GIFTS RECEIVED FOR MISSIONS IN JUNE 1980
CLASSIS EAST SOURCE AMOUNT
Clifton ladies’ aid Gift $ 230.00
CLASSIS MID WEST
Friend in Chicago Hts. Gift 100.00
Kalamazoo Pentecost Col. 1517.00
Norwich Pentecost Col. 2284.50
Friend in Mich. Gift 145.00
Grand Rapids Pentecost Col. 3028.26
Friend in Lansing Books 100.00
Friend in Grand Rapids Gift 10.00
Friend in Grand Rapids Gift 10.00
Unionville Pentecost Col. 497.61
Friend in Lynwood Gift 125.00
Hamilton Pentecost Col. 525.30
CLASSIS WEST
Rock Valley Pentecost Col. 790.76
Sioux Falls Pentecost Col. 292.60
Waupun Pentecost Col. 731.60
Sioux Center Pentecost Col. 1287.00
Sheboygan Pentecost Col. 967.60
CLASSIS FAR WEST
Lethbridge Pentecost Col. 1316.31
TOTAL $13,958.54
Dear friends,
Herewith we want to acknowledge everyone for their generous support for the mission of our congregations. May the Lord truly bless you and your gifts. The Lord give the prayer of the prophet Habakkuk which you can find in Habakkuk 3, there it became truly the cry of this prophet, “O Lord revive Thy work in the midst of the years, in the midst of the years make known, in wrath remember mercy.”
This prophet lived in a dark time, and we also are living in a dark time. The time of Habakkuk was the time shortly before Israel went in captivity in Babylon. Truly friends, we are living in a time where the Lord is speaking in so many ways with His judgments, with volcanoes, storms, heat, drought and floods. There is one judgment that is worse yet in our day, that’s the hardening of the heart.
This prophet wasn’t praying anymore for good crops, for prosperous business or for nice homes, or so many selfish things, but it was truly his cry, O Lord revive Thy work, for Thy work is the most important thing that we need on the journey to eternity. That work of the Holy Spirit we need on the mission field and at home. Friends, I would ask you all to read the 3 chapters of the book of Habakkuk.
The mission board had a nice meeting at Grand Rapids with the presence of Rev. Vergunst who is the mission clerk of the Netherlands. It was the first time that we had a Holland deputy meet with the mission board in America. Many things were properly discussed together.
Again we want to thank the congregations for their fine collections on Pentecost Day.
So far as we know our mission workers are well and busily working at their post, because most of the time they are short of help. We commend them all to the Lord.
American General Mission Fund Netherlands Reformed Churches of United States and Canada
John Spaans, Treasurer,
R.R. 3 Box 17
Plankinton, So. Dak. 57368
Phone 1-605-732-4539
IS TELEVISION REALLY SO BAD?
(The following article is written as a pastoral letter of warning against the evils of television on behalf of the 1980 Synod, and all facts are taken from studies conducted during the last ten years.)
We are living in a sin-sick, morally-degenerated, and pleasure-crazy world. Our society continually demands entertainment, amusements, and pastimes at an ever-increasing level.
What is the goal of this “continual-entertainment” spirit? To keep modern man “happily” busy.
In a certain sense, entertainment does succeed in its goal. It keeps thousands and millions busy.
The very words themselves reveal this fact. The word “amusement” comes originally from the French and literally means “to stare at fixedly so as to prevent musing or thinking”. The word “pastime” speaks for itself. It means to kill or use up time as a thing of little value; to pass time away. The root of the word “entertainment” means to divert. Thus it implies something which takes us away or diverts us from the normal, real world of everyday life.
In other words, entertainment, amusements, pastimes are things which keep us busy—busy avoiding the realities of life and truth as they are set down in God’s Holy Word. They keep us busy avoiding thinking about eternity, hell, heaven, sin, God, Christ, salvation, our own selves, and especially our necessity for a new heart.
But if entertainment succeeds in its first goal of making man busy it fails miserably in its second: happily busy. Never as in our day has there been so much restlessness, dissatisfaction, and yes, unhappiness—in spite of the millions who immerse themselves in the slavery of modern-day entertainment forms. With all our gadget-saving devices, our freedom from poverty, temporally, our multiplication of opportunities in nearly every walk and aspect of life, plus our continual drinking in of entertainment—in spite of all these things, no age has been so unhappy as modern man.
Entertainment can never give enough—it always leaves an empty feeling behind. The more it is practiced and relied on, the emptier it becomes.
It has turned our society into an object of pity, for we are a victim of its own system. Society goes full cycle from being pleasure-hungry to pleasure-mania to pleasure boredom.
But do you know what is even worse? Not only the world, but also the church has begun sliding down the devilish, unending slope of entertainment which can only end in nothingness, sin, and disastrous judgments.
Satan does not stop with liberal churches only. He comes also among us. We, who may hope that the truth is still amongst us—who know so well that the Word of God says, “Abstain from ALL appearance of evil”—who have it read to us from Sunday to Sunday, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me” —are also beginning to fall victim to the idolatrous god of entertainment.
Step-by-step some are beginning to look for new things—(in the church and outside of the church) to entertain and keep ourselves busy with. Step-bystep the old-fashioned, plain gospel message with its emphasis on the necessity of conversion, is being increasingly placed to one side. Less and less time is spent praying together as a family, reading religious books together with children, talking together in family circles about religious matters, catechism classes, and sermons that are preached or read.
Are we not all guilty? Do we not all fall short in experiencing the reality of the seriousness of life, death, the judgment day, and eternity? Today we have a carefree, laughing society, but you never read in the Bible that Jesus laughed. Rather, especially referring to our day, He said: “Watch, and pray, and again I say unto you watch!”
But by nature we don’t watch. By nature our question is “how far can I go and still not sin” instead of “how far can I flee from sin and avoid the very appearance of evil”?
At the very heart and center of our modern entertainment spirit stands TELEVISION. This is an obvious fact. 97% of Americans today have television sets in their homes and 91 % of all television time is dedicated solely for the purpose of entertainment. Entertainment-addiction and television-addiction cannot be separated from each other.
Our society has become TELE-HOLIC. On a night when wives do not leave home 95 out of 100 will spend it watching TV. 85% of their husbands will do likewise. 80% of teenagers will follow their parents’ example, and 75% of children will also spend their evening drinking in sin.
There are people, however, who actually do not believe that television becomes an object of slavery in the home, and for that reason we have to consider the power of it in the homes where it is allowed. I shall seek to show you from plain facts that a television owner usually becomes addicted to TV with respect to (A) TIME, (B) SIN, and (C) CONTROL.
(A) TIME. The average TV viewer spends 5½ hours daily watching TV. By the time an average American youth becomes 65 years old, he will have spent 14 years of his life watching TV (compared to 1 year spent in church, Sunday School, and catechism if he comes faithfully to all). In the U.S.A. children 3 to 5 years old spend 54 hours every week watching TV, which is 64% of their time awake. When the average graduate from high school receives his diploma at 17 years of age, he will have spent 11,000 hours of his life in school, but 22,000 hours watching TV. Every time an adult sits down to watch TV, he/she averages 3½ hours of watching time before turning the TV off. Children are glued to TV for an average time of 2½ hours per sitting. (Yet, is not 1½ hours in the house of God often too long?) Outside of sleeping, the average American will spend more time in his life watching TV than anything else—yes, even more than working. Do we not have a tele-holic society with respect to our precious, God-given time?
(B) SIN. TV is a flood of sin. It addicts its watchers against all 10 commandments.
First Commandment: Anything we put above God becomes an idol. Modern man has become addicted at putting TV before God.
Second Commandment: If not in reality, in practice TV has become a graven image in the hearts of nearly all of its watchers.
Third Commandment: TV causes its hearers to become addicted to hearing the name of the Lord used in vain. Profanity is used so often that it becomes an inoffensive thing. Few TV watchers realize that every time they willingly watch and hear such things, all those sins are ascribed to them on account of their willing participation.
Fourth Commandment: Even the Sabbath day is not holy enough for its watchers to keep it turned off, or, if a small percentage may still do so for conscience’s sake, yet the desire and craving for their idol remains even on the Lord’s Day.
Fifth Commandment: TV does anything but honor father and mother, continually degrading fatherhood and motherhood, and even frequently glorifying the disobedience of children. Family life, respect for authority, and obedience to government is repeatedly violated on program after program.
Sixth Commandment: Instead of “Thou shalt not kill”, one study reached the conclusion that by the time a child is 14 at least 18,000 violent assaults and murders take place in his own living room before his eyes. Another study confirmed that the average child between 5 and 13 years of age soaks in 1,300 murders each year, so that violence, assaults, and murders no longer speak the message of sin or its consequences even to a child. Murders, hatred, violent actions and words assume the role of normal behavior. The average child’s program contains 38 acts of violence per hour (adult program: 20). A New York City judge who spent his life in courts judging juvenile delinquents and teenage criminals has plainly said that those who have investigated the situation know that TV is a prime cause of crime. Another judge said: “Parents, one hour of TV can teach your children more crime, rebellion, smartaleck freshness, and sex than you can counteract in months if you work at it.”
The trouble with violence on TV is that it does not show the real consequences of violence. The guilt that is left behind in the soul of the murderer, the bereaved family, the orphaned children, the filled hospitals, and the solemn graveyards are not shown. Especially in children’s programs violence is often totally unreal. Their heroes are often crushed or blown into pieces and moments later reappear unscathed. TV is artificial violence glorified instead of showing real violence in all of its ugly and terrible long-term consequences. Is it a wonder then that there have been thousands of examples of tragedies nation-wide when children have “played TV together”?
Seventh Commandment: How can the TV viewer remain unaddicted with respect to the 7th commandment when 7 out of 8 references to sexual acts on TV take place between those who are not united in the bonds of sacred matrimony? How can he remain unaddicted when the TV viewer sees on an average of 3 times every hour intimate sexual behavior between unmarried adults? How can he remain unaddicted when countless circumstances, conversations, immodest dress, actions, and behavior all point to the excitement, glory, and acceptability of sining against the 7th commandment in a totally false, unrealistic, and animalistic way?
Eight Commandment: Can an hour be found that goes by where the TV-world does not unashamedly steal before its audiences. It is no wonder that thousands of thefts in real life have been patterned after TV plots and heroes.
Ninth Commandment: False witnessing against a neighbor becomes a very normal, acceptable, and even expected form of behavior on television shows.
Tenth Commandment: Covet is a desirable word for TV viewers. Constantly they are reminded through advertisements of a stream of unending luxuries which they are told they shall never be happy without. There is always something they must have which they don’t have. The programs themselves are not an exception. For one man to covet another man’s wife (or vice versa) is daily the main theme of entire shows.
From beginning to end TV glorifies sin. On TV the only thing that is sin is morality. TV applauds sin, approves sin, and forces its watchers to minimize sin through tens of thousands of countless repetitions. Over and over again the traditional family life is despised as old-fashioned: fatherhood is replaced with heroism via pathways of sin, motherhood is rejected as being below dignity, obedience from children is laughed upon as being too boring to be entertaining.
TV has become a book and catalog of sin, and all studies reveal it is getting worse. It has become the devil’s classroom for it comes from the bottom of hell. Yes, the devil is smart enough to throw in a little religion too, and occasionally even a little morality, just to pacify consciences enough not to throw it out. Does not TV make a tele-holic society with respect to sin when it feeds lust, perverts morals, presents impurity as love, pictures murder as thrilling, exalts gross nakedness and indecency as beauty, and seeks to legitimize all kinds of sin against every commandment of God?
(C) CONTROL. Here the addiction becomes even more serious. Thousands of family fights take place regularly because no agreement can be reached on which sin-show to indulge in. 35% of mealtimes in American homes are spent in front of the TV set. Nightly thousands of parents realize the programs that will come on are demoralizing and harmful for their children but yet are so hungry themselves to drink in the sin that they contain that they often let the children watch it too, having no power to control it.
People who say they can control TV are speaking idealistically, not realistically:
(1) In the first place, who ever met such a person? Our natural hearts love sin, our ears listen for sin, our eyes look for sin. That is just the problem with TV. One of our former ministers once wrote: “If you took sin out of TV you could not sell it to the stones on the street.” It is not the box itself that is the problem, but it is our hearts. It shows what the heart of man wants to see. We have enough TV’s already in our hearts without buying one for our home. It is our TV hearts that are inclined to TV sets. We do not stand above a TV owner. Just the opposite. We desire to come so low that we confess we would not trust our own heart with such an instrument.
(2) In the second place, who is able to keep sin from flashing before them on the screen at any moment, whether it be through the program being watched or through advertisement?
(3) Is a person who has owned a TV set for some time, and consequently become hardened to many sins, really qualified to know what is necessary to “control”?
Man does not control TV. The sin-box controls him. Only one study of many will prove this point. Approximately 4 years ago in St. Catharines, Ontario, the newspaper headlines read one day: $500 Paid for Disposing of TV”. The article went on to say that a study was done in Detroit in which the goal was to find out to what degree people are controlled by TV. 250 families were scientifically selected from various races and classes to be offered $500 if they would live without their TV set for one month. After 30 days they could take it back in, and receive $500 free. Out of 250, only 50 families agreed to do it. How many families “made it” through this trial of 30 days? Eight! The other 42 forfeited their $500 sometime during the month—one family took their TV back in on the 29th day. The 8 who made it through were interviewed extensively. All 8 said it brought their family closer together without TV. Six fathers said they first learned to know their children. One father said: “The day that I disposed of our TV was the first day in 25 years that no one was killed in our living room, no sirens screamed, no shots rang out, no artificial merriment told us when to laugh, and no one slashed anyone else.” And what was now the final result of these eight families of whom 7 said their family life was considerably more rewarding without TV? The last line of the article tells us: “All eight families took TV back in.”
Tele-holism. Knowing it does more harm than good, and still keeping it. That is slavery.
Yes, television is really bad. I trust the facts are sufficient for all of us. I hope that not one of us as Netherlands Reformed members can nor dare to have it in our home. I hope also that you can see in the light of these facts how our 1980 Synod could not decide otherwise than: “After several warnings Synod judges that consistories are obliged to proceed with placing under quiet censure those members who continue to keep a television set in their homes.” May the Lord bless this use of the keys of discipline to cut out the cancer of TV from amongst us before it spreads through the churches to the entire destruction of our denomination.
If there should be one who reads this article who owns a TV set I urge you to dispose of it today on the following grounds:
(1) It is plainly against the Word of God. In Psalm 119 the Lord commands us to turn our eyes from vanity. The entire Bible speaks a resounding “THUS SAITH THE LORD” against television because of its unending list of evils.
(2) If you are a member of our denomination you have promised not to resist church government and authority. Every day you keep a television set in your home you are breaking the promise you made when you joined our denomination. Every day you are violating the fifth commandment unnecessarily. Do not go on resisting church authority, putting a blot on the truth, and persevering in sin.
(3) The sinfulness of television destroys your own soul. Every secular and/or religious study has revealed TV’s over-all evil effects. Since you know that we are all fallen children of Adam and Eve, corrupt, totally depraved, and dead in trespasses and sins, why do you unnecessarily feed your own corrupt nature with still more corruption through this instrument of sin?
(4) Every study on television reveals that TV also hinders the God-given treasure of family life and communion. This alone should be reason enough to dispose of TV immediately.
(5) By keeping television you are stepping on and fighting against your own conscience. You know it is not right to possess such an instrument, or else you have no impression of the truth which is taught in our denomination.
(6) You are wasting precious God-given time for which you will have to give an account one day. Would it not be far better that you take the time spent watching TV to read good books or listen to sermon tapes, thereby showing by your life that you believe the 98th answer recorded in our Heidelberg Catechism: “We must not pretend to be wiser than God, who will have His people taught, not by dumb images, but by the lively preaching of His Word”?
Do yourself a favor: for the Word of God’s sake, the church’s sake, your own soul’s sake, your family’s sake, your conscience’s sake, dispose of your television TODAY. Do it permanently before you become its life-long slave.
Finally, that it may become the prayer of all of us with David: “I will set no evil thing before my eyes. Turn Thou my eyes from beholding vanity.”
In behalf of 1980 Synod,
Rev. J.R. Beeke
Deze tekst is geautomatiseerd gemaakt en kan nog fouten bevatten. Digibron werkt
voortdurend aan correctie. Klik voor het origineel door naar de pdf. Voor opmerkingen,
vragen, informatie: contact.
Op Digibron -en alle daarin opgenomen content- is het databankrecht van toepassing.
Gebruiksvoorwaarden. Data protection law applies to Digibron and the content of this
database. Terms of use.
Bekijk de hele uitgave van vrijdag 1 augustus 1980
The Banner of Truth | 20 Pagina's
Bekijk de hele uitgave van vrijdag 1 augustus 1980
The Banner of Truth | 20 Pagina's