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Through All
Generations
By Dr.
Gene Edward Veith
Among the many cultural contributions of the
Baby Boomersalong with free love, the drug scene, and Grateful Dead
tieswas the concept of the generation gap. In every other culture and
throughout history, children were socialized to become adults. When children
grew up, they took their parents places, their roles and their values.
There was no separate youth sub-culture, no music and fashions to set off the
younger generation from their parents. Children were dressed, for the most
part, like little adults. But in the mid-twentieth century, American culture
became stratified along generational lines.
Today, as pundits try to
dissect the differences between Baby Boomers and Baby Busters, the Sixties
Generation and Generation X, even the church becomes fractured along
generational lines. But the Bible puts forth the constant theme that God, His
saving Word, and His Church extend "through all generations" (Psalm 89:1).
Talkin Bout My
Generation
The generation of Americans who won World War II emulated
their own Depression-toughened parents in many ways. But in the unprecedented
baby-making that followed the war, accompanied by extraordinary prosperity and
better-living-through technology, their own children may have been a little
spoiled. Always before, children would help their parents on the farm, playing
a major economic role and learning the skills and disciplines of adulthood.
Now, there werent that many farms and children could concentrate on the
hard work of entertaining themselves. This process was helped along with not
only television, but perhaps even more importantly radios and record players,
which made possible the mass-production and nation-wide distribution of
music.
I do not mean to denigrate these times at all. It was great to
grow up during the 1950s and 1960s. I know. I was there. For the most part we
enjoyed stable, two-parent families, with our mother there when we came home
from school. But, as the Bible would lead us to expect, this paradise had its
serpent, its temptations and its fall. Baby Boomer teenagers, freed of having
to deal with the real world, began thinking their parents, who were mired in
the real world by which they supported their children, were too
materialistic.
The obvious injustices addressed by the Civil Rights
movement gave the Baby Boomers watching it on television both a moral idealism,
which assumed bad social conditions could be changed, and a moral superiority,
which looked down on the less enlightened generations that went before. When
hard times came, such as the Vietnam War, they seemed so wrong.
Though
their parents and grandparents lived through war on a far more colossal scale,
many Baby Boomers took the opportunity to rebel, not only against what they
considered an unjust war, but against the values and mind-set of their
parents.
The Baby Boomer generation considered themselves different
from the previous generation, and they were. A generation gap opened up. This
was first noticed in the 1950s, as alienated youth began complaining that "my
parents just dont understand me," and their parents admitting that, "yes,
we sure dont."
Soon, a youth subculture developed. Music played
a defining role as radio stations and record companies churned out
rocknroll for affluent young buyersmusic which articulated
their pre-occupations and gave shape to their desires. While it is true that
the silent majority of young people in the 1960s were law-abiding and
relatively conservative, few were untouched by the more extreme manifestations
of what began to be known not only as a sub-culture but a counter-culture. Not
growing out of the infantile "pleasure principle" and refusing to acknowledge
societys rules, many young people of the 1960s staged the "sexual
revolution." Drugs, eastern mysticism and radical politics were other phases of
the untrammeled pursuit of self-gratification.
When the hippies and
the yippies grew up, some of them reacted against the follies of their youth.
Others brought their counter-culture with them into the American mainstream, so
that today, Baby Boomer values rule in academia, government and the media. What
was once a counter-culture has become the establishment.
The Next
Generation Gap
A funny thing happened when the Baby Boomers became
parents. With supreme justice, their children rebelled against them. To the
extent mom and dad has bought into the counter-culture, their children tended
to go in the opposite direction. Fathers who had fought with their fathers over
long hair now fought with their own sons who shaved their heads. Instead of the
bright colors, flowing robes and floral patterns of Sixties clothing, the next
generation wore black, leather and tattoos. Rock concerts had been love-ins of
happy, melodic music and communal solidarity; the punk rock and heavy metal of
the next generation featured harsh noise, depressing lyrics and mosh pits where
concert-goers slammed into each other in a violent parody of dancing. Parents
who believed in flower power often had to deal with children paralyzed by
cynicism. The simpering "peace and love" ideology of the Sixties was mocked by
the violence and nihilism of the new pop culture.
And no wonder. The
Baby Boomers split up their families with carefree abandon, which meant that
their children were victimized by broken homes. Baby Boomer parents were so
self-absorbed that they often forgot to raise their children. They liberated
their babies and made school fun. Now their children lacked discipline and
bitterly resented their useless educations. The Baby Boomers initiated the
sexual revolution; now their children had to deal with AIDS. The Baby Boomers
started the vogue of drugs; now their children were left with mental breakdowns
and twelve-step programs. The Baby Boomers thought their ideals of peace, love
and new consciousness would change the world; their children saw that it was
all a big lie.
Unlike the Boomers, members of the so-called Generation
X dislike being all grouped together under a generational stereotype. Whether
they are "slackers," paralyzed by apathy and hopelessness, or driven achievers
and money-makers, they tend to have a cynical edge and a wholly admirable
distrust of phoniness. Another trait is their frustration that Baby Boomers,
however old they get, still demand all the attention.
How Not to
Minister to the Different Generations
It has been said that the major
problem of Baby Boomers is that they refuse to grow up. Though adults, they
reject adult responsibilities. While this, like other generational assertions
in this essay, is a sweeping generalization with many exceptions, it contains
much truth.
For example, notice how aging Boomers still tend to listen
to the same music they listened to when they were sixteen. We Baby Boomers (and
remember I include myself in all of these criticisms) do not consider that it
might be a sign of some infantile clinging to childhood when we do not allow
our taste to change and mature. We tend to think that we are the ones who are
not only cool but contemporary.
Many churches today feel the need to
be contemporary. The assumption is that in order to reach people the church
should throw off its old-fashioned styles and get with the times. The hoary
liturgy should be done away with and those archaic hymns should be replaced
with music people are listening to today.
Notice that these
assumptionsthat old forms are not relevant, that people today are somehow
different from those of the past, that being alive means being
entertainedare relics of the Baby Boomer generation. In fact, it is
usually Baby Boomer pastors who are implementing these kinds of reforms.
Now here is the irony, which is immediately recognized by Generation
X-erscontemporary worship services, with their "contemporary" music, are
seldom contemporary at all. The ubiquitous "praise songs" have more to do with
the style of Peter, Paul and Mary than with actual contemporary music
today.
Certainly, Baby Boomers often do demand their kind of music in
church. This is another one of their (our) traitsto be demanding and
self-absorbed and intolerant of other styles. The World War II generation never
demanded worship styles with Big Band music.
It should also be
recognized that what might work for the Baby Boomer mind does not necessarily
work for Generation X-ers. Much of the panoply of church growth techniques are
designed for the former. Generation X-ers tend to be skeptical of attempts to
manipulate them. They tend to see right through slick programs and fake
friendliness that many churches resort to in an attempt to reach them.
Though both Baby Boomers and Generation X-ers represent "lost generations," it
may be that the latter holds more promise. Perhaps their childrenalready
the subject of scrutiny as "Generation Y"will achieve normalcy and the
obsession with generational differences will fade away. In the meantime, it is
instructive to note the yearning expressed by a number of X-ers for
authenticity and spiritual substance.
Consider the Lutheran group
Lost and Found, whose music with its "alternative" sound is genuinely
contemporary, as opposed to, say, their Baby Boomer counterpart Barb and Dave.
In their song, "Opener," they offer a Generation X flavored indictment of
church-growth-style worship services. Instead, they crave substance, namely,
the Body and Blood of Christ:
Im looking for something strongerThan my own life these days,
Yet the church of my childhoodSeems like the YMCA.
Well, every SundayIs just like the last,
As if the church has no historyAnd the people have no past.
We just sing what we like to singAnd we preach about the news,
And think of some new thingJust to fill up the pews.
I want palms on Palm SundayAnd Pentecost still to be red.
I want to drink of the WineAnd eat of the Bread.
And they search for attendanceWhile I starve for transcendence.
But I count among this BodyOf both the living and the dead.
The poignant emphasis the singer puts upon
the word starve"while I starve for transcendence"expresses well the
spiritual dilemma of our day. The Baby Boomers, in their narcissism, prefer a
touchy-feely, emotional, entertaining, self-aggrandizing approach to everything
from education to the workplace, including church. The next
generationcasualties of what the Boomers have done to the
cultureare often cynical, depressed and sometimes to the point of
nihilism. They yearn for something real and authentic, but everything they see
in this media-saturated commercialistic culture they have inherited seems
phony. Maybe everything is phony, which is a refrain of postmodernism, so that
the only proper response is a detached yet bitter irony.
Churches,
tragically, play into this perception. Most churches today have been taken over
by the Baby Boomer mentality, exhibiting the values of mass-market
commercialism, the rejection of the past and hedonistic individualism.
Meanwhile, those who may never have known a stable family yearn for a sense of
belonging to some community bigger than themselves. They are "looking for
something stronger/than my own life." They "starve for transcendence."
This is why I believe Lutheranism holds such potential for the next century if
churches can be found to practice it. To a generation hungering for belonging,
we can offer membership in a "BodyOf both the living and the dead." To
those hungering for something real, we can offer the Real Presence of Jesus
Christ.
The other good news for the church is that we Baby Boomers are
getting old and will soon die out.
From Generation to
Generation
It is true that American society today is generationally
segmented. In fact, more generations and sub-divisions of generations have been
identified. Even within a particular generation, there are hosts of sub-groups.
These often identify themselves with trivial signs, such as taste in music.
Notice what happens when a church aims itself, through its music or
worship style, at one particular generation or sub-group. The others, in this
generational and cultural crazy-quilt that is the typical American
congregation, will be alienated. What is happening in church will appear to be
geared for the particular privileged group.
When churches go to a
"contemporary service," older parishioners of the World War II generation
object. How could they be expected not to? Those who have devoted their lives
to the church for decades feel, as one told me, that "they have taken away my
church." It is unfair to categorize such objections, as is often done, as being
overly tradition-bound or as some unwillingness to evangelize. They are
responding both to the feeling of being unwanted in their own church and to the
fact that they can hardly worship in such an alien language.
The
answer, however, is not to give them a Big Band service. Nor to give Generation
X a punk or hip-hop or death metal service. The answer is in the genius of the
hymnbook.
When we are singing hymns in church, we are not following
the preferred "style" of anyone in the congregation. This is church music,
wholly different, whatever its origins, from the currently preferred musical
taste of any of the generations assembled to worship. No one is offended; no
one is excluded; everyone is lifted out of a particular time, generation or
in-group, into the extra-ordinary experience of worship.
In The
Lutheran Hymnal, one can hardly find a trace of Glenn Miller, though his
band was very big in 1941, when the hymnal was first published. Lutheran
Worship of 1982 has nary a disco tune. Perhaps its most up-to-date music
can be found in the liturgical settings, which are far more "contemporary" than
the 1960s-era praise songs that are now brought in to replace them. There are
20th century hymns, such as those by the great composer Ralph Vaughn Williams,
but there are few, if any, concessions to the years Top Forty. The fact
is, pop music of every kind is excluded, since fashions, by their very nature,
come and go. Furthermore, church music is to have a very different use than the
music put out by the entertainment industry, namely, to be sung corporately
(most pop music works at best only as a solo performance) under the Word and in
the presence of God. Music with origins in the folk culture (the old hymns
specifically passed down from generation to generation) or the high culture
(compositions old or new of artistic greatness) has the capacity to be
universal, transcending time and place as Christs church is supposed to
do.
The Christian church, St. Paul tell us, "consists of many diverse
members who come together in the unity of the Body of Christ" (1 Cor. 12:12-27). "There should be no division in the body"
(12:25), we are warned, so that generational differences,
like those of "ethnicity, race, gender or social class" (Gal.
3:28), must not be allowed to get in the way of the unity we have in Jesus
Christ.
This unity extends through time, "throughout all generations,"
including those generations of the past. In a typical church service, the hymns
that are sung literally do span the generations. A typical worship service thus
exemplifies the commerce of ages that is intrinsic to the communion of
saints.
A new baby represents a new generation, but the baby is
baptized into the one Body of Christ. In church, the old and young, rich and
poor, parents and children, Boomers and X-ers, kneel together in prayer, hear
the Gospel each of them desperately needs and join together in the unfathomable
spiritual intimacy with Christ and with each other, that is Holy Communion.
There are different generations, but they are all equally in need of
Christ. The Church is the place where generational differences are to be
transcended, not reinforced. Where ephemeral fashions and cultural distinctions
are subsumed into an eternal perspective, into a kingdom which "endures from
generation to generation" (Daniel 4:34). Only a church
which resists being merely of one generation can be relevant to them all.
Dr. Gene Edward Veith is Dean of Arts and Sciences at
Concordia University, Mequon, Wisconsin.
Permission is
granted for reproduction by the publisher of For the Life of the World
(Volume __, Number ___, the official magazine of
Concordia Theological Seminary-Fort
Wayne.
Psalms 89: 1
I will sing of the LORD's great love
forever; with my mouth I will make your faithfulness known through all
generations.
1 Corinthians 12: 12-27
12 The body is a unit, though it is made up of many parts; and though
all its parts are many, they form one body. So it is with Christ. 13 For
we were all baptized by [3] one Spirit into one
body--whether Jews or Greeks, slave or free--and we were all given the one
Spirit to drink. 14 Now the body is not made up of one part but of many.
15 If the foot should say, "Because I am not a hand, I do not belong to
the body," it would not for that reason cease to be part of the body. 16
And if the ear should say, "Because I am not an eye, I do not belong to the
body," it would not for that reason cease to be part of the body. 17 If
the whole body were an eye, where would the sense of hearing be? If the whole
body were an ear, where would the sense of smell be? 18 But in fact God
has arranged the parts in the body, every one of them, just as he wanted them
to be. 19 If they were all one part, where would the body be? 20
As it is, there are many parts, but one body. 21 The eye cannot say to
the hand, "I don't need you!" And the head cannot say to the feet, "I don't
need you!" 22 On the contrary, those parts of the body that seem to be
weaker are indispensable, 23 and the parts that we think are less
honorable we treat with special honor. And the parts that are unpresentable are
treated with special modesty, 24 while our presentable parts need no
special treatment. But God has combined the members of the body and has given
greater honor to the parts that lacked it, 25 so that there should be no
division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each
other. 26 If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part
is honored, every part rejoices with it. 27 Now you are the body of
Christ, and each one of you is a part of it.
Galatians 3: 28
There is neither Jew nor Greek,
slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.
Daniel 4: 34
At the end of that time, I,
Nebuchadnezzar, raised my eyes toward heaven, and my sanity was restored. Then
I praised the Most High; I honored and glorified him who lives forever. His
dominion is an eternal dominion; his kingdom endures from generation to
generation.
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