Monthly Archives: July 2013

What to Expect When No One’s Expecting: America’s Coming Demographic Disaster

Senior writer for The Weekly Standard, Jonathan Last, has a book forthcoming entitled What to Expect When No One’s Expecting: America’s Coming Demographic Disaster. He gave a hint in the December 10th issue of the magazine in an article entitled A Nation of Singles (pages 22-26).

From 1910 to 1970, those who had been married were as high as 98.3% and, during those six decades, the percentage never dropped below 92.8%. But around 1970 until the present, the United States has dropped to 88.6% (to the year 2000). Looking at age groups, among those who are at the age of marriage – groups between 20 and 34 and 35 and 44 – a little over half of adult Americans are single!

Last offers two reasons for this massive shift away from “wedded bliss” to “blissful single.” First, citing a report by Joel Kotkin (“The Rise of Post-Familialism”; available at joelkotkin.com), there is a swing away from religion in our country. Just being religious usually motivates people to marry because all the major religions in the world promote marriage and the family. “The more devout they are, the higher their rates of marriage and the more children they have” (25). But our society is becoming distinctively more secular.

Secondly, there is also a decided rupture between sex, marriage, and having children. It is clear that American society has dragged sex out of the marriage covenant. While divorce rates have remained constant, the rate of cohabitating continues to rise. If you are living together with the benefit of a sexual relationship but without the burden of having children – it lowers American’s fertility rate. If you don’t want children, generally you don’t want marriage either. One in five women today does not want any children.

Here’s another repercussion of not wanting children – you don’t care if you are spending on credit. Our current generation of politicians is no longer spending their children’s inheritance; they are now spending – on credit – our children’s income. If children aren’t important to you, you don’t care what kind of future you leave them.

But without the responsibility of families and children to provide for, men tend not to work as hard, as long, as intensely. That also has negative repercussions on the economy.

The fact is, though, many studies have shown that married people are happier, better off financially, and healthier. Children grow up more stable emotionally, psychologically, and intellectually if they have a mom and dad in the home.

In the words of Last: “Marriage is what makes the entire Western project – liberalism [the classic definition, not in the sense of “progressivism”, p.h.], the dignity of the human person, the free market, and the limited democratic state – possible” (26).

We as Christians need to exemplify before our children the great blessings of marriage. We also need to rededicate ourselves as spouses to one another. In the words of Jesus: “Have you not read that he who created them from the beginning made them male and female, and said, ‘Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’? So they are no longer two but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let not man separate” (Matthew 19:4-6).

–Paul Holland

THE PASSING OF TIME

The rules at a particular university were such that if the professor
were not present in the classroom by 15 minutes past the hour, the class was
considered a “walk” and the students were free to leave — with no penalties
for missing a class.  The rooms were equipped with the type wall clocks
which “jumped” ahead each minute, in a very noticeable fashion.  These
clocks were also not of the most sophisticated construction.  Some
enterprising student discovered that if one were to hit the clock with
chalkboard erasers, it would cause the clock to “jump” ahead one minute.

So, it became almost daily routine for these students to take target
practice at the clock (as it would have it, this particular professor was
not the most punctual).  A few well-aimed erasers, and lo, 15 minutes were
passed, and class dismissed itself.

When the day for the next exam rolled around, the professor strolled
into the room, passed out the exams, and told them “You have one hour to
complete it.”

The professor then proceeded to collect the erasers from around the
room and gleefully took aim at the clock.  When he had successfully “jumped”
the clock forward one hour, he closed the class and collected the exam
papers.

We’ll all been in situations where we would like for time to jump ahead
and move faster than it does.  But, as we get older, we become aware than
time is moving quite fast enough on its own, without any help!

“My days are swifter than a weaver’s shuttle…” (Job 2:6)

“Now my days are swifter than a runner; They flee away….They pass by
like swift ships, Like an eagle swooping on its prey.” (Job 9:25-26)

“For what is your life? It is even a vapor that appears for a little
time and then vanishes away.” (James 4:14b)

The Bible speaks often about how quickly life passes, not to depress
us, but to bring us to the realization that we had better be preparing now
for the eternity that lies beyond this life.

If you find yourself watching the clock at work today, wishing the time
would pass faster, be careful!  It will be gone before you know it.

Alan Smith

Are you letting worry kill you?

A STORY IS told about a man who came face to face with the dangers of worry…

Death was walking toward a city one morning and a man asked, “What are you going to do?”  “I’m going to take 100 people,” Death replied.  “That’s horrible!” the man said.  “That’s the way it is,” Death said.  “That’s what I do.”  The man hurried to warn everyone he could about Death’s plan.  As evening fell, he met Death again.  “You told me you were going to take 100 people,” the man said.  “Why did 1,000 die?!”  “I kept my word,” Death responded.  “I only took 100 people.  Worry took the others.”

“An anxious heart weighs a man down.”  Proverbs 12:25

–Mike Benson

Victory at the Cross

I have heard lessons about victory in the cross before, but the other day I noticed something that had always been right before my eyes. There are four “V” letters at the angles of the cross. That is an obvious sermon outline. Victory over sin, victory over death, victory over hopelessness, victory over Satan could be among the topics. Just pick any four and start preaching. Just when it looked like Satan had won, Jesus gave us the victory. Likewise, when it seems that life is getting us down, we should remember that we are already victorious. Just look at the cross.

–By Charlie Gamble