Brownies with a Difference!

Many parents are hard pressed to explain to their youth why some music, movies, books, and magazines are not acceptable material for them to bring into the home or to listen to or see.
One parent came up with an original idea that is hard to refute. The father listened to all the reasons his children gave for wanting to see a particular PG-13 movie. It had their favorite actors. Everyone else was seeing it. Even church members said it was great. It was only rated PG-13 because of the suggestion of sex--they never really showed it. The language was pretty good--the Lord's name was only used in vain three times in the whole movie.
The teens did admit there was a scene where a building and a bunch of people were blown up, but the violence was just the normal stuff. It wasn't too bad. And, even if there were a few minor things, the special effects were fabulous and the plot was action packed.
However, even with all the justifications the teens made for the PG-13 rating, the father still wouldn't give in. He didn't even give his children a satisfactory explanation for saying, "No." He just said, "No!"
A little later on that evening the father asked his teens if they would like some brownies he had baked. He explained that he'd taken the family's favorite recipe and added a little something new. The children asked what it was.
The father calmly replied that he had added dog poop. However, he quickly assured them, it was only a little bit. All other ingredients were gourmet quality and he had taken great care to bake the brownies at the precise temperature for the exact time. He was sure the brownies would be superb.
Even with their father's promise that the brownies were of almost perfect quality, the teens would not take any. The father acted surprised. After all, it was only one small part that was causing them to be so stubborn. He was certain they would hardly notice it. Still the teens held firm and would not try the brownies.
The father then told his children how the movie they wanted to see was just like the brownies. Our minds lead us into believing that just a little bit of evil won't matter. But, the truth is even a little bit of poop makes the difference between a great treat and something disgusting and totally unacceptable.
The father went on to explain that even though the movie industry would have us believe that most of today's movies are acceptable fare for adults and youth, they are not.
Now, when this father's children want to see something that is of questionable material, the father merely asks them if they would like some of his special dog poop brownies. That closes the subject.
Received from Merry Hearts Mailing List.
Note: This is a good story to tell your children, since it puts sin into its proper perspective. I presented this story with the appropriate props (brownies and the "difference" - securely sealed in a plastic zip-lock bag) to our Children's Sunday School Class. Needless to say, it made a big impression. They were also somewhat leery of eating the brownies afterward, and wouldn't do so until I assured them many times that the brownies did not have the additional ingredient. Bon appetite!
Reflections
We are what we think.
- 02/09/2012 12:28 PM
Quote of the Week: Kenneth Samples, 4
You may have an: iPod, iPhone, iPad, iTunes, But only Jesus is the I Am (John 8:58). –Kenneth Samples, Sunday school class, Christ Reformed Church
() - 02/07/2012 10:11 AM
Blaise’s Best Bet, Part 2: Pioneering Physicist
Despite dying in 1662 at age 39, French philosopher Blaise Pascal left a mark on mathematics and science still present to this day. Part 2 of this series on Pascal’s intellectual legacy focuses not only on his practical contributions to … Continue reading
() - 02/02/2012 10:19 AM
Quote of the Week: T. V. Morris
Ockham on the razor – ‘I would much rather have had a good after-shave named for me.’ – T. V. Morris, The Bluffer’s Guide to Philosophy (South Bend, Indiana: Diamond Communications, 1989), 45.
() - 01/31/2012 12:47 AM
Blaise’s Best Bet, Part 1: an Introduction to Blaise Pascal
How many seventeenth-century Christians have modern-day computer languages named after them? Only one—Blaise Pascal (1623–1662).1 Inventor of the first digital calculator, Pascal is described by many historians as one of the founding fathers of modern science. He is widely known … Continue reading
() - 01/26/2012 12:24 PM
Quote of the Week: Robert M. Bowman Jr.
To say that the Trinity cannot be understood likewise is imprecise, or at least open to misinterpretation. Trinitarian theologians do not mean to imply that the Trinity is unintelligible nonsense. Rather, the point they are making is that the Trinity … Continue reading
() - 01/24/2012 12:09 AM
My Daughter’s Brain-Mind
When my oldest child, Sarah (now 24 years old), was a toddler she loved to push the buttons on the keyboard of my very first computer. While I was working on the computer, she would come up to me and … Continue reading
() - 01/19/2012 12:14 PM
Quote of the Week: Anthony A. Hoekema, 3
The Scriptures teach that God saves us not as puppets but as persons, and that we must therefore be active in our salvation. The Bible, in a way which is deeply mysterious, combines God’s sovereignty with our responsibility in the … Continue reading
() - 01/17/2012 12:25 AM
An Inconvenient Duty
Christmas is by far my favorite time of year. I never tire of hearing the incredible message that the Son of God took a human nature and became the God-man at his Incarnation (Philippians 2:5–11). But this past December, just … Continue reading
() - 01/12/2012 09:16 AM
Quote of the Week: Kenneth Samples, 3
Courage is forged only through facing one’s fears. Steel must be refined by fire. For faith to grow, it often has to be tested by trial. –Kenneth Samples, church lecture entitled “Facing Life’s Challenges and God’s Reasons for Suffering”
() - 01/10/2012 11:43 AM
Are You a Renaissance Christian? 12 Tips for Pursuing Knowledge and Wisdom in Daily Life
I first heard the expression “renaissance Christian” from apologist and attorney John Warwick Montgomery in the early 1980s. Montgomery gave a lecture at the former Simon Greenleaf School of Law on the importance of developing the Christian mind. The lecture … Continue reading
()
http://www.godandscience.org//doctrine/brownies.html
Last updated November 25, 2006



