"We
now have this light shining in our hearts, but we ourselves are like
fragile clay jars
containing this great treasure. This makes it clear that our great power is from God,
not from ourselves." 2 Corinthians 4:7 (NLT)
containing this great treasure. This makes it clear that our great power is from God,
not from ourselves." 2 Corinthians 4:7 (NLT)
The following comments from Anneli Rufus are particularly pertinent for parents of school age children. They also prompt us to ask ourselves how we view ourselves. Do we see ourselves as the kitten sees itself in the mirror or do we see ourselves as Paul writes to the Corinthians? Have a great day! Jeff
Is
low self-esteem all that bad? Self-loathing is. But between
self-loathing and narcissism is a vast spectrum comprising infinitely
various degrees of self-regard. Neither extreme is good. If only we
could just reach medium.
In
1986, California state assembly member John Vasconcellos proposed the
State Task Force to Promote Self-Esteem. This ignited a new movement:
Based on the notion that low self-esteem caused every kind of social woe
from teenage pregnancy to low test scores and high dropout rates, school
curricula and parenting techniques were radically transformed, their
main objective now being to cultivate high self-esteem among the young,
which activists proclaimed would cure those social woes and make America
a safer, happier, and better place. A multibillion-dollar industry
surged around self-esteem. Kids were taught to make “me” flags of
their putative “me” nations, to view history and fiction through the
filter of their feelings, and to start schooldays with
affirmations such as I always make good choices and Everyone
is happy to see me.
The
aftermath has not worked out as planned. Since 1986, self-esteem among
young people has increased. Studies show that students hold
themselves in higher regard than students in decades past. But to the
shock and horror of the self-esteem movement’s boosters, soaring
self-esteem has done nothing to stem crime, addiction and those other
ills the boosters claimed high self-esteem would stem. In fact, ambient
sky-high self-esteem might present new problems of its own: One
long-term study found that college students are now twice as
narcissistic as college students were in 1982; other
studies link high
self-esteem with high rates of aggression, territorialism, elitism,
racism, and other negative qualities.
And other
studies show that
the so-called Millennial Generation – young adults born after the
self-esteem movement began — are demonstrably
less likely than Baby Boomers and Generation Xers to care about social
problems, current events or energy conservation.
Millennials are also less likely to have jobs whose main purpose is to
help other people. In one study, three times as many Millennials as
Boomers said they made no personal effort to help the environment . . .
.
Noting
that there are “almost no findings showing that [high] self-esteem
causes anything [beneficial] at all,” University of Pennsylvania
psychology professor Martin Seligman laments:
“Something
striking has happened to the self-esteem of American children during the
era of raising our children to feel good. They have never been more
depressed.”
“Lord, thank you for showing us where our
self-worth comes from. . . anyone who is in Christ has become a new
person. The old has
gone and the new has begun. (2 Corinthians 5:17).
Amen”
For
more:
follow on Twitter @jefflampl
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