Josh McDowell's Youth Devotionsಮಾದರಿ

Josh McDowell's Youth Devotions

DAY 1 OF 366

IKE'S BIKE.

"Welcome to the latest episode of Current Culture! My name is Geraldo Winfrey-Raphael, and I'm your host. Today we're talking to ordinary people about morals and values and whose version of right and wrong is ... well, right... or wrong. Our first guest is Ike, a high school student."

Geraldo nods seriously into the camera, then turns and thrusts a microphone toward a teenage boy dressed in black. Geraldo tries to keep up with Ike's purposeful stride as they walk across the school quad.

"You look like an intelligent high school student," Geraldo says. "How do you choose between right and wrong?"

Ike stops walking and looks straight into the camera.

"Right and wrong?" the student says. "There is no 'right' and 'wrong'! Read your Nietzsche, man! Get a grip on Machiavelli! Those words are nothing but the wishful thinking of a society too weak to face the prospect of a godless world and the lack of moral absolutes! That's what Nietzsche said, man! Look it up!"

Ike begins walking again. Geraldo starts jogging to keep up with the young man. Finally, Ike stops abruptly in front of a bike rack, an expression of shock on his face.

"Is something wrong?" Geraldo says. "Are you all right?"

"My bike! It's gone! Somebody stole my bike!"

Ike throws his arms in the air and begins pacing in front of the bike rack. "Oh, dude, this is wrong! This is totally wrong!" "But I thought Nietzsche said ..."

"Aw, shut up, man! Like, Nietzsche never had a Trek 950 with titanium hubs and alloy rims and all kinds of really cool stuff! Oh, this is so wrong!" Another student approaches, then stops.

"I thought your mom drove you to school this morning," the other student says. Ike suddenly stops his pacing and looks at the camera. "Oh," he says. "Yeah. That's right." He shrugs. "Cool."

Ike and his friend walk away. Geraldo faces the camera, then draws a single finger across his throat in a slicing motion.

REFLECT: In the above script, Ike quoted Nietzsche and Machiavelli. These were two philosophers who said that there is no such thing as right and wrong. Their writings had a significant influence on Adolph Hitler and other dictators of the twentieth century. Do you think that Ike really believed what he said about right and wrong? Why or why not? What do you believe about right and wrong?

PRAY: "God, I admit that sometimes I act like there's no such thing as right and wrong. But I don't want to do what's right in my own eyes; I want to do what's right in your eyes. Help me especially in the area of..."

Scripture

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About this Plan

Josh McDowell's Youth Devotions

Written for teenagers to use in their daily quiet time readings, this plan will make them laugh or cry. Some are fiction, some are stranger than fiction, but each will help you discover how to make right choices in the everyday ups and downs of life. Josh McDowell's Youth Devotions is a daily adventure in making right choices.

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© 2011 Josh McDowell Ministry. All rights reserved. No part of these Materials may be changed in any way or reproduced in any form without written permission from Josh McDowell Ministry, 2001 W Plano Pkwy, Ste. 2400, Plano, TX 75075. www.josh.org. +1 972 907 1000. Used by Permission.