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Double standards have plagued
society from the dawn of history, but it is this generation and those
to follow which will pay the Piper. Adults set one group of standards
for their own conduct while prescribing another for the conduct of "The
Younger Generation". Mainliners in society have reserved privileges
for themselves while denying basic human rights and imposing stringent
limitations on certain minorities. One standard is for men, another for
women, usually imposed by male members of society.
As the pendulum swings in the other direction, we are witnessing not the
elimination of the double standard but a tragic distortion thereof. Extremists
of the "Now Generation" claim an unbridgeable gap exists between
them and those "over 30" who should not be trusted, but they
do not tell us of the trustworthiness of those who were once their peers
and who are now on our side of 30. Extremists among leaders of minority
groups, which are only now receiving certain of their just rights to a
degree not known in our nation before, embrace that double standard when
they advocate for themselves the same exclusivity and separation which
caused them so much pain for so many generations.
I offer you another idea which may be extreme to some of you. I offer
you Heaven which, according to Scripture, is a Kingdom awaiting all those
who wish to enter it, not after the demise of the flesh, but now, as we
walk and move in this corruptible body. I offer you the "Kingdom
of God and Its Righteousness" and all that which shall be added (Matt.
6:33) and forewarn you that Hell is waiting impatiently at the opposite
pole. Perhaps the idea of Heaven and Hell is too archaic a concept for
this ultraliberal society with its many shadings of truth, its variations
on the themes of good and evil, its radical attitude that everything lies
in a limitless area between good and evil, between the Heavenly and the
Hellish . . . a massive, all-encompassing, unproductive and self-defeating
gray zone.
Out of this attitude and out of this quality has come a rash of so-called
experts; gurus of a secular wisdom assailing us with their infallibilities
on every question which man, in prior times, handled with a certain humility
and discretion. No subject is too sacred, no mystery too deep that it
cannot be discussed in dogmatic detail by these magnificent magi of a
malleable mammon who hold out for the world the false gods of pleasure
and gratification that promise to solve all our problems; from the most
public, such as wide-spread poverty and starvation, to the most intimate
methods of living and loving.
Sadly, it is not these advocates and products of this gray zone concept
which are to be censured so much as those of us who stand by passively
and watch them gaining, day by day, one foot-hold after another in our
society. Not only do we allow them to glorify such scripturally forbidden
things as sexual aberrations of all types, abortions, pornography drugs
and negative life-styles which diminish our society, not only do we stand
idly by as they strive to convince our children that theirs is the only
way of life, but many of us, innocently or naively, condescend to follow
or to imitate some of these questionable champions of questionable causes
without asking to see their credentials.
Enough of this senseless and corrupting indecision. Christians must consider
that now is the time for them to make a decision either for Christian
activity to counter the influences of evil in our society or for complete
surrender to those influences. We are being engulfed in an ocean of permissiveness.
Discipline and self-respect are almost forgotten words. The ability to
censure sin out of a hatred for sin, and to admonish the sinner out of
love for the sinner seems to be a past-tense idea.
I submit to you that the evils of our time are not new to us nor unique
to our generation. St. Paul writes: "It is said that there is sexual
immorality among you so terrible that not even the heathen would be guilty
of it", (I Cor. 5:1). In referring to Christ's refusal to allow the
woman taken in adultery to be stoned by her accusers, His act of forgiveness
is almost always emphasized. His admonition to the woman to "go and
sin no more" is often overlooked.
We are suffering from an over-reaction to the excessive disciplines of
Puritans and Christians of the Middle Ages, from a Victorian hypocrisy
which was embraced by certain areas of our society out of which grew the
dualism which allowed racism and violence in all its forms. Finally, aware
of the real dangers inherent in that 19th century moralism, our society
became disenchanted and fearful to the point that we have abandoned, almost
entirely, the need for spiritual and moral disciplines essential to our
total health as individuals and as nations.
In the final analysis, we must decide if we are to be joined to things
Heavenly or things earthly. . . to the things of God or of Satan. We must
decide whether we will abide in that gray zone created by those whose
faith is uncertain or non-existent or to leap heavenward with our every
action and thought.
It boils down to whether we are believers of that contained in the Scriptures
we profess as being God-inspired, or followers after the purveyors of
fleshly fantasies.
From Word
Magazine
Publication of the Antiochian Orthodox
Christian Archdiocese of North America
February 1987
p. 14
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