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Understanding and Building the Conscience of the Adolescent Introduction When the adolescent beings to think for himself,
he sees the biased rigidity of some of his parents' standards. As he
searches for his identity, he also feels compelled to assert his
independence from his parents. Some of this is good. If the adolescent
never learns to think for himself, he will always be a "yes-man." His
values and ideals will never be his own; he will simple be a puppet of his
parents, or of some other person. I. The
Teenager's 1.
As a part of finding his identity, the
typical teenager rethinks some of his
morality. 2.
He
may outwardly rebel
against a few of his parents' values just to see if he can get away with
it. Largely, his is trying to be his own person. 3.
He is trying to separate
himself both from his
parents and from their internalized ideals. He is probably somewhat at sea
as he tries to sort out his own beliefs and value
system. 4.
In this process he is also trying to find his own
personal identity, worth, and purpose in life. II. The Parents' Personal
Challenge 1.
The sensitive parent is ready for this
challenge. Instead of
vainly struggling to keep his teenager at an immature, internalized, or
fear-based level of morality, he encourages this newfound search for
personal values and identity. 2.
The sensitive parent allows the teenager to think
for himself, but in an
open way discusses the reasons for supporting biblical truth and
morality. 3.
A wise parent is flexible for
he is willing to
reevaluate his own position in the Word of God, his values and his
morality. He may even see that some of his taboos and values are not
specifically mentioned in the Scriptures. 4.
A wise parent majors in biblical
principles and
non-defensively gives his personal reasons for his own convictions.
5.
The sensitive parent does not
claim the power of
divine inspiration to force his adolescent into conformity to his personal
convictions. III. The Features Of a Mature
Conscience The mature conscience should be operating well by
late adolescence and early adulthood. 1.
Hypothetically, his conscience should be free
from the
necessity of external controls and restraint. The
mature person does not need to be motivated by the fear of others or by an
inner sense of self-punishment. 2.
He judges each situation on the basis of its
merits. He considers
the positive and negative consequences of his actions to himself and to
others. 3.
He refrains from wrong
because of its
effect on others and because of his relationship to the Lord he
loves. He follows God's commandments out of 4.
He questions things realistically.
a.
The person who immediately conforms to every
authoritative comment is usually a dependent or a fear-oriented person.
b.
He lacks a sense of individuality and self
confidence and he is afraid to
question. c.
At first it may seem that he is mature because of
his unquestioning stance. d.
But usually he has been coerced, and later when
independent he will fall into grevious sin because he was not allowed to
come to his own personal convictions. e.
While biblical standards are absolute and
authoritative, they do have sound logic behind them.
f.
God does not say, "Do this because I say so!"
Instead, He points out that His commands are for our good and for the good
of others around us.
An unquestioning faith that fails to ask "why?" is
actually naive. 5.
The mature person with a biblically motivated
conscience combines these two seemingly opposing
traits.
IV.
Understanding The Kinds Of Control That We Exercise As Parents, and their
Value
·
Respect
the right and privileges of others because they have a sense of warmth,
empathy, and concern. ·
See the
consequences of behavior for both self and others, and act according to
those implications. ·
Respect
authority and learn from the guidance of others. ·
Think
independently and rationally, not bound on the one hand by inner fears of
punishment or a sense of guilt, or on the other hand by a rebellious
attitude which rejects all authority but one's own.
·
Accept
divine absolutes and the leading of the Holy Spirit while seeking to
understand their implications and continuing to accept them, even when
they are divergent from our reasoning. ·
Make all
moral decisions out of a mature love for God, ourselves, and
others. ·
The Word
of God is that which controls their decisions and conditions
their Adapted
from “An Ounce of Prevention," by Dr. Bruce Narramore.
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© 2008
Christian Youth Counseling Ministry.
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