I have not been asked to give my testimony in a long time. But old as I am, 70, I sometimes think I have something to say to teenagers of today. Not that I will likely ever be asked to address a group of teens. And this document will likely never see the light of day.
People like testimonies that are filled with drama – the regenerate turning to Jesus Christ for salvation. Or the testimonies of famous people – media stars, athletes, politicians. I am none of those. Just an old maid who has lived what most would consider to be a boring life. I am a “Boomer” one of the generation today’s Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z consider to be the cause of all the world’s troubles. I haven’t been on the mission field. I haven’t got a podcast – although I do have a blog – with five followers. I am just one of those “unimportant” persons in a small town in the middle of flyover country and with the exception of a brief jaunt into Canada, who has never been out of the Midwest. As a teen, I never did drugs, never drank alcohol, rarely went to parties. From high school through college it was school, work (got my first job at thirteen) and family responsibilities.
So. There’s the background. Here’s the story.
I was raised in the Church. Twelve years of Christian education. But even before that, my mother recorded in my baby book that I was saying the Lord’s Prayer on my own at age 2 -1/2. I was the pious kid who had questions for my teachers at an age when they weren’t expecting them. Questions such as, “If God knows what we will do or say before we do or say it, how can we have free will?” That was in second grade. My mom got a call from my teacher that evening.
I wasn’t popular in those schools, and for those who think bullying is a phenomenon found only in public schools – they are wrong. It wasn’t just my classmates. The good roles in the assemblies, the essays on the gold star board, the ones to run errands – all went to the pretty girls, the popular girls. I learned to keep my head down and my mouth shut – most of the time.
But I learned all about God. I learned all about His chosen people. I learned about Jesus. I learned about the Holy Spirit. God was omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent. He was a God of answered prayers and miracles – even to this very day. At the age of ten, I made a solemn vow in front of my teachers, classmates, and family to follow Jesus Christ and reject the devil and all his works.
Yet as I learned all about who God was and is and what He has done and continues to do, I began to have doubts. Things happened. Things that I was told weren’t supposed to happen to God’s faithful children. My father became disabled, then developed bi-polar disorder and we were plunged into poverty. When I started high school, my father turned over the responsibility of balancing the family checkbook, filling out state and federal tax forms, and riding shotgun when we traveled after he instructed me on what to do if he had a heart attack at the wheel. My younger brother was developmentally disabled and I was frequently given the responsibility of looking after him. I became the unpaid babysitter for my nieces and nephews. My middle brother and his wife lost their infant daughter. Being clumsy, I broke several bones and developed juvenile arthritis. I had severe dysmenorrhea. I required surgery to remove an eighteen pound ovarian tumor. I was sexually assaulted…and all before I was a teenager.
In all this I had questions. “Where are You, God?” “Why won’t You answer my prayers?” After all, I had been taught daily, for years, that God was in the business of answering prayers. In the pain, in the silence, I came to the conclusion that God played favorites – and I was not one of His favorites. Entering my teens, the doubts only grew, and upon high school graduation, at the age of seventeen, I walked away from church, away from God. My mother cried when I said I would no longer be attending church. My father simply said it was my decision and I was old enough to make it.
But God.
There is a name for God young people may never have heard. It was used by poets of old. He is called, “The Hound of Heaven.” Remember that solemn vow I made when I was ten? When a person takes an oath before God, the person may forget or may recant the vow. God never forgets. Like a police dog that is unleashed and told, “search,” God is on the scent and He never gives up.
Junior year in college. Midterms. The University of Wisconsin-Parkside was still under construction and the only place to get a cup of coffee was the snack bar. Ten, maybe a dozen tables, each with four chairs. I got there early, but the place was soon packed. I claimed my territory by spreading my text books and notebooks across the entire table and proceeded to cram for the upcoming tests. Nose in my studies, I didn’t even notice them at first, until he spoke. A guy and a girl, each balancing a cup of coffee and a bagel stood over me.
“Excuse us,” he said. “There are no other chairs available. Would it be okay if we sat with you?”
I wasn’t pleased. But I was trained to be polite – mostly. “Fine,” said, piling up my books. “But I have studying to do, so don’t bother me.” (Well, I did say mostly polite)
They took their seats and after a few minutes, the whispering began. The guy poked the girl with his elbow, “You ask her.”
The girl poked him back, “No. You ask her.”
Back and forth the whispering went at least a half-dozen times. Finally, I closed my book with a slam and demanded, “What!”
The girl said, “Who do you say Jesus Christ is?”
I answered. “Jesus Christ is the Son of God, second person of the Trinity, fully human and fully divine. Now leave me alone”
There was silence. One beat. Two. Three…ten. Then the guy asked, “And what difference has that knowledge made in your life?”
“None.” I thought the conversation was done. I mean, that’s how one gets rid of Jesus people, right? Give them an answer they don’t expect.
Then he asked, “Would you like it to?”
And that’s when, like Jericho, the walls came tumbling down. I packed up my books and we found a quiet corner on campus where we prayed. Not that I didn’t still have doubts. When I was preparing for bed that night I asked myself, “What have I gotten myself into?” But I consoled myself with the thought that it was a large campus and I wasn’t likely to ever see the pair of them again, so no sweat. However, the very next evening there was a knock on my front door. The girl, Sue, had driven up from Kenosha to bring me to a Bible study at her home. And that’s how I became involved in InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, even becoming an officer of the club the next year.
That all happened fifty years ago this month. Fifty years. Half a century. So, after fifty years, do I have it all together? Nope. It has been fifty years during which I lost my parents, three older siblings, and two nephews. It has been fifty years in which I have become the guardian for my developmentally disabled younger brother and my developmentally disabled uncle. It has been fifty years of great jobs, good jobs, terrible jobs and job loss. Half of those fifty years have been spent below the federal poverty level. It has been fifty years of arthritis, fibromyalgia, recurring ovarian cancer, and clinical depression.
So what can I say after fifty years of not having it all together? Simply this. God is good. All the time.
What makes me think I have anything of value to say to teens?
Two weeks ago, I got a “nudge” to write this. I resisted at first, but eventually gave in. Even as I typed I was asking myself, “What am I supposed to do with this?” Thus the sentence, “this document will likely never see the light of day.”
I’ve been reading a number of articles over the last few years of how teens and college students raised in Christian homes are abandoning the faith. And I thought I could articulate a possible reason: unanswered prayer.
I have seen this in several families I know. Their parents, my age or younger, were enthusiastic members of Evangelical churches that preached a form of Christian triumphalism. “God answers prayers, God had a plan to prosper you, all things work together for good, God won’t give you anything more than you can handle” etc. And as a six-seven-eight year old, those kids joyfully believed. But then difficulties happened: bullying, injuries, illnesses, financial setbacks…either to themselves or people they cared about. Their reality just didn’t match what they had heard about God, so they came to a crossroads: either their reality wasn’t real or God wasn’t real (or if He was real, He just didn’t care). That was the conclusion I had come to.
So. I wish I could tell them Jesus said, “In this world, you will have trouble,” and that means more than just a bad acne outbreak. I want to tell them, you most likely will not understand why those troubles have come your way. You may not feel capable of dealing with them. The pain is just too much. The silence of God is just too deafening.
But.
That’s okay. You don’t have to feel “happy, happy, joy, joy.” If you weep, Jesus weeps with you. If you are in pain, physical, psychological, or spiritual, Jesus has felt that pain. If you are weak, He is strong. His love for you never fails. Even if you fail, even if you turn away, He will be waiting for you. You may or may not have some sort of tangible manifestation of His presence, but He is with you and will always be with you and that is a foundation upon which you can build your life.