Sunday, November 20, 2016

AN ENTITLED GENERATION

AN ENTITLED GENERATION!
(The opposite of entitlement is thankfulness)
11/20/2016
            Mitt Romney was recorded in a private conversation during his bid for the presidency: “…. there are 47 percent…who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it. That’s an entitlement. (and they believe) the government should give it to them.”
            The political pundits would say this speech may have ended Mitt Romney’s path presidency. He mildly put at 47 percent of people being entitled, however the truth of the matter is that we have a whole generation of people who feel they are entitled. Entitlement is when people feel the world owes them something without having to do anything to earn it.
            The dictionary definition of entitlement: The fact of having a right to something. The amount to which a person has a right. The belief that one inherently deserves certain privileges or special treatments. What privileges or special treatments do any one of us really deserve? From a biblical perspective, entitlement is “when I get the false impression that I deserve more than I really deserve which is a cross.” Given our sinful nature, if it was not for Jesus the only thing we deserve is hell.
            Recently, Wilma and I attended a Deeper Life Conference, where the speaker; Mark Buchanan asked the attendees a couple of questions. What’s the natural default of your heart? Where does it go when it is at rest? Is it fear, disappointment, resentment or joy, gratitude and astonishment?  For Mark the number one thing that he struggles with is a sense of entitlement. What might be your number one struggle?
            I think if we are really honest with ourselves it wouldn’t take much time before we admit, yes we too might be struggling with entitlement. This is not a phenomenon of certain section of people, but it affects all of us. How did this trap of entitlement come about in our generation? How does the Bible view entitlement? What is the opposite of entitlement? How can we create an entitlement free culture?
I. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND TO AN ENTITLED GENERATION
            When we argue about which generation is more entitled, the current one blames the previous one. It is true that the present generation reaps the fruit either good or bad of the generation that has gone before. In the case of entailment many blame the “Baby Boomers,(1943-1960) for creating a generation of entitlement, why?
            For example, before World War II the great depression swept the entire globe, leaving many unemployed and desperate.  According to Tim Smith,  the pastor of First United Methodist Church, “ Entitlement started in earnest after WW II when the United States experienced unprecedented economic growth and the Baby Boomers experienced the highest standard of living of any generation in human history.
            The entire consumer market focused on them because of the numbers of their generation, catering to their every need and wants. Boomers then passed on to their children the promise of “The American Dream” that every American will get to have a good life, a job they enjoy, a generous paycheck, affordable housing and transportation and a secure retirement and an expectation that their standard of living would be the same or better than their parent’s, not taking into account that it took decades of hard work to attain that.[1] In one-way the baby boomers failed to set up an example of contentment.
            Many, who were born in the sixties and thereafter, grew up not knowing what hardship is all about, but with a sense of privilege, and entitlement.  They lack a sense of gratitude and contentment. It is all about their needs and wants. Let me make a statement here before we look deep into this subject. All entitlements are not bad, some are absolutely necessary for human survival. For example, all children are entitled to have a mother and a father especially during their early and formative years.
            All of us have unalienable human rights for food, clothing, shelter, freedom, security and to live productive, healthy, and happy lives. If you are working in a job you are entitled to receive a compensation or salary. It is very biblical. The scripture says, Those who work deserve their pay!” I Timothy 5:18.
            I am not against these types of entitlements. The entitlement I am concerned about is that when someone feels that they deserve a much better treatment because they belong to a certain, race, ethnicity, class, religion or strata of society. Or even worse is that when they think that every one owes it to them, and they don’t have to do anything to earn it.  That is bad entitlement, that’s more dangerous than anything else.
            How does this entitlement manifest itself? It manifests in a very subtle way. Some parents genuinely think that they owe it to their children so they give into any and every whim and fancy of their children. Knowing that weakness children complain, demand, and manipulate, if that doesn’t work they throw a temper tantrum to get what they want. Once they get what they want from their parents, they expect the same kind of treatment from everyone else around them.  Soon we will have a spoiled brat among us. Wilma and I have raised our daughters not always giving them what they wanted. We did not play to their every tune. We did not let them manipulate us.
            We corrected them, disciplined them and set boundaries where necessary. The scriptures give us some clear instructions on how to raise our children. Proverbs 22:6, “Start children off on the way they should go, and even when they are old they will not turn from it.” Proverbs 13:20-24, “Whoever spares the rod hates their children, but the one who loves their children is careful to discipline them.”
            Parenting is an awesome responsibility that God has given to us. It is the duty of every parent to raise their children in the ways of God. We are living in a society where we are becoming more and more child centered. When we never discipline our children, and give everything they ask, we are doing a disservice to them. We are raising children who think that they are entitled to every thing.
            A clear example of this failure of parenting is, “Ethan Couch” who is infamously called as, “the Afluenza Teeen”  I would call him “An entitled Brat” Ethan’s parents never corrected or disciplined him, instead gave everything he wanted all the time.  As a result he was raised to believe that he could do anything and get away and never feel any remorse for doing so. The parents failure to start him off on the right way, and his entitled behavior resulted in the loss of four innocent lives forever and one can never speak or move, and not to mention the grief stricken families.
            Just imagine what devastation one entitled and unruly kid has caused. Because of his un-curtailed behavior four families will not have their loved ones with them during this thanksgiving season. They won’t be there to celebrate Christmas. This kind of entitlement is far more dangerous to our society.  Are we raising an entitled generation?

            Entitlement is not a new phenomenon we see it play out in biblical times as well. Let me introduce a group of people who thought they deserved better treatment. This was the time when Joshua was allotting the land to the tribes of Israel. One of the sons of Joseph, Manasseh was given only one lot as their inheritance. They thought they were too numerous, and that to they were the sons of Joseph who once was the prime minister of Egypt; hence they were to be treated with favor. What a sense of entightelement?
            They went up to Joshua complaining, why you gave us only one allotment since we were numerous and were blessed by God.   “If you are so numerous, Joshua answered, and “if the hill country of Ephraim is too small for you, go up into the forest and clear land for yourselves there in the land of Perizzites and Rephaites.” The Manassehites were unwilling to do the hard work of clearing the land, instead they came back to Joshua with another excuse. “The hill country is not enough for us, and all the Canaanites who live in the plain have chariots fitted with iron..”
            Joshua said to them, “you are numerous and very powerful. You will have not only one allotment, but the forested hill country as well. Clear it, and its farthest limits will be yours; though the Canaanites have chariots fitted with iron and though they are strong, you can drive them out.” Joshua 17: 14-18. This story tells us that not only in our generation but ages past as well, there are always those groups of people or individuals who feel they are entitled for better things and better service. They want everything to be presented to them on a golden platter without having to do the hard work.
            After hearing this sermon, you may be beginning to see the areas where you felt entitled. Where you felt you deserved better than others. During this thanksgiving season, how can we deal with our sense of faulty entitlement, and cultivate contentment?

II. THE ANTIDOTE  FOR ENTITLMENT IS THANKFULNESS.
            Let’s face it; if we are honest with ourselves, at times we feel we deserve much better things in life. We walk around with an attitude of entitlement. The most powerful antidote for entitlement is radical gratitude.  Considering all of life as a gift and living in constant recognition of the many givens. Waking up to a new day.  A roof over your head. Light switches in every room.  Water running from your taps.  Food on the table.  Relationships.  The ability to make choices, go places. A warm shower.  Laying down your head on a pillow in peace at night, these and many more we take for granted. And the sin loving and sin exalting world we live in does not encourage us to recognize this, is that we once were desperately lost and doomed to eternal punishment and separation from God but He saved us, cleaned us up and made us His treasured possession. Therefore thankfulness is fitting for us in every circumstance.
            In closing, dear friends let me remind you of the words of Paul to the Colossian believers. “So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live your lives in him, rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness.” Amen





[1] http://www.sermoncentral.com/sermons/entitlement-tim-smith-sermon-on-entitlement-176782.asp?Page=2