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- 10 Facts About Dancing
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- IN THE MODERN DAY in which we live the pleasure of dancing is taken for
- granted. But the Christian (and especially the young man or woman who has
- recently received Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour), will do well to examine
- dancing both in the light of the Scriptures, and also as to the effect it has
- upon his testimony.
-
- Following are ten facts about dancing in the light of history and the
- Scriptures:
-
- 1. Dancing has a disreputable history. The path of the dance is a slimy trail
- back through half-civilized people to the very heart of savagery. As to the
- modern dance, it originated in the beer gardens of Germany among lustful men
- and dissolute women. A man named Gault, a French dancing master, originated
- the waltz in 1627. In an attempt to ruin his sister, he strangled her to
- death. For this he was beheaded in 1632. The lust of the human heart is the
- only reason for the popularity of the steps of the modern dance. Read James
- 1:14 and 15.
-
-
- 2. The origin of the modern dance was on a low level. Many of the present day
- dances originated in the lowest places of this earth . . . among prostitutes,
- drunken men, and in gambling dives. The dancer is putting himself or herself
- on a level with the scum of the earth. The dance floor is the nursery of the
- divorce courts, the training ship of prostitution and the graduate school of
- infamy.
-
- 3. Dancing has ruined millions of lives. Ex-dancing master T. A. Falker, an
- authority on the subject of dancing, said, "80 percent of the denizens of the
- underworld once belonged to churches which permitted dancing." There are
- 800,000 fallen women in houses of correction in the United States. The Chicago
- Vice Commission says that 75 percent of these women attribute their downfall
- to the dance. The average life of a fallen woman is only five years. This
- means that there are hundreds of thousands of new recruits for the underworld
- every year.
-
- 4. Dancing permits indecent familiarity between the sexes. Such familiarity,
- which would not be allowed otherwise, breeds lust which leads to the sins of
- adultery and fornication so prevalent among modern dancers. Please read
- Proverbs 6:27-32.
-
- 5. The dance ruins one's influence for good. The Christian who plays with
- dancing or indulges in dancing is always open to reproach, and never fails to
- bring down upon himself the censure of good people. Romans 14:22 says: "Happy
- is he that condemneth not himself in that thing which he alloweth."
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- 6. One cannot take Christ with him when he goes to a dance. Who would dare
- pray just before entering a dance hall, "Lord Jesus, be with me this evening?
- Let Thy blessing rest upon this in which I am about to engage." How would you
- like Christ to call for your soul while you are on the dance floor, in
- indecent contact with some other man's wife or daughter? Read Philippians 4:8.
-
- 7. The dance robs Christ of one's affections. Colossians 3:1-3 should be
- enough for the Christian. Can a place where sin, danger and death constantly
- lurk be a fit place for any decent person?
-
- 8. The best people, and the most spiritually minded people condemn dancing. Mr.
- C. P. J. Mooney once wrote editorially in the Commercial Appeal concerning a
- dance hall in Memphis: "Why not let the police put a sign in red fire across
- the front reading thus: 'This is the beginning of the journey of lost souls.'"
- Read Exodus 32:26.
-
- 9. The appeal of the dance is altogether to the flesh. God's judgment to those
- who sow to the flesh is clearly stated in Galatians 6:7, 8. He who mingles
- with the dancing crowd is mingling with those whose hearts are full of lust
- and sin and evil desire.
-
- 10. The principles laid down in Scripture oppose dancing. No one will deny
- that dancing is an amusement of the world. In Romans 12:2 the Christian is
- exhorted: "be not conformed to this world." No clearer command is found in
- Scripture than is given in II Corinthians 6:14: "Be ye not unequally yoked
- together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with
- unrighteousness and what communion hath light with darkness." This should
- settle the question for all honest Christians.
-
- T. A. J. Basley
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