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Your Future—Is It in Danger?Awake!—1982 | December 22
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Your Future—Is It in Danger?
ALL of us have a stake in the future. Teenagers, hoping to live perhaps another 60 or 70 years, wonder what kind of life the future will offer them. Older persons want whatever time they have left to be as comfortable as possible. And most of them are concerned about what the future holds for their children and grandchildren.
Hence, young or old, we invite you to answer the following questions. And as you do, consider why you answer the way you do.
PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS: Today people feel free to experiment with such things as marriage and parenthood. They feel liberated from old-fashioned ideas. Has this greater “freedom” brought greater happiness?
HEALTH: Today man understands more about the causes and cures of sicknesses than he ever did. In view of this, how confident are you that cancer or some other disease will not cripple you or end your life prematurely?
FINANCIAL SECURITY: In many lands ordinary people are wealthier than at any previous time in history. Are you, then, satisfied with today’s economic situation? Are you confident that you will maintain your present living standard for the rest of your life?
PERSONAL SAFETY: Two hundred years ago most countries had no policemen, as we know them today. Now almost every country has a well-organized police force with modern equipment. Does this make you feel confident that your house will never be burgled, or you will never be mugged or otherwise victimized?
SECURITY: Today world leaders can speak with one another merely by lifting the telephone receiver. Additionally, nuclear weapons have made modern warfare unthinkable to any sane person. Does this make you confident that there will never be a third world war? Are you certain that civilization will still be here 50 years from now?
How did you answer these questions? If you answered them the way many others have, then they have reminded you of some basic weaknesses in human society. These weaknesses must be resolved before we can have any real confidence in the future. Now let us look at these questions again.
PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS—And Your Future:
Happiness depends to a large extent on how you get on with other people. Even with perfect health and complete security, if you do not have warm personal relationships, you will be unhappy. And the closest and warmest relationships of all should exist in the family. Too often this is not the case.
A recent headline in Time magazine announced: “Illegitimacy soars as the stigma against it declines.” Also, many couples show an irresponsible attitude toward marriage. In Britain one in four marriages now ends in divorce, an increase of 400 percent in the past 20 years. The Roman Catholic Church forbids divorce. Yet Roman Catholics oftentimes break up their marriages by means of annulments. Through this loophole 338 marriages in the U.S.A. were “dissolved” in 1968. In 1980 the figure shot up to 32,000.
Another important personal relationship is respect for the aging. Respect for old people used to be automatic and caring for one’s aging parents a sacred duty. Often this is no longer true. Now many grown-up children no longer want to care for their parents. Worse, many elderly parents are physically abused by their children. “Domestic violence against the elderly is a burgeoning national scandal,” says U.S. politician Mario Biaggi.
The elderly, too, are easy game for young thugs. “‘Granny-bashing’ has now entered the catalogue of domestic crime,” reported London’s Daily Mail. Thus a headline in The Wall Street Journal proclaimed: “Many Elderly Women Fight Ill Health, Fear Of Crime, Loneliness.”
Do you not agree that such trends bode ill for your future, as well as for the future of all mankind?
HEALTH—And Your Future:
In spite of medical advances no one can be sure what the future holds as far as his health is concerned. But there are things we can do to improve our prospects.
For example, according to the magazine World Health, “tobacco, especially cigarette smoking, accounts for about 30 percent of all cancer deaths in countries . . . where people have smoked substantial numbers of cigarettes for many decades.” Evidence also suggests a link between chewing tobacco or betel nut and cancer in the mouth.
Similarly, heavy drinking leads to cirrhosis of the liver and alcoholism, and it is implicated in many crimes, as well as in work and traffic accidents. Overeating produces overweight, with attendant heart and artery problems. Sexual immorality has produced a worldwide pandemic of venereal diseases, some of which are incurable. And the abuse of drugs (in addition to tobacco and alcohol) has produced a whole crop of problems. Would not avoiding these practices improve your prospects for a happy future?
Unfortunately, though, our health is not always in our own hands. Hundreds of millions are sick because of malnutrition. Pollution is also a health hazard.
But even if men were entirely wise in avoiding these health hazards, their future would still be a question mark. Not all serious diseases are caused by man’s misuse of himself and his environment. And, finally, death comes to all men. Will it always be like that?
FINANCIAL SECURITY—And Your Future:
How can we ensure a reasonably prosperous future for ourselves and our family? Well, young people can study hard at school, equipping themselves for the future. Older ones can work diligently, practice thrift and build up a reputation for honesty and reliability. Some have insurance policies and pension plans. All of this can help. But, again, there are forces at work that can bring our plans to nothing.
Consider the food situation. The 1981 United Nations Fund for Population Activities reported that the food went to those who had the money to buy it. Those without money went hungry.
Then there is the problem of inflation. This can be a cruel destroyer of hopes. In Britain the purchasing power of the pound sterling is less than one fifth of what it was 17 years ago. Some nations have a regular yearly inflation rate of more than 100 percent.
Creeping unemployment adds to the difficulty. How can people plan for a happy future if they cannot find work?
Yes, because of an uncertain economic situation, many feel uncertain about the future. Do you?
PERSONAL SECURITY—And Your Future:
What can we do to assure our personal security? To be honest, very little. If possible, we can avoid going into high-crime areas. We can install burglar alarms at home. We can try not to attract the attention of criminals.
Commenting on the crime situation, England’s Duke of Edinburgh said that the world today is like the Dark Ages. London’s Metropolitan Police Commissioner confessed: “One could be forgiven for sinking under a sense of helplessness.” And Britain’s Lord Chief Justice said: “There has been, in short, a breakdown in the moral fibre of the country which it is far beyond the power of the law to repair.” For example, an intruder broke into the British Queen’s bedroom, despite high security. Of course, England is not alone in this dilemma of crime.
And there is an even greater threat to your personal security—namely, the possibility of war. Canadian journalist David Lancashire warned: “With the growing sophistication of the weapons has come an increasing chance of accidental war by computer error. In a recent eighteen-month period the U.S. missile warning system signaled false alarms 147 times.” Dr. Helen Caldicott called the nuclear arms situation “almost out of human control.”
This review shows that the future happiness of all of us is threatened by the nations’ insecurity. And there is very little we, as individuals, can do about it.
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Your Future—It Can Be HappyAwake!—1982 | December 22
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Your Future—It Can Be Happy
FROM this brief discussion we have seen a few things that we can do to make our future a little more secure. But there are many things we just cannot do anything about. Some matters are out of the control of even the world’s rulers. They are certainly out of our personal control. We must look beyond mankind. How can we do that?
For thousands of years a book has existed that points to a superhuman solution for man’s problems. That book is the Bible, and it points us to our Creator as the One who can give us a secure future.
It may be that you do not believe in the Bible. Or perhaps you do accept it but do not feel that it is relevant to today’s problems. However, the fact is this: The Bible gives the most comprehensive and successful guide to living that has ever been recorded.
Consider once more those matters raised at the beginning of this discussion and see what the Bible says about them.
PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS:
With regard to caring for aging parents, it says: “If anyone does not provide for those who are his own, and especially for those who are members of his household, he has disowned the faith and is worse than a person without faith.”—1 Timothy 5:8.
The Bible also teaches responsible parenthood and responsibility in marriage. “Let marriage be honorable among all, and the marriage bed be without defilement,” exhorts one Bible writer. (Hebrews 13:4) In another Bible book the same writer says: “Be in subjection to one another in fear of Christ. Let wives be in subjection to their husbands . . . Husbands, continue loving your wives . . . Children, be obedient to your parents . . . Fathers, do not be irritating your children, but go on bringing them up in the discipline and mental-regulating of Jehovah.”—Ephesians 5:21, 22, 25; 6:1, 4.
You may feel that such counsel is excellent but idealistic. Really, though, it provides us high standards to aim for. And the truth is, millions of people today try hard to live according to such standards and their lives are happier because of it.
YOUR HEALTH:
Consider this advice: “Quit mixing in company with anyone . . . that is a fornicator or a greedy person . . . or a drunkard.” (1 Corinthians 5:11) Or this: “Let us cleanse ourselves of every defilement of flesh and spirit.” (2 Corinthians 7:1) Any who obey this advice avoid the venereal diseases and many of those other sicknesses that were mentioned previously.
For the sicknesses that we cannot avoid, the Bible mentions another remedy that we will refer to later.
FINANCIAL SECURITY:
There is also abundant advice to help us during these difficult economic times. Take just two examples of the Bible’s counsel: “If anyone does not want to work, neither let him eat.” Also: “Whatever you are doing [including secular work], work at it whole-souled as to Jehovah, and not to men.” (2 Thessalonians 3:10; Colossians 3:23) This advice helps us to make the most of whatever economic situation we find ourselves in.
In addition to this, Jesus once made a remarkable promise. Speaking of the problem of getting enough food and clothing, he said: “Keep on, then, seeking first the kingdom and [God’s] righteousness, and all these other things will be added to you.” (Matthew 6:33) This is God’s promise to care for his servants. Does God keep his promise? Millions testify that he does.
PERSONAL SECURITY:
The Bible counsels us about how to conduct ourselves wisely in these dangerous times. But it is undeniable that most problems having to do with security, whether we are speaking of crime or we are speaking of the threat of war, should be solved more by governments than by individuals. In this regard the Bible also proposes a solution. It frankly says that man is unable to govern himself without help: “It does not belong to man who is walking even to direct his step.” (Jeremiah 10:23) And it encourages us to look to God’s Kingdom for successful government.
Another Kind of Government
As a matter of fact, people have been praying for a long time for God to take over the rulership of the earth. When they utter the familiar Lord’s Prayer, they say: “Let your kingdom come. Let your will take place, as in heaven, also upon earth.” (Matthew 6:9, 10) What is that, if not a prayer for God instead of man to rule the earth? The Bible even gives us a vision of the fulfillment of that prayer: “The kingdom of the world did become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will rule as king forever and ever.”—Revelation 11:15.
Under that Kingdom many things that are only too familiar today will disappear: “Evildoers themselves will be cut off, but those hoping in Jehovah are the ones that will possess the earth.” (Psalm 37:9) “There will come to be plenty of grain on the earth; on the top of the mountains there will be an overflow.” (Psalm 72:16) “He is making wars to cease to the extremity of the earth.” (Psalm 46:9) No more warfare, crime or hunger under this rulership!
How about sickness and death? Listen to this promise: “[God] will wipe out every tear from their eyes, and death will be no more, neither will mourning nor outcry nor pain be anymore. The former things have passed away.” (Revelation 21:4)
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