Wednesday, June 17, 2009
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Even Teenagers Are God's Creation
Bonnie St. John 

So Saul clothed David with his armor, and he put a bronze helmet on his head; 
he also clothed him with a coat of mail. David fastened his sword to his armor
and tried to walk, for he had not tested them. And David said to Saul, "I 
cannot walk with these, for I have not tested them." So David took them off.
(1 Samuel 17:38-39 NKJV) 

Our children today are very busy trying to fit into someone else's armor--to 
fit in with the kings of our society and try to pass themselves off as someone
other than the unique and special person that God made. How do we reach our 
children so that they could have the courage David did? If a rock star was
offering his clothes, his lifestyle, and his friends to a young person face to 
face, how many do you think would have the courage to say, "No thanks, that
just doesn't fit me."

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David was confident that he was loved and valued by God just for who he was: a 
little shepherd boy. He knew that what God had taught him in the fields,
God could use to vanquish his enemies on the battlefield. I still feel awe for 
this young man who turned down the king's armor and went off to face a giant.
Basically David was saying, "I don't need to be something that I am not." 

That story inspires me to see the places in my life where I am trying to be 
someone else, too. What messages am I sending by the clothes I wear? The diets
I start? The career ambitions I have? We need to be the example for the next 
generation of being enough as we are. 

Maybe we don't reach as many young people as we could because we are trying to 
teach them to wear the armor we think they should wear. We mean well, but
we may be trying to fit them into our own idea of who they should be. Saul 
meant well in offering his armor. 

Instead we could tell them that God loves them and created each and every one 
of us for a special purpose. We could be showing them how to find themselves
in the Bible instead of just making them conform. If we could teach each child 
to honor what God did when creating them, maybe they wouldn't feel the need
to become an "Emo," a "Goth," or a "Skinhead." They might not be looking for 
confidence through plastic surgery and designer labels. Instead, they could
become: themselves. 

Are you reaching and teaching our children to be themselves--a unique person 
created by God? Reach out and help them to explore who they really are, not
just who we want them to be.

Bonnie St. John
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