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FEATURES: Promise Makers
By Bill McCartney
The founder of Promise Keepers explains why he’s calling for a spiritual assembly of men in the nation’s capital
The founder of Promise
Keepers explains
why hes calling for a spiritual assembly of men in the
nations capital.
America is
suffering from a severe shortage of integrity, and men are
behind some of its worst manifestations. Men are more likely
than women to break their marriage vows through adultery,
violence, or abandonment. Men are impregnating young women in
record numbers and leaving them to deal with the
consequences--a stint on welfare, an education cut short, or
a trip to an abortion clinic. Men are also more likely to
abuse drugs and alcohol and then engage in a wide range of
criminal behavior. Indeed, it is men, overwhelmingly, who
commit most of the nation's violent crimes and dominate its
prison system: At least 94 percent of all inmates are male.
Social problems are moral problems, which ultimately have
a spiritual cause. For those of us involved in Christian
outreach programs, the connection is inescapable: The failure
of large numbers of men to live up to their family and social
obligations represents a failure of faith.
More to the point, the growing irresponsibility of men
points, in large part, to a failure in our Christian
churches. Men are much less likely than women to set foot in
a church, less likely to say they are absolutely committed to
Jesus Christ, less likely to read the Bible during the week
or strongly affirm the role of religious faith in their
lives. Many--perhaps most--men see church mainly as a place
for women and children. A similar separation of men from
religious life is to be found in non-Christian communities as
well. Uninspired by any religious vision for their lives,
more and more men are becoming disconnected from any moral
vision.
All of this is taking a tremendous toll on our culture.
The absence of responsible men from the home is now widely
regarded as the most important cause of America's social
decline. If America is truly in the throes of cultural
breakdown, then the shallow faith of so many men, and the
kind of behavior that follows from it, has contributed to
this breakdown.
The Need of the Hour
But here is where many feminists and others who scorn
traditional virtue have it wrong: If men are a principal
cause of family meltdown, crime, and racial strife, then men
also are central to the solutions to those problems. What
America desperately needs today is men who take
responsibility for their actions, who are faithful to their
families, who keep their word, even when it's difficult or
costly.
America is crying out for a generation of "promise
keepers." Five years ago, when I was still the head
football coach at the University of Colorado, I realized that
too many men were getting their priorities out of alignment.
I'd seen too many men who called themselves Christians and
attended church, but had little idea what it meant to live
out a Christian ethic, either on the playing field or in
their homes. To be honest, I watched my own family suffer as
I poured myself into my career. I rationalized my
workaholism, of course, but in reality I was letting go of my
most basic responsibilities. Family members and friends
finally helped me to see that, in essence, I had been
directing my own life without reference to God. Because I
failed so miserably, I've been able to see that many men
today are doing exactly the same thing I did.
I resigned my coaching position in order to help bring
together men who were interested in succeeding in the most
important areas of their lives: their personal relationships
with Almighty God, their wives, and their children. Just over
4,000 men met in 1991 at the Coors Event Center in Boulder,
Colorado, for the first conference of our new organization, Promise Keepers. It
was not a gathering of angry white males or an exercise in
chest-beating or in lifting male self-esteem. This was about
men taking stock of their moral and spiritual inventory. We
asked men to publicly proclaim their love and allegiance to
Jesus Christ and their commitment to their families. Since
then, more than 2 million men have attended conferences in
which they are challenged to make, and keep, a series of
promises to honor God, to remain faithful to their spouses,
and to support their churches.
Now we are taking Promise Keepers a step further. We are
calling on men to come to Washington, D.C., for a day of
heartfelt confession and prayer. Men from all over the
country will gather not for any political cause, but for the
purpose of being honest with each other and, most
importantly, with God Himself, about our shortcomings. We
want to see God spark personal renewal in the lives of tens
of thousands of men, the kind of spiritual commitment that
radically changes attitudes and everyday decisions.
Why Washington, D.C., and why now?
The nation's capital has historically served as the
geographical soul of America, the place where national
tragedies are mourned, where victories are celebrated, where
protests are most keenly felt, and where the nation's
attention turns to in times of crisis. Many believe we are in
such a crisis. Many Christian leaders correctly see the
crisis not only out there in the larger culture, but right
here, inside the church. That's why, despite what our
critics claim, we aren't interested in political agendas;
politics simply can't touch issues of the heart.
Prayer can do that, for it involves communicating with our
Creator. It means bowing down before Almighty God. For
Christians, humble prayer unlocks the door to a personal,
life-transforming relationship with Christ Himself. It is
perhaps the most important tool for moral and spiritual
rebirth. And so what better place to spark such renewal, to
help address our national ills, than in the symbolic heart of
the nation?
Signs of the Times
In the game of football, if your team is getting trounced,
you'd better have a serious talk with the men at halftime and
identify the problems. There is plenty of blame to go around
to explain the ills afflicting America, but the decline in
responsible manhood is surely one of the worst culprits.
Could it have anything to do with the fact that fathers
are less and less likely to live with their sons? In one
generation, the proportion of children entering a broken
family has more than quadrupled. Patrick Fagan of The
Heritage Foundation, using data from the National Center for
Health Statistics, calculates that in 1950 about 12 out of
100 kids entered a family torn by divorce or illegitimacy;
last year the number was 58 out of 100. More children are
growing up without fathers than at any time in our nation's
history. And though many women are courageously raising
children on their own, kids--especially young boys--need the
firm guidance of a loving father.
Why have crimes against American women-assault, rape,
spousal abuse-hit new highs among the industrialized West?
Is it a coincidence that America leads the world as a peddler
of pornography? According to U.S. News & World Report,
the number of hard-core pornographic video rentals rose from
75 million in 1985 to 665 million in 1996. Last year, the
money that Americans (mostly men) spent viewing hard-core
videos, peep shows, live sex acts, adult cable programming,
computer porn, sex magazines, and the like exceeded all of
Hollywood's domestic box-office receipts. Any clearheaded man
can tell you: The more that men are exposed to images of
women as objects created only to satisfy their needs, the
more likely they are to treat women in exactly that way.
The list could go on. In a breathtaking range of
categories, America ranks as a leader in vice. "If God
withholds judgment from America," Billy Graham once
said, "He will owe Sodom and Gomorrah an apology."
He echoes the warning of Founding Father Thomas Jefferson:
"Indeed, I tremble for my country when I reflect that
God is just, and that His justice cannot sleep forever."
A Weakened Church
One of the most important reasons for America's declining
morals is the lack of powerful restraints on people's worst
impulses. In my view, every society needs the restraint of
the people of God, who act as bulwarks against people's
ill-informed and destructive choices, like offensive linemen
protecting the quarterback. They are the ones most likely to
discourage evil, to argue for moral reform, and to perform
heroic acts of kindness. Russell Kirk once put it this way:
"Without Christian culture and Christian hope, the
modern world would come to resemble a half-derelict fun fair,
gone nasty and poverty-racked; one enormous Atlantic
City."
Yet today the church in America is grievously compromised.
In a 1991 poll conducted by George Barna, 25 percent of
regular church attendees admitted that their Christian
beliefs made no significant difference in their lives. The
problem is especially acute among men: Barna found that men
are half as likely as women to attend a church during any
given week. Men are also 33 percent less likely to say they
are religious and to claim they are absolutely committed to
their faith.
Pollster George Gallup reports that, while almost half of
Americans attend church services, only 6 to 10 percent are
what he terms "highly spiritually committed."
Gallup's research has compared behavior of churched and
unchurched people in a variety of categories: people who call
in sick when they are not, pad their resumes, cheat on tax
deductions, and so on. His research has found little
difference in the ethical views and behavior of the churched
and the unchurched.
How can this be? Despite evidence of interest in religion
at the popular level (books about angels, the growth of
"psychic hotlines"), people seem to be looking for
support, not salvation; help rather than holiness; a circle
of spiritual equals rather than an authoritative church or
guide. Too many churches are pandering to this trend.
But one of the major functions of the local church is to
help Christians continuously deepen their devotion to God, to
become more like Christ Himself. That means facing up to
personal failures, shedding selfish attitudes, and exchanging
destructive habits for healthy ones. In countless practical
ways, Christian faith ought to affect how men resolve
conflicts, control their tempers, juggle work and family
responsibilities, and discipline their children. Without such
devotion, there is little reason to expect most men to make
good choices most of the time.
How can we recover a healthy fear of God in our lives, our
churches, our communities? How can people of faith re-emerge
as a powerful, nearly irresistible force for good in our
society? It will not happen without prayer: prayer for
repentance, reconciliation, and renewal.
The
failure of men to live out their responsibilities
as husbands and fathers reflects a profound failure
in the American church.
Biblical repentance means taking personal responsibility
for our actions, admitting to God where we've gone out of
bounds, and asking for His forgiveness and for the strength
to change course. Reconciliation means taking whatever steps
necessary to repair relationships that we've helped to
damage. Renewal involves pledging our best efforts to honor
God and meet our God-given responsibilities in our families
and communities.
This is what our sacred assembly in Washington aims to
bring about. We will spend most of the day in prayer,
worship, and confession. Pastors and other Christian leaders
will speak about these subjects. Men will be challenged to
admit their failings and sins not only to God but to one
another. The adage "confession is good for the
soul" is much more than a religious platitude. It is an
affirmation that there is a spiritual dimension to life, and
that when we neglect our spiritual lives, we damage our own
souls.
A New Game Plan
We realize that conferences might produce a lot of heat,
but not much light. As a former coach, I know it's not enough
simply to get men worked up in the locker room about winning
a ball game. They need a game plan.
That's why Promise Keepers, since its founding, has worked
closely with local churches, which are still the key to
revitalizing men's commitment to spiritual growth. Promise
Keepers has three roles, all of which we believe will
strengthen local congregations: First, we use stadium
conferences to challenge men to rededicate their lives to
Christ, through biblical teaching, worship, and the Seven
Promises of a Promise Keeper (see box, page 19). Thousands of
men have made decisions to follow Christ that have profoundly
and positively changed the way they regard their family
responsibilities.
Second, we offer pastors the tools to challenge men to
grow in their faith and in their ability to live out the
promises they make to their wives, children, and churches.
When it comes to influencing men through our congregations,
the role of spiritual leaders is absolutely crucial; yet
while men are catching the vision at the conferences, few
churches have established men's ministries that are prepared
to help them live out that vision. We distribute study
materials aimed at men that can be used both in the pulpit
and in group discussions.
Finally, we want to see men become significantly involved
in serving people in their congregations and in their local
communities. From a biblical standpoint, serving others must
involve real sacrifice: At a recent conference in Washington,
D.C., for example, we mobilized 1,500 men to help clean and
repair 47 dilapidated school buildings. On October 3,
approximately 5,000 men will go to 90 D.C. schools and do the
same thing, all as unpaid volunteers.
Behind our goals is an assumption that one of the ways to
help people make real life changes is through relationships.
This is why churches are so important: They offer numerous
opportunities for men to build friendships with other men,
especially in the context of small groups. Whether
task-oriented (fixing a church member's car or mowing the
lawn for a single mom) or study-oriented (poring over a
passage of Scripture), small groups allow men to get involved
in each other's lives.
How does that make a difference? Only in the context of
meaningful friendships can men hold one another accountable
for their behavior, seek advice about their marriages or
careers, and be candid about the struggles they're facing.
The authors of the Bible understood this when they wrote that
"plans fail for lack of counsel, but with many advisors
they succeed" and that "as iron sharpens iron, so
one man sharpens another" (Proverbs 15:22; 27:17).
In our best moments, we want to do the right thing, but
often we don't. If men are regularly getting together as
friends, with a common Christian commitment, then they'll be
asking each other some tough questions about their behavior:
Who was that woman you were having dinner with the other
night? How are you handling the temptation to pad your
expense account at work? The men could lie, of course. But
the better a man knows his friend, the easier it is to sense
when he's fudging the truth.
Men and Manhood
Many have asked us, why only men? Won't another men's-only
club just worsen the relationship between the sexes?
There's no doubt that when men are simply left to
themselves, whether roving in gangs or gathering in locker
rooms, they often are trouble waiting to happen. That's
exactly what our conferences are not about.
Seven Promises of a Promise Keeper
A Promise
Keeper is committed to:
Honor Jesus
Christ through worship, prayer, and obedience to
Gods Word through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Pursue vital
relationships with a few other men, understanding
that he needs brothers to help him keep his promises.
Practice
spiritual, moral, ethical, and sexual purity.
Build strong
marriages and families through love, protection, and
biblical values.
Support the
mission of his church by honoring and praying for his
pastor and by actively giving his time and resources.
Reach beyond any
racial and denominational barriers to demonstrate the
power of biblical unity.
Influence his
world, being obedient to the Great Commandment (Mark
12:30-31) and the Great Commission (Matthew 28:19-20).
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Men can meet and work together for positive
purposes, whether it's fixing up schools or coaching Little
League baseball. And when they do so to establish or deepen
their relationship to Christ, something extraordinary
happens. It's a dynamic that is hard to describe, but our
events seem to reach a level of lasting honesty,
vulnerability, and commitment. Our conferences and the
friendships that grow out of them help to create a healthy
pressure among men to do the right thing. It's a sense that
we're in this thing-this journey of faith and commitment to
God and our families-together. When I talk to men about the
impact of the conferences on their lives, this is one of the
first things they tell me.
I've worked closely with hundreds of men over the years,
and at least one common denominator stands out: Men are eager
to make and keep promises; they want to be challenged to
"be all they can be"-that is, to adopt a thoroughly
Christian vision for their lives. Promise Keepers is about
helping men see a picture, giving them concrete goals and
helping them move toward those goals, whether that's spending
more time with their children, learning to honor their word
to their wives, or learning to own up to failure on the job.
It is about becoming men of integrity, because integrity is
impossible without keeping promises.
There's another reason to bring men together for training
and encouragement. We live in a society that is, almost daily
it seems, redefining manhood. That men are carrying more
responsibility in child-rearing is a great step; it is one of
the most important ways that men can demonstrate their love
for their families. But it's not the whole story of what it
means to be a husband and father.
From a Christian perspective, men have a unique, God-given
responsibility for the spiritual health of their families.
Some suspect that in emphasizing this leadership role for
men, we seek to put women down or turn back the clock on
women's recent gains. On the contrary, by challenging men to
take their faith seriously, we think they will work harder at
nurturing their wives and children and helping them fulfill
their own God-given potential.
Whenever the Bible discusses the issue of male leadership,
for example, it is always for the purpose of serving and
sacrificing for others-for the family, the church, and the
world. To read the teachings of Christ and the apostles in
any other way is to distort the Scriptures. Period.
Ironically, it is men's masculine qualities, their
willingness to provide for and protect their families, for
example, or to draw strong boundaries for their children,
that seem to be in greatest demand by women today. And so one
of the specific promises of a Promise Keeper is to support
his family through love, protection, and biblical values.
We realize that many people, even those sympathetic with
our goals, remain suspicious about Promise Keepers' challenge
to men. Let me suggest that much of this skepticism is a
result of some pretty lousy examples of men, even supposedly
religious men, who manipulate and exploit the women around
them. No woman wants-nor should want-to love and support a
husband who acts like a predator or a tyrant. Those who
remain skeptical ought to ask the wives and children of men
who attend our conferences if they resent or are troubled by
their husbands' determination to follow Christ. He is, after
all, our supreme model for manhood.
In a few weeks we will assemble men from around the nation
and from other countries on the Mall in Washington, D.C., in
what will be a national sacred assembly. There are great
precedents for such a gathering. Spiritual assemblies such as
these played an important role in some of America's greatest
spiritual awakenings-which always led both to transformed
lives and to significant moral reform.
During the early 19th century, for example, tens of
thousands of men and women converted to Christianity in
revival campaigns that became known as the Second Great
Awakening. The movement began in England and had its roots in
a Call to Prayer issued by pastors in Northamptonshire in
1784. The flame of revival eventually spread to America,
where it shaped the course of the great national debate on
abolition. Large numbers of new converts, determined to
follow Christ wholeheartedly, freed their slaves. Many began
to preach publicly against slavery. Others helped with the
Underground Railroad, which shuttled slaves to freedom in the
North.
We sense that America faces a cultural crisis as
potentially destructive as that facing the nation in the era
of slavery. That's why we are calling the October 4 event
"Stand
in the Gap: A Sacred Assembly of Men." It's taken
from the prophet Ezekiel's plaintive cry for his own people
to return to God. In Ezekiel's day, the people of Israel had
wandered far from God, their first love. The result for
Israel was national disaster: military defeat from without,
moral rot from within. Ezekiel despairs that no one is
willing to come forward to climb the literal breach in
Jerusalem's walls and act as a human rampart against the
evils of his day. In Ezekiel 22:30, God tells the nation:
"I looked for a man among them who would build up the
wall and stand before me in the gap on behalf of the land so
I would not have to destroy it, but I found none."
We believe that God is again looking for a few good men
who desire to honor Him in every area of their lives. In so
doing, such men will refuse to abandon their wives during the
tough times; they will balance their obligations at work with
those at home; they'll gladly lose sleep to calm a child who
hears ghosts under the bed. Today, more than ever, America
needs men like these, men who will "stand in the
gap" and stand against a culture that mocks commitment,
sacrifice, and virtue. May God find a multitude of such men
when He looks upon our capital this October.
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