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November 22, 2008
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Home > 2008 > July (Web-Only)Christianity Today, July (Web-Only), 2008  |   |  
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Parents and Prodigals
As my daughter leaves for college, packing up her belongings, she is still a stranger to me.



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This article was originally published in the June 23, 1978 issue of Christianity Today.

This is the year my first child will leave home: Over the past 18 years I have often had cause to lament the fact that Jesus never had any children. The area where I have needed the most guidance and the clearest pattern of behavior has been a great grey mist through which move the bewildering and sometimes contradictory figures of Abraham and Isaac, Jacob and Joseph, David and Absalom. My own mother's favorites were Hannah and Samuel, but then he left home at the relatively uncomplicated age of 3, not 18. From the very first, however, something had gone awry in human families. Cain was a prodigal who went off to a far country but never returned.

If the Old Testament is full of the all-too-human failings of families, the New Testament supplies the opposite problem. We see few families and scarcely any children. We know Peter had a mother-in-law, so he must have been married. Several of the disciples were close kin and at least two had a pushy mother. Philip had three daughters whose spinsterhood was presumably alleviated by their gifts of prophecy. Timothy's mother and grandmother were obviously virtuous women, but where was his father?

It is only Mary who provides any kind of fully developed pattern of parenthood in the New Testament. We see her energy, her youthful exuberance, and defiant idealism evident in the Magnificat and the subsequent cross-country hike to her cousin Elizabeth's. We watch her being transformed and tempered as she participates in the mystery of the Incarnation, is rebuked by her 12-year-old son in the temple, shows him off at the Cana wedding, and attempts unsuccessfully to deprogram him at the beginning of his itinerant ministry. Yet she is still there, grieving at the cross (when the disciples have fled) and rejoicing at Pentecost.

But what kind of model is Mary? True, the same conflicts that were hers have also been mine. First, there is the sense of floundering in depths over one's head, of participating in a drama one cannot possibly comprehend nor foresee the outcome of. And second, there is the vertigo produced by the constant vacillation between asserting parental authority and allowing the child autonomy. The blessed mother herself must have sometimes regretted that her son did not see fit to marry and bring forth a brood of offspring like the other boys. Yet the very fact that I can so easily identify with Mary's pain and failure merely proves the need for a more satisfactory manual of child rearing.

The lack of a proper example for parenthood is sorely felt by our entire culture. It seems we know how to do almost everything else in this country today except how to make lasting marriages and raise children. The advances in social justice and economic equity of the past two centuries have been in almost directly inverse proportion to the steadiness and reliability of familial relationships. Governments take human rights with a seriousness never before seen in history. But the family, the basic human experience, lives in an atmosphere of disaster.

Provided with the world's most luxurious accommodations, our families live an interior life of poorer quality than refugees among rubble. Their existence has that impermanent, hand-to-mouth nature usually associated with poverty — only now it grows out of wealth. Convenience food, easy access to entertainment, disposable dishes and diapers, the quick call, the fast getaway. Yet half of all marriages end in divorce. We are at war with one another on the home front. And the heart is ripped open as surely as by shrapnel and left to heal as best it can. The only balm seems to be a friendly pat on the back from the secular media: "There, there. It happens to everyone these days. Buck up. It's only a trend."





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 15 comments.See all comments
Mark Eaton   Posted: July 31, 2008 7:07 AM
I am so disgusted by this kind of dribble. Another shining example of how lost our Baby-boomers really were and how weak they were. Why do we celebrate this weakness? We talk about how why we can't do this and why we won't do that. Rubbish. Last year my only son died of lung cancer. After talking with many of his friends, I learned that he loved the life my wife and I had created with him and that his only regret is that he did not spend more time with us. We intentionally raised him in the way God instructs, did not spare the rod, instructed him about all things (including sex), and always spoke the truth with him. We as parents fail by lying and speaking down to our children. Children are very smart and will see through most issues with amazing clarity. Be honest with your children. Guard their mind and soul as well as their body. Make sure you instruct them more than the world and the church. God gave YOU the responsibility of teaching your child. Make sure you fulfill it.

Melissa   Posted: July 29, 2008 5:26 PM
Was dissapponted to see God, our Father not included in the poll. It is his example that is my main inspiration I want to raise my children as he fathers me with the same love, compassion and wisdom.

Dave   Posted: July 29, 2008 2:17 PM
I have no children of my own but this artical reverberates the shock I felt aroud the time when I was 18 and relaized that all tehse yeras my parenst had no idea what they were doing, they were ad-libing it all along. In a way I'm glad its like that.

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