We Need Godly Men
In this report put out by the University of Cincinnati’s School of Planning, it is noted that, in Cincinnati, while “poverty and female headed households are not synonymous…over 70 percent of the families in poverty are headed by a female.”
The problem, of course, is not women; it’s men (or lack thereof). These statistics show that 70 percent of poverty stricken families have no male provider. Single mothers, then, are forced to both raise children and provide for their household. The implications of this are deeply saddening. Along with children who lack healthy parental influence—especially that of a father—comes increased crime and decreased probability that these children will be successful in school (and, consequently, in their future career). With a feeling of little or no hope for the future, young people turn to drugs, prostitution, and violence, as they oftentimes find such industries to be more lucrative than any alternative. What makes this worse, however, is that babies are still being born under such circumstances. In other words, the cycle continues; many young men grow up without a father’s example of responsibility, and many young women lack a good protector and male role model. The poverty continues from generation to generation; the disease only seems to worsen. One might begin to think that this system cannot be escaped.
What urban Cincinnati needs is some good fathers. I don’t know how this can actually be accomplished, quite frankly, but I know it must involve the work of the gospel breaking into people’s lives. Revival is needed; the Church needs to train and equip young men to be good fathers and husbands, instead of baby-daddies who bail out on their family. The only way that the addictions, the broken homes, and the violence can truly be stopped in our city is by gospel transformation. How then can we reach these people and proclaim to them the truth?
This entry was posted on September 10, 2007 at 10:46 am and is filed under Culture, Masculinity, Social Justice, Urban Ministry, Violence . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
September 10, 2007 at 2:34 pm
Interesting and very sad stuff man, your absolutely right this city, and world needs Godly dudes, and it happens with a transformation by the Gospel and Jesus in their lives. How do we do that, I think one way is to speak out to lazy Christians, I myself included most times, and cultivate them and show them what kinds of responsibilities they are to have in there lives instead of playing Halo all the time, or drinking coffee and arguing theology, “not that I don’t like theology,” but thats just one thing that comes to mind for me, and is due to calling Jesus as my Lord and Saviour, and the influence Mike has had on me.
November 19, 2007 at 3:22 pm
hey, this is soooo true. and the way you say you don’t know how it will happen, is soooooo honest. me too. us all, too.
I’m encouraged to hear that England’s secular society was impacted by the Great Awakening and the Wesleyan revival stuff… I’m hopeful that the repentance of the church from worldliness might bring redemption of social systems as “aftershock”.
thanks for posting. was a helpful thought.