Lost Boys
Kerby Anderson
We need to find the “lost boys of America” and reach out to them. They are responsible for mass shootings. And they are also killing themselves (slowly with drugs or quickly through suicide). This needs to be a priority for every church in every community.
Many people have written about this. David French wrote an essay and quoted from two authors I have discussed in previous commentaries. Robert Putnam is best known for his book, Bowling Alone, that addressed the crisis of loneliness when few were aware of these dangers. He then went on to write the book, Our Kids, that explained how kids in crisis grow up in relative isolation from children in healthy families.
The other author is Malcolm Gladwell, who wrote about the need to see all the school shootings together rather than looking at each incident independently. As I have mentioned in previous commentaries, he says the school shootings (and later, mass shootings in general) represent a form of slow-motion riot. Each new shooter lowers the threshold for the next.
His conclusion is ominous. “The problem is not that there is an endless supply of deeply disturbed young men who are willing to contemplate horrific acts. It’s worse. It’s that young men no longer need to be deeply disturbed to contemplate horrific acts.”
They may commit those acts in a shooting or even turn the gun on themselves. We have heard the profile before. You can probably write the script. “Is the shooter an alienated young man? Yes. Did he meticulously plan the shooting? Yes. Did he repeatedly broadcast his deadly intent on social media? Yes.”
They are a danger to us, and they are a danger to themselves. We need to create programs to reach out to these lost boys. After all, the Bible makes it clear that we are our brother’s keeper.