream, two people were having an intense conversation in a meadow in the woods. One of these people was just your average girl. The other person was fantastically beautiful, sparkly, and a vampire. They were discussing the difficulties inherent in the facts that A) they were falling in love with each other while B) the vampire was particularly attracted to the scent of her blood, and was having a difficult time restraining himself from killing her immediately.

In spite of these steamy scenes, the lead characters actually remain chaste. Even though the Mormon author doesn't allow Edward and Bella to have sex before marriage, she may be a bit naïve about what tends to happen when passionate teenagers get alone in a field.

From the preview, the movie seems to take it a step further. In one clip, Bella is seen in her underwear kissing Edward in the bedroom. As a parent, how would you react to this reality?

Interestingly enough, it seems that many parents aren't all that concerned with the amount of sensuality, because in this story, it doesn't lead to sex. But what message does this mentality send to our kids? (There's been a lot of debate about these messages lately.)

The studio producing the film, Summit Entertainment, is hoping that the absence of sex scenes will expand its marketability to young kids. According to this Advertising Age article (subscription required), Summit is "counting on an unexpected group to help evangelize the film beyond its pubescent base: moms." The studio won't be disappointed, because PG-13 is deemed "okay" by most parents today.

"No sex? Oh, it must be clean, then."

What's Our Role?
There are lots of points to consider when deciding if our kids should read this book and/or watch the movie.

First, we must remember to monitor our kids' reading material in addition to their media choices. The Internet is not the only place where kids come across unhealthy messages. Reading engages the mind in a different way than music, TV, or movies; there's much more imagination involved. Knowing that reading makes an impact on our kids, let's be sure to keep an eye on what our kids have on their book shelves.

Secondly, let's note that kids are devouring a book that focuses on love, passion, and romance. Young readers have questions; this book provides answers. Unless you want your kids to only hear Edward and Bella's take on the subject, speak up. Love and romance are issues that most teens struggle to understand. We must be prepared to wade through those questions with them in search of answers. If that means we have to read a few chapters from these books to discover a way to initiate a conversation about love, romance, or even sex with our teens, so be it. Remember to focus on asking questions, rather than giving lectures.

Finally, as popular as these books are, the film will reach a much larger audience. While the book audience is mostly female, guys are already expressing interest in the film.

We encourage parents and anyone working with youth to go see this film and judge for yourselves. Twilight opens in theaters on November 21st, and The Source will post our review of the film on our movie review page that weekend. The highly anticipated movie is directed by Catherine Hardwicke, whose film debut was the sobering movie Thirteen, which she also wrote. Her later works, Lord's of Dogtown and The Nativity Story demonstrate Hardwicke's ability to present a story about young people to today's youth.

Twilight is a love story with a bite. If we proactively engage our kids concerning love and romance, maybe we can help guide them to answers to some of the questions raised by the story. Twilight's tagline is, "When you can live forever what do you live for?"

What answer does the movie provide?

What are your kids' answers to that question?

The New Christians

As part of a book-club initiative (that failed to meet more than once after we read the first book) this past summer a small group of my friends read "The New Christians," by Tony Jones. Jones was, until a few weeks ago, the national director for Emergent Village, the online epicenter of the emergent church. I had cause to reread this book a few weeks ago for a paper I wrote about postmodernism's affect on the evangelical church, most clearly evident in the emergent church movement.

Anyways, Tony Jones has recently decided that the GLBTQ community (Gay, Lesbian, Bi-sexual, Transgender/Transsexual, Queer) should be embraced by the church, since they "can live lives in accordance with biblical Christianity (as least as much as any of us can!)."

This statement/position is indicative of the emergent church's liberal leanings, and while Jones scoffs at the "slippery slope" accusations that have been hurled at him, one can hardly deny, at least in Jones' case, that once you start downplaying the authority of Scripture and re-interpreting the plain meaning of the text of Scripture, you will end up apostatizing from biblical Christianity. In "The New Christians," Jones relates the following story: There was a group of GLBT people that were told that they could not rise to leadership positions in their church. Rather than affirming the church's (biblical) position, someone who Jones came into contact with started a church around those GLBT people so that they wouldn't feel "alienated" from Christianity. Now, Jones himself has decided that GLBT can experience the grace of God just as much as the rest of us while remaining in the GLBT lifestyle.

I realize that many of you may not be familiar with postmodern thought or the emergent church, but they are radically affecting the younger generations of church-goers, including your children. Postmodern influence is huge, and we should all have a basic understanding of it so that we know how to engage our children who come home from college with a new or "enlightened" understanding of truth, the Scriptures, and Christianity.

This is an excellent book on the emergent church, and so is this, if you want to read about the movement from a conservative evangelical perspective. This book is the one written by Tony Jones and will provide a glimpse of the emergent church from the inside if you'd like that perspective. I have the first and third books listed here if you'd like to borrow them.

11.19.2008

They Like Themselves (too much?)

A recent USAToday story reported that graduating seniors of the 2006 class are much more optimistic about their chances of success in marriage, employment, and a host of other areas. While this seems to be good news (who wants a bunch of depressed teenagers wallowing around?) some are concerned that the boost in self-esteem is the result of over-praising by parents, teachers, and coaches. I think these researchers are onto something, and the following two statements may be indicative of why the younger generations are fairly impressed with themselves.

First, every kid gets a trophy. The trophy used to be the prized possession of the true "winners"- those who succeeded and accomplished the most in a given season/event. Now, everyone is a "winner" and everyone gets a trophy.

Second, there are teachers around the country who are refusing to grade papers/exams in red ink because red ink supposedly induces a negative psychological reaction. When a student sees red ink on a returned exam or paper, they know they did something wrong, and we just can't have that. So many teachers (none that I've ever had, thankfully) are grading in softer colors like, purple, green, and blue.

Dr. Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, posted an entry to his blog that examines this issue and his insights are worth heeding:

"In recent years, some observers have warned that children are not well served when parents lavish them with inordinate praise or with unrealistic assessments. The culture of earned recognition has given way to sports teams that award a trophy to every player and to contests in which every participant wins.

"As they grow older, some children turn cynical about all this. They just begin to discount what their parents, educators, or other authorities tell them. Eventually, reality intrudes in the form of college admissions, athletic scholarships, or other dimensions of merited recognition. It may be that every player on the 8th grade team gets the same trophy, regardless of performance on the field. All that changes when it comes time for college athletic scholarships, however. Those are not passed out without regard for performance."

Continue reading here...


11.17.2008

How to Write Better Emails

How to Write Better Emails

Posted using ShareThis

Texting

Hey all- on Sunday morning Larry mentioned that texting is both a gift and a curse. It is a gift in that it enables quick communication when not much information is needed, but a curse because it can disrupt the privacy of our homes and distract us from paying attention in school, at work, or during worship services. I had pretty much made the same appeal last Wednesday night during the Collision service to the students directly- there's a time and place for texting, but during the Collsion service and the Sunday morning worship service is not that time nor that place. We don't want to be ogres about this, but it was starting to get out of control, so we both felt that the issue needed to be addressed.

Anyways, I have an opportunity to try out a texting service for free fro 45 days that will simplify the way information is disseminated from me to students, parents, and the student leadership team. Typing the same message 10 times to get information out to everyone who needs it, is a cumbersome process, and this program will allow me to send messages to up to 100 people at a time. It will enable me to group people together (ie parents, students, volunteers) so that I can quickly and easily communicate updates to whoever needs them.

As part of the process I need to input the phone numbers and service providers (Verizon, Sprint, etc...) of my contacts, so I'm asking for that information from you. If you have a cell phone with texting capabilities and would like to be on my text-list, please email your phone number and service provider to dustin@hillcrestbaptistchurch.org. This applies for your students also, if they are in the student ministry currently. I have many of their phone numbers, but some I do not have. I'll be talking about this with them directly Wednesday evening and next Sunday. I have phone numbers for several of the parents, but I don't know if texting is an option for you, and I will not add you to my list unless I hear from you. For most of you, I can't add you right now because I don't have your number.

This text list will be used for short reminders of upcoming events, payment schedules, and the like. It will not be used to send "Dustin's thought for the day" or any other information. The blog information will not be sent to you through texting. It will only be used to get relevant information to you in a timely manner. Such as, "Hey, the concert went longer than expected, we'll be home 45 minutes later than we thought," or, "Hey, don't forget that the $30 deposit for mission trip is due this Sunday."

I hope many of you will respond to this. Texting is the primary form of communication for many, including your teenagers (if you have been gracious enough to allow them to have a phone AND purchased a texting plan for them, that is), and your cooperation will make it much easier for me to get information out to you in a timely manner.

11.15.2008

Teenage Bullies are Rewarded With Pleasure, Brain Scans Show

It’s no fun being bullied, but new research supports what many teenagers have long suspected: A victim’s pain may be a bully’s gain. A new brain imaging study of aggressive teenage boys found that watching others being bullied triggered parts of their brains associated with pleasure. “It is entirely possible their brains are lighting in the way they are because they experience seeing pain in others as exciting and fun and pleasurable,”[Reuters] said co-author Dr. Benjamin Lahey.

The study subjects were 16 boys 16 to 18 years old, half of whom had aggressive conduct disorder and half of whom had no behavioral disorder. While their brains were hooked up to functional MRIs, the boys were shown video clips of people getting hurt either by accident, such as having a heavy object dropped on their hands, or by intentional actions by others, such as someone stomping on their feet.

Continue reading here...

11.14.2008

The Vampire That Rocked The Chart

The soundtrack to the upcoming teen vampire romance Twilight debuts at #1 on The Billboard 200. Twilight is the first soundtrack to hit #1 in advance of the movie's release since 8 Mile six years ago. That album topped the Nielsen/SoundScan chart for the week ending Nov. 3, 2002. The Eminem movie was released on Nov. 8.Only five other soundtracks have ever hit #1 in advance of the movie's release.

Continue reading here...

Riding the Highs and Lows of Teenage Faith Development

This is an interesting article on the stages that we all have progressed through at some point in the development of our faith. Not all of us have progressed as the same speed, nor have we all experienced each level, but nonetheless it's an interesting article highlighting the need for patience and Godly instruction at all levels of the faith development spectrum.

Trapped in Neverland

Carl Trueman is one of the most insightful evangelicals around today and he has written an excellent short essay on the "adolescentization" of American society. Below is a brief excerpt from his essay:

But it gets more disturbing than simply finding people in their twenties and thirties acting like spoiled children. Parents are becoming increasingly involved as well. With two sons in travel football (that's soccer to any American readers), I have stood on too many touchlines where parents act like frustrated two years olds as the game does not develop as they would like; and, again, as a professor, I have had unpleasant experiences with parents too. Being told by a parent that their child is `young and immature' works for my wife - she teaches at a church nursery, dealing with three year olds - but it wears a bit thin when the problem child is eighteen, nineteen, twenty....thirty.... And that this kind of stuff seems more common in the church than in the secular world is disturbing.

Continue reading here...

Response to the Homosexual Arguments

Robert Gagnon, professor of NT at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, offers some very helpful and biblical responses to the arguments being pushed by gay-rights activists in today's society.

The homosexual lobbyists and activists are aggressively pursuing their agenda of redefining marriage to include homosexual unions. Violent outbursts in California recently focused the attention of the nation on the issues surrounding homosexuality and marriage. California recently voted in favor of Proposition 8 which defined marriage as an institution between a man and a woman. Californians have passed similar ballot initiatives in the past several years, only to have their will overturned by 7 judges in robes who create laws from the bench. This is the modus operandi, or standard operating procedure, of leftist liberals who cannot get their policies passed into law- they appeal to radically leftist state supreme courts, and those judges, drunk with their own power and in complete disregard of their constituent citizens, create laws from the bench which override the voice of the people of their respective states.

It is my contention that the issues of marriage and homosexuality, like the issue of abortion, are settled once one has a biblically informed worldview. This video interview featuring Robert Gagnon will go a long way toward giving Christians a biblically informed response should this issue ever come up in conversation or should the state of Ohio ever face ballot initiatives similar to those faced in CA.

The video is long (28 min) but well worth your time.

11.13.2008

Events Update

Hello all- here's a quick summary of the upcoming activities:

11/14- Scallywagtag Overnight Laser Tag. We're heading to Scallywagtag for an all-night laser tag and concert party. Cost is $20 which includes all laser tag and concerts. Bring extra cash for food and arcade video games. We'll leave the church around 10:30 and return around 7am.

12/13- Christmas Sweater Party. Invite your friends to the Christmas Musical and the after-musical Christmas Sweater Party in the Crash Room. Prizes will be given for the ugliest Christmas Sweater. This event is free, but there will be food for sale. We'll have a live band playing some songs also. The following links will take you to the website of some of the bands that we're covering so you can give them a listen if you'd like.

Worth Dying For- Consume Me Now
The Almost- Say This Sooner, Southern Weather

As well as some songs from Hillsong, Switchfoot, and assorted Christmas tunes. This will be a party you do not want to miss!!!

11.07.2008

Study is first to link TV sex to teen parenthood

Could the amount of sex teens see on TV predict whether they'll become a teen mother or father? A study in today's Pediatrics says it's a distinct possibility.

The study is the first to draw a direct link between sexual content on TV and the likelihood that teens who watch it will become parents. Researchers examined survey data from about 2,000 teens. They plucked out 23 popular shows and asked how much teens watched each. They coded the replies to established indicators of sexual content for each show — everything from nudge-nudge jokes on network sitcoms to full-blown intercourse on steamy cable dramas.

PTC Finds Increase in Harsh Profanity on TV

The article contains graphic language, so I'm not posting a link to the story. If you would like the link to the story, email me- dustin@hillcrestbaptistchurch.org- and I will provide the link to the full story. Below is a quote from PTC (Parents Television Council) President Tim Winter:

“Our results show that when an expletive is introduced on television, usage of the word becomes commonplace in fairly short order. Then the broadcast networks feel the need to up the ante with even more offensive profanity. The result is that there is a significant increase in the overall use of profanity on the public airwaves, and an escalation in the offensiveness of the words used. While certain expletives may become ‘commonplace’ to network executives, they must keep in mind that most parents do not want their children bombarded by those words during hours when they’re most likely to be in the audience.”

Teen Net addictions growing

A growing number of parents and family therapists are seeking help for teens who appear to be hooked on cyberspace.

Addiction specialists say in some cases kids are jeopardizing their health through compulsive Internet behaviour that includes staying up all night, skipping school and withdrawing from real-life friends to get immersed in online games or surfing the web.

“We’ve been receiving at least a couple of calls a week asking, ‘How do you deal with Internet addiction?’” says Bruce Ballon, a psychiatrist with the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto. “(Society is) just starting to realize — oh my God, it’s so huge.”

In response, CAMH has just launched a pilot program to treat teens with problematic computer behaviour from excessive online gaming to gambling.

Internet addiction came into the spotlight this week after the disappearance of Barrie teen Brandon Crisp. Brandon went missing Thanksgiving Monday after his dad removed his Xbox from the house. Steve Crisp says he had confiscated it at least 20 times since Brandon became “obsessed” with the online war game Call of Duty 4. He began to skip school and stay up all night. The teen hasn’t been seen since that day.

Those who treat teens agree that, like other addictions, excessive Internet use is a sign of underlying problems and often goes hand-in-hand with mental health issues such as depression.

How not to raise a pagan

No one sets out to raise a pagan- except those who have deliberately chosen to be pagans. But Dr. Albert Mohler told the students of Southeastern Baptist Seminary that that is precisely what will happen if the instructions of the Lord are ignored. The default result of neglecting to carefully and diligently raise your children in the instruction and admonition of the Lord is that you will raise a pagan. You can listen to the audio from Dr. Mohler's sermon entitled "How Not To Raise A Pagan."

11.05.2008

John MacArthur Sermons

This is a monumental achievement for the folks working over at Grace To You ministries, the public ministry of pastor John MacArthur. All of his recorded sermons (over 3500) have been made available online for free here. MacArthur is well known as one of the best preachers of our day and to have his entire preaching career available at our fingertips is a treasure. MacArthur preaches straight through whole books of the bible, predominantly the New Testament, so you will find sermons available on just about every text in the New Testament. This would be an excellent way for you to study whole books of the bible. Enjoy!

11.03.2008

Howard Stern

I am no fan of Howard Stern. The man is gross and disgusting, and he's no friend of conservative politics or religion of any sort. But listen to these interviews that he conducted on the streets of Harlem. Unbelievable. Hilarious. Disappointing. Mind-blowing.