Author Archives: jtjim

Golf and Marriage

September 10, 2007

Jane Jimenez

Jane Jimenez

In the 60s, without instant reply, TiVo and DVDs, my Dad had to closely follow the newspaper schedule and spend his day in front of our 12-inch black-and-white television through 18 holes in order to witness the dramatic finish of the 1962 U. S. Open when Jack Nicklaus won his first professional title in a playoff with Arnold Palmer.  What a waste of a good day, I thought.

I never understood the lure of golf.  People walking over short grass, swinging sticks at little balls…walking and swinging, over and over, for years.  Even Tiger Woods could not rally my interest in the game.

This was before I learned that grass is never just grass.  Like snow for Eskimos, it comes in thousands of degrees of variation, its length, humidity, and density confounding the roll of well-hit balls.  After one day of instruction about the complexities of golf, enthusiastically taught by our son-in-law as we watched the Wachovia Championship, I’m hooked.

With my new understanding, a lifetime seems too short to learn how to perfect every aspect of what can go wrong with one’s golf game…the stance, the swing, the grip of the club, the follow-through of the swing…not to mention the mental strength needed to handle the pressure when your shot hits the trees, the sand, the water, the rough…and the periodic spectator.

As we watched Woods struggle through the U.S. Open, I saw the endless challenges posed by the lie of the green…the impact of grass mown tight to the ground and covered with morning dew on a downhill slope just beyond the aimed for hole.

Tiger struggled.  I wanted him to win.  But he failed to catch Angel Cabrera and came in a frustrating second.  Better, though, than his subsequent games at Bethesda and the British open where he finished 6th and 12th.

Woods is good enough to win any golf game he plays.  But not every golf game.  He is good.  But he’s not perfect.

Golf…and marriage.  In the first instance, a golf game gone sour provides motivation for the player to isolate his problem and work to remedy it.  There are golf clinics, DVDs, books, pros, and practice ranges all dedicated to making your game the best it can be.

In the second instance, a marriage gone sour can be turned around by a couple motivated to isolate their problems and work toward a solution.  Yet, how often, in our modern world, is a no-fault divorce offered as a solution to couples who struggle? Instead of fixing a marriage, we dissolve the marriage…we quit the game.

Thankfully, an emerging movement is coming forward to turn the divorce trend in favor of repairing relationships and restoring healthy marriages.  In 1999, Oklahoma launched the Marriage Initiative to reduce the divorce rate in their state.  This Oklahoma initiative is joined by the federal Healthy Marriage Initiative which funds programs around the country to strengthen and save marriages.

Critics of marriage education would have us believe that bad marriages are a lost cause.  They raise the specter of abuse, suggesting that fixing a troubled marriage results in more battered wives.  They ignore important realities.

Relationships have much in common with golf games.  No two are the same…and in one marriage, no two days are the same.  No marriage is perfect.  But on a good day, in a good game, there is nothing that can beat winning at golf and succeeding in marriage.

Marriages, like golf games, can improve.  Researcher Linda J. Waite interviewed couples and asked them to rate their marriages from one to seven, on a scale from “just awful” to “fabulous.”  Five years after her first survey, she returned to the same couples with the same question.  Of the couples who first rated their marriage as “awful,” eighty-seven percent of the same couples said their marriages were either “pretty good” or “very good,” sixes and sevens on her scale.

Waite summarized her findings, “Most of the marriages that were bad became much better. I think in a lot of cases when marriages are unhappy it’s sort of a bad patch, and it doesn’t last. One reason divorce is relatively high in our society is because now either person can leave, and we are more willing to leave than we used to be if we hit a bad patch. We’re less likely to work it through. But there’s evidence that dramatic turnarounds are commonplace. They’re the typical experience.”

In the words of marriage Drs. Les and Leslie Parrott, “Love, by itself, is not enough to sustain even the most loving couple — at least the kind of love Hollywood pumps into our culture is not enough. Marriage requires new skills in communication, conflict resolution and so on. Love cannot protect a marriage from harm. But love combined with effective skills can overcome all.”

There is a lot to commend people who dedicate their lives to being the best they can be. Winners may have talent.  They may have benefited from great coaches and good weather.  But in the end, they win because they put their whole attention to the details of the game that make winning even possible.

Golf…and marriage.  Winning at the game is only possible if we have the proper goal…more than winning…persisting in the challenge…making our game the best that it can be.

http://www.acf.hhs.gov/healthymarriage/

http://www.okmarriage.org/oklahomamarriageinitiative.asp

If Truth Be Known

September 3, 2007

Jane Jimenez

Jane Jimenez

The 60s sexual revolution was in full bloom as I headed to college in 1969.  Founded on a new definition of happiness…the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow…the revolution spawned a new vocabulary.

Words birthed in the sexual revolution…liberation, freedom, self-expression, empowerment…all of these defined the supposed rewards of releasing strictures and limits of a more “primitive world” imposed on human behavior.  We demanded a better happiness.  Anything goes.  If it feels good, do it.  No limits.  No fear.

A new kind of happiness at the end of the rainbow thus demanded a new road to happiness.  Planning families gave way to preventing families.  Babies were prevented by pills instead of self-control, and when both self-control and pills failed, babies were redefined as tissues and cells to be removed or eliminated.

Social institutions and cultural pace-setters became vested in affirming this new road to happiness.  Professors wrote new textbooks based on an untested social hypothesis, and they began indoctrinating a generation to believe that science would eventually document the success of re-engineering creation.

Capitalizing on the profits to be made in promoting the proposition that unrestrained human behavior leads to self-fulfillment, marketing campaigns put the mantra to snappy jingles, do it my way for the me generation.

Man as the creator…recreating ourselves in the image of the happiness we thought we most wanted.  We have finally succeeded in elevating our selfish interests to the pinnacle of noble achievement.

Now all that remains to complete this brave new world is removing the vestiges of antiquated notions of family from our laws and social government.  California is prepared to lead the way.  In legal briefs filed with the California Supreme Court by the California Governor and Attorney General, marriage between a man and a woman has been reduced to an inconsequential notion without any social merit to motivate governmental support.

This is an odd time to dismantle marriage as mankind has known it…just at the time when social research has given expression to the powerfully positive effects of raising children in a stable marriage between mother and father.  Even as we have insisted for forty years on our rights to construct a new happiness, research leads back to the world we are running from.

Social research clearly shows the benefits of traditional family structure on building self-esteem for children, leading to their success in school and reducing the negatives for them of crime, drugs, alcohol and risky behaviors.  Children in modern research studies are giving powerful witness to the pain and harm of divorce.  Listening to them…what is the impact on our children of recreating the world for ourselves?  We have “won” at their expense.

The breakup of families is no easy path to a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.  Neither is the destruction of life required by campaigns to prevent families.  Courageous voices of women who bought into the sexual revolution are being heard, a testimony to the failure of pills and medical procedures to produce the promised happiness.

Families, marriage and children…these were not accidents of an antiquated creation we could dispose of without consequence.  They were the products of truth, the truth of human existence created long before we were the twinkle in our parents’ eyes.

Truth exists for us to know.  We must learn truth, not create it.  Truth doesn’t come and go, changing hither and thither, based on our own whims.  Truth was created in the beginning…without our input.  It forms the foundation for our human nature and happiness.

Lust and covetousness were more than sins.  They defined boundaries set on human willfulness and rebellion, limiting our selfishness in wanting more of the world than we were entitled to.

If truth be known, happiness was always there for us to have.  We just ignored the road signs and charted our own path away from the end of the rainbow.

Happy Teens

August 20, 2007

Jane Jimenez

Jane Jimenez

Mass Marketing 101 teaches that successful marketing campaigns sell with promises of happiness.  Thus, we end up with hamburgers in the hands of Paris Hilton, scantily clad and writhing seductively in suds washing over the ultimate in cars, a Bentley.

This 2005 television ad had it all…a famous pretty girl, a luxurious car and sex…the ultimate symbols of human happiness.  By all accounts, Carl’s Junior executives were pleased.

This formula is repeated day in and out.  And in modern America, the formula has made its way from adult ad campaigns to those targeting teens…and their younger brothers and sisters.  Playboy bunnies are appliquéd to tops for toddlers, and rhinestones spell out Hey Baby! on the seat of velveteen pants riding low on the hips of ten-year-olds.

Sex sells.  This has become a truism in Mass Marketing 101.  Have a buxom beauty hold a widget while staring seductively through the camera lens, and you’ll sell a million widgets.  If we buy their widget, we will be best friends with the buxom beauty and we will be happy.

Everywhere, sex is connected with happiness.  Entire prime time television series serve up episode after episode where pretty people spend all of their time thinking, talking and doing sex.  And sex educators take their cue.

Paid by Planned Parenthood, educators stand in front of teens and remind them that “sex is natural…when you are ready, we can show you how to do it ‘responsibly’…your parents don’t have to know…after all, sex is your right…you have a right to be happy…and sex is the basic human drive that leads to happiness.”

Consequences?  Well, if you manage to encounter a consequence when your saferrrrrrrrr sex practices fail to “protect you,” Planned Parenthood has a tool kit of remedies.  You can detect your consequences through testing.  You can treat your consequences with drugs.  And you can destroy your consequences with a “surgical procedure.”  After all, you have a right to be happy.

This is the world we have created for our teens…to make them happy.

Wrong!  We are wrong.  We have been wrong for years.  And now a poll by The Associated Press and MTV of 1,280 young people ages 13-24 lays out for adults what our teens really want in order to be happy.

“What makes you happy?”  Teens resoundingly reply, “spending time with family.”  Kristiana St. John, 17, from Queens, New York, says, “They’re my foundation…My mom tells me that even if I do something stupid, she’s still going to love me no matter what.  Just knowing that makes me feel very happy and blessed.”

Money?  Almost no teens responded “money” when asked what makes them happy.

Sex?  In spite of the hard sell by television and the saferrrrrrrrr promises of Planned Parenthood, “being sexually active actually leads to less happiness among 13-17 year olds according to the survey.  If you’re 18 to 24, sex might lead to more happiness in the moment, but not in general.”

Future Goals?  Marriage.  Ninety-two percent of these young people either definitely or probably want to get married.

Religion?  More than half of the young people said they believed in a higher power that has an influence over their happiness…nearly half said religion and spirituality are very important to them.

Reading through extended reports on the survey, the good news is that teens seem to know more about happiness than we give them credit for.  If we wanted to help them move toward happiness,

  • we would affirm the value of religion and its role in their life and decisions,
  • we would help them maintain a “general stress-free feeling” where they were “not worried about anything”,
  • we would teach them skills needed to create successful relationships leading to happy marriages,
  • we would strengthen the bonds between students and their parents, and
  • we would link the deepest desires of young people for education, family, marriage and children into a meaningful life plan.

The best news for parents and adults is that we have educators who have made it their goal to truly help teens reach happiness.  This latest survey and its results confirm what these educators find from their work in the classrooms.

Who are these educators?  Working with many different agencies and programs around the country, they teach and encourage teens to abstain from sex until marriage as a way to eliminate stress and negative consequences from their life.  They build bonds between parents and teens.  They support parental goals by giving teens medically-accurate information.  And they teach life-skills to help in developing healthy relationships today and in building a foundation for healthy marriages and parenting in the future.

These educators are leading the way to happiness for teens.  Yet, they struggle against the “wisdom” of a culture saturated with “sex-will-make-you-happy” messages and promises that, if not “safe,” sex can at least be “saferrrrrrrrrr.”

You can play a part in the effort to support teens in their quest for happiness.  Check out the National Abstinence Education Association at www.abstinenceassociation.org.  Review the research and reports that tell the truth about abstinence education.  And watch for action alerts as Congress debates whether students should be able to have abstinence education.

It is time for us to take hold of the messages sold to our teens by the media and by “sex-will-make-you-happy” teachers.  Our teens have told us what they need in order to be happy.  It is time for us to listen.

The Real Problem with Abstinence Education

August 13, 2007

Jane Jimenez

Jane Jimenez

Opponents of abstinence education have spent the past ten years denouncing these important health education programs.  Their attacks are relentless.

Opponents are not content with allowing abstinence programs to serve students, schools and families that want this education.  They are not content to let abstinence education exist as an alternative to other programs promoting use of birth control as a “saferrrrr sex” message for minors.

Opponents want to kill abstinence education.  Completely. They work tirelessly to strip every penny of funding support for abstinence programs that encourage and support students who make a personal commitment to remain sexually abstinent.

One has to wonder what the real problem with abstinence education is.  Why is it so terrible to teach our youth the importance of remaining sexually abstinent?

Opponents would have us believe that medically accurate information supports encouraging teens to engage in “saferrrrr sex.”  It doesn’t.  Opponents would have us believe that abstinence education doesn’t work.  It does.

These two battles are actually smoke screens.  Diversions.  They hide what we are not supposed to see.  What opponents of abstinence education would like to bury in the sand is their real reason for opposing sexual abstinence education for teens.

Abstinence education is about revealing truths its opponents would rather ignore.  Abstinence education does not suggest that outercourse, petting, or naked showers together are several of many healthy and satisfying options to abstinence that teens can choose from when they “are ready.”

Abstinence education shines a light on the problems inherent in promoting sex as entertainment without rules, seeking gratification for one’s own pleasure without concern for those we impact as a result.  Abstinence educators are not afraid of acknowledging the life in the womb created by the union of egg and sperm.

It restores a line in the sand.  It dares to stand up for true medical accuracy.  It is supported by a growing body of research about the foundational needs of humans.  It embraces the impact of sex on the welfare of a human being in holistic terms, not only just physically, but emotionally, socially, financially and spiritually.

Studies confirm what abstinence teachers around the country see in their classes.  These truths resonate with young people who have not been corrupted by years of liberal dogma.  They know when their hearts are broken and when they have been exploited by someone who professed “love” only to get the sex they were after.

Teens want love, honor, fidelity.  They look to adults, the role models who are in charge of demonstrating higher goals, only to find these “role models” either wallowing in the mud…or more often…confused about the role of sex in their own lives.

American media, entertainment and marketing industries have capitalized on this confusion, exploiting the natural human tendency to want to satisfy our appetites while ignoring the consequences.  We buy their products, and cultural “rules of engagement” allow them to market this message to children just entering kindergarten:

  • Supreme Court justices in 2004, preserved the right of pornographers to use the Internet unrestrained in their promotion of material harmful to children.
  • Girls of the Playboy Mansion, a television “reality” show, builds destructive fantasies of three twenty-something girls sharing the bed with an 81-year-old leering millionaire.
  • Abercrombie and Fitch glamorize teen group sex in wall-size murals greeting our youth and their younger siblings as they enter the store at the mall.
  • College health centers serve as a pass-through to local abortion agencies with little or no mention of adoption.
  • Leaders in the most visible health crisis of the century, when challenged by a physician at an HIV conference, refuse to set sexual abstinence as the expected standard for children at any age.
  • Hollywood adultery is considered a harmless transitional stage between marriages, and this has been adopted by mainstream politicians hoping to lead our country as President.
  • Magazines like Redbook and Seventeen that used to offer wholesome articles now sell promiscuity and risky sex behaviors on every page.

For nearly forty years, we have been “educated” that the problems encountered with sex can be cured by buying a pack of pills and a “medical procedure.”   This education is only possible if we are willing to ignore medically-accurate truths.  This is the very education that opponents of abstinence hope to force on every child in America.

People who oppose abstinence education oppose it for one simple reason. They don’t want their culture to be challenged and reined in by limits to sexual behavior…of any kind …at any age.  And that’s no good reason at all.

A Christian Nation

August 6, 2007

Jane Jimenez

Jane Jimenez

America is a blessed nation.  For over 200 years, we have been a Christian nation, founded on the principles taught by Christ.

At every turn, America is being challenged.  Our laws are being re-evaluated by people who do not believe in Christ…who, in many cases, do not believe in God.  Our legislation is being crafted by people without a God-fearing faith…and by people of faith in other gods.

What are Christians to do?  How do we preserve what God has entrusted to us?

Good Christians have taken up the battle.  We fight on many fronts.  Our laws must preserved in the courts.  Legislation must be scrutinized for provisions that violate God’s commands.  Media outlets must be challenged to fully and fairly report the news.  And most importantly, on every front, Christians are fighting to preserve our religious freedom, our freedom to openly speak and act as Christians.

The battle is fierce.  And therein lays a danger.  As we fight to preserve a Christian nation and the freedoms it gives us, we must keep our focus on that larger struggle.

Our legal arguments are needed to preserve our right to pray.  Good reporters are needed to give voice to Christians otherwise silenced by a media hostile to Christians.  Congressional representatives must be free to speak and work, expressing their beliefs in what they do.

All these things we must fight for…without neglecting our first duty…our Christian duty as it was distilled and crystallized by the sacrifice of Christ on the cross.

The great commission came to us from Christ…not as a law of government.  It is the personal entreatment from our Lord, tend my sheep.  Our Christian duty is personal.  Do we love Him?  Yes?  Then shepherd his sheep.

The greatest battle of all is the battle for the human heart.  Christ came down to us not to rewrite Roman law.  He came to write God’s truth in our hearts through the ultimate miracle of living God’s love in our midst.

Clever legal arguments came from the Scribes and Pharisees who plotted together how they might trap Him in what He said.  Christ answered not with citations from the Torah, but by focusing human attention on Godly matters, rendering to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s; and to God the things that are God’s.

Christ did not command a separate nation be built to sequester his followers away from the Samaritans.  He waited for the Samaritan woman at the well and told her all the things that she had done, serving her living water.  He taught that even a Samaritan can feel compassion and bandage the wounds of a traveler fallen by the side of the road.

Must we stay engaged in the culture, fighting to preserve our government founded on Christian principles?  Yes.  Most definitely.  But Christians are not won to Christ by writing laws in Congress or by winning battles in the courts.

Do we know the saving grace that guides our nation?  Yes.  But it cannot be shared with Samaritans by pointing to our Christian heritage and demanding that they bow to tradition.

Jesus is not “justified” by the number of people who vote for Him.  He was alone on the cross.  God is not more powerful or more loving because he is encoded in our government.  He is.  He was.  He always has been.

Laws that do not arise from the human heart will never be able to stand on precedence.  In times of trial, we must be willing to stand alone.  It is imperative that we stand for government under God.  But this is never going to be a convincing argument to convince non-believers of God’s existence or draw them under His wings.

We win The Battle, when we lead the way to Christ.  And we lead the way by following HimDo we love Him?  Yes?  Then tend his sheep.  All other matters belong to Caesar.  And while they may be matters of importance, we must do these things without neglecting the first.

Follow Him.