16
HOW TO GUARD AGAINST
IMMORALITY & THE OCCULT
When children from nine years of age upward are led to believe that
[contemporary teen novels] reflect how most people live, then their conduct will
certainly be influenced. . . . If more acceptable conduct is desired by society,
then society must hold before young people more acceptable conduct.1
LITERATURE THAT FAILS to thrill, titillate, or terrorize doesn’t get far in
today’s secular marketplace. Shallow and provocative substitutes for good
literature seduce rather than build noble character. Traditionally, the
classroom has been a purveyor of character-building books. It still is, but what
kind of values does it now build?
When my son was in the eighth grade, his English teacher required her students
to read Jay Mclnerney’s Bright Lights, Big City. The setting: A nightclub for
singles, in the wee hours of the night. The hero: “You.”
You spot a girl at the edge of the dance floor who looks like your last chance
for earthly salvation. . . . There she is in her pegged pants, a kind of doo-wop
retro ponytail pulled off to the side, as eligible a candidate as you are likely
to find this late in the game. The sexual equivalent of fast food.
She shrugs and nods when you ask her to dance. You like the way she moves, the
oiled ellipses of her hips and shoulders. After the second song, she says she’s
tired. She’s at the point of bolting when you ask her if she needs a little
pick-me-up.
“You’ve got some blow?” she says.
“Is Stevie Wonder blind?” you say.
She takes your arm and leads you into the Ladies’ [room]. A couple of spoons and
she seems to like you just fine, and you are feeling very likable yourself. A
couple more. This woman is all nose.
“I love drugs,” she says, as you march toward the bar.
“It’s something we have in common,” you say.
“Have you ever noticed how all the good words start with D? . . . You know.
Drugs. Delight. Decadence.”
“Debauchery,” you say, catching the tune now.
“Dexedrine. . . .”
“Delinquent.”2
A discussion with my son’s teacher resulted in a change in reading assignments.
Yet it takes more than an occasional win to slow society’s downward spiraling.
In Amusing Ourselves to Death, mass media critic, the late Neil Postman,
compared the chilling prophecies of two authors, George Orwell and Aldous
Huxley:
Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth
would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a
captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied
with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal
bumblepuppy. . . . In [Orwell’s] 1984 . . . people are controlled by inflicting
pain. In [Huxley’s] Brave New World, they are controlled by inflicting pleasure.
In short, Orwell feared that what we hate will ruin us. Huxley feared that what
we love will ruin us.3
Postman suggests that Huxley, not Orwell, was right. I believe that if Huxley
was right, Orwell’s reality will follow. New Age optimists, who believe man’s
inherent goodness will lead him on an upward journey to spiritual perfection
have, in Huxley’s words, “failed to take into account man’s almost infinite
appetite for distractions.”4
America still reads, but popular books now aim to entertain, not inform. Thrills
sell. Facts don’t. A charismatic world leader needs no military weapons, only
promises, to take control over a hedonistic and non-thinking people.
I am not a pessimist. Our King has won the war, filled us with Himself, and
promised us a glorious future. We don’t need to fear anything—other than turning
our backs on God.
STEP ONE: PERSONAL PREPARATION
ARE children being taught to read discerningly, or do they accept whatever is in
print simply because it is in print?
Pray as a family for discernment and wisdom. Don’t let fear of offensive
literature keep your family from finding and feasting on wonderful books.
Commit yourself to a deeper knowing of the Word of God. Continue a daily Bible
study program together. If children know truth, they will spot the lies.
Enjoy books together that demonstrate God’s values. Read-aloud times build in
most children a deep love for reading, while they also enable you to direct your
children’s taste for enriching books. “While the average first-grade student
reads from a primer with only 350 words, his listening vocabulary approaches
10,000 words, according to the Council for Basic Education.”5
When you read aloud to your children, they learn to associate wholesome books
with good times.
STEP TWO: BE ALERT TO DECEPTION IN BOOKS
A crossless version of Christianity fits the New Age lie that all can be
one—with or without Jesus. It denies man’s need for redemption and, in effect,
makes man his own savior. “For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish
foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God” (1 Corinthians
1:18).
Examine gift books for children. Some of Audrey and Don Wood’s attractive books
are filled with enticing New Age magic. Other picture books, like The Witches
Handbook by Malcolm Bird, treat witchcraft as a game for all to enjoy.
Check contemporary children’s poetry. While some poems are superb, others are
grotesque and macabre.
Check fantasy game books. They make you the hero—but what beliefs do you follow?
What mental pictures will your imagination create? As you make decisions
appropriate to the story, will occult forces become part of your thinking? Some
titles will tip you off—like Seas of Blood and Castle Death—but many others
sound deceptively innocuous.
Be alert to what your child’s peers read. Discuss their influence on your child
with him. During the winter of 1989, our son’s eighth-grade peers read Cycle of
the Werewolf by Stephen King, master of occult horror.
New kinds of joke books are captivating today’s readers. The object of the humor
may be sex, marriage, parents, or God. Some of the illustrations may be
pornographic. While we are in dire need of healthy humor, we don’t need to laugh
at corruption and delight in immorality. God wants us to love, accept, and
forgive each other. But He also tells us to discipline and control our own human
nature. Discuss these Scriptures with your child: Leviticus 11:44, 20:26; and
Matthew 5:6, 8. Review Romans 12:1-2, 9, and Romans 13:14.
STEP THREE: CHECK YOUR LIBRARY
Befriend your local librarian. Learn your library’s guidelines and limitations.
Know its definition of adult literature and whether or not children can check it
out.
Many decision makers deny essential differences that separate childhood from
adulthood. Children have neither the knowledge, wisdom, or experience to make
adult decisions and carry adult responsibility. Adult movies, television, and
books feed children adult-sized mental stimulants that they are unprepared to
handle.
Scan the books promoted in special displays for children and for young adults
(teenagers). Do they promote anti-Christian religions or poor values? Do
biographies promote social philosophies that oppose Christianity? Is the
children’s section balanced with books that promote other points of view? If
not, our libraries become like the media—a political force with incredible power
to influence children according to their own bias.
Discuss your concerns with the librarian. Observe the guidelines in chapter two.
Suggest solutions. While your local librarians may share your values, the
American Library Association denies the need to shield children from certain
kinds of adult literature and illustrations.
STEP FOUR: JOIN IN THE BATTLE FOR TRUTH
Continue to pray with other Christian families for God’s wisdom and direction.
Write those who advertise in offensive magazines. One voice does make a
difference.
Keep an up-to-date church library and encourage other families to support and
use it.
Let God encourage you with biblical passages that promise victory to those who
trust and follow Him. See Psalm 25:1, 4-5; Exodus 14:13-14; Deuteronomy 1:30;
20:1, 4.
PREPARING CHILDREN FOR SPIRITUAL BATTLE
REMEMBER, this is spiritual warfare. God’s enemy fights as hard as ever to win
the hearts and loyalties of our children—and he has added all kinds of high-tech
tools to his arsenal.
To resist his strategies, they first need to understand them and have in their
hearts the Word of God. That’s why God told His people long ago to base all
conversation—day and
night—on His unchanging truth and to teach His truth diligently to our children
(see Deuteronomy 6:6-7).
Everything we say must reflect the reality of God—His love, His omnipotence, His
promises, and His warnings. To prove that our God is far greater than the
plethora of alternatives that are out there, our lives must demonstrate faith in
the midst of difficulties and His triumph in the midst of turmoil. This is
possible, not by our own strength, but by His power and grace. Then, seeing His
greatness, children learn to trust His promises.
Likewise, the armor of God (Ephesians 6:10-18) begins and ends with the power of
His Word. First, we put on the belt of truth, which holds all the other
pieces—His righteousness, peace, faith, and salvation—in place. The last part,
“the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God,” is simply His truth and
promises memorized, remembered, and affirmed as we face each day’s challenges.
This two-edged sword is our main weapon in every battle. It exposes lies and
uncovers deceptions while it strengthens our faith and lifts our hearts. The
world can’t understand it, and many so-called Christians despise it. But to
those who love God, it brings the hope, strength, joy, and perseverance needed
to walk with Him in peace no matter what happens.
(For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the
pulling down of strong holds;) Casting down imaginations, and every high thing
that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity
every thought to the obedience of Christ. (2 Corinthians 10:4-5)