We tell our children to build heroes. To have people in
their lives to mentor them. To look to for guidance and growth. To observe. To
respect. To emulate. We want this for our children. We want voices in their
lives to echo our own values when they get to the age where they are growing
away from us, into independent thinkers, young people who are starting to make
choices on their own.
We want good examples for them. People who inspire. People
to whom they can look up to. And there is something amazing in the pure
innocence of the trust that our young people hand over to those mentors and
heroes in their lives.
But when that trust is broken, it is a hard fall down.
Because there are no pedestals taller than the ones constructed by the innocent.
The ripples go wide, and the silt and muck turned
up, clouds visibility for a while.
We’ve told our children to build heroes.
What do we tell them when their heroes fall?
1.
God loves the fallen. God loves the broken. He
loves those who have toppled from their pedestals. And he calls us to treat others as we want to
be treated. That can be a huge challenge in some circumstances. This is an easy
and glib statement. And reality, reality is not at all easy. And you cannot
stop on this point. It has to be combined with the next.
2.
Consequences are real. An Olympian failing a
drug test is disqualified. An NFL player breaking the rules is suspended. A
brilliant teacher breaking the rules of conduct is fired. There is a backlash
of public opinion surrounding a political figure after indiscretions come to
light.
a.
Sometimes those consequences are far removed –
not many of us run in social circles that include Olympians, Senators, or NFL
players and so the consequences are also removed.
b.
But sometimes we are up to our necks in the
consequences. Children cannot see their father because of a restraining
order. Relationships that were in place
cannot be re-instated. The failure of a
hero sours participation in a sport or activity.
c.
Showing the love of God gets tricky, because
sometimes the consequences make the ground after a heroes fall filled with
rubble and pits. It’s not easy to know what to do.
3.
Don’t distil the chaos and complexity for
children. It is there, recognize it. Recognize the push and pull of forgiveness
and justice. Love and consequence.
Acknowledge that there is a messy world we live in and how we should act
and react is not always clear.
4.
Give time and space for emotion. Losing heroes
is a tough process. In time the pedestals will grow shorter, the trust will be
given less completely. It’s a coming of age that is hard. Even for adults, who
watch leaders falter it is hard. Give feelings their room, acknowledge them and
allow them space. Anger is ok. Disappointment is ok. Sorrow is ok. Grieve the fall of heroes. And
grieving is a process that takes time.
5.
Pray. Pray for the fallen, pray for those caught
in the ripples, pray for those who cannot yet see through the muck stirred up,
and pray for those who can. Pray for wisdom to know what to do, what to say.
And in so many cases, what not to say. Pray for yourself. Pray for your
children. Pray for the heroes they have in their lives, both the ones now and
the ones in the future, the shattered and the unbroken. Pray with your children
as they grieve, as they move forward. I was reminded today that prayer comes so
often from our emotions. Spend time sharing those emotions with your children.
Spend time praying together.
6.
Given the age of your children and the depth of
grief, take a look at the leaders in the Bible. They were shown in context as
fully human, fully broken people with flaws and sins that gave way to
consequences in their lives. Sometimes
we don’t tell our kids that Noah had issues with drinking, that Abraham had
issues with honesty, that King David had issues with adultery (and murder). We
only tell them the pretty parts of those stories. And you have to be cautious
because some children don’t need the fall of one hero compounded with another
right away. But in time and with age, our kids need to get a fuller picture of
what the Bible presents. Because it gives us a totally unflattering, realistic
picture of all humanity including the leaders, including the heroes. And in
that blatant honesty it also presents a God who loved us in spite of it. There is power in this picture, and release
from human pedestals. It opens up whole new areas of discourse and thought.
What do we tell our children when heroes fall.
We tell them that heroes are not any different from the rest
of us.
And that God loves us even though we are broken.
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