From an address by Dr. Van Neste, to a group of college men, on the topic of manhood:
I know some have told you that the way to take leadership, step up, progress in manhood is to get married. However, I must differ. Marriage is the last thing some of you need to be thinking of just now. You need to grow up first. I affirm what I think these others are getting at- start preparing yourself for marriage. Move Halo down your list of priorities in order to begin thinking about what sort of vocation you will pursue, how you’re going to pay your bills, etc. But much progress in this may be needed before you really start looking for a wife. If you are not right now getting your class work done, and fulfilling your comparatively light responsibilities as a single student then don’t even consider the prospects of marriage. Instead start working on growing up.
Our culture is infatuated with youth and encourages you not to grow up. After all, it says, the glory is in the youth. If you would be men you must reject this siren song and swim against the tide. You must diligently seek to throw off immaturity and to grow up. Remember the one boy who never grew up was Peter Pan – and in case you haven’t noticed his role has typically been played by a woman. The chase for perpetual youth is never manly. The other example of avoiding the effects of growing up is the medieval boys choirs. To maintain the high voices of the boys as they aged, the boys would be castrated. Again, avoiding maturity is emasculating.
So my main point to you tonight is, work on growing up. It does not “just happen.” Examples abound of physically mature males who have never truly attained manhood because they failed to mature in anyway other than physically.
So, what does it look like to grow up in manliness? No doubt this could be discussed in many ways. I’ll just take a stab at some tonight.
Take responsibility/ reject passivity. With our modern invention of “adolescence” (which now includes college age) you can be encouraged to float along without much real responsibility, just get by in classes, major in play, be a goof off, sample the girls to whatever extent you can, and not really consider responsibility.
But you need to shake off the doldrums. I enjoy life, like to laugh and to joke (even if not everyone appreciates puns!), but that is different from being a total goof off. Laugh when it is appropriate, but if you can’t be serious at the proper times you are immature. You don’t need to jeopardize any woman by talking about a serious relationship with her.
Find ways now to discipline yourself in being responsible. Here are some ways:
Do your work; take seriously your current obligations. Learn and discipline yourself to complete your school assignments and to do them well. Be on time at work and in class.
Own your failures. Reject the blame game. When the buck is passed it is always done with a limp wrist. If you did not get your assignment done on time own up to it and drop the lame excuses. Face it like a man. If you simply did not discipline your time sufficiently to accomplish the task, don’t spin it with some religious sounding excuse. If you’re roommate was in crisis, I am glad you were willing to stay up all night last night to talk with him. But your paper is still due today. You should not have waited until the last day to complete it.
Expect to work. That is what God made you for. Reject laziness. See laziness not merely as a foible but as damnable sin, a dangerous cancer that can eat away your soul. Laziness and avoidance of work is a typical sin for men so wage a particularly diligent and merciless war against it in your own soul.
Yes, work-aholism is another error that affects men, but the answer is not laziness. In fact work-aholism is often a way of avoiding the really challenging work of caring for and leading one’s wife and children.
Work is good and ennobling. If this is not the way you think, change your thinking to adopt this biblical view. Reject the “live for the weekend” mentality.
Instead, begin asking God and godly leaders what work He has put you here for. Find you calling. Yes, I know He created you for His glory, to be in relationship wit Him and with others. But he also made you to work. For what task were you created? What work will you commit yourself to? You need to have some clear thoughts about this (not a full blueprint) before you can seriously consider marriage. Before you should take a wife you need to know where you’re taking her. You need to know what you intend to do in life. Of course God sometimes shifts things, and things change. But you need to have a goal. You need to know, to the best of your ability, under God, and in concert with godly, wise counsel, where you are headed.
Reject the temptation to whine and complain.
One of the most ‘un-manly’ things you can do is whine. I am not saying “Don’t admit weaknesses and seek help.” No. Do that. But I am talking about whining about how things are wrong for you instead of making the most of your situation.
Part of manhood is initiative so begin to practice this by seeking solutions rather than sniping and complaining. This produces leadership.
Embrace Commitment. The world will tell you life is found in freedom from any constraints, obligations or commitments. It is a lie. What this leads to is purposelessness. We are often given the picture of manliness in the lone wandering hero. This is false.
This aversion to commitment and obligations is actually just a form of cowardice. It is easy to play games and go through motions. In isolation you can keep your sins hidden, deceive yourself with an exalted view of yourself, live in fantasy. The real work is in settling into specific situations, working out issues, helping people, having to face your own sins, deficiencies and failures and staying at it over the long haul. And, this is where real life is found.
You are not a drifter born to walk alone. You were made for community.
Of course part of what I have in mind here is to begin thinking not of various women to entertain but of the prospect of settling down with a specific woman. They call it ‘playing the field.’ Typically it’s just sin. Don’t toy with women. They were not created for your amusement. You know the stories of guys dating various girls, or at least keeping a number of girls ‘on the line’, giving them just enough interest to keep them close for whenever he wants to hang out with them. Guys like this need other guys to rebuke them and run them off.
But, how do you begin this? How do you prepare?
First, invest yourself in a local church. Learn there to live in community with other people, to build significant relationships, to work through problems, to express your needs and to meet the needs of others. The church is the training ground for life in general.
Then learn the fact that commitment costs. Stand by your word. Realize that every decision to do one thing is a decision not to do several others. So do not simply clutter your life with miscellaneous things. Take responsibility and commitment to bring some focus to your life. What are you about?
Sacrifice. All these issues are inter-related so you will see some overlap here. But Eph 5 shows clearly that masculine leadership involves the willingness to sacrifice. The self-centered environment we live in will not encourage you in this direction. We must crucify the idea that says, “I deserve it all and it should not hurt me to get it.” This is stupid as well as sinful. But it is common. I see it when a student says “Surely you won’t penalize me for my paper being late (or work hurriedly done) because I did not have enough time. You know I have to have a social life.” My answer- which some of you may have already heard- is “No, I do not understand; and, no, you do not have to have a social life every day. It would not hurt you to shut yourself away for a few weekends and learn to work hard on something, to learn to pay the price to succeed.”
If you are going to invest your life into something that matters you will have to make sacrifices. In the future that will involve laying aside some things you would like to do in order to work around the house, to help your wife with some things that in themselves don’t particularly interest you, to lead your family.
Elisabeth Elliot put this well:
“There is no getting around the fact that to give yourselves wholeheartedly to the rearing of children will eliminate you from a lot of activities your friends are enjoying and often from activities that seem to be obligations- not merely social, but perhaps church, family, business and civic ones. You will have to ask God for wisdom to choose and the guts to stick to the choice. (Don’t pay attention to you-owe-it-to-yourself talk. You owe nothing to yourself, everything to God.)”
But that is in the future, for now learn to live out of principle and not out of unbridled desire. Learn to say no to yourself.
Also on this point, it is true that masculinity involves the idea that men protect women and children. I know this is terribly non-pc and to many people passé. That does not change the truthfulness of it however. Nor does it change the fact that most women deeply appreciate this if they have not trained themselves not to.
“Women and Children First.” The Titanic- Although Hollywood perverted the story into class warfare and peepshow thrills, the real story of the Titanic includes the cry “Women and children first” as the men on board, with only few exceptions, yielded their seats on lifeboats so that women and children could be rescued. Men looked into the eyes of their wives and children to speak tender words of comfort and encouragement before sending them out to safety knowing full well that they, the men, would die in those waters and never see their loved ones again. In the end 9 men died for every one woman that died in that disaster. The current First Lady, Mrs. Taft, honored this spirit of manhood by mounting a national campaign to raise private funds for a monument that would carry the inscription: “To the brave men who gave their lives that women and children might be saved”. Mrs. Taft explained, “I am grateful to do this in gratitude to the chivalry of American manhood.”
Also the HMS Birkenhead:
“In 1852, the British troopship H.M.S. Birkenhead was traveling to South Africa when she hit a ledge and foundered. On board were more than seven hundred men, women, and children. With only twenty minutes left before she would sink, the decision was made to place all women and children aboard the few life boats. The men would remain behind and face the man-eating sharks circling the disaster. Hundreds of men drowned or were eaten alive in full view of their children, but not a single woman or child perished that day. In past years, this story was known by every schoolboy and girl.”
OK. But what does this look like right now in the day to day life of young men in college:
Guys take the risk in relationships. You initiate and make the approach. That way she can be safe and does not have to take the risk of stepping out first. Also if she feels the need to break it off she is free to do so even without explanation. You take the brunt of it and let her go unscathed.
In a small way, you could include opening the door for ladies, waiting for her to enter a door first, walking on the traffic side of the street, placing yourself between her and any potential danger, etc.