This is a continuation of a review of the movie Divided. See the first part here.
The
main issue in regards to youth leaving the church is an abandonment of
the Gospel and true Christianity in our homes. Fathers are not teaching
their children in the ways of God because they do not know God
themselves. The producers of this movie are overtly concerned about what
happens at our church gatherings, and they should be much more
concerned about the homes of our youth. Age segregation for Sunday
school will be like a drop in the bucket compared to the outpouring of
teaching and love from a true, biblical father. I do not see the
dismantling of age segregated teaching during church meetings as the
cure-all for getting kids to "stick with" the church. Fathers will not
automatically start teaching their kids in the manner that they should.
The producers of the film do say that youth ministers may not
necessarily go away if you follow their plan. Their role would simply
shift from teachers to equippers, giving fathers the support, training,
and encouragement needed to be the teachers they are called to be. I
believe this a good thing. But, once again, they are setting the
argument up as an either/or proposition.
Next, if the segregated teaching of the youth in a church leads them
away from the influence of their fathers and brings them into
worldliness, then you have a fundamental problem in the church itself.
The problem is not necessarily youth groups; the problem is youth groups
in the hands of heretical men who parade themselves as ministers of
God. It's not that they do youth ministry, it's that they do it in the
name of God whom they do not know. Looking at the American landscape,
one would have to say that the majority of our churches are really not
churches anyway. They are populated and led by those who are
unconverted. They have a form of Godliness . . . well, actually, most do
not. They just use His name. So the problem is not the youth group
itself. There is a root of evil that must be addressed. The producers
show and talk about the worst of the worst in youth ministry, but they
don't address Sunday school teachers and youth leaders who are teaching
solid, Biblical principles. What if a father teaches their children all
week long, and for two hours a week another teacher gives them solid
teaching as well? Isn't that a reinforcement, not a tearing away? Keep Reading...
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