Growing out of our cult of youth
It’s 2011. Three score and five years ago, our mothers brought forth a new generation, a big generation, a baby boom that has now started entering retirement. Soldiers returning from the war in 1945 started having kids in 1946. They’ve been the center of our attention ever since, whether we’ve liked it or not.
Even The New York Times marked the event with “Boomers Hit New Self-Absorption Milestone: Age 65”:
“According to the Pew Research Center, for the next 19 years, about 10,000 people ‘will cross that threshold’ every day—and many of them, whether through exercise or Botox, have no intention of ceding to others what they consider rightfully theirs: youth.”
So it is fitting that the man to bring in that 65th New Year should be Dick Clark, who for decades never seemed to age. Even now, with the right camera angle, he looks nowhere near his 81 years.
Clark, who came to be known as “America’s oldest living teenager,” began his national celebrity as the host of American Bandstand, a baby boomer teenybopper TV favorite that aired from 1957 to 1987. He began hosting Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve in 1972, an annual show that has brought America to New York’s Times Square to watch the ball drop every New Year’s Eve since then except 1999. In December 2004, Clark suffered a debilitating stroke. Since then, Ryan Seacrest has taken over most of the New Year’s Eve hosting duties as Clark has slowly but impressively regained speaking ability and arm and hand motion.
I had been completely unaware of Clark’s recent travails. But I was struck by what I saw last Friday night.
At first I thought his inclusion in the show for the countdown was a welcome departure from the cult of youth and of fleeting pleasure that so dominates televised New Year celebrations. Here they were, honoring an octogenarian stroke survivor, allowing the ugliness of creeping death to intrude on their revelry for the sake of respect for a grand old man. He did a remarkably good job considering how far he’s had to come in the last six years.
But upon reflection (and prodding from my wife), I became convinced that his appearance was actually a metaphor for a vain culture and a self-absorbed generation. The baby boomers have been the center of everyone’s attention since they were born, beginning with the publication of Dr. Spock’s Baby and Child Care in 1946 and up to the present barrage of pharmaceutical ads for people whose parts don’t work the way they once did, including Viagra and meds for “Low T” that enable 60-year-old men to carry on like teenagers. (It’s remarkable that their preoccupation with perpetually extended adolescence has made it entirely acceptable even to mention such products on prime time television.)
Dick Clark is how they have seen themselves over the years, the Dorian Gray in all their mirrors. They’ve been true to Roger Daltrey’s generational cry, “Hope I die before I get old,” but only by denying that they’re ever getting old. The Pew study tells us that “the typical Boomer feels nine years younger than his or her chronological age” and thinks old age begins at 72. They’ve made it our standard practice to speak of the aged as being so many “years young.”
Like the generation he has hosted for the last 50-some years, Dick Clark has not aged gracefully as a grand old man does. In fact, he has defined himself against it. Though not himself a baby boomer, he has spent his life preening, tucking, and tanning to preserve himself the way we’ve always remembered him.
But on the boomers’ last New Year’s Eve before retirements start, the man who seemed to embody their hope of living “forever young” flashed—unintentionally it seemed—the reminder that, like the irresistible advance of each new year, death comes to all men (Romans 5:12). Socrates saw philosophy, the best human life, as a preparation for death. The Psalmist wrote, “Teach us to number our days, that we may get a heart of wisdom” (Psalm 90:12). Perhaps one day we will return to the view that “Gray hair is a crown of glory,” and that the fullness of its glory “is gained in a righteous life” (Proverbs 16:31).
Happy New Year.

















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back to top15 Comments to “Growing out of our cult of youth”
We cannot escape the inevitable — we can only prepare for it.
http://www.RedLetterBelievers.com, Salt and Light
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There are lots of ways to gloss over, deny and rationalize the inevitablity of death. To exploit or to ease peoples’ fear of death. None of them are honest.
Huge chunks of our commercial culture rely on creating the illusion that it can be postponed. Evrything from cosmetics to cars is promoted or designed to give a temporary rejuvenic effect and mask the truth that we will cease to exist.
But only religion holds out the promise that it will never really happen. It promises eternal life.
I think that is the greatest lie of all.
And by that promise, it cheapens the value of real life.
I think that is one of the most dangerous lies of all.
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Whaddya mean old age doesn’t start at 72?
My father retired at age 62. He started to received AARP stuff and went nuts (born in ‘07). He always told the toll collector “here you go, son” but when the guy responded with “thanks, pop,” he stopped. It was an adjustment. In is 70s, while waiting for my mother to get ready for church, he put his leg up on a kitchen chair (something we were not allowed to do), so I teased him. His comeback? “I’m old, I can do what I want.”
Every generation, every person, gets hit in the face with the fact that they are now “Der Alte” — the old one. I do think it will be difficult for those who are not grounded in faith. They will have to come to terms with a lot of “stuff.”
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And you can disprove eternal life how?
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It will be my turn this year as one of those 10,000. It is sobering to realize how short it has been and how little there may be left. But I can with only increasing honesty and sincerity say that the confident trust I have in God makes the past, present, and future a life of wondrous hope. I would live blindly in foolish cynicism were it not for the realized grace of The Timely God Who daily assures me “I Am with you.” To believe otherwise is to fall prey to the desperate lie of our hopeless enemy.
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My best friend and I had dinner last week and we figured we’ve known each other since 1980. What a long time that’s been and all the things we’ve been through together, deaths of parents, school, her divorce. We remembered saying “we have 20 good years left, let’s make the best of them” and now we are thinking it’s maybe 15 years….
I personally feel I’ve earned every gray hair I’ve got (and lately there are more of them). I still have work to do, but I can see how I resist God in some things, what I have to work on, and where I’ve been successful. Age is a great teacher. What I’ve learned is that someday I get to “go home.”
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That which has no ultimate value, ultimately has no value. In your worldview, the “value of real life” is an oxymoron.
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Ree: I value my life and the lives of others.
It saddens me that others don’t. They trade in their sense of self worth and self determination and respect for others for an impossible promise, made by men of suspect motives. What is couched as a “gift” is really composed of threats and chains.
I find it insulting that you would cheapen the value of my life.
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And what men with suspect motives? Or chains and threats?
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Sorry, Arcadia, but the fact that you “value your life” doesn’t mean that your life has any intrinsic value. And there’s nothing noble about pretending and acting like it does if we’re all just here today and gone tomorrow, moving toward nothing more hopeful than the eventual burnout of our sun.
Of course, in reality, your life has whatever value your Creator gives it. But if all you are is a bunch of random cells functioning by random chemical processes, then it’s your belief in your value that’s “the greatest lie of all.” And it’s you, as a victim of an impersonal universe, who’s in chains, while it’s the Christian, who’s been saved from the power of sin and death, who knows real liberty. And to complain of “threats,” is like a man drowning in the ocean complaining that his would-be rescuer who’s throwing him a life preserver is threatening him with drowning if he refuses the lifeline. It’s really quite silly.
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A man I know went to a convention called Glamourcon. It turned out to be former centerfolds from PLAYBOY arranged at tables in a big convention hall. They had autograph pix to sell and the room seemed full of nerdy unmarried guys there mainly to ogle. Some were there to pose alongside the washed-up old Bunnies.
It is a sad thing when folks desperately cling to youth long since gone.
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Or from a simpler and more plainly obvious direction, Arcadia, do you actually think that the universe, with all its complexity, just came into existence? From nothing? With no intelligence behind it? Do you think that your “intelligence” could just spring from dumb nothingness? That you were modeled after nothingness? Purposeless meaningless nothingness? Have you really ever pondered your world view backward to its utterly illogical irrational beginning? All “this” was just here, from eternity ago? Never a beginning, never a creator? Never a purpose? The evidence for a creator abounds all around you, from a cosmological viewpoint to the wonderfully intricate microbiological constructs within you which contain multiple examples of “irreducible complexity,” firmly trouncing the weak idiotic flat-earth-like shamble of a theory of macro-evolution or Darwinism. Once you truly examine, EXAMINE, with intelligent open-mindedness, the evidence for God all around you and the LACK of any factual, realistic evidence for all the other secular theories, then your heart may soften and your mind may start to wonder how you missed all this before. There’s no grape Kool-aid, no “checking your brain at the door” for the intelligent, discerning Christian. For these Christians, who believe in God with their heart, soul, and MIND, it is a thorough and open examination of the evidence (which can be a rather long process for the skeptic–I am one) which leads them to Christ, not a blindly plodding acceptance of the first good religion that comes along, out of a need for hope (although we do need hope) or a better explanation for all “this” because we just need one. No. Start rebuilding your knowledge with truth instead of all those buzz-phrases/words that you’ve learned from other blind secular naysayers. Real truth, examined truth, tested truth. Yes, test your “truths” instead of swallowing them as they’re fed to you from others who had them falsely fed to them. You’ve been lied to, but not from true Christians. You’ve been lied to by the secular world of “we-don’t-want-to-believe-in-anything-that-establishes-accountability-to-something-higher-than-ourselves-that-may-reserve-the-right-to-judge-us” people–the people who latch onto any lie that makes them feel like they’re in control. I assure you, all of the “facts” that you think you “know” to be true, have no real foundation of truth or evidence to support them. It takes an insanely greater amount of “faith” to believe in a secular world than it does to believe in what the plain evidence clearly points toward–an Architect, Creator, Father, our God, who wrote us such an incredible love story, set in such an incredible theater to be played out to a spectacular happy ending…the evidence is all around you, you just need to open your heart, soul and mind.
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If we were to let the current price of a slave in the modern world (according to National Geographic) decide, a human life is worth 40 dollars. If we let the base value of all the atoms in a human being define their value, more like six. even if we take the average amount a human earns in a life time, 1.2 to 2.5 million depending on their level of education. If we use the cost of ending a life, 375 is the price of ending an unborn child, at least the last time I checked. No matter which of the above values you use, each is essentially paper that will decay into dirt.
I do not recommend using money to value people’s lives, but like money, we all will die and frankly be forgotten. Possibly your great-grandchildren will never know who you are and what you did.
Plus whatever you do will fail, as at some point in the future, the sun will expand into a red giant, and its radius will happen to be about the same as the current distance between the sun and the earth. Thus all you do here at least will burn. Even if humans get off this piece of dust, the universe will reach maximum entropy and all you and your descendants will have done will have been for naught. I learned a long time ago I am nothing, formed from nothing, and yet He who is everything for some reason (love) cares about me, you, all of us nothings on the surface of a dust particle in space. Any worth that my life has is from Him, not from me, you, or this material universe.
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Just a personal observation:
Folks who are determined to to prove a “negative” – There is NO God – do so very vehemently and vigorously!!
WHY????
(Straight from Sigmund F. – more or less) – To acknowledge the existence of some power greater than SELF, is to admit that one just may be accountable for actions during this brief journey on this blue orb; and that SUCKS!!!!!
Ergo, deny any power greater than man, OR one that really interacts with, MAN!
Wala!! “I can do as I please, with no moral restrictions, or accountability to anybody.
Unfortunately, these folk will bend the knee to Him, though reluctantly
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I am not sure, FN, if we will be capable of reluctance when standing in the presence of God.
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