Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Can You Stand the Truth?






In most of my meetings I make sure I mention the danger some music imposes on us and I've noticed most youths find it really hard to believe in what  I'm saying. Some even think I'm trying to dictate their lives by telling them what not to listen to. Well, I decided to share with you what this secular pediatric website has to say. Even though it's from a physical point of view, the outcome is pretty much the same as of the spiritual one in the meetings.


Objective: To perform a comprehensive content analysis of substance use in contemporary popular music.

Design: We analyzed the 279 most popular songs of 2005 according to Billboard magazine. Two coders working independently used a standardized data collection instrument to code portrayals of substance use.

Outcome Measures: Presence and explicit use of substances and motivations for, associations with, and consequences of substance use.

Results: Of the 279 songs, 93 (33.3%) portrayed substance use, with an average of 35.2 substance references per song-hour. Portrayal of substance use varied significantly (< .001) by genre, with 1 or more references in 3 of 35 pop songs (9%), 9 of 66 rock songs (14%), 11 of 55 R & B/hip-hop songs (20%), 22 of 61 country songs (36%), and 48 of 62 rap songs (77%). While only 2.9% of the 279 songs portrayed tobacco use, 23.7% depicted alcohol use, 13.6% depicted marijuana use, and 11.5% depicted other or unspecified substance use. In the 93 songs with substance use, it was most often motivated by peer/social pressure (45 [48%]) or sex (28 [30%]); use was commonly associated with partying (50 [54%]), sex (43 [46%]), violence (27 [29%]), and/or humor (22 [24%]). Only 4 songs (4%) contained explicit anti-use messages, and none portrayed substance refusal. Most songs with substance use (63 [68%]) portrayed more positive than negative consequences; these positive consequences were most commonly social, sexual, financial, or emotional.

Conclusions: The average adolescent is exposed to approximately 84 references to explicit substance use daily in popular songs, and this exposure varies widely by musical genre. The substance use depicted in popular music is frequently motivated by peer acceptance and sex, and it has highly positive associations and consequences.


*Excerpted from: http://archpedi.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/162/2/169


To be continue...


Luke Castro
YPG National Coordinator


Saturday, December 24, 2011

JOKER!




"Then the kingdom of heaven shall be likened to ten virgins who took their lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom. Now five of them were wise, and five were... 

foolishstupid, silly, idiotic, witless, brainless, mindless, unintelligent, thoughtless, half-baked, imprudent, incautious, injudicious, unwise, ill-advised, ill-considered, impolitic, rash, reckless, foolhardy, daft; informal dumb, dim, dimwitted, halfwitted, thick, harebrained, crack-brained, crackpot, pea-brained, wooden-headed, dumb-ass, chowderheaded. - Matthew 25:1-2

Are the synonyms enough to make you understand? 

Perhaps you could attempt to read the rest of the chapter. 


Do you dare?



Luke Castro
YPG National Coordinator

Friday, December 23, 2011

Wise Up!




Have you ever been in a situation where you do or say something and immediately after that you regret it? Young people often find themselves in this situation. Why? Because they act according to the impulses of their hearts, without wisdom.

What comes to mind whenever the word wisdom is mentioned is the image of an old man, full of experience and knowledge... this is the world’s image of wisdom. But there is a big difference between the wisdom that comes from God and the wisdom of the world.

The wisdom of the world often bears a lot of tragedy and problems simply because they act based on their own understanding. It’s equally easy to see the bad fruits of those who are unwise.

"Instead of kicking yourself every time you commit the same mistakes
seek wisdom from God that you may deal with things the right way."

For God, age or experience is not an issue. When Solomon asked for wisdom he was young, he had no experience of running a kingdom but he recognised that he wasn’t mature enough to deal with that responsibility and sought wisdom from God. He received it because his heart was after God’s own, meaning he wanted to do things right by God.

You may not be running a kingdom but you need wisdom to deal with family, finances, school, friends and the situation around you. Instead of kicking yourself every time you commit the same mistakes seek wisdom from God that you may deal with things the right way.

When you receive counselling from pastors or assistants, they don’t just sit there talking about things that they know. They are linked with God, they seek for wisdom and consequently God gives it to them in order to give people the right direction and advice.

Be wise.

If you want to grow in your faith, make sure you attend the last YPG Real Talk meeting of the year next Thursdays at 7pm.

Find your local YPG branch.



Luke Castro
YPG National Coordinator

Monday, December 19, 2011

What Are You Known For?




In 2 Chronicles 26, we read the story of King Uzziah who was called to rule at the age of sixteen. When the people chose him to govern over them instead of his father, he grew from strength to strength and prospered in everything.

As he did what was right in the sight of God “…his fame spread far and wide, for he was marvelously helped till he became strong.”
(2 Chronicles 26:15)

So what caused this great and successful king to be remembered as nothing more than a leper?

Note here that it says he was successful until he became strong, in other words, until he became proud.


“Stop for a moment and look at yourself…what are you known for?”


King Uzziah allowed pride to fill his heart and believed himself to know everything and lost the fear of God, just like many young people do today.

“…when he was strong his heart was lifted up, to his destruction, for he transgressed against the LORD his God by entering the temple of the LORD to burn incense on the altar of incense.” (2 Chronicles 26:16)

When the priests rebuked him for this, instead of humbling himself and recognising his mistake, he was angry in his heart. Consequently, leprosy broke out across his forehead. In those days, a leprous person was an outcast; they were seen as ‘unclean’ and would have to stay away from the rest of the citizens of that city. In that single moment of rebellion in his heart, King Uzziah lost everything and was ashamed and humiliated before all men.

Isn’t this what happens to many youths nowadays?

Like this King, many youths lose the fear of God and despise the many opportunities that He gives them through direction and instruction from the man of God (pastors/assistants). They refuse to humble themselves. Consequently they become ‘leprous’. 

Instead of being known for being successful, they are known for everything that is bad and shameful.

They become like those youths who are no longer known by their names but rather as ‘that girl that fights all the time’‘the boy who is an undergraduate’, ‘the one in the gang’, ‘the guy who ended up in prison’ or ‘the girl who got pregnant’.

Kind David was in a similar situation as King Uzziah. He was successful and also well known. At his greatest, like King Uzziah, he sinned when he sent his soldier to his death in battle because he wanted to be with his wife.

In comparison to King Uzziah’s sin, King David's seemed the worst of the two, so why is it then that today, he is remembered as the man after God’s own heart despite this big mistake? It’s because when David was rebuked by the priests for his actions, instead of being filled with pride like Uzziah, he humbled himself and repented of his sin.

Today, David is still known as a great king, a great man of God. Uzziah is known for being a leper.

Stop for a moment and look at yourself…what are you known for?


Luke Castro
YPG National Coordinator

Friday, December 16, 2011

Overcoming the 'Loser State'




Many youths, in spite of believing in God and having every opportunity to succeed, they are losers!

They are constantly defeated by their problems, situations and are constantly making the same silly mistakes.

They try to overcome this ‘loser state’ according to their abilities but the Bible is clear…

Whoever seeks to save his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life will preserve it.” (Luke 17: 33)

When we give our life to the Lord Jesus, not just vocally but to the point of acting upon every instruction that's given, we can never lose because from that moment on our life is in His hands. We're safe.

This means that no matter what happens around you, even if it’s a situation that is against you, you can't lose because you already 'lost' your life the day you gave it to God. No matter what happens, there's no loss! 

How can you lose something you have already lost? Your life is His concern now.

If you are reading this and thinking, ‘I don’t want to be a loser anymore’, then do something about it! Give your life to God, with no reservations.

Only the Holy Spirit can make you complete.

Make sure you win the biggest battle of all battles, the inner one.



Pr Luke Castro
YPG National Coordinator


Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Where U Going? - Francis Kallon Testimony


Watch this amazing example of what is to be in control of one's life.



Monday, December 12, 2011

Your Spiritual Compass



How can we discern between good and evil in this corrupt and hypocritical world, filled with deception?


How can we know whom to date and marry 
according to the will of God?


What career should we choose in order to be 
more useful in the Kingdom of God?


What to do when home is in turmoil?


Which church is of God?


How to identify the voice of God and the voice of the devil?




Adrift in the spiritual ocean?



When He, the Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide into all truth.
John 16:13

  

Luke Castro
YPG National coordinator


Friday, December 2, 2011