Many of our young people these days are confused. Some have never been taught right from wrong. So many have no knowledge that God loves them or that Jesus died for their sins. So they try anything that will take away their fear and confusion. They turn to drugs or alcohol trying to forget. Or maybe they turn to sexual activity, even to changing their minds. A girl might decide she will handle her confusion better if she pretends she is a boy, dressing and living the part. The boy might do the same. And there are adults who have made up a word for it and call it trans gender.
We adults are confused too. We wonder what has happened to our world. We used to depend on our government, thinking they will make everything okay. But they seem to be as mixed up as we are. So we turn to protesting, carrying signs against every little thing we think is wrong whether it is or not. Many adults have given up going to church and many of our churches are as mixed up as their adults. Because of that, the adults have given up and don’t even tell their children about God or Jesus and that brings us back to our children’s confusions.
There is an answer! God still lives and waits for our prayers. We must pray urgently, not just bless our family or bless this food, but for God to bring us closer to him, repent of , not only our sins, but the sins of our country and ask Him for forgiveness. I have heard, even recently, that God doesn’t care any more, but that is the evil one talking. God loves us, and Jesus died for our sins. And we must pray, all of us, before our country isn’t our country anymore.
That is today. It wasn’t that way in my little northern Minnesota town. Remember I’m 92 years young now. I lived in town and had to walk about a mile to the outskirts of town where the school was. I felt a little jealous when the school bus came into the school’s driveway and let the kids out. The bus was so neat. Why couldn’t we have a bus too? The bus was pulled by two horses. It didn’t have any windows, just canvas squares that you could roll up or down, and it had a coal-burning stove inside. It had wheels when the weather was good. But when it snowed, as it did most of the school year, it had sled runners.