reb•e•lu•tion (reb’el lu shen) n. a teenage rebellion against the low expectations of an ungodly culture.

1/27/2006

Writing Contest: Runner-Up — Mr. Woehr

We are pleased to present the following submission by Christian school teacher, Mr. Woehr. Thank you, sir, for you submission. We will be using your description (at the very end) of what we're doing with The Rebelution... God bless you, sir!
Rebellion vs. Rebelution
by Mr. Woehr

As a student of humanity, I find Mr. Heer's philosophy seemingly true in its historical perspective, that is, that children/young adults often attempt to overthrow the dominance of ethics of their parents' generation. (Even Socrates was once accused of being a rebellious influence on the youth of his day.) The difficulty with this attempt, however, is that, however noble these children's ethics may be, their children will attempt the same kind of overthrow against their ideals. So that, given a 100% success rate of overthrows, the pendulum of ideals will swing to its opposing apogees every 15-20 years. It kind of lends a sense of hypocrisy to say "Question Authority," when one questions the authority who says that.

Thankfully, most young adults, by the time they reach their 25th or 30th birthday, have matured enough emotionally both to realize the wisdom in their parents' ways of thinking and to reject the folly contained therein. Often, this maturity level comes about through having children of their own, when they feel how their parents felt when they made wrong decisions as children. Thus, the curse with which nearly every parent at some point curses their child ("Someday you will have children, and I hope they will be just like you!") comes true. Yet it simultaneously becomes a blessing when that adult child understands why his parents did what they did, even though at the time, it had made little sense to him.

As a 40-something Christian school teacher (albeit childless), I am both relieved and grateful for a blog-site such as the Rebelution. The relief comes because of the realization that there are youngsters out there who have not caved in to the natural and peer pressures to ovethrow their parents' ideals, and the gratefulness because there is a site to which I can steer my teenaged students that will not undo the Christian principles that their parents, church, and school have striven to plant in their minds.

Ergo: Yes, I think you fellows are doing a good thing, i.e., rebelling against rebellion.