Pubdate: Fri, 18 Feb 2005
Source: Leduc Representative (CN AB)
Section: Soulsearch
Copyright: 2005 Leduc Representative
Contact:  http://www.leducrepresentative.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2265

COMMUNAL RESPONSIBILITY TO TACKLE DRUG ISSUES

Let's picture the problem of drugs like a huge ocean liner, perhaps like 
the ship that was out of control in the movie Speed 2.

To steer the ship, you adjust the trim tab, which in turn adjusts the large 
rudder, and as a result the entire ship changes course.

The point is that addressing the problem of drugs is complex and demands 
the attention of every facet of a community.

How decisions that we take for granted feed the problem might not be 
obvious, just as the trim tab is not an obvious part of the ship.

One facet of the drug trade is spiritual.

Money is a useful, powerful and potentially dangerous tool. The love of 
money is at the root of all kinds of evil.

If we ignore God or relegate Him to life's bottom shelf, money becomes a 
spiritually powerful force, guiding decisions and undermining moral authority.

Since selling drugs to kids is profitable, there will always be someone to 
market them.

Therefore, renewed focus on God in prayer and daily faith will adjust the 
trim tab of the drug problem, but there is more.

We need to take steps to move away from being a drop-off society. Churches, 
schools and government social agencies can all contribute to this change.

The church feels successful when we convince parents to let us teach their 
children spiritual and moral values.

We have delegated too much responsibility to schools to educate our 
children when we drop them off. Of course these institutions should 
continue to do this, while working to empower parents to be more proactive 
and involved in the spiritual development and education of the children.

Financial demands, work stress and fatigue lead parents to disengage in the 
development of their kids and drop them off for others to care for.

Parents need encouragement and support while they take on the issues of 
building character in their families.

Someone will say, "Yes, it's all in how the kid was parented," but that is 
true, only if children are puppets rather than human beings with wills.

An African proverb says, "It takes a whole village to raise a child." A 
third adjustment to the trim tab concerns taxation. A family with two 
parents who work will pay less tax than a family where one parent works, 
earning the same amount of money as the family in which both parents earn.

Moreover, while government moves toward a national child care plan, 
families in which one parent prefers to stay home and be available to the 
children will not benefit.

While law enforcers continue to face the problem on the front line, they 
need to know that the rest of us are stepping up to turn this ship around. 
"You do not have, because you do not ask," the Bible says.

God cares about our families and the future of our community.

Beyond stepping up, we need to kneel down. Backed by prayer, the community 
can turn the ship around.