Leslie (10 Aug 2004)
"for Paul Wilson re: Kyle Williams"


Hi Paul,
Kyle Williams entered public high school this past year, from what I
remember in a previous WND posting he made.  Perhaps the indoctrination of
the new "tolerance" has seeped into his young brain.
ysiC,
Leslie
ps  I receive the following on a homeschooling e-mail list that I am on:

http://www.bobhostetler.com/writing/bestof005.html
New Tolerance No Virtue
by
Josh McDowell and Bob Hostetler
 

My son was a high school senior when I asked, "Son, in twelve years of
school, were you ever taught any absolute truth?"

"Sure," he said.

Surprised, I asked, "What absolute truth have you learned in public
schools?"

He shrugged. "Tolerance," he said.

I have since discovered that his experience is common. Tolerance has become
the cardinal virtue, the sole absolute of our society. Yet many of us don't
understand what our schools and society--and sometimes our own
teenagers--mean when they talk about tolerance.

In recent years, the meaning has changed drastically.

New Definitions

Many parents don't realize that their children are speaking a different
language. To some extent this has always been true; the slang and speech of
youth have baffled generation after generation of parents. But the language
differences between parent and child today are much more dangerous than
youthful slang, for even when the words we use sound the same, our children
don't always mean the same as when Mom and Dad use those words.

The traditional definition of tolerance means "to recognize and respect
(others' beliefs, practices, etc.) without necessarily agreeing or
sympathizing" with them. This attitude--that everyone has a right to his own
opinion--is what tolerance means to most of us.

But today's definition--the concept our children are being taught in schools
and through the media--is vastly different. This new tolerance means to
consider every individual's beliefs, values, lifestyle, and truth claims as
equally valid. So not only does everyone have an equal right to his beliefs,
but all beliefs are equal. All values are equal. All lifestyles are equal.
All truth claims are equal. The new tolerance goes beyond respecting a
person's rights; it demands praise and endorsement of that person's beliefs,
values, and lifestyle.

We are already feeling the effects of this "new" tolerance. It is why a
Christian who objects to pornography in the neighborhood convenience store
is dismissed as "intolerant." It is why a Christian who espouses the
Biblical view of homosexuality is denounced as "intolerant." It is why a
Christian who distributes pro-life leaflets near an abortion clinic is
labeled "intolerant." Such reactions are the logical and necessary result of
this new definition of tolerance.
 

New Dangers

I believe that fundamental change in meaning--and thinking--represents one
of the greatest shifts in history--and we dare not miss it. We must instead
prepare our children and teenagers for a culture totally different from the
one in which their parents grew up, one which will be marked by:

The repression of public discourse. I have addressed millions of high school
and college students over the past three decades about Jesus Christ and the
historical evidence for his life and resurrection. But recently I have
witnessed a startling shift. When I began touring and lecturing, I would
often get heckled. I even welcomed it at times, because the heckler would
respond to the substance of my message, saying such things as "Prove it!"
and "I don't believe you." In the past few years, however, that has changed.
Now my attacker invariably says, "How dare you say that?" "Who do you think
you are?" The issue is no longer the truth of the message, but the right to
proclaim it.

The privatization of convictions. Because the new tolerance declares that
all beliefs are equally valid, Christians will face increasing pressure to
be silent about their convictions--in school, in the workplace, and in the
public square--because to speak out will be seen as an intolerant judgment
of others' beliefs and lifestyles. This explains the ruling of Judge Samuel
B. Kent of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, who
decreed that any high school student mentioning the name of Jesus in a
graduation prayer would be sentenced to a six-month jail term! He wrote:

And make no mistake, the court is going to have a United States marshal in
attendance at the graduation. If any student offends this court, that
student will be summarily arrested and will face up to six months
incarceration in the Galveston County Jail for contempt of court. Anyone who
thinks I'm kidding about this order. . . [or] expressing any weakness or
lack of resolve in that spirit of compromise would better think again.
Anyone who violates these orders, no kidding, is going to wish that he or
she had died as a child when this court gets through with it."

Our children today face a culture that commands us to be silent about our
Christian convictions silence, which will increasingly force a choice
between obeying man and obeying God (Acts 5:29). The proponents of the new
tolerance argue that we are free to believe whatever we like; we should just
keep it private. But as sociologist S. D. Gaede says, "I cannot be mute
about my convictions. . . . it is precisely those convictions that committed
me to truth and justice in the first place."

The new wave of religious persecution.Some years ago, I asked my daughter
whether she feared being called any names or labeled in any way at school. I
was surprised at her answer. She responded immediately that she was afraid
of being called "intolerant." That label was enough to strike fear into the
heart of my teenage daughter, because the accusation alone is enough to
invite retribution and persecution, all in the name of tolerance.

The danger is not confined to those in large cities or public schools. One
fourteen-year-old girl ran into trouble in her parochial school history
class. The class was instructed to write a constitution for a
pseudo-country. The discussion turned into a debate when the girl politely
objected to a suggestion that the constitution include freedom of sexual
preference and maintained that sexual preference didn't deserve special
mention in the constitution. Almost immediately, a classmate erupted,
saying, "You're a bigot!" The teacher intervened to prevent further
name-calling, but the damage had been done; that fourteen-year-old's parents
had to help her cope with the undeserved label her classmates had given her.

Such incidents as these reflect our society's shift from a Judeo-Christian
culture to an increasingly and aggressively anti-Judeo-Christian culture.
The claims of Jesus are considered too narrow by today's definition, and the
cross is viewed by many as the ultimate symbol of intolerance and bigotry,
because the Gospel represents a direct and formidable challenge to the "new
tolerance." As the new tolerance permeates our culture, a new wave of
unpopularity--and even persecution--is likely to be encountered by
Christians . . . including our youth.
 

New Directions

The dangers and damage of the new tolerance are daunting, but we may take
heart; there is hope. It is possible, not only to understand, but also to
expose and counter the agenda of the new tolerance. It is possible, not only
to keep our youth from being fooled by the new tolerance but also to instill
within them a "more excellent way," a way for them to "take [their] stand
against the devil's schemes" (Ephesians 6:11b). It will not be easy, but I
am confident that doing so will require a bold and concerted effort in three
areas:

We must train our children to pursue truth. It may be difficult to speak the
truth in today's climate, but Jesus said, "the truth will set you free"
(John 8:32). We must recover--without embarrassment or apology--the basic
belief in truth that characterized Jesus Christ's message and ministry. This
means embracing all people, but not all beliefs; it means listening to and
learning from all people, but not necessarily agreeing with them. Even if it
makes us objects of scorn or hatred, we must courageously speak the truth in
a "sympathetic, kindhearted, and humble" spirit, knowing that those who
oppose the truth "are perishing. . . because they [refuse] to love the truth
and so be saved" (1 Peter 3:8, NASB; 2 Thess. 2:10, NIV).

We must train our children to promote justice. The prophet Micah once said,
"What does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to exercise
loving-kindness" (Micah 6:8, author's paraphrase). Justice used to be a
dominant virtue in Western culture, but it has been supplanted by tolerance,
because justice and the new tolerance cannot coexist; they are antithetical
to each other. That is because justice requires a moral basis for discerning
right from wrong; with tolerance, there is no right or wrong (except the
sole virtue of tolerance). Yet God has called us to act justly, and the more
Christians identify with and promote justice, the more we will discover that
the moral principle of justice still resonates with believer and unbeliever
alike.

We must train our children to practice aggressive love. God also calls us
(in Micah 6:8) to exercise loving-kindness. Christians are subject to a much
higher standard than tolerance. We are called to follow the way of Christ,
who accepted Samaritans and Phoenicians (John 4; Mark 7:24-30) and treated
even prostitutes and tax collectors with dignity (Like 7:36-50; 19:1-10).
The Christian imperative exceeds tolerance, which simply avoids offending
someone; we are commanded to "do everything in love" (1 Cor. 16:14), which
actively seeks to promote the good of another person.

Tolerance says, "You must approve of what I do." Love responds, "I must do
something harder; I will love you, even when your behavior offends me."

Tolerance says, "You must agree with me." Love responds, "I must do
something harder; I will tell you the truth, because I am convinced that
'the truth will set you free.'"

Tolerance says, "You must allow me to have my way." Love responds, "I must
do something harder; I will plead with you to follow the right way, because
I believe you are worth the risk."

Tolerance seeks to be inoffensive; love takes risks. Tolerance glorifies
division; love seeks unity. Tolerance costs nothing; love costs everything.

I believe the dreadful potential of the "new tolerance"--the repression of
public discourse, the privatization of convictions, and the new wave of
religious persecution--can be averted, but only if we train our children to
exercise truth, justice, and love in their homes, schools, churches, and
communities.

The odds may seem stacked against us, but we must do what God calls us to
do. We must discern, teach, and choose right over wrong, truth over error,
justice over injustice, and love over tolerance. Only then will we turn the
tide from tolerance back to truth.
 

Josh McDowell and Bob Hostetler are coauthors of eight books, including The
New Tolerance (Tyndale House Publishers).