Sowing Bad Seed
Consider our Lordâs parable of the wheat and the tares, in Matthew 13. The servants asked the master, âDid you not sow good seed in this field? Why then hath it tares?â And the master said, âSome enemy hath done this.â
The fields of the Lord are many. One of the fields that I work in is Young Adult fiction, YA for short.
And there are a lot of people sowing tares in it.
Kirsten Salyer, a deputy editor at Time Magazine, recently published some of her thoughts on YA fiction, With a Little Help, You Too Can Write a Young-Adult Novel(Time, Oct. 3, 2016). Her essay is a review of a book on the subject, The Magic Words, by Cheryl B. Klein. But whether she knows it or not, Ms. Salyer has offered us insight into the thinking of the tare team.
YA Fiction is Important
Ms. Salyer is acutely aware of the importance of YA fiction, much more so than most of us. The ungodly are often a lot cleverer at getting what they want in life, whatever it may be, than we Christians are. Jesus warned us, in His parable about the crooked steward: âThe sons of this world are more shrewd in their generation than the sons of lightâ (Luke 16:8). They know what they want and know how to get itâeven if what they want is only perishable, worldly, and, compared to the blessings of Godâs Kingdom, contemptible and cheap.
Salyer knows that the fiction absorbed by readers early in their livesâsheâs talking about books, but it certainly applies to movies and television, tooâwill help to shape their thinking, and their outlook, for many years to come. âThe books we read when weâre young have a special sort of power ⌠Theyâre as formative as anything else in our young lives, and sometimes theyâre the first place we encounter larger-than-life ideas.â She concludes, âThe narratives we tell young readers can influence how they understand and value the world around them. The magic isnât in the words; itâs in how the words come together to reflect and affirm the realities of a diverse young-adult experience.â
I think sheâs right, or I wouldnât have written ten Bell Mountainnovels, eight of which are in print as of this writing ( https://leeduigon.com/books/). We who write such books are sowing seed, either in the Lordâs service or the worldâs: like it or not, it has to be one or the other. But what kind of seed does Salyer wish to sow?
Sheâs high, for instance, on a 2014 book by Jandy Nelson, Iâll Give You the Sun, a YA novel âwith a gay protagonist.â Actually two âgayâ protagonists, a pair of twins. And off to the side of her essay is a review of The Best Manby Richard Peck, described by one reviewer as âa big-hearted novel of gay marriage.â Sheâs really high on this one: â[T]he uncle he [the twelve-year-old protagonist] idolizes is marrying a teacher he idolizes. The newlyweds are men.
âPeck, who won the Newbery Medal for A Year Down Yonder, masterfully frames issues of sexuality for young readers, translating the message that âlove is loveâ for a demographic still navigating first crushes,â and so on.
What, in her view, do these books accomplish? They teach important lessons, she asserts, in âacceptanceâ and âtolerance.â Young readers are to be taught that homosexual acting-out is ânormalâ and praiseworthyâwhich cannot be true unless God is wrong for declaring it a mortal sin. So the seed being sown here is anti-Biblical, anti-Christian, and morally wrong. It cannot be right unless the Bible is wrong.
If you survey the field of YA fiction, youâll find such tares as these springing up all overâI havenât the space or the patience to list them all: books celebrating, sometimes subtly and sometimes not so subtly, sodomy, transgenderism, pedophilia, and abortion. The field is morally in a lamentable state.
For all her talk of trying to find out what truly appeals to young readers, and writing toward that end, she and the authors whom she praises merely go ahead writing about what appeals to them. The lesson that âlove is love,â whatever form it takes, is profoundly antinomian. But we cannot expect non-Christian or anti-Christian writers to deliver any other kind of message.
A Field Full of Tares
The abundance and success of so many YA novels preaching sin as virtue, evil as good, is evidence that indicts us for being careless with our culture, especially when it comes to deciding what sort of material we allow to seep into our childrenâs minds. The publishers would not be selling this stuff if we werenât buying it. And it ought to be noted that many such books have been placed into school libraries and hawked and touted in school classrooms.
Do you remember the big push for Philip Pullmanâs His Dark Materialstrilogy? Published by Scholastic Booksâalways prominent among the usual suspectsâthis was an overtly atheist tract ( https://leeduigon.com/2010/11/03/satanism-for-young-readers-a-review-of-his-dark-materials/). It was brought into public school classrooms, hyped with assorted contests for the kiddies, made the subject of classroom teaching, and quickly translated into a major feature film. The good news is that the movie floppedâprobably because parents finally cottoned on to what Pullmanâs work was all about, and didnât take their kids to see the movie.
This suggests that thereâs something we can do about the abundance of tares being sown in the YA fiction field.
We really ought to read what our children are reading, rather than just to be so happy that theyâre reading at all that we pay no attention to the content. We should not be bringing into our homes books that preach an anti-Christian message. And if our children, especially those in their early teens, have been exposed to such a message, we must equip ourselves to discuss that message with them. We must not allow our silence to be taken for consent.
Few people can actually write a book and get it published, so I wonât be asking you to write your own Bible-friendly YA novels to crowd the bad stuff off the shelves. Parents must act as consumersâas pre-consumers, if you willâmaking sure that the young readers in our own households are only consuming literature compatible with a Christian view of life. We are even better off if the children have received a Christian education and already know, or at least can sense, when an author is trying to lead them into the counsel of the ungodly.
When I was a child, this was much easier on parents: there wasnât much out there that was going to lead young readers astray. But the culture that we live in has changed, and we are now called to be vigilant.
As we can see by some of the books that Ms. Salyer recommends, the field today is full of tares. These are nourished on consumersâ money. Withdraw that source of nourishment, and some of those tares will shrivel and dieâhopefully a lot of them.
Water the Wheat, and Not the Tares
Some of you will be surprised to learn thereâs plenty of YA fiction out there suitable for Christian readersâall kinds of it, from heroic fantasy to humor, from mystery to romance (yes, Christians do fall in love), historical novels, school stories, everything under the sun. These novels donât get the kind of marketing buzz that Scholastic Books could give to Philip Pullman, atheism and all; but they are out there, and you, the Christian consumer, can choose to water this good seed with your dollars instead of watering the tares.
Iâm a great fan of C.S. Lewisâ Chronicles of Narnia, J.R.R. Tolkienâs The Hobbit, and S.D. Smithâs heroic rabbit tales, The Green Emberand The Black Star of Kingston. But thereâs so very much more to choose from. The Goodreads website, for example, offers a list of 206 YA books enjoyed and recommended by Christian readers (http://www.goodreads.com/list/... ). These were picked by readers like you, not self-anointed experts, and might be a good place to start looking for the best books for your children.
Light reading, casual reading, is so much more than that. We want to relax, we want some entertainmentâbut itâs also one of the chief ways by which we educate ourselves.
I dread to think of the effect on young readersâ worldview, and character, of a steady diet of some of those books that Kirsten Salyer recommendsâto say nothing of the long-term effects on our entire culture.
Donât you?
Topics: Culture , Fiction, Media / Arts