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Does Your Child’s Cell Phone Preach Another Gospel?

Russell Moore

Dean of Theology, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

 

I’m afraid I’m not the most popular pastor with the ten to fourteen-year-old demographic in my church right now. I took on an issue, parenthetically, yesterday that caused frenzied looks and agape mouths. I dared to question the theology of text-messaging.

Rifling through some things the other day I found some church bulletins from my home congregation from the 1980s. All over the back of them I can see my teenage handwriting, interspersed with that of my youth group friends. There’s some tic-tac-toe there, and some plans being made for after-church Capture the Flag games, and so on.

I realized that the pre-teens and teenagers in my congregation won’t ever have such things, not because they’re too holy to ever pass a note in church, but because cell-phone technology has made it as easy, and as temporal, as a text-message.

Text-messaging is easy, and can easily break the boredom of a classroom or a family dinner, and it can put one in touch with people one’s parents never know one is “talking” to. That’s easily enough remedied by Christ-following parents, but I wonder if the cellphone isn’t being used as just one more opportunity to preach a misleading gospel to our kids.

The formation and discipline of children, after all, is built on the pattern of God’s fatherly discipline of his people (Heb 12:3-11), seen in his discipline of Israel (Deut 8:1-20) and, ultimately, in his discipleship of the incarnate Christ (Luke 2:20, John 5:19-20; Heb 2:10). Our discipline of our families is rooted, then, in the Fatherhood “from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named” (Eph 3:14).

I wonder, then, when it comes to cell phones, how many parents do precisely what our Father never does, and never will do. James tell us, “Let no one say when he is tempted, ‘I am being tempted by God,’ for God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself tempts no one” (James 1:14). The Apostle Paul tells us that “God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it” (1 Cor 10:13).

That’s why our God, through the Law of Moses, treats his people as a tightly-governed child “under guardians and managers until the date set by his father” (Gal 4:2). He carefully works us toward maturity, seeing that we’re faithful in small things before putting us over many things. That’s what a good and loving Father does.

A pre-teen or a teenager with unrestricted cell-phone usage (or Internet or television consumption) is being placed in a very, very difficult place of temptation. The company of that young man or woman is now away from the scrutiny of parents, and is now left only to his or her discretion or conscience.  Are there some young Christians who can handle such? Of course. Should you assume your child is one of them? Your Father is more careful of you than that.

First of all, pre-teens and teenagers, simply, brace yourself, don’t need cellphones. I know you’re immediately responding with safety issues, etc. Nonetheless, for thousands of years pre-teens and teenagers have safely grown to adulthood without having communication devices in their pockets. Pre-teens and teenagers all over the world do it right now, and they survive.

Second, if your child does have a cellphone, this means you have a cellphone. Your responsibility is to know about every call, and the identity of every person text-messaging your son or daughter. You don’t have time to monitor this? Then you don’t have time for your child to have a cellphone.

This doesn’t mean you have to turn your house into an Inquisition hall. It simply means your child knows that you love him or her enough to check in frequently to see what’s going on in life. It also means that you communicate clearly that the child doesn’t have a personal cellphone, autonomous of your authority. It’s your cellphone, and your child is using it.

Communicating your love to your child means communicating your involvement. The gospel message is one of Fatherhood and sonship, of a Father who knows the hairs on our head (Luke 12:7), who fights for his children when they’re tested, tempted, or mistreated. Picture that kind of God to your children, even if they grumble and complain at first. So did we, and all those before us, when we were first delivered from our respective Pharaohs into a Father’s house.


Russell Moore is Dean of the School of Theology and Senior Vice President for Academic Administration at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and executive director of the Carl F. H. Henry Institute for Evangelical Engagement. Dr. Moore is the author of The Kingdom of Christ: The New Evangelical Perspective (Crossway, 2004) and the forthcoming Adopted for Life: The Priority of Adoption for Christian Families and Churches (Crossway, May 2009).

Website: RussellMoore.com

 

Most Recent User Comments
silencedogood
3/4/2009 1:38 PM
I think lespaul506 is missing the point. "A pre-teen or a teenager with unrestricted cell-phone usage"

The unrestricted usage is key. When our children have physical friends we don't allow unrestricted access, we have guidelines etc & want to know who our children are spending time with & we want to know their parent's info also. Technology circumvents parental authority easily.

Modest privacy is one thing, but secrecy is another. Secrecy provides the opportunity for temptation, & the only reason for secrecy is to hide what the child doesn't want the parents to know. If they are doing what is right why hide it?

The author is saying that we need to be as aware of the children's cell phone/virtual use as we are of their physical relationships, because it is far too easy for Christian teens to be tempted & fall, because of their immaturity, to this technology if there is no oversight/accountability.

Children need parents not friends, & discipline should always be loving but resolute.
lespaul506
2/20/2009 9:06 PM
I'm absolutely appalled that you would suggest parents know about every call and text that their child is sending/receiving. Is that how we're to teach children about trust? What about teaching your child right from wrong and giving them the ability to do so on their own? Think about when you were a teen and how you would have responded to this kind of invasion!
lespaul506
2/20/2009 9:06 PM
While it is correct that teens do not need cellphones, I'm sure your parents said the same thing to you at that age. That's how technology works, and the problem is not with having cell phones, it's how they're used. "The company of that young man or woman is now away from the scrutiny of parents, and is now left only to his or her discretion or conscience." Exactly! You as a parent should be teaching your child integrity so that their discretion is proper.

"Nonetheless, for thousands of years pre-teens and teenagers have safely grown to adulthood without having communication devices in their pockets." The amish and your parents could have told you that for thousands of years people have gotten by without such technological advances as the zipper or the internal combustion engine, but would you give up such niceties? The problem is not with the technology, but with the lack of proper parenting.

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