FAITH
		
		Wake Up and Smell the Pizza
		
		      By Todd & Jedd Hafer
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  
                 Divorce. Drugs. Teen suicide. Sex. Internet predators. 
                We talked about all of this and more. It was another Wednesday 
                night with a church youth group—maybe like one you belong 
                to. We laughed a lot, a few people teared up, and at one point 
                a teen asked to be excused from the group for a moment because 
                she had to, and we quote, “take care of a wedgie problem.” 
              After the evening ended—and the last pieces of cold pizza 
                and cups of room-temperature Mountain Dew were scavenged—we 
                handed out response cards to the attendees. This is a Hafer brothers 
                tradition. We hunger for feedback. We want to know if we’ve 
                connected with a group. We want to know what we can do better 
                the next time. And we’re insecure. On this particular night, 
                the responses were rewarding, so positive that it was almost embarrassing. 
                As we shuffled through our thick stack of three-by-five cards, 
                we read comments like “Please come back soon,” “You 
                guys are hilarious,” and “Please stay in touch.” 
               
              Then, at the bottom of the stack, we found one dissenting reaction. 
                The note was printed in a scrawling, scratchy, asymmetrical hand 
                that had to be a guy’s (because it looked like our handwriting). 
                The feedback was terse and to the point: “Next time, bring 
                more pizza.”  
              At first, this seemed like a real buzz kill after basking in 
                all the compliments, but we ended up laughing and marveling at 
                how God does such a good job of pounding home lessons in humility—even 
                using our favorite food as a hammer.  
              We didn’t think much about the “Pizza Card” 
                after that night—until it was time to start writing our 
                latest book for teens and the adults who care about them. We were 
                trying to come up with a theme, a “hook” as they call 
                it in the publishing industry.  
              We knew what we wanted to do: Talk about what’s fresh, 
                what’s hot. We wanted to deliver a devotional with the works. 
                Then it hit us: Fresh, hot, deliver, the works. Pizza, of course. 
               
              “Okay,” you might be saying, “I understand 
                why you titled this book Wake Up and Smell the Pizza, but why 
                write another teen devotional? Like brands of frozen pizza, don’t 
                we already have enough of them?”  
              Maybe. We know there are a lot of great teen-related books out 
                there. We recommend many of them at the end of this book (check 
                out the “Extra Toppings” section). But we couldn’t 
                think about things like market saturation or duplication of effort. 
                We simply had to write this book.  
              Why? Because we care too much not to. We have worked with teens 
                since we were teens. As high school students, we taught Sunday 
                school classes to our peers. We led Bible studies—one in 
                the biology lab of a public high school. Try to get away with 
                that today.  
              Currently, Jedd’s job is working with teens. He is a director 
                at Children’s ARK, a treatment center for kids who have 
                run away, been abused, arrested, and/or kicked out of traditional 
                schools or programs. (The average ARK kid has been kicked out 
                of four other programs. And as for the “above average” 
                kids, you might not believe it if we told you!)  
              Todd is a parent to two teenagers, a reality that still amazes 
                and frightens him regularly.  
              We also work with school kids, church kids, sports teams—you 
                name it. Bottom line: The teen world isn’t just a book topic 
                for us; it’s our life.  
              Much has changed about teen life since our own middle school 
                and high school years, but there is one constant: Being a teen 
                is hard. Do you know that almost one-fourth of eighth graders 
                have tried “huffing”—using household chemicals 
                like paint thinner or type corrector to get high? Or that almost 
                four million teens get infected with a sexually transmitted disease 
                every year? (That’s about equal to the combined populations 
                of Montana, South Dakota, Wyoming, Alaska, Vermont, and North 
                Dakota!) Or that suicide is one of the leading causes of death 
                among teens? Or that the 2003–2004 school year was the worst 
                for school violence in a decade? School-related violence claimed 
                forty-eight lives, more than the two previous school years combined. 
                Want more cheery news? Millennials, people born in 1982 or later, 
                are leaving churches by the millions.  
              Statistics like these are important to acknowledge, but we share 
                them reluctantly. You see, sometimes when you talk about percentages 
                and millions of people, the stats lose their personal meaning. 
                And that cannot happen, because we are talking about individual 
                human lives, and each one matters. When we walk through the halls 
                of a middle school, for example, we look at the faces and it kicks 
                us in the heart to think that about every fourth kid is risking 
                his or her mental well-being—and even life itself—in 
                a quest to get high.  
              So we didn’t write this book for “the millions of 
                teens out there.” We wrote it for you, personally.  
              Maybe you’re strong in your faith and have been able to 
                avoid the tragedies and heartbreaks that invade many teens’ 
                lives. But you need encouragement and information to help you 
                stay strong. And you want to be able to help your friends, some 
                of whom are dancing with danger. We’re here to help you. 
               
              Or maybe you feel your life is a mess. You’re into things 
                that would shock your parents if they knew. Perhaps, more tragically, 
                they wouldn’t care. We’re here for you too.  
              If you’re like most teens we meet, you’re somewhere 
                between the two extremes. Some areas of your life are under control, 
                but you have a weakness or two. Secret temptations. Private but 
                dangerous habits. You’re being pulled in two different directions. 
                It’s like your heart is a chunk of meat that two starving 
                dogs are fighting over. You’re not sure which one is going 
                to win. Dude (or Dude-ette), can we help you! We’ve been 
                there.  
              You might be a concerned youth leader, parent, or teacher looking 
                for a way to connect more closely with the teens in your life. 
                You are looking for a resource. Maybe this is it.  
              We sincerely hope this book will be meaningful to you, whatever 
                your situation. Not because of our impressive credentials (we 
                don’t have any; the only professional organization we belong 
                to is the Subway Sandwich Club), but we do have a few things going 
                for us. First, we truly want to offer encouragement and faith-based 
                advice more than anything else. It’s not important that 
                you remember our names or write glowing reviews of this book on 
                Amazon.com. We’d much rather you forget all about us, but 
                remember the biblical principles and time-tested advice we’ll 
                be providing.  
              Second, we aren’t the smartest guys in the world, but at 
                least we realize that fact. Thus, this book isn’t just a 
                collection of our insights. If that were the case, it would be 
                more like a pamphlet. So we relied on the wisdom and experience 
                of people more qualified than we are. Some of them are authors 
                whose books we recommend back in “Extra Toppings” 
                land. (In fact, the section called “More Stuff to Chew On” 
                might be the most valuable part of the whole book.)  
              Other insights came via teens from high schools, middle schools, 
                churches, etc., who have helped us get a clearer picture of what 
                it means to be a teen in the twenty-first century. So, thank you, 
                students from Wasson High School, Doherty High School, Monticello 
                Trails Middle School, Mill Valley High School, Colorado Springs 
                Christian School, Pulpit Rock Church, The Children’s ARK, 
                Woodmen Valley Chapel, and Southwoods Christian Church. Thanks 
                also to those of you who shared your hearts via our Web site, 
                www.haferbros.com. This book wouldn’t exist if not for you. 
               
              Also, we have enjoyed the humbling privilege of tapping the brains 
                of some awesome colleagues and friends—see the “Acknowledgments” 
                section for more info on these people.  
              Finally, we want to assure you—or perhaps warn you—that 
                we don’t duck difficult topics in the following pages. One 
                of the reasons we wrote this book is that we have noticed a trend 
                in Christian publishing to deny the realities of life in today’s 
                world or to quickly gloss over them. This doesn’t work. 
                If a teen is addicted to pornography, for example, it’s 
                feckless to say, “Just quit looking at the porn, dawg. Read 
                Deuteronomy instead, and try to think of Moses or Elijah whenever 
                temptation emerges.” Indeed, that is advice entirely lacking 
                in “feck.”  
              If you believe that God is relevant to contemporary life (as 
                we do) and that his Word is more than a quaint relic from a time 
                unlike today, then you must trust that he will provide guidance 
                for all areas of life. That means Internet pornography, substance 
                abuse, eating disorders, suicide, you name it.  
              We are trying to convey that guidance in a way we hope you will 
                find relevant, challenging, funny, and memorable. In short, we 
                hope we can deliver.  
              And, by the way, to that guy in the youth group: Dawg, we promise 
                to bring more pizza next time.  
               
                HOW TO USE THIS BOOK 
                Well, basically, you just read it and try to learn something. 
                It’s not complicated. But since we have a page to fill here, 
                we should tell you about a few of the features and benefits of 
                the book. (And if we say “features and benefits” one 
                more time, or use any other bit of soul-less Corporate America 
                jargon elsewhere in this book, you have our permission to throw 
                corn dogs or the projectiles of your choice at us if we ever come 
                to your town to speak.)  
              As you dive into Pizza, you’ll see that each of the forty 
                readings features an ingredient that will enrich your life in 
                some way. The “meat” of each devo is a story, mini-essay, 
                or interview that explores what the ingredient is, why it’s 
                important, and how to incorporate it into the mix of your life. 
               
              Next comes a “Slice of Advice,” a Bible verse or 
                quote related to the topic.  
              In some cases, a “Slice of Advice” will be followed 
                by a brief rant titled “Please, Easy on the Cheese.” 
                Here, we will take on so-called pop-culture experts or expose 
                myths that too many teens are buying in to.  
              Topping off each devo is a challenge called “Deliver on 
                This.” This is where you get practical. This is where you 
                take what you’ve read and make it work in your everyday 
                life, because the words we write aren’t meant to just lie 
                there on the page any more than a pizza is meant to sit in the 
                box until the cheese gets rubbery and the crust fossilizes and 
                not even your dog will eat it.  
              This is stuff to live out. Ideas to put into practice. You can 
                work on one idea a week or go at a quicker pace if you wish. Every 
                so often, we’ll provide a “Time to Reheat It” 
                section, in which we’ll review what has gone before and 
                allow you to reflect on how you’ve been doing with your 
                “deliveries.” So let’s get started. We’re 
                at your door. We have something for you.  
              Read excerpts from the book: 
              The Love Perspective: 
                Nose Art 
              Here by Chance? 
                Not a Chance! 
               
              Excerpted from: Wake Up 
              and Smell the Pizza 
              by Todd & Jedd Hafer 
              Copyright © 2005 ; ISBN 076420033X. Published by Bethany 
              House Publishers. Used by permission. 
                
              
              
              
		  
 
 
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