Faith Filled Family Magazine July 2016 | Page 21

Independence in Teens Requires Parental Wisdom By Clive McLaren Years ago, parents had sole rights to their children’s upbringing, behaviour, and future prospects; they were just children until they reached twenty one becoming adults. Then in the 1920’s the term ‘teenager’ came into use and with it recognition that this age group needed the freedom to develop ideas and purpose for themselves. But it wasn’t until the period after WW2 that the teen-generation became a phenomenon. Pop music, rock ‘n’ roll, the widening availability of the automobile, high schools, and university educa- tion away from the family home became magnets for millions of teenagers. The consumer society, illicit alcohol, drugs and the sexual revolution were beginning to create ‘freedoms’ never dreamt of by most people before the war. Secular humanism increasingly challenged the accepted norms of Christian values. Of course, rebellion from parental authority has been around since Cain and Abel, but within Judeo-Christian culture, it was and still is accepted that children obey their parents, even into adult-hood, in the home at least. However, our sophisticated Western social norms have offered many alternatives to the Christian nuclearfamily. Now rights of individuals can be more powerful in law than the rights of parents. Our youngsters are deeply influenced by their peers, consumerism, Hollywood, music, and celebrity culture. Alternative philosophies and spirituality can often seem far more attractive than what our ‘boring old parents and preachers’ tell us! Before we try to convince our teens to resist such worldly influences, we must begin by asking ourselves as parents;