Applause.
Nothing is more insidiously dangerous than the pursuit of the applause of men. Nothing is more temporary, more meaningless than the applause of men.Yet, sadly, it can creep into our spiritual walk. Jesus warned us that such a life as His disciples erases any chance of receiving His "well done" and undermines our relationship with Him. The reason is obvious. When we do our "spiritual stuff" in order to impress men and gain their approval, we are actually worshiping ourselves in His presence. We have set up an altar to ourselves in our hearts--His temple. Men applaud--and we are deceived into thinking that He is pleased with us. He is not--not in the least.
One of the saddest things associated with teaching in a Christian school is the number of students who graduate and then walk away from Him, from His love, from the cross. And some of those are students who were leaders while at the school. They received applause for their "spiritual stuff" at home, school, and church, but then they move out of that familiar environment and into a world that does not applaud the genuine disciple and His obedience to Christ and His call on their lives. No applause for serving Him? Applause for not serving Him. They pursue the applause.
This is a difficult-to-navigate component of spiritual development in adolescence. Obviously we want to encourage them when we see that they are pursuing the things of God. But if they come to expect praise and applause for their religiosity, their "faith" may crumble as they move out of our homes and the familiar environment.
Their "excuse" is that they have discovered the "real world." They have not. Their "real world" is a dark place filled with blind people pursuing a life devoid of satisfaction and meaning. A world that is so dark that it thinks its darkness is light. That is a a life of illusion. Delusion. There is nothing "real" about it. All reality rests in and comes from a relationship with Christ--and can be found nowhere else.
Nowhere.
We must remind our students that the "real world" they long to be a part of is a lie--an attractive lie, but a lie perpetrated by the one who is the father of lies. His lie--his "real world"--kills (John 10:10).
Pray for your children, warn them of the applause of men, in word and in a life well-lived --the life of unwavering discipleship. Demonstrate to them that such a life alone gives one meaning and purpose. Be sure they know which life is real and Whose applause will be worth it all.