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Generations, Part 3

October 10, 2010 • Pastor Star R. Scott

Amen! Let's turn to Ephesians 6. We want to continue along the lines that we were on. Just looking at the hour that we're in, and the need to really--I think, probably escalate all that we've done over these last years in trying to prepare our children to stand in the midst of this crooked and perverse generation. But you know, we've been talking a lot lately about the gospel being generational and the responsibility that we have to give the emphasis to this generational principle in the midst of living in a society, really, that promotes independence of each generation. We've seen it, you know--it's a natural thing for young people to want to be independent; we have the youth culture, and we see it in the secular, you know, everybody--every generation kind of just mocks the way the younger generation dresses or the music they listen to, even in the secular realm.

And so, the natural tendency, because of the Adamic nature, is for independence, separation; you know, identifying our generation, our way of doing things. But in the kingdom, there's only one way to do it, amen? The Lord's the same yesterday, today and forever; so there's no new way; there's no twenty-first-century way; there's no... I've always felt strongly about this where the emphasis of the youth culture--we've always had in our ministry "youth ministry" but never separated it from the whole community. You know, we're all one; the body of Christ is one. We've drifted away from the role of the patriarch in our society today. I want to talk about that a little bit, and yet I don't want it to be seen as abusive, because when we teach on the patriarchal principle--you know, the true patriarch isn't going to try to micromanage his children's family. Because we're all separate entities, we have separate gifts and separate calls. But the patriarch is responsible to see that his children and his children's children remain faithful to the Lord, amen?...

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