“Grandpa, Tell Me About the Good Old Days”

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“Grandpa, Tell Me About the Good Old Days”

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Do you remember the song Grandpa, sung by the famous country music artists, The Judd’s? 

Some of the words go like this:

Tell me 'bout the good ole days/ Sometimes it feels like/ This world's gone crazy./ Grandpa, take me back to yesterday/ Where the line between right and wrong/ Didn't seem so hazy.

Did lovers really fall in love to stay?/ Stand beside each other come what may/Was a promise really something people kept/ Not just something they would say?/ Did families really bow their heads to pray?/ Did daddies really never go away?/ Whoa oh Grandpa/ Tell me 'bout the good ole days.

Grandpa/ Everything is changing fast./ We call it progress,/But I just don't know./ And Grandpa, let's wander back into the past,/ And paint me a picture of long ago.

Did you notice the line, “Where the line between right and wrong didn't seem so hazy”? 

Do you ever ask yourself what happened to the good old days? While flipping the TV channels, I ran across a sitcom with two lesbians as major characters. It was at that moment that I reflected back on what I felt were the “good ole days.” Remember the family shows such as “The Andy Griffith Show”?

Again I ask, what happened to the world I grew up in; the world where there were family sitcoms with a traditional family? What happened to the world where Christian values were the norm? Schools and government building openly posted the Ten Commandments. Now, the Ten Commandments are ordered to be removed by atheists fighting to get God out of the schools and government buildings.

What used to be a taboo to talk about in the “good ole days” is now openly flaunted and worn as a badge of courage! People who oppose these lifestyles because of religious convictions can easily find themselves in a lawsuit or their business closed, or even fired from their job. Everyone has rights and a voice; everything is tolerated, it seems, except the Christian conservative values.

Here’s what has happened to the world I grew up in: “People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying its power” (Timothy 3:2, emphasis added). Isaiah 5:20 says, “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter.”

Thankfully, there is hope, hope of a new world coming! A world even better than the world I remember in the “good ole days.” We are to watch, be vigilant in our obedience to God, and not be swept into this declining world. Be a light, a shining example of how God’s way works to your neighbors. Perhaps we can help influence people for the better. And we can take comfort that God will intervene and restore His laws on society, which will produce total peace and happiness for eternity.

Comments

  • kimandtroy
    this is so true! great article
  • Janet Treadway

    thanks Kimberly This article was written 3 years ago and wow has our world declined from the world I grew up in

  • DanielSnedden
    What an excellent article pointing out the things that my sisters and I discuss from time to time. We grew up on Andy Griffith and Leave it to Beaver. Our TV time and content was strictly limited. Now there are no limits to what children see and hear on TV. I remember my parents sitting on the front porch in the summer evenings (we had no air-conditioning at that time) while us children played flashlight tag or caught fireflies. Neighbors would walk down the sidewalk and stop to talk to our parents. People used to talk to each other unlike today. I don't know most of my neighbors where I live now. We lived in a small town here in Southeastern Ohio. Everyone new everyone else on their street. If there was a death or illness in someone's family, relatives and neighbors alike would help out. Sometimes cooking a meal or two, mowing the lawn or babysitting the children depending on the need. People did not get into each other's business but they were just what we used call "Neighborly". Even though we did not have all of the technological advances in medicine, electronics/communications, I still think the quality of life was much better. People were sociable. Now most Americans are antisocial. They have their eyes fixed on their cell phones and their ears plugged with their iPods. It is comforting to know that God's Kingdom will be even better than my good old days. Thanks again for another excellent article!
  • Janet Treadway

    Children over all where healthier then because they were not glued to their devices While knowledge has increased, the quality of life has decreased, mentally and physically and certainly morally.

  • Deanne
    I'm with you Janet! Hear, hear! I used to watch the Brady Bunch and felt secure watching the whole family relate and go through the issues of day to day life. How the world has changed in our life time. Bring on The Kingdom.
  • Janet Treadway

    Thanks Deanne. So true. You just can't find anything worth watching anymore. The attacks on a normal family is on the rise with programming that counter acts that. Certifiably a different world we live in today and the world we remember is being slowly erased.

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