| 
        	
        		|  |  
        		| 
                    	
                    		
               		   
                    		
                        |  God Allows U-Turns for Teens
 256 pages Bethany House Publishers
 ISBN: 0764200909
 Do you feel like you’re headed down a road that shouldn't be traveled? You’re   not alone. Sometimes it’s too easy to find the wrong path. Sometimes you just   feel lost. But God is waiting to help you turn your life around; He wants to   show you the way.  This powerful collection of stories from real-life teens offers   encouragement and support as you overcome poor relationships with your parents,   physical or sexual abuse, drug addiction, or painful consequences. With God, all   things are possible. Are you ready for a U-turn?
                           |  
                    		|  |  |  ALCOHOLThe Price of Acceptance By Cara Symank Parker
 CBN.com  ABILENE, TEXAS  Have you ever felt like you just don't quite fit in? I have. I grew up in a   Christian home and attended a Christian school through high school—though I   never found my place there. It became hardest when I outwardly disagreed with   the actions that my peers were involved in. Even in, and maybe especially in, a   Christian school, a lot of people don't want to be identified as "Christian."   They do everything they can to not be Christian. I was ridiculed for not   participating with "the crowd." I believed in what the school and the Bible   said.   
               As time went by, I became frustrated, desperately wanting to be part of the   group. Tired of fighting the crowd, I let my guard down and decided to join   them. I decided it was my only way to be accepted. Each time I would do   something I knew was wrong, I would feel guilty and considered pulling away from   the group. However, no matter how bad I felt, it was hard to break away. I was   feeling accepted—an acceptance I had not felt before I joined "the crowd." For   the rest of my high school years, I chose "the crowd's" way over God's way.   
               On Thanksgiving night of 2001, at the age of nineteen, my entire life was   forever changed. Nothing in life had prepared me for what was about to take   place. As my family and I prepared to leave my grandparents' house, my mother   was standing in the driveway loading up our family's vehicle. My father, my two   younger sisters, and I watched in horror as my mother's life was taken away with   all of us looking on. She was hit and killed right there in the driveway by a   drunk teenage driver.   
               That night, in the midst of all the chaos and intense emotional pain, I   focused on my mother's teachings to me. Her message about God's grace and love   were always made very clear. I knew I had to fully rely on God in order to make   it through the gut-wrenching tragedy.   
               After the accident, I never returned back to the things I had participated in   before in order to gain acceptance. I had a devastating and tragic view of the   heartache and pain excessive alcohol use could potentially cause to others. I   regret it took something that huge to make me realize the value of life is not   based on what my peers think of me or expect of me.   
               A teenage girl very close to my age killed my mother. I wonder if she felt   she needed to "feel worthy" of the crowd she was with. It was at that point God   allowed me the choice to make a U-turn in my life. Through Him I gained the   courage to stand up to what I knew was right. I was able to talk to the people I   had previously wanted acceptance from and tell them I disagreed with their   actions. I could tell them their actions were not only wrong, but deadly. I was   able to show them how, with God's acceptance, they could turn their lives   around.   
               God has given me unbelievable strength to make it through the loss of my   mother. Although I miss her deeply, God has given me a sense of peace. If I were   still focused on needing the acceptance of my peers, I would not have the peace   I have now. I am currently in college and the majority of the people in my   classes share much of the same views as the ones I knew in high school. The   difference is I am now able to stand up for my belief in Christ. I do not have   to participate in stuff I know is wrong in order to feel acceptance. Christ has   given me the ultimate acceptance I need. Is it going to take a tragedy in your   life, like it did for me, in order for you to realize that only God's acceptance   matters? I wonder, and so I ask.  
 Excerpted from God Allows U-Turns for Teens compiled by Allison Bottke (with Cheryl   Hutchings), copyright © 2006; ISBN 0764201816. 
                Published by Bethany House   Publishers. 
                Used by permission. Unauthorized duplication   prohibited.    
 
 CBN IS HERE FOR YOU!Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting?
 Are you facing a difficult situation?
  A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need. |