And so that one we did- I had seen it before a while back, but I enjoyed it, and she deserved it. I do think watching these movies with closed captioning on helps me, maybe because my hearing isn't great.
In the movie, many mistakes were made that were the result of "Pride and Prejudice" constrained by customs, obsession with status, and limited opportunities of women in a society that relegates them to service, I get all of that...
But the reaction to that, has allowed the pedulum to swing the total opposite way.
I wrote on this issue before- no more Hollywood stars because of the 'toxic masculinity' mood in Hollywood- (see link here : The Last Action Star?)
Even in the movie last night- Darby was disliked, because he was misunderstood and subject to gossip rampant with disinformation.
It reminded me of a John Wayne quote:
“Everyone wants to feel useful in this old world… to hit a lick for what’s right and say a word against what’s wrong even if you get walloped for saying that word… You do the one or the other. You do the one and you’re living, the other and you’re dead on your feet.”
That’s about as subtle as a hammer. But it’s hard to shake.
Now to be honest- there is a HUGE balancing act here-
A man without love can become a cruel brute and a man without fight.... well, he ain't a man.
I wrote on this archetype as well, how the movie Forgiven shows the darker side of this glorification of cowboy as fighter - (see link here: Unforgiven)
There’s something about all of this that resonates, especially right now. Most men I talk to don’t want applause. They don’t need fame. But they do want to feel useful. They want to matter. They want to know their life counts for something beyond paying bills and keeping the schedule moving.
Our culture has changed, but the problem hasn’t. You can polish society, create what looks like an “oasis of civilization,” and still never deal with the root issue of the human heart. Without Christ, sin doesn’t go away. It just dresses better.
And that’s part of the tension men feel today.
The Confusion Around Manhood
It’s not easy to know what being a man is supposed to look like anymore. The messages are mixed at best and hostile at worst.
Be strong — but don’t be too strong.
Lead — but don’t appear controlling.
Speak up — but only if your opinion is approved.
Be tender — but don’t be weak.
It leaves a lot of men unsure of where they stand.
The reason that old Western image still appeals to people isn’t really about guns or showdowns. It’s about clarity. That character knew what he believed. He knew when something was right or wrong. And he was willing to absorb the consequences.
That’s what struck me about the quote. “You do the one and you’re living.” In other words, you either step into responsibility, or you slowly drift into passivity. There isn’t much middle ground.
And that’s not about bravado. It’s about engagement.
Most of us aren’t being asked to defend the Alamo. But we are being asked to lead our homes. To disciple our children. To love our wives well. To serve our churches. To stand for truth in ordinary conversations.That’s where the real fight is. The hard truth is that it’s often easier to disengage. It’s easier to stay quiet. Easier to let someone else take responsibility. Easier to avoid the uncomfortable conversation.
But over time, that kind of avoidance hollows a man out. You may still be busy. You may still be successful. But inside, you know you’re coasting.
That’s what Wayne meant by being “dead on your feet.”
The kind of man our families need isn’t extreme in either direction.He’s strong enough to protect and provide.
He’s steady enough to be counted on.
But he’s also gentle enough to listen.
Humble enough to admit when he’s wrong.
Strength without tenderness becomes harsh. Tenderness without strength becomes instability. Biblical manhood holds both together.
Which brings us to Jesus.
If we’re honest, even the best cultural images of manhood fall short. They may inspire grit, but they don’t address sin. They don’t change the heart. When you look at Christ, you see something far deeper than a cinematic hero. You see courage that doesn’t need to prove itself. Authority that isn’t insecure. Power that is perfectly controlled.
He confronted hypocrisy directly. He spoke truth clearly. He endured injustice without retaliation. And He went to the cross willingly.
One detail that’s always struck me: after the resurrection, He still bore the scars.
He didn’t erase them. (Why Still the Wounds?)
Those scars were proof of what He had endured. They weren’t signs of weakness; they were reminders of love and victory. The hard road led somewhere. It accomplished something.
We want the easy road. We want growth without discomfort, leadership without sacrifice, influence without cost.
But maturity — real maturity — is forged through difficulty.
Here’s the encouraging part: no matter your season of life, there is still room to grow.
As husbands, we can grow in patience and intentional love.
As dads, we can grow in consistency and presence.
As grandfathers, we can grow in wisdom and spiritual leadership.
As leaders, we can grow in courage and humility.
Growth requires honesty. It requires repentance. It requires leaning into Christ rather than trying to manufacture strength on our own.
The world doesn’t need loud men. It needs faithful men.
Men who know when to speak and when to be silent.
Men who don’t shrink back from truth.
Men who take responsibility for their homes.
Men who are tough when necessary and tender by conviction.
The real measure of a man isn’t whether culture applauds him. It’s whether he is alive in Christ and engaged in what God has called him to do.
and that also means you will have detractors, you will be misunderstood- but someone has to stand strong and tall in that noise.
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