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BY
JENNIFER MAE BARIZO
We enter this new
millennium as amateurs, as children even, not knowing and perhaps not
even understanding what the future may hold. This trek into the
unknown is almost like a gutsy, potentially gory experiment. We are
the lab rats, this precarious planet is the lab. But we are also the
scientists, taught how to hypothesize, observe, calculate, and
conclude. Our Manual teaches us how to live; our Instructor has
breathed into us this life. We have all been students at one time in
our lives, and recall those endless
moments before the bell would ring, or those last droning words of the
professor before class finally ended. Or those bittersweet days right
before graduation, when we clung to each moment, knowing that things
would never be the same again.
Things will not be
the same again. Never again will we scrawl 19- on a check. Never again
will we live in the twentieth century. We will no longer share the
same millennium with Bach or Galileo, or Einstein. We will probably
never again need record players or typewriters or slide rules. And we
hope we will never again have the chance to celebrate a new millennium
on this old scarred earth.
God, who is
timeless and omnipresent, gave us the concept of time to motivate us
and to guide the processes of our lives.
As the millennium
approaches, a plethora of films that attempt to depict the end of time
have surfaced at the top of the charts. Movies portraying the world
ending in a giant tidal wave or a massive meteoric explosion or by a
killer virus have all contributed to the world's frenzy and
apprehension concerning the millennium and the end of the world.
Richard Leone,
president of the Twentieth Century Fund, wrote: "History records
that, as the last turning of the millennium approached, much of
Christendom expected nothing less than the end of the world."
Perhaps that is why a sense of urgency is in the air.
A Wake-up Call
Pierre Scott, a 22-year-old from Greenville, North Carolina, says
that the new millennium is a wake-up call for us to start spreading
God's love, but it shouldn't be.
"We shouldn't
just now start to live as though Christ was coming tomorrow. We should
live that way always," Scott says.
Michelle Ask, an
18-year-old from Colton, California, expresses fear about the future.
"I don't think
Jesus will come on January 1, but the whole concept of the new
millennium brings me closer to my family and to God. It's as if it's
the beginning of the end. We have to make clear-cut decisions. We have
to choose sides-we can't sit on the fence any longer." So what
about the future? The near future, such as January 2 and 3 and 4? What
happens the Sabbath after the new year? What happens at NET '01? What
is in the church's future?
"We are the
future of the church," Duane Gang, 21, city editor of Rutgers
University's Daily Targum, says with confidence about the youth of the
church. "Times have changed. In some ways the church hasn't
embraced those changes. It often tries to change youth to fit the
perception of how youth should act."
"There is an
inconsistency in how we teach our children. We want to teach them how
to be solid individuals, and how to be steadfast, but we want to let
them expand their horizons and fly," says Myjela Dona, from
Rockville, Maryland.
One youth said that
he was given rules about "movies, music, dancing, card playing,
coffee drinking, sex, alcohol, Sabbathkeeping, and bowling, but no one
explained to me how I should approach ethical dilemmas."
This disturbs a
great number of youth who think that it is fair to ask questions when
they are told that they are "not allowed."
Gang says that the
church needs to give explanations to youth.
"We like to
ask questions, and even to question authority."
What the overriding
sentiment seems to be is that pastors and teachers can talk
unceasingly about standards, punishments, and what is right or wrong,
but that is not what draws youth nearer to the Lord.
Kutasha Bryan, a
19-year-old from Puerto Rico, says that the adult's job is not just to
teach and reprimand, but to reach out and feed and mold. "I want
to see a glimpse of what Jesus is about," says Bryan.
A Turbulent
Story
Jesus, who lived and died two millennia ago, knew all along what
the future would bring. He probably feels an affinity with the youth
of today; He caused a disruption almost everywhere He went, and we
will always remember Him as young, never older than 33. His influence,
like that of many of today's youth, was global; He rebelled against
social norms; He wanted relationships and understanding, not blind
programmed lives; and He too had a story to tell.
The story of
today's youth is a turbulent one, and one that has not reached its
climax or its end.
Generation X, the
label given people born roughly between 1965 and 1985, characterizes a
group of people who are a little bit dysfunctional and disorganized.
Dwight Nelson, the NET '98 speaker who took a sabbatical to study
Generation X, spoke about them in an April 1998 interview printed in
the Adventist Review.
He said Generation
X is "the generation that comes from the most broken homes. The
generation that comes with the most latchkey kids. The generation that
comes with the most dysfunctional families. The generation that comes
with the most economic instability tied in with the social
dysfunction. And by the way, because of MTV, the entire planet is into
the same mind-set, the brokenness, the same sense of relational
longing."
The risks are high, and change is often painful
It's true. But that
does not make them less able to become ambassadors for Jesus Christ.
These are the same youth who are venturing far out of their comfort
zones as student missionaries for Christ. The same youth who are
spreading their talents of music and literature and drama and sports
to witness for their faith. The same youth who are, in little ways,
saving the world by being environmentally conscious. The same youth
who are using technology to make connections with people who have
never before had contact with the teachings of Jesus Christ.
The New England
Youth Ensemble, which has been spreading God's love through music for
more than a quarter of a century, is made up of young musicians
dedicated to their mission. Director Virginia-Gene Rittenhouse talks
of how they have been ambassadors for Christ:
"The group has
traveled to nearly 40 countries on their mission. In Russia, after the
walls of Communism came down, we played for nearly 30,000 people at
the evangelistic crusade in the great stadium in St. Petersburg. In
South Africa, the orchestra visited areas like Soweto and Guatema
[then dangerous areas] and joined with the hundreds of Africans
singing their native music. In Israel, we played in Bethlehem,
bringing the Israelis and Palestinians together in what was, as one
official called it, 'our one hour of peace.'"
Karen Studer, 22,
who was a student missionary in Belize, is part of a group of young
people participating in India 2000, a massive outreach program taking
place from December 20 to January 2. The project, sponsored by
Maranatha Volunteers International, will consist of building churches
and doing medical research in the country.
"I think it's
up to the youth to take the initiative. Sometimes adults frown on our
new ideas, but we can't take no for an answer. We have to be on fire.
We can make a difference," Studer says.
Using Change
Effectively
It was Karl W. Deutsch, professor of international peace at
Harvard University, who said that "the single greatest power in
the world today is the power to change. . . . The most recklessly
irresponsible thing we could do in the future would be to go on
exactly as we have in the past 10 or 20 years. I can imagine no more
dangerous policy than the conservatism that exists today."
Times have changed,
and we should embark upon this new threshold of the millennium devoted
to using change to our advantage. Youth are growing fast-children who
once were bouncing in their playpens are now racing through the
Internet; information that once was nearly impossible to procure is
suddenly at our fingertips. And though our church and its principles
should lead us through eternity, we must know that as society,
technology, preconceptions, and expectations shift, so too must our
methods of harvesting souls for the kingdom.
Everybody has their
"story of the century" etched deep in their subconscious or
lurking on the surface of their everyday lives. Stories that have
moved them, or that reflect their faith. Our story, the one of our
church, and of the young Ellen Harmon, is far from being finished. God
is still working with us, urging us to reexamine our propensities
toward narrow ideologies and to observe the outcomes of our actions.
The risks are high, and change is often painful, but with our hearts
and minds open we can have the opportunity to expose uncharted
possibilities that will enable us to spread the boundless love of
Christ throughout the world. We are all students, and all young at
heart. We must believe without a doubt that one day this extensive
experiment will end, when our Instructor will tell us that we can go
home.
Jennifer Mae
Barizo is a graduate student in New York City and a columnist for the Adventist
Review.
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