Sunday, March 11, 2012

Guiding the Blind (or what I like to call "Raising Teenagers")

The other day at youth group we played a game. I told the youth we needed a volunteer who was going to be blind-folded and another volunteer who was going to be the guide. We then took the two out of the room while I explained the other details to the rest of the group. I gave them a few minutes too construct an obstacle course through the room. The harder the obstacle course the better.

I then told them that they also needed to include their own bodies as part of the course. And that the blind-folded volunteer will also be carrying a tray of glasses filled with water one-handed, palm up while he traversed the obstacle course.

So they put together a crazy course and placed their bodies throughout and then we had the blind-folded volunteer begin to navigate the course without saying a word, listening very closely to the volunteer guide.

Our bind-folded volunteer actually made his way through the chairs, tables and bodies laid before him quite well. It wasn't easy. But with caution and, at times, just plain being slow as he was guided through, he made it to the end.

Afterward I explained to the youth that the obstacle course represented the teenage years. The blind-folded volunteer represented a typical teenager. The guide represented the teenager's parent.

The fact that they had to lay their bodies throughout the course while the blind-folded volunteer carried a tray of glasses filled with water represents the fact that when a teenager doesn't listen to his parents, it is usually a very messy ending that involves more than just the teenager involved.

Teenagers today are brought up in a culture where every song they listen to, every sitcom they watch is screaming at them to NOT listen to the guidance of their parents. The culture tells teens that they don't need their parents. They have enough knowledge and wisdom on their own without parents interfering and making their life miserable.

But reality is, teenagers cannot see the obstacles that lie ahead of them. That is why parents are so essential in their life. The parent can guide them through every obstacle that the culture throws at them. But the teenager needs to listen to this guidance. Sometimes...scratch that, most of the time, teens think they don't need the guidance and that they can make it on their own, but pain and difficulty are all that kind of thinking brings.

It was just a silly game...but I think we made a pretty profound point. Just read through Proverbs. Over and over again you see the phrase, "My son, listen to my words!" Not too different than guiding a blind-folded volunteer through a crazy obstacle course during youth group.

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