Mother looks into the eyes of her baby - talks to her/him - correlated with intelligence... Emotional intelligence correlates with more of that experience from others - through life...
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DAD,
YOUR KIDS NEED YOU MORE THAN YOU MAY REALIZE
Note
from Rowland Croucher: this was written 15 years ago – chapter 11 in my book
The Family: At Home in a Heartless World (1995, HarperCollins). I believe in
the principles/wisdom here more passionately than ever. (Some of the
conservative writers might be excluded from another edition, but their ideas
still merit attention). Feel free to use some of this material for your Fathers
Day Sermon.
****
As a
father has compassion for his children, so the Lord has compassion for those
who fear him. (Psalm 103:13)
So
deeply do we care for you that we are determined to share with you not only the
gospel of God but also our own selves, because you have become very dear to us…
You are witnesses, and God also, how pure, upright, and blameless our conduct
was toward you believers. As you know, we dealt with each one of you like a
father with his children, urging and encouraging you and pleading that you lead
a life worthy of God, who calls you into his own kingdom and glory. (1
Thessalonians 2:5-12)
David
therefore pleaded with God for the child; David fasted, and went in and lay all
night on the ground. (2 Samuel 12:16)
And
when the feast days had run their course, Job would send and sanctify [his
children], and he would rise early in the morning and offer burnt offerings
according to the number of them all; for Job said, ‘It may be that my children
have sinned, and cursed God in their hearts.’ This is what Job always did. (Job
1:5) When you depart from me today you will meet two men by Rachel’s tomb in
the territory of Benjamin at Zelzah; they will say to you, ‘The donkeys that
you went to seek are found, and now your father has stopped worrying about them
and is worrying about you, saying: “What shall I do about my son?”‘ (1 Samuel
10:2)
Things
that we have heard and known, that our ancestors have told us. We will not hide
them from their children; we will tell to the coming generation the glorious
deeds of the Lord… that the next generation might know them, the children yet
unborn, and rise up and tell them to their children, so that they should set
their hope in God, and not forget the works of God. (Psalm 78:3-7)
Fathers,
do not provoke your children, or they may lose heart. (Colossians 3:21)
Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the
discipline and instruction of the Lord. (Ephesians 6:4) Discipline your
children while there is hope; do not set your heart on their destruction. (Prov
19:18) [A bishop or overseer] must manage his own household well, keeping his
children submissive and respectful in every way. (1 Timothy 3:4)
….
As I
type this chapter The Bulletin/Newsweek magazine has just arrived. The cover
story: ‘Kids Need Both Parents: Forget the trendy view that single women
provide adequate parenting. They don’t.’
Two
events in my life as a father have indelibly imprinted themselves on my memory
(and on my conscience). One night when Jan and I were reading in bed our
fourteen year old son Paul came into our room. Precised, the conversation went
like this: ‘Dad, you love the church more than you love the family, don’t you?’
‘What makes you think that, Paul?’ ‘Well, when we’re having a family-time and
someone from the church comes with a problem, you leave us to attend to them,
and we may not see you any more that night. But when you’re counseling someone
in your study, we can’t interrupt you… So the church can interrupt the family,
but the family can’t interrupt the church, so the church is more important than
the family.’
What
would you have said? Here was my lame response: ‘Paul, you and I do lots of
things together. Most fathers are not around for a significant chunk of the day
when they have to earn a living. I’m actually around more than most.’ His response:
‘Yes, you’re around, but I often think your head is somewhere else.’
That
week we installed a telephone-answering machine and put notes on the front door
when we were having family-time. But it was too late for Paul. His hatred of
the church persists until this day, twenty years later.
Actually,
my problem as Paul’s dad went deeper. He was a well-put-together kid, and
although we played games together, we didn’t often spend one-on-one time
talking together. I didn’t realize he desperately needed that. Of course he
didn’t ask for it (his dad was busy) but he shouldn’t have had to ask. I should
have realized that growing boys need to talk to their dads as the key to their
initiation into manhood. Now why didn’t I know that? Simple: my own father (according
to my memory) never ever had any worthwhile conversation with me. I cannot
remember ever exchanging more than half a meaningful sentence with him. Ever.
He was a good man, a faithful provider, a diligent Bible student (and secretary
of the little Brethren Assembly we attended three times every Sunday), but he
didn’t talk to me. My earliest memories of him were during the war when he came
home dressed in a soldier’s uniform. He was very handsome, I thought. I
remember him at night studying to pass Public Service exams to get ahead
because he had dropped out of school early. His father was a cleaner in a
factory, and didn’t talk to his son either…
My
second ‘aha!’ experience occurred half way into a study-year in Canada. Jan
went out to work and I was at home each afternoon when our younger daughters,
Amanda and Lindy, came home from school. They had a snack and told me all about
their day. It was wonderful! When Jan came home, however, they’d already told
their stories, so over dinner I had to extract them again for Jan’s benefit.
Often I heard myself saying, ‘Darling, you’ve been so privileged over all these
years to be there when the kids came home. I’m jealous!’
When
you hear `So-and so’s a success’ what do you think of? His home and marriage?
Unlikely – usually it’s his career. What nurtures the family unit is in
conflict with what maximizes personal development. And yet the highest
happiness on earth is in marriage and family. Every man who is a happy husband
and father is a successful man even if he’s failed in everything else. I like
the story about a man who came to his friend Carl Jung, saying
enthusiastically, ‘I’ve been promoted!’ Jung would say, ‘I’m very sorry to hear
that; but if we all stick together, I think we will get through it.’ If a
friend said ashamedly, ‘I’ve just been fired,’ Jung would say ‘Let’s open a
bottle of wine; this is wonderful news; something good will happen now.’
Fathers
in the industrialized world have generally failed to integrate competent
fathering with ‘breadwinning’. But that’s not a new problem. Robert Bly (Iron
John) points out that there are no good fathers in the major stories of Greek
mythology, and very few in the Old Testament.
Peter
Sellers, in The Optimists of Nine Elms has old Sam grunting ‘It’s got nothing
to do with working or making money. It’s the way of the world, making fools of
us all. And what for? What did kids want? Their parents. What did their parents
want? Kids. But what did they do? They let themselves get shanghaied into
working so hard to make things better for their kids that their kids never see
them. And they never see their kids. Stupid blinking world’, belched old Sam.
‘Stupid blinking parents. You only know how to say “Don’t do this,” and “Don’t
do that”, and “No, no, you can’t”.’ ‘Well, you can,’ old Sam said, ‘that’s what
it’s all about. It’s not just filling their bellies with bread and butter. What
about a bit of bread and butter for up here?’ he demanded and banged his head
with his fist to make his point.
Fathers,
your family is the most precious possession you have. Take time to recognise
how important each member of the family is to you, and communicate that. All
members of your family need to know that you care about them. You’ll be
surprised at how many family ‘problems’ evaporate when you communicate warmth
and love and trust to your family.
Quality
time with children is not merely spending time, but wasting time with them. The
serendipitous moment when a child says ‘Hey Dad’, ‘Hey Mum’ can’t be planned –
you’ve got to be around when it happens. Modern dads are often bigamous until
they’re into their forties – married to their job as first priority. A spate of
books about ‘Absent Fathers Lost Sons’ is pointing to a trend for boys not
understanding what it means to be masculine because Dad isn’t home enough,
doing interesting and instructive things with their younger and teenage sons.
Does a teenager really want his Dad? Yes, if a strong relationship was built
between them in earlier years.
And
so does a teenage daughter. At puberty most girls have as their #1 question:
‘Am I attractive to fellas?’ The girl’s father is the representative male, and
if Dad gives the message, ‘Hey, how did I deserve a gorgeous daughter like you?
There’s some lucky young fellow wandering the earth…’ the daughter’s
self-esteem gets a real assist. Future marital happiness for a woman depends as
much – sometimes more – on her previous relationship with her Dad, as with her
husband.
A
few years ago Paul gave me psychoanalyst Guy Corneau’s book, Absent Fathers,
Lost Sons. Corneau believes we have to rediscover ‘natural religion’, and you
may have some questions about that. But his central thesis is that a man is
born three times in his life – born of his mother, born of his father, and
finally born of his own deep self. ‘Christ referred to it when he said that he
knew neither his father nor his mother, even though his parents were in the
crowd… Men’s mourning for the unrealistic expectations they had of their
fathers, and the solitude this mourning imposes upon them, are experiences that
liberate them. Their suffering serves as an initiatory mutilation; it forces
them to confront the reality of the objective world…’ [Boston: Shambhala, 1991,
p. 181] [70]
Corneau’s
‘aha’ experience came not from his counseling practice so much as from a
workshop he conducted with men. He asked them ‘Do you feel like a man?’ Not one
of them answered in the affirmative. The problem? Their fathers were
spiritually and emotionally absent from their sons as they grew up. Sons who
haven’t been given adequate fathering tend to experience confusion about their
sexual identity; their sense of self-esteem is unsteady; they repress their
aggressivity and their inquisitiveness; they have trouble respecting moral
values… Lacking a father, says Corneau, is like lacking a backbone. A whole
generation of sons is crying out, as Jesus did on the cross, ‘My father, my
father, why have you forsaken me?’
So,
dad, your kids need you more than you may realize!
…..
Child
psychologist Dr Urie Bronfenbrenner was once asked ‘What is the key ingredient
in the successful development of a human being?’ Without hesitation he replied,
‘Someone, some adult, has to be crazy about the kids.’ We all know what he
meant. Our children need 100 percent of us. I can’t have one eye on the
television and one eye on Sarah’s homework. You can’t ‘listen’ to your children
when you’re still replaying in your mind the big staff meeting at work. Kids
have great antennae. They know where they stand in our priorities.
Gary
Bauer, Our Journey Home: What Parents Are Doing to Preserve Family Values,
Dallas: Word Publishers, 1992, pp.127. [92]
It
is little more than a month since I was handed this living heap of
expectations, and I can feel nothing but simple awe… I have got a daughter,
whose life is already separate from mine, whose will already follows its own
directions, and who has quickly corrected my woolly preconceptions of her by
being something remorselessly different. She is the child of herself and will
be what she is. I am merely the keeper of her temporary helplessness.
Laurie
Lee, ‘The Firstborn’ quoted in Alexandra Towle (ed.), Fathers, Artarmon, NSW:
Harper & Row, 1986, p.214. [79]
David
Blankenhorn of the Institute for American Values has pointed out that the
phrase ‘good family man’ has almost disappeared from our popular language. This
compliment was once widely heard in our culture – bestowed, to those deserving
it, as a badge of honor. Rough translation: ‘He puts his family first.’ Ponder
the three words: ‘good’ (moral values); ‘family’ (purposes larger than the
self); and man (a norm of masculinity). Yet today within elite culture, the
phrase sounds antiquated, almost embarrassing… Contemporary American culture
simply no longer celebrates, among its various and competing norms of
masculinity, a widely shared and compelling ideal of the man who puts his
family first.
David
Blankenhorn, ‘What Do Families Do?’ paper presented at Stanford University,
November 1989, p.19, quoted in Dr. James Dobson and Gary L. Bauer, Children at
Risk: Winning the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of your Children, Dallas:
Word Publishing, 1990, p.166. [109]
In
addition to purely physical power, of course, fatherhood represents a great
deal of psychological power in a child’s life. Because your child sees you as a
successful, dynamic member of the world he [or she] wants to enter, you have
the power to shape significantly what your child will become. By using the
power to educate, to set limits, to make decisions, you will influence much
about your child’s personality.
Unlike
personal power, nurturance, the ability to protect and comfort a child, has
been an undervalued facet of masculinity in our society. Many men believe they
may express nurturance toward their children only by protecting them from
outside dangers or by economically providing for the family and not through a
personal, tender relationship with the child. They don’t see it as masculine
and thus don’t see it as a natural part of their father power.
Children,
male and female, possess a natural tendency to give and respond to tenderness –
from both parents. If you allow nurturance to be a totally feminine domain in
your family, you can hurt both your sons and your daughters. Rigid, strict,
punitive fathers compel their sons to stifle tender feelings and become harsh
and unloving themselves. Such fathers make their daughters feel that men are
not tender creatures, that only harsh men are masculine.
To
associate nurturance with femininity is a common mistake in American society.
Indeed, usually we call it ‘mothering’ instead of ‘parenting.’…The father
crooning to his infant may not feel himself quite the masculine male. Rather
than seeing it as weakness, you should adopt the attitude that you are showing
nurturance-from-strength. You should realize that you are actually evidencing
power and competence by showing your children how to throw a ball or by
cuddling them.
Henry
Biller and Dennis Meredith, Father Power, NY: David McKay Co Inc., 1974, p.104.
[297]
Maybe
you’re a working parent because you don’t want to starve, or because you want
your child to go to college, or because you want some of life’s extras for
yourself, or because the satisfaction of the business world is essential for
your own well-being. No matter what your reason, here you are, right in the
middle of a balancing act.
Caryl
Waller Krueger, Working Parent, Happy Child: You Can Balance Job and Family,
Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1990, p.13. [62]
Almost
all the fathers who attended the birth reached an ecstatic peak of emotion: a
personal Everest. Often this was at the moment of birth itself, sometimes it
came an hour or two later as the shock passed through their system. Then for
some while afterwards, their behaviour was manic, disordered, high… ‘I felt
like an astronaut who’d landed on the moon.’ Even the more withdrawn ones
became voluble, often drawing total strangers into eager conversation. So
powerful was the feeling that almost every man cried. Some did this quite
openly, some brushed away the tears or sought to conceal them. The taboo
against men’s tears is fierce, and for many this was the first time they had
cried since they were small children themselves. We checked the accuracy of
this by observing fathers at twenty successive births. Eighteen were crying.
The other two were numbed; perhaps their tears came later… Most men will become
fathers. They will not receive all that much of a cultural bequest to help them
in the art and science of the role: how dads become dads, and how they might
emerge as better ones. The old strategies are changing.
Brian
Jackson, Fatherhood, London: George Allen and Unwin, 1984, pp.121-122. [195]
The
most delicate and important questions… were about male sensibility when then
child entered his world. I often found that I was one of the few people,
sometimes the only one, to whom the man had spoken his feelings. He may not
have done this with the woman (‘I never knew you thought that’ was a common
interjection in the interviews), perhaps because she excluded him, or did not
expect it of him or was obviously much better at such discussion herself. He
hardly ever explored his private response with male colleagues at work.
Coversation there was ritual, stylized, public – wages, sport, weather,
holidays, politics, the job in hand (‘My mates just didn’t want to know’,
‘Don’t know whether they were bored or embarrassed, may be just plain not
interested’). I doubt if that was wholly so. Women inherit a culture which
enables them to express intimate feelings. The mothers talk openly, freely and
at length, between themselves about the minutiae and sensation of parenthood.
Not every woman will use this chance, but nevertheless it is there, and the mothers
are far more practiced, skilled, and confident than the men in discussing and
sharing the delights and depressions of parenthood. This does not mean that the
fathers care or feel any less. They are anxious to express fatherhood. But they
often met dilemmas. One was their lack of practice in articulating the gentler
feelings, whether in word, touch or action… The first-time father needed a new
vocabulary of expression if he was to attune his private with his public self.
Perhaps the mothers, sharing intimate life, had always known this of him:
voiceless love in the dark… The tap-roots of fatherhood run deep. The image I
take away is of men in tears at the birth, and yet feeling they had to disguise
them. The question I most remember asking is ‘When did you last cry?’, knowing
that so often it would be countered with ‘Not since I was a child myself.’ To
release the full force of fatherhood will mean breaking the masculine taboo on
tenderness.
Brian
Jackson, Fatherhood, London: George Allen and Unwin, 1984. pp.134-135. [349]
Studies
conducted through the 1980′s consistently show that fathers spend about
one-fifth the amount of time as mothers on total domestic work, including child
care. Moreover, in North America this difference remains unaffected by the mother’s
employment status outside the home. A great many popular arguments against
mothers returning to the paid workforce center around the so-called deprivation
of parental contact children will suffer as a result. Yet time-budget studies
show that mothers, on the average, do not spend less time with their children
when they have outside employment. They simply cut down on other activities
they consider less important, including house cleaning, hobbies, socializing
with friends, and even sleeping. By contrast, the average North American
father, while quite competent to parent, actually performs parenting tasks only
for ten to thirty minutes per day. And most of this, it turns out, is taken up
by chauffering activities or ‘keeping an eye on them’ while watching
television. Perhaps the greatest irony of all is that many divorced fathers
report spending more time with their children after they have retained only
visiting rights than they did when they lived in the same household with them.
Mary
Stewart van Leeuwen, Gender and Grace: Women and Men in a Changing World,
England: Inter-Varsity Press, 1990, pp.159-160. [198]
Man
is the key to a happy family life because a woman by nature is a responding
creature. Some temperaments, of course, respond more quickly than others, but
all normal women are responders. That is one of the secondary meanings of the
word submission in the Bible. God would not have commanded a woman to submit
unless he had instilled in her a psychic mechanism which would find it
comfortable to do so. The key to feminine response has only two parts – love
and leadership. I have never met a wife who did not react positively to a
husband who gave her love and leadership. Deep within a woman lies a responding
capability that makes her vulnerable to that combination. It is so powerful, in
fact, that many respond when they are only given love. (This is less likely
when a woman is subjected only to leadership.)
The
combination of love and leadership is unbeatable. An interesting facet of that
two-sided key is that most men must consciously work on one or the other. The
temperament which naturally exudes love must consciously make an effort to
exercise consistent leadership. By contrast, the man gifted in leadership must
concentrate upon a regular display of love.
Tim
LaHaye, Understanding the Male Temperament, Old Tappan, NJ: Fleming H. Revell
Company, 1977, p.178. [205]
No
man can possibly know what life means, what the world means, what anything
means, until he has a child and loves it. And then the whole universe changes
and nothing will ever again seem exactly as it seemed before.
Lafcadio
Hearn quoted in Alexandra Towle (ed.), Fathers, Artarmon, NSW: Harper &
Row, 1986, p.211. [40]
There
is considerable evidence of the impact – for good and bad – of family life on
children. Consider the intense bitterness which Germaine Greer expresses
towards her parents in Daddy, We Hardly Knew You. Cut by her father’s
abandonment of her to go to war, her anguish is intensified by his subsequent failure
to want to know her and show her affection: ‘Some children can remember their
fathers reciting Urdu poetry or Marlowe, or teaching them to recognise birds
and butterflies, to spot trains, to play chess or cricket. But you, Daddy dear?
Not a curve-ball, not a cover-drive, not a card-trick. Not a maxim. Not a saw,
adage or proverb. Except, “You’re big enough and ugly enough to take care of
yourself”.’
Kevin
Andrews, ‘The Family, Marriage and Divorce’, in The Australian Family,
quarterly journal of the Australian Family Association, Volume 13, No 4,
December 1992, p.18. [125]
Lily
and I regard ourselves as our children’s servants. It is for this reason that
we do not expect – except in our more immature moments – any great gratitude
from them. They are entitled to our service; it is our position to serve them.
It is our expectation that they themselves will grow into servanthood – that
having been served and having role models for service, they will be able to
serve their children and the world in turn… We would hardly serve our children
well if we did everything they wanted, obeyed their every whim… And wherever
the decisions are made, that’s where the locus of power resides.
M.
Scott Peck with Marilyn Von Walder and Patricia Kay, What Return Can I Make?,
London: Arrow Books, 1985, pp.55-56. [107]
Three
hundred years ago Jonathan Edwards, a dynamic Calvinistic preacher, was largely
responsible for the Great Awakening in this country…
[He]
married a godly woman, and over the past three hundred years his descendents
have included: 265 college graduates, twelve college presidents, sixty-five
university professors, sixty physicians, one hundred clergy… thirty judges,
three Congressmen, two Senators, and one Vice President of the United States.
Sociologists
have compared the effects of Jonathan Edwards’ life and marriage to those of
another man living at the same time: Max Juke – a derelict and ungodly vagabond
who married a woman of similar character. Over the generations, their union has
produced: three hundred children who died in infancy, 310 professional paupers,
440 crippled by disease, fifty prostitutes, sixty thieves, seven murderers, and
fifty-three assorted criminals of other varieties.
D.
James Kennedy, Learning to Live with the People You Love, Springdale, PA:
Whitaker House, 1987, p.75. [132]
Armand
Nicholi, a clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard medical school, has
studied the literature on the question of parental absence and children’s
well-being. The literature spans over 40 years of research and study. His
conclusion is this: ‘What has been shown over and over again to contribute most
to the emotional development of the child is a close, warm, sustained and
continuous relationship with both parents.’ [Emphasis in original]
Nicholi
goes on to make this observation: ‘One other comment about this research. In
addition to the magnitude of it, the studies taken as a whole paint an
unmistakably clear picture of the adverse effects of parental absence. Yet this
vast body of research is almost totally ignored by our society. Why have even
the professionals tended to ignore this research? Perhaps the answer is, to put
it most simply, because the findings are unacceptable.
‘Attitudes
which now prevail toward parental absence resemble those once prevalent toward
cigarette smoking. For decades Americans ignored the large body of research
concerning the adverse effects of cigarette smoke. We had excellent studies for
decades before we began to respond to the data. Apparently as a society, we
refuse to accept data that demands a radical change in our lifestyle.’
‘The
Assault on the Family’, Family Update, a Bi-Monthly Newsletter of the
Australian Family Association. Vol. 9 No. 3 May-June 1993. [206]
‘Clubhouse’
magazine, a publication of James Dobson’s Focus on the Family, recently asked
its young readers to share what they liked most about their dad… I was struck
by how seldom these children mentioned physical possessions or material things
their fathers provided them. Instead it was the simple manifestations of love
and commitment that were cited most often, the very things that sometimes fall
by the wayside in our increasingly fast-moving world.
‘A
father should be not only your dad, but your friend, too.’ – Samantha, age ten,
Southaven, Mississippi
‘My
dad’s most important quality is his willingness to ask forgiveness from me when
he is wrong’ – Stephanie, age nine, Duluth, Georgia
‘A
good dad would come to your games… and miss work just for you’ – Brook, age
twelve, Roswell, Georgia
‘The
most important quality in my father is that he makes me feel safe’ – Erin, age
nine, Kansas City, Missouri
‘A
dad must discipline you when you do something wrong so you won’t grow up to be
a bad person’ – Lisa, age thirteen, Concord, California
‘I
think a dad should care about his children’s grades and their lives. And it
helps when your dad will study for a test with you’ – Lynn, age ten,
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania
‘The
most important qualities of a father are that he loves and does the best he can
for his kids. My dad does that all of the time… well, most of the time. No dad
is perfect’ – Alicia, age eleven, Wausaw, Wisconsin.
All
of these touched my heart. But one came at me like a freight train. It was
written by ten-year-old Sommer from Fergus Falls, Minnesota: ‘The most important
thing is that my father loves my mother.’
Gary
Bauer, Our Journey Home: What Parents Are Doing to Preserve Family Values,
Dallas: Word Publishers, 1992, pp.145-146. [287]
This
morning I asked my nine-year-old son, ‘Do you know that I love your mother?’
‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘How do you know?’ I persisted. ‘You tell her all the time,’
he said. ‘Well,’ I continued, ‘what if I lost my voice and couldn’t say I loved
her. Would she still know I loved her?’ ‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘You could write it
down for her.’ So I said, ‘OK, son, let’s say I had both my arms amputated, and
I can’t write with my feet. Would she know I loved her?’ ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I’d
tell her for you.’ ‘Wait,’ I said. ‘How would you know I loved her?’ Long
pause. ‘By the way you treat her,’ he said. It took about five minutes to get
him to the point. But eventually he saw that love goes deeper than words.
Josh
McDowell, ‘Love is Shown by Actions’ in LaVonne Neff et. al., Practical
Christianity, Wheaton, Illinois: Tyndale House Publishers Inc., 1988, p.232.
[141]
The
most important thing a father can do for his children is to love their mother.
Theodore
Hesburgh in Robert I. Fitzhenry (ed.), Chambers Book of Quotations, Edinburgh:
W&R Chambers Ltd., 1986, p.125. [16]
A
father needs to be willing to be finite and mortal in his children’s eyes… The
image which needs to be shattered is that fathers are the ones who know all the
answers, can take charge in all situations, are always right and never make
mistakes. What needs to be communicated is that fathers do have a great
responsibility in the home but that it is possible for fathers to misunderstand
a situation, to make wrong judgements, to get their own ego involved in a
situation, and to need forgiveness.
Kenneth
Chaffin, Is There A Family In The House?, Minneapolis, Minnesota: World Wide
Publications, 1978, pp. 92-93. [90]
When
a father now sits down at the table, he seems weak and insignificant, and we
all sense that fathers no longer fill as large a space in the room as
nineteenth-century fathers did. Some welcome this, but without understanding
all its implications.
These
events have worked to hedge the father around with his own paltriness.
D.H.Lawrence said: ‘Men have been depressed now for many years in their male
and resplendent selves, depressed into dejection and almost abjection. Is that
not evil?’
As
the father seems more and more enfeebled, dejected, paltry, he also appears to
be a tool of dark forces. We remember that in Star Wars we are given the image
of ‘Darth Vader’, a pun on dark father. He is wholeheartedly on the side of the
dark forces. As political and mythological kings die, the father loses the
radiance he once absorbed from the sun, or from the hierarchy of solar beings;
he strikes society as being endarkened…
In
our time, when the father shows up as an object of ridicule… on television, or
a fit field for suspicion (as he does in Star Wars), or a bad-tempered fool
(when he comes home from the office with no teaching), or a weak puddle of
indecision (as he stops inheriting kingly radiance), the son has a problem. How
does he imagine his own life as a man?
Some
sons fall into a secret despair. They have probably adopted, by the time they
are six, their mother’s view of their father, and by twenty will have adopted
society’s critical view of fathers, which amounts to a dismissal.
Robert
Bly, Iron John: A Book About Men, New York: Vintage Books, 1992, pp.98-99.
[272]
As
University of Utah psychologist Michael Lamb puts it, ‘Fathers are not merely
occasional mother-substitutes: they interact with infants in a unique and
differentiable way.’ Whereas mothers tend to talk to or cuddle with their kids
or play with dolls, blocks and puzzles, fathers naturally engage in physical
activities… As a result of these different playing styles, children often look
to their mothers for warmth, quiet-time activities, and verbal stimulation,
while they value their fathers as wonderful playmates who introduce them to the
world at large. Both are important… Father-play tends to be lively,
unpredictable, imaginative and obviously exciting… Not only are these
differences normal, they are crucial to a child’s development. Each parenting
style teaches your child different things about the world. Mother’s approach
informs him that the world can be cuddly, safe, nurturing and supportive.
Father’s process lets him know that it can be all of those things but also
jostling, unsettling, fun and surprising.
Mitch
Golant and Susan Golant, Finding Time For Fathering, New York: Ballantine
Books, Fawcett Columbine, 1992, pp.45-46. [160]
One
of the great distorting idolatries of our day is the confusion between the
standard of living and the quality of life. It is no wonder that so many books
are being written about fatherhood at the moment for it has rarely been the
case that so many men who purport to believe in ‘family values’ while in church
are so absent from the home during the week. Many men leave home early in the
morning, leave work late at night and even work at weekends. They may believe
that men are the decision makers in the family, but it is their women who make
the decisions. They may believe the man is the head of the household but the
household has to function without him. They may believe that the man should
take the spiritual initiative but they are too shattered to pray. Such men will
improve the quality of their relationships only if they make more time for
those relationships. In a world in which time is money, this means that they
must accept a lower standard of living, less status and less power.
Roy
McCloughty, ‘The Yoke Of Masculinity’, On Being, Vol.20, No.7, August 1993,
pp.17-18. [186]
Fathers
send subtle and not-so-subtle messages to both their sons and daughters about
how men walk, talk, dress, relate to one another, and relate to women. These
lessons are important. Without them, our children would have a void in their
lives. Statistics show that boys who are reared without a father * have greater
difficulty relating to other men * don’t know how to treat women * have a
higher rate of divorce * don’t know how to raise their own sons.
Daughters
who are raised without a father figure * have more difficulty relating to men *
may turn to sexuality as their only means of relating * have a harder time
choosing a husband * and divorce those men at a higher rate than other women.
Thomas
Whiteman, Ph.D. with Randy Petersen, The Fresh Start Single Parenting Workbook,
Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1993, p.166. [122]
A
man’s personal relationship with God often mimics his relationship with his
father.
The
overall result of father wound on the religious life of most men is that they
tend to be spiritually passive and inactive. They may come to church, but they
are not really there. They may hear a sermon intellectually, but its message
may never penetrate their hearts enough to make a difference in their lives.
They may serve as ushers and shake people’s hands before and after the service
or as elders who make financial and policy decisions for the church, but they
often cannot make themselves connect with what church is really about. They
can’t connect enough to be fully involved with heart, mind, and soul…
Lacking
a feeling connection in their relationship with God, most men feel inadequate
to be the spiritual leaders they know they should be, so they feel shamed. They
tend to withdraw from the church, leaving even less male leadership for the
next generation… If your church is like most churches, women either design or
run a high percentage of its programs.
The
fact is, today’s church is primarily a feminine church. By saying this, I do
not mean to imply that I am anti-feminine. However, I must ask, ‘Where are the
men?’ Where are the men who are spiritually alive? Who have a fire in their
bellies – a passion to grow towards God, a passion to grow as men, and a
passion to grow toward other men? Who are willing to take bold risks in their
faith? Where are the men who will take action in sharing the gospel of Christ?
Who will live out their faith through active involvement in the Christian
church community?
The
church desperately needs the involvement of such men, yet they are difficult to
find. For generations, men have been wounded by the lack of male leadership and
modeling of spiritual truth by older men. Consequently, men are greatly shamed
when they realize that they should be spiritual leaders, teachers and models,
yet have no idea how to assume those roles. Many men would rather abandon the
church (either physically or emotionally) than deal with these feelings of
shame and inadequacy.
Dr.
Earl R. Henslin, Man to Man, Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1993, pp.79,
80-81. [369]
…..
Lord
God, father of us all, you have entrusted me with these little people, and it’s
an awesome responsibility.
I am
stretched beyond my limits: I’m supposed to be the provider of food and shelter
and clothing and answers for school homework; chauffeur, gardener/janitor,
financier, and fixer of everything.
I am
supposed to model what it means to live and to love; and to represent you as
priest in my home.
They’re
big responsibilities.
Lord,
I have found that it’s easier for a father to have children than for children
to have a father.
The
emotional demands of work, financial pressures, marriage, and lots of other
things leave me with little left over for the kids.
Help
me to compose myself before I reach home each day so that I am available for my
family. Help me to be a growing person, so that out of the reservoir of
spiritual and emotional strength I will have some energy to give to my wife and
children. Help me to understand myself, my past, my strengths and my limits, my
masculine and my feminine traits, my anger, my fears, my weaknesses.
What
I say to my children may not be heard by the world, but it will be heard by
posterity. These kids are like wax, and are being formed into something
beautiful or terrible, and I carry a big responsibility for the outcome. May
they always know that there is nothing or no-one more valuable to me than they
are.
So,
hear my confession of ignorance and failure; cleanse me from all selfishness;
and forgive my ignorance. Help me to forgive my own father for his faults and
failings: I am not responsible for them, but for me. Help me to love my
children’s mother. May I be a good priest in my home.
And
when the Great Day comes and I will stand before you my king and my judge, I
would like to hear you say, ‘Well done, good and faithful father, Your children
have delighted in you, and you are blessed.’
Amen.
A
Benediction
May
God the Father, Jesus our Friend, the Holy Spirit our counselor and teacher,
empower you so that you may empower others. May the demands and the pain of
fathering be for you a challenge rather than a burden. May your years with your
children be the happiest in your life. Amen.
****
CAPSULE:
ABSENT FATHERS, LOST CHILDREN
As I
look back on more than forty years of married life, I am astonished that the
work of the ministry does not destroy ministers’ marriages. The minister will
have the best and biggest room in his house for his study. The minister sees
less of his family than any member of his congregation does. He sees less of
his children. He has to leave it to his wife to bring them up. Seldom can he
have an evening out with his wife and, even when such an evening is arranged,
something again and again comes to stop it. Demands to speak and to lecture
take him constantly away from home and, when he does come home, he is so tired
that he is the worst company in the world, and falls asleep in his chair. As I
come near to the end of my days, the one thing that haunts me more than
anything else is that I have been so unsatisfactory a husband and a father. As
the Song of Solomon has it: `They made me keeper of the vineyards; but my own
vineyard I have not kept’. When the Pastoral Epistles are laying down the
qualifications for the elder, the deacon and the bishop one of the unvarying
demands is that `he must know how to manage his own household’ – and for a
minister that is the hardest thing in the world.
William
Barclay, Testament of Faith, Oxford: Mowbrays, 1977, p.16-17. [235]
We
had a lot of good times together, but Mary [my wife] never got wrapped up in
the corporate life. She didn’t try to keep up with the Joneses. For both of us,
the family was supreme. As for the responsibilities of the corporate wife, she
did what was necessary, and she did it with a smile. But her values – and mine
– were home and the hearth… Your job takes up enough time without having to
shortchange your family. The four of us used to take a lot of motor trips,
especially when the kids were young. That’s when we really got close as a
family. No matter what else I did in those years, I know that two sevenths of
my whole life – weekends, and a lot of evenings – was devoted to Mary and the
kids. Some people think that the higher up you are in the corporation, the more
you have to neglect your family. Not at all! Actually, it’s the guys at the top
who have the freedom and the flexibility to spend enough time with their wives
and kids. Still, I’ve seen a lot of executives who neglect their families, and
it always makes me sad… You can’t let a corporation turn into a labour camp.
Hard work is essential. But there’s also a time for rest and relaxation, for
going to see your kid in the school play or at the swim meet. And if you don’t
do those things while the kids are young, there’s no way to make it up later
on… Yes I’ve had a wonderful and successful career. But next to my family, it
really hasn’t mattered at all.
Lee
Iacocca, Iacocca: An Autobiography, New York: Bantam Books, 1984, pp.304-305.
[278]
A
young man told me of a conversation he had in hospital with his father just
before he died. The father, a perpetually busy man, had not spent much time
with his children and the son expressed his regret that they had not shared
more together. The father responded by reminding his son that he had worked
long hours in order to put food on the table to feed the family. The son remained
silent, but in his heart he was yearning to tell his father that he had never
been as hungry for food as he had been for his father’s presence.
Rabbi
Neil Kursham, quoted in Mitch Golant and Susan Golant, Finding Time For
Fathering, New York: Ballantine Books, 1992, p.60. [103]
When
the office work and the ‘information revolution’ begin to dominate, the
father-son bond disintegrates. If the father inhabits the house only for an
hour or two in the evenings, then women’s values, marvelous as they are, will be
the only values in the house. One could say that the father now loses his son
five minutes after birth…
The
German psychologist Alexander Mitscherlich writes about this father-son crisis
in his book called Society Without the Father. The gist of his idea is that if
the son does not actually see what his father does during the day and through
all the seasons of the year, a hole will appear in the son’s psyche, and the
hole will fill with demons who tell him that his father’s work is evil and that
the father is evil…
Not
receiving any blessing from your father is an injury. Robert Moore said, ‘If
you’re a young man and you’re not being admired by an older man, you’re being
hurt…’ Not seeing your father when you are small, never being with him, having
a remote father, an absent father, a workaholic father, is an injury…
Between
twenty and thirty percent of American boys now live in a house with no father
present, and the demons there have full permission to rage…
When
a father, absent during the day, returns home at six, his children receive only
his temperament, not his teaching… The father returns home… usually irritable
and remote… [and] children do not receive the blessing of his teaching… A
father’s remoteness may severly damage the daughter’s ability to participate
good-heartedly in later relationships with men. Much of the rage that some
women direct to the patriarchy stems from a vast disappointment over this lack
of teaching from their own fathers.
Robert
Bly, Iron John: A Book About Men, New York: Vintage Books, 1992,
pp.21,31,96,97. [300]
The
men in my family are hardworking, good men, but most of them are disconnected
from their feelings. That is the norm for upper midwestern farm families like
ours. We value hard work and consider it noble to bear, in stoic silence,
whatever physical or emotional pain comes our way. Our unspoken rule is ‘men do
not feel’. The men in our family know little about emotional expression. One
rarely hears a hearty laugh or feels a warm hug from strong arms, or offers a
spontaneous ‘I love you.’
It
is tragic that sons should suffer such loss and woundedness from fathers who
truly love them, but it happens. I know my father loved me. I know he cared. He
worked hard, sacrificed for his family, and was a good provider, but he did not
know how to help me feel loved. I also know that my father did not feel loved
by his father. He never received affirmation from his father, and I doubt that
he ever felt the warmth and comfort of a loving hug from his father. My father
was unable to give what he had never received himself. He didn’t have a clue
about how to reach out to me emotionally because no one had ever reached out to
him…
Every
boy yearns to be sought out by his father. When a boy lacks this emotional
connection, his natural response is to try to do something that will cause his
father to demonstrate his love for him, something that will create an emotional
bond between them. Different boys try different behaviours. One boy will become
an overachiever. ‘Maybe if I do well enough in school or make the basketball
team’, the boy reasons, ‘Dad will think I’m special’. Another boy will cause
trouble at home or at school until he gains his father’s attention. Regardless
of the outward behaviour, the motivation is the same – to be emotionally
connected or close to the father…
There
is no subsitute for an intimate, emotional connection between father and son.
This connection cannot be made by a father who is physically or emotionally
absent. It cannot be made by a father who functions at home in the same way he
functions in the workplace. It takes time and emotional involvement for a
father to establish intimacy with his son.
Dr.
Earl R. Henslin,
...
Girls more likely to suffer trauma
TEACHERS, PARENTS, PASTORS...
Do yourself a favour and download the TED talks app,
then listen to any of the five or so brilliant talks by the educator/ communicator extraordinaire Ken Robinson...
Excerpts:
A little girl (6) was drawing a picture.
Teacher: What are you drawing?
'God'...
'But no one knows what God looks like'
'They will when I'm finished...'
~~~
'If you're not prepared to be wrong, you'll never really succeed at anything worthwhile...'
~~
DAD, YOUR KIDS NEED YOU
MORE THAN YOU MAY REALIZE
Note from Rowland Croucher:
this was written 15 years ago – chapter 11 in my book The Family: At Home in a
Heartless World (1995, HarperCollins). I believe in the principles/wisdom here
more passionately than ever. (Some of the conservative writers might be
excluded from another edition, but their ideas still merit attention). Feel
free to use some of this material for your Fathers Day Sermon.
****
As a father has compassion for
his children, so the Lord has compassion for those who fear him. (Psalm 103:13)
So deeply do we care for
you that we are determined to share with you not only the gospel of God but
also our own selves, because you have become very dear to us… You are
witnesses, and God also, how pure, upright, and blameless our conduct was
toward you believers. As you know, we dealt with each one of you like a father
with his children, urging and encouraging you and pleading that you lead a life
worthy of God, who calls you into his own kingdom and glory. (1 Thessalonians
2:5-12)
David therefore pleaded
with God for the child; David fasted, and went in and lay all night on the
ground. (2 Samuel 12:16)
And when the feast days had
run their course, Job would send and sanctify [his children], and he would rise
early in the morning and offer burnt offerings according to the number of them
all; for Job said, ‘It may be that my children have sinned, and cursed God in
their hearts.’ This is what Job always did. (Job 1:5) When you depart from me
today you will meet two men by Rachel’s tomb in the territory of Benjamin at
Zelzah; they will say to you, ‘The donkeys that you went to seek are found, and
now your father has stopped worrying about them and is worrying about you,
saying: “What shall I do about my son?”‘ (1 Samuel 10:2)
Things that we have heard
and known, that our ancestors have told us. We will not hide them from their
children; we will tell to the coming generation the glorious deeds of the Lord…
that the next generation might know them, the children yet unborn, and rise up
and tell them to their children, so that they should set their hope in God, and
not forget the works of God. (Psalm 78:3-7)
Fathers, do not provoke
your children, or they may lose heart. (Colossians 3:21) Fathers, do not
provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and
instruction of the Lord. (Ephesians 6:4) Discipline your children while there
is hope; do not set your heart on their destruction. (Prov 19:18) [A bishop or
overseer] must manage his own household well, keeping his children submissive
and respectful in every way. (1 Timothy 3:4)
….
As I type this chapter The
Bulletin/Newsweek magazine has just arrived. The cover story: ‘Kids Need Both
Parents: Forget the trendy view that single women provide adequate parenting.
They don’t.’
Two events in my life as a
father have indelibly imprinted themselves on my memory (and on my conscience).
One night when Jan and I were reading in bed our fourteen year old son Paul
came into our room. Precised, the conversation went like this: ‘Dad, you love
the church more than you love the family, don’t you?’ ‘What makes you think
that, Paul?’ ‘Well, when we’re having a family-time and someone from the church
comes with a problem, you leave us to attend to them, and we may not see you
any more that night. But when you’re counseling someone in your study, we can’t
interrupt you… So the church can interrupt the family, but the family can’t
interrupt the church, so the church is more important than the family.’
What would you have said?
Here was my lame response: ‘Paul, you and I do lots of things together. Most
fathers are not around for a significant chunk of the day when they have to
earn a living. I’m actually around more than most.’ His response: ‘Yes, you’re
around, but I often think your head is somewhere else.’
That week we installed a
telephone-answering machine and put notes on the front door when we were having
family-time. But it was too late for Paul. His hatred of the church persists
until this day, twenty years later.
Actually, my problem as
Paul’s dad went deeper. He was a well-put-together kid, and although we played
games together, we didn’t often spend one-on-one time talking together. I
didn’t realize he desperately needed that. Of course he didn’t ask for it (his
dad was busy) but he shouldn’t have had to ask. I should have realized that
growing boys need to talk to their dads as the key to their initiation into
manhood. Now why didn’t I know that? Simple: my own father (according to my
memory) never ever had any worthwhile conversation with me. I cannot remember ever
exchanging more than half a meaningful sentence with him. Ever. He was a good
man, a faithful provider, a diligent Bible student (and secretary of the little
Brethren Assembly we attended three times every Sunday), but he didn’t talk to
me. My earliest memories of him were during the war when he came home dressed
in a soldier’s uniform. He was very handsome, I thought. I remember him at
night studying to pass Public Service exams to get ahead because he had dropped
out of school early. His father was a cleaner in a factory, and didn’t talk to
his son either…
My second ‘aha!’ experience
occurred half way into a study-year in Canada. Jan went out to work and I was
at home each afternoon when our younger daughters, Amanda and Lindy, came home
from school. They had a snack and told me all about their day. It was
wonderful! When Jan came home, however, they’d already told their stories, so
over dinner I had to extract them again for Jan’s benefit. Often I heard myself
saying, ‘Darling, you’ve been so privileged over all these years to be there
when the kids came home. I’m jealous!’
When you hear `So-and so’s
a success’ what do you think of? His home and marriage? Unlikely – usually it’s
his career. What nurtures the family unit is in conflict with what maximizes
personal development. And yet the highest happiness on earth is in marriage and
family. Every man who is a happy husband and father is a successful man even if
he’s failed in everything else. I like the story about a man who came to his
friend Carl Jung, saying enthusiastically, ‘I’ve been promoted!’ Jung would
say, ‘I’m very sorry to hear that; but if we all stick together, I think we
will get through it.’ If a friend said ashamedly, ‘I’ve just been fired,’ Jung
would say ‘Let’s open a bottle of wine; this is wonderful news; something good
will happen now.’
Fathers in the
industrialized world have generally failed to integrate competent fathering
with ‘breadwinning’. But that’s not a new problem. Robert Bly (Iron John)
points out that there are no good fathers in the major stories of Greek
mythology, and very few in the Old Testament.
Peter Sellers, in The
Optimists of Nine Elms has old Sam grunting ‘It’s got nothing to do with
working or making money. It’s the way of the world, making fools of us all. And
what for? What did kids want? Their parents. What did their parents want? Kids.
But what did they do? They let themselves get shanghaied into working so hard
to make things better for their kids that their kids never see them. And they
never see their kids. Stupid blinking world’, belched old Sam. ‘Stupid blinking
parents. You only know how to say “Don’t do this,” and “Don’t do that”, and
“No, no, you can’t”.’ ‘Well, you can,’ old Sam said, ‘that’s what it’s all
about. It’s not just filling their bellies with bread and butter. What about a
bit of bread and butter for up here?’ he demanded and banged his head with his
fist to make his point.
Fathers, your family is the
most precious possession you have. Take time to recognise how important each
member of the family is to you, and communicate that. All members of your
family need to know that you care about them. You’ll be surprised at how many
family ‘problems’ evaporate when you communicate warmth and love and trust to
your family.
Quality time with children
is not merely spending time, but wasting time with them. The serendipitous
moment when a child says ‘Hey Dad’, ‘Hey Mum’ can’t be planned – you’ve got to
be around when it happens. Modern dads are often bigamous until they’re into
their forties – married to their job as first priority. A spate of books about
‘Absent Fathers Lost Sons’ is pointing to a trend for boys not understanding
what it means to be masculine because Dad isn’t home enough, doing interesting
and instructive things with their younger and teenage sons. Does a teenager
really want his Dad? Yes, if a strong relationship was built between them in
earlier years.
And so does a teenage
daughter. At puberty most girls have as their #1 question: ‘Am I attractive to
fellas?’ The girl’s father is the representative male, and if Dad gives the
message, ‘Hey, how did I deserve a gorgeous daughter like you? There’s some
lucky young fellow wandering the earth…’ the daughter’s self-esteem gets a real
assist. Future marital happiness for a woman depends as much – sometimes more –
on her previous relationship with her Dad, as with her husband.
A few years ago Paul gave
me psychoanalyst Guy Corneau’s book, Absent Fathers, Lost Sons. Corneau
believes we have to rediscover ‘natural religion’, and you may have some
questions about that. But his central thesis is that a man is born three times
in his life – born of his mother, born of his father, and finally born of his
own deep self. ‘Christ referred to it when he said that he knew neither his
father nor his mother, even though his parents were in the crowd… Men’s
mourning for the unrealistic expectations they had of their fathers, and the
solitude this mourning imposes upon them, are experiences that liberate them.
Their suffering serves as an initiatory mutilation; it forces them to confront
the reality of the objective world…’ [Boston: Shambhala, 1991, p. 181] [70]
Corneau’s ‘aha’ experience
came not from his counseling practice so much as from a workshop he conducted
with men. He asked them ‘Do you feel like a man?’ Not one of them answered in
the affirmative. The problem? Their fathers were spiritually and emotionally
absent from their sons as they grew up. Sons who haven’t been given adequate
fathering tend to experience confusion about their sexual identity; their sense
of self-esteem is unsteady; they repress their aggressivity and their
inquisitiveness; they have trouble respecting moral values… Lacking a father,
says Corneau, is like lacking a backbone. A whole generation of sons is crying
out, as Jesus did on the cross, ‘My father, my father, why have you forsaken
me?’
So, dad, your kids need you
more than you may realize!
…..
Child psychologist Dr Urie
Bronfenbrenner was once asked ‘What is the key ingredient in the successful
development of a human being?’ Without hesitation he replied, ‘Someone, some
adult, has to be crazy about the kids.’ We all know what he meant. Our children
need 100 percent of us. I can’t have one eye on the television and one eye on
Sarah’s homework. You can’t ‘listen’ to your children when you’re still
replaying in your mind the big staff meeting at work. Kids have great antennae.
They know where they stand in our priorities.
Gary Bauer, Our Journey
Home: What Parents Are Doing to Preserve Family Values, Dallas: Word
Publishers, 1992, pp.127. [92]
It is little more than a
month since I was handed this living heap of expectations, and I can feel
nothing but simple awe… I have got a daughter, whose life is already separate
from mine, whose will already follows its own directions, and who has quickly
corrected my woolly preconceptions of her by being something remorselessly
different. She is the child of herself and will be what she is. I am merely the
keeper of her temporary helplessness.
Laurie Lee, ‘The Firstborn’
quoted in Alexandra Towle (ed.), Fathers, Artarmon, NSW: Harper & Row,
1986, p.214. [79]
David Blankenhorn of the
Institute for American Values has pointed out that the phrase ‘good family man’
has almost disappeared from our popular language. This compliment was once
widely heard in our culture – bestowed, to those deserving it, as a badge of
honor. Rough translation: ‘He puts his family first.’ Ponder the three words:
‘good’ (moral values); ‘family’ (purposes larger than the self); and man (a
norm of masculinity). Yet today within elite culture, the phrase sounds
antiquated, almost embarrassing… Contemporary American culture simply no longer
celebrates, among its various and competing norms of masculinity, a widely
shared and compelling ideal of the man who puts his family first.
David Blankenhorn, ‘What Do
Families Do?’ paper presented at Stanford University, November 1989, p.19,
quoted in Dr. James Dobson and Gary L. Bauer, Children at Risk: Winning the
Battle for the Hearts and Minds of your Children, Dallas: Word Publishing,
1990, p.166. [109]
In addition to purely
physical power, of course, fatherhood represents a great deal of psychological
power in a child’s life. Because your child sees you as a successful, dynamic
member of the world he [or she] wants to enter, you have the power to shape
significantly what your child will become. By using the power to educate, to
set limits, to make decisions, you will influence much about your child’s
personality.
Unlike personal power,
nurturance, the ability to protect and comfort a child, has been an undervalued
facet of masculinity in our society. Many men believe they may express
nurturance toward their children only by protecting them from outside dangers
or by economically providing for the family and not through a personal, tender
relationship with the child. They don’t see it as masculine and thus don’t see
it as a natural part of their father power.
Children, male and female,
possess a natural tendency to give and respond to tenderness – from both
parents. If you allow nurturance to be a totally feminine domain in your
family, you can hurt both your sons and your daughters. Rigid, strict, punitive
fathers compel their sons to stifle tender feelings and become harsh and
unloving themselves. Such fathers make their daughters feel that men are not
tender creatures, that only harsh men are masculine.
To associate nurturance
with femininity is a common mistake in American society. Indeed, usually we
call it ‘mothering’ instead of ‘parenting.’…The father crooning to his infant
may not feel himself quite the masculine male. Rather than seeing it as
weakness, you should adopt the attitude that you are showing
nurturance-from-strength. You should realize that you are actually evidencing
power and competence by showing your children how to throw a ball or by
cuddling them.
Henry Biller and Dennis
Meredith, Father Power, NY: David McKay Co Inc., 1974, p.104. [297]
Maybe you’re a working
parent because you don’t want to starve, or because you want your child to go
to college, or because you want some of life’s extras for yourself, or because
the satisfaction of the business world is essential for your own well-being. No
matter what your reason, here you are, right in the middle of a balancing act.
Caryl Waller Krueger,
Working Parent, Happy Child: You Can Balance Job and Family, Nashville:
Abingdon Press, 1990, p.13. [62]
Almost all the fathers who
attended the birth reached an ecstatic peak of emotion: a personal Everest. Often
this was at the moment of birth itself, sometimes it came an hour or two later
as the shock passed through their system. Then for some while afterwards, their
behaviour was manic, disordered, high… ‘I felt like an astronaut who’d landed
on the moon.’ Even the more withdrawn ones became voluble, often drawing total
strangers into eager conversation. So powerful was the feeling that almost
every man cried. Some did this quite openly, some brushed away the tears or
sought to conceal them. The taboo against men’s tears is fierce, and for many
this was the first time they had cried since they were small children
themselves. We checked the accuracy of this by observing fathers at twenty
successive births. Eighteen were crying. The other two were numbed; perhaps
their tears came later… Most men will become fathers. They will not receive all
that much of a cultural bequest to help them in the art and science of the
role: how dads become dads, and how they might emerge as better ones. The old
strategies are changing.
Brian Jackson, Fatherhood,
London: George Allen and Unwin, 1984, pp.121-122. [195]
The most delicate and
important questions… were about male sensibility when then child entered his
world. I often found that I was one of the few people, sometimes the only one,
to whom the man had spoken his feelings. He may not have done this with the
woman (‘I never knew you thought that’ was a common interjection in the
interviews), perhaps because she excluded him, or did not expect it of him or
was obviously much better at such discussion herself. He hardly ever explored
his private response with male colleagues at work. Coversation there was
ritual, stylized, public – wages, sport, weather, holidays, politics, the job
in hand (‘My mates just didn’t want to know’, ‘Don’t know whether they were
bored or embarrassed, may be just plain not interested’). I doubt if that was
wholly so. Women inherit a culture which enables them to express intimate
feelings. The mothers talk openly, freely and at length, between themselves
about the minutiae and sensation of parenthood. Not every woman will use this
chance, but nevertheless it is there, and the mothers are far more practiced,
skilled, and confident than the men in discussing and sharing the delights and
depressions of parenthood. This does not mean that the fathers care or feel any
less. They are anxious to express fatherhood. But they often met dilemmas. One
was their lack of practice in articulating the gentler feelings, whether in
word, touch or action… The first-time father needed a new vocabulary of
expression if he was to attune his private with his public self. Perhaps the
mothers, sharing intimate life, had always known this of him: voiceless love in
the dark… The tap-roots of fatherhood run deep. The image I take away is of men
in tears at the birth, and yet feeling they had to disguise them. The question
I most remember asking is ‘When did you last cry?’, knowing that so often it
would be countered with ‘Not since I was a child myself.’ To release the full
force of fatherhood will mean breaking the masculine taboo on tenderness.
Brian Jackson, Fatherhood,
London: George Allen and Unwin, 1984. pp.134-135. [349]
Studies conducted through
the 1980′s consistently show that fathers spend about one-fifth the amount of
time as mothers on total domestic work, including child care. Moreover, in
North America this difference remains unaffected by the mother’s employment
status outside the home. A great many popular arguments against mothers
returning to the paid workforce center around the so-called deprivation of
parental contact children will suffer as a result. Yet time-budget studies show
that mothers, on the average, do not spend less time with their children when
they have outside employment. They simply cut down on other activities they
consider less important, including house cleaning, hobbies, socializing with
friends, and even sleeping. By contrast, the average North American father,
while quite competent to parent, actually performs parenting tasks only for ten
to thirty minutes per day. And most of this, it turns out, is taken up by
chauffering activities or ‘keeping an eye on them’ while watching television.
Perhaps the greatest irony of all is that many divorced fathers report spending
more time with their children after they have retained only visiting rights
than they did when they lived in the same household with them.
Mary Stewart van Leeuwen,
Gender and Grace: Women and Men in a Changing World, England: Inter-Varsity
Press, 1990, pp.159-160. [198]
Man is the key to a happy
family life because a woman by nature is a responding creature. Some
temperaments, of course, respond more quickly than others, but all normal women
are responders. That is one of the secondary meanings of the word submission in
the Bible. God would not have commanded a woman to submit unless he had
instilled in her a psychic mechanism which would find it comfortable to do so.
The key to feminine response has only two parts – love and leadership. I have
never met a wife who did not react positively to a husband who gave her love
and leadership. Deep within a woman lies a responding capability that makes her
vulnerable to that combination. It is so powerful, in fact, that many respond
when they are only given love. (This is less likely when a woman is subjected
only to leadership.)
The combination of love and
leadership is unbeatable. An interesting facet of that two-sided key is that
most men must consciously work on one or the other. The temperament which
naturally exudes love must consciously make an effort to exercise consistent
leadership. By contrast, the man gifted in leadership must concentrate upon a
regular display of love.
Tim LaHaye, Understanding
the Male Temperament, Old Tappan, NJ: Fleming H. Revell Company, 1977, p.178.
[205]
No man can possibly know
what life means, what the world means, what anything means, until he has a
child and loves it. And then the whole universe changes and nothing will ever
again seem exactly as it seemed before.
Lafcadio Hearn quoted in
Alexandra Towle (ed.), Fathers, Artarmon, NSW: Harper & Row, 1986, p.211.
[40]
There is considerable
evidence of the impact – for good and bad – of family life on children.
Consider the intense bitterness which Germaine Greer expresses towards her
parents in Daddy, We Hardly Knew You. Cut by her father’s abandonment of her to
go to war, her anguish is intensified by his subsequent failure to want to know
her and show her affection: ‘Some children can remember their fathers reciting
Urdu poetry or Marlowe, or teaching them to recognise birds and butterflies, to
spot trains, to play chess or cricket. But you, Daddy dear? Not a curve-ball,
not a cover-drive, not a card-trick. Not a maxim. Not a saw, adage or proverb.
Except, “You’re big enough and ugly enough to take care of yourself”.’
Kevin Andrews, ‘The Family,
Marriage and Divorce’, in The Australian Family, quarterly journal of the
Australian Family Association, Volume 13, No 4, December 1992, p.18. [125]
Lily and I regard ourselves
as our children’s servants. It is for this reason that we do not expect –
except in our more immature moments – any great gratitude from them. They are
entitled to our service; it is our position to serve them. It is our
expectation that they themselves will grow into servanthood – that having been served
and having role models for service, they will be able to serve their children
and the world in turn… We would hardly serve our children well if we did
everything they wanted, obeyed their every whim… And wherever the decisions are
made, that’s where the locus of power resides.
M. Scott Peck with Marilyn
Von Walder and Patricia Kay, What Return Can I Make?, London: Arrow Books,
1985, pp.55-56. [107]
Three hundred years ago
Jonathan Edwards, a dynamic Calvinistic preacher, was largely responsible for
the Great Awakening in this country…
[He] married a godly woman,
and over the past three hundred years his descendents have included: 265
college graduates, twelve college presidents, sixty-five university professors,
sixty physicians, one hundred clergy… thirty judges, three Congressmen, two
Senators, and one Vice President of the United States.
Sociologists have compared
the effects of Jonathan Edwards’ life and marriage to those of another man
living at the same time: Max Juke – a derelict and ungodly vagabond who married
a woman of similar character. Over the generations, their union has produced:
three hundred children who died in infancy, 310 professional paupers, 440
crippled by disease, fifty prostitutes, sixty thieves, seven murderers, and
fifty-three assorted criminals of other varieties.
D. James Kennedy, Learning
to Live with the People You Love, Springdale, PA: Whitaker House, 1987, p.75.
[132]
Armand Nicholi, a clinical
professor of psychiatry at Harvard medical school, has studied the literature on
the question of parental absence and children’s well-being. The literature
spans over 40 years of research and study. His conclusion is this: ‘What has
been shown over and over again to contribute most to the emotional development
of the child is a close, warm, sustained and continuous relationship with both
parents.’ [Emphasis in original]
Nicholi goes on to make
this observation: ‘One other comment about this research. In addition to the
magnitude of it, the studies taken as a whole paint an unmistakably clear
picture of the adverse effects of parental absence. Yet this vast body of
research is almost totally ignored by our society. Why have even the
professionals tended to ignore this research? Perhaps the answer is, to put it
most simply, because the findings are unacceptable.
‘Attitudes which now
prevail toward parental absence resemble those once prevalent toward cigarette
smoking. For decades Americans ignored the large body of research concerning
the adverse effects of cigarette smoke. We had excellent studies for decades
before we began to respond to the data. Apparently as a society, we refuse to
accept data that demands a radical change in our lifestyle.’
‘The Assault on the
Family’, Family Update, a Bi-Monthly Newsletter of the Australian Family Association.
Vol. 9 No. 3 May-June 1993. [206]
‘Clubhouse’ magazine, a
publication of James Dobson’s Focus on the Family, recently asked its young
readers to share what they liked most about their dad… I was struck by how
seldom these children mentioned physical possessions or material things their fathers
provided them. Instead it was the simple manifestations of love and commitment
that were cited most often, the very things that sometimes fall by the wayside
in our increasingly fast-moving world.
‘A father should be not
only your dad, but your friend, too.’ – Samantha, age ten, Southaven,
Mississippi
‘My dad’s most important
quality is his willingness to ask forgiveness from me when he is wrong’ –
Stephanie, age nine, Duluth, Georgia
‘A good dad would come to
your games… and miss work just for you’ – Brook, age twelve, Roswell, Georgia
‘The most important quality
in my father is that he makes me feel safe’ – Erin, age nine, Kansas City,
Missouri
‘A dad must discipline you
when you do something wrong so you won’t grow up to be a bad person’ – Lisa,
age thirteen, Concord, California
‘I think a dad should care
about his children’s grades and their lives. And it helps when your dad will
study for a test with you’ – Lynn, age ten, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania
‘The most important
qualities of a father are that he loves and does the best he can for his kids.
My dad does that all of the time… well, most of the time. No dad is perfect’ –
Alicia, age eleven, Wausaw, Wisconsin.
All of these touched my
heart. But one came at me like a freight train. It was written by ten-year-old
Sommer from Fergus Falls, Minnesota: ‘The most important thing is that my
father loves my mother.’
Gary Bauer, Our Journey
Home: What Parents Are Doing to Preserve Family Values, Dallas: Word
Publishers, 1992, pp.145-146. [287]
This morning I asked my
nine-year-old son, ‘Do you know that I love your mother?’ ‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘How
do you know?’ I persisted. ‘You tell her all the time,’ he said. ‘Well,’ I
continued, ‘what if I lost my voice and couldn’t say I loved her. Would she
still know I loved her?’ ‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘You could write it down for her.’ So
I said, ‘OK, son, let’s say I had both my arms amputated, and I can’t write
with my feet. Would she know I loved her?’ ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I’d tell her for
you.’ ‘Wait,’ I said. ‘How would you know I loved her?’ Long pause. ‘By the way
you treat her,’ he said. It took about five minutes to get him to the point.
But eventually he saw that love goes deeper than words.
Josh McDowell, ‘Love is
Shown by Actions’ in LaVonne Neff et. al., Practical Christianity, Wheaton,
Illinois: Tyndale House Publishers Inc., 1988, p.232. [141]
The most important thing a
father can do for his children is to love their mother.
Theodore Hesburgh in Robert
I. Fitzhenry (ed.), Chambers Book of Quotations, Edinburgh: W&R Chambers
Ltd., 1986, p.125. [16]
A father needs to be
willing to be finite and mortal in his children’s eyes… The image which needs
to be shattered is that fathers are the ones who know all the answers, can take
charge in all situations, are always right and never make mistakes. What needs
to be communicated is that fathers do have a great responsibility in the home
but that it is possible for fathers to misunderstand a situation, to make wrong
judgements, to get their own ego involved in a situation, and to need
forgiveness.
Kenneth Chaffin, Is There A
Family In The House?, Minneapolis, Minnesota: World Wide Publications, 1978,
pp. 92-93. [90]
When a father now sits down
at the table, he seems weak and insignificant, and we all sense that fathers no
longer fill as large a space in the room as nineteenth-century fathers did.
Some welcome this, but without understanding all its implications.
These events have worked to
hedge the father around with his own paltriness. D.H.Lawrence said: ‘Men have
been depressed now for many years in their male and resplendent selves,
depressed into dejection and almost abjection. Is that not evil?’
As the father seems more
and more enfeebled, dejected, paltry, he also appears to be a tool of dark
forces. We remember that in Star Wars we are given the image of ‘Darth Vader’,
a pun on dark father. He is wholeheartedly on the side of the dark forces. As
political and mythological kings die, the father loses the radiance he once
absorbed from the sun, or from the hierarchy of solar beings; he strikes
society as being endarkened…
In our time, when the
father shows up as an object of ridicule… on television, or a fit field for
suspicion (as he does in Star Wars), or a bad-tempered fool (when he comes home
from the office with no teaching), or a weak puddle of indecision (as he stops
inheriting kingly radiance), the son has a problem. How does he imagine his own
life as a man?
Some sons fall into a
secret despair. They have probably adopted, by the time they are six, their
mother’s view of their father, and by twenty will have adopted society’s
critical view of fathers, which amounts to a dismissal.
Robert Bly, Iron John: A
Book About Men, New York: Vintage Books, 1992, pp.98-99. [272]
As University of Utah
psychologist Michael Lamb puts it, ‘Fathers are not merely occasional
mother-substitutes: they interact with infants in a unique and differentiable
way.’ Whereas mothers tend to talk to or cuddle with their kids or play with
dolls, blocks and puzzles, fathers naturally engage in physical activities… As
a result of these different playing styles, children often look to their
mothers for warmth, quiet-time activities, and verbal stimulation, while they
value their fathers as wonderful playmates who introduce them to the world at
large. Both are important… Father-play tends to be lively, unpredictable,
imaginative and obviously exciting… Not only are these differences normal, they
are crucial to a child’s development. Each parenting style teaches your child
different things about the world. Mother’s approach informs him that the world
can be cuddly, safe, nurturing and supportive. Father’s process lets him know
that it can be all of those things but also jostling, unsettling, fun and
surprising.
Mitch Golant and Susan
Golant, Finding Time For Fathering, New York: Ballantine Books, Fawcett
Columbine, 1992, pp.45-46. [160]
One of the great distorting
idolatries of our day is the confusion between the standard of living and the
quality of life. It is no wonder that so many books are being written about
fatherhood at the moment for it has rarely been the case that so many men who
purport to believe in ‘family values’ while in church are so absent from the
home during the week. Many men leave home early in the morning, leave work late
at night and even work at weekends. They may believe that men are the decision
makers in the family, but it is their women who make the decisions. They may
believe the man is the head of the household but the household has to function
without him. They may believe that the man should take the spiritual initiative
but they are too shattered to pray. Such men will improve the quality of their
relationships only if they make more time for those relationships. In a world
in which time is money, this means that they must accept a lower standard of
living, less status and less power.
Roy McCloughty, ‘The Yoke
Of Masculinity’, On Being, Vol.20, No.7, August 1993, pp.17-18. [186]
Fathers send subtle and
not-so-subtle messages to both their sons and daughters about how men walk,
talk, dress, relate to one another, and relate to women. These lessons are
important. Without them, our children would have a void in their lives.
Statistics show that boys who are reared without a father * have greater
difficulty relating to other men * don’t know how to treat women * have a
higher rate of divorce * don’t know how to raise their own sons.
Daughters who are raised
without a father figure * have more difficulty relating to men * may turn to
sexuality as their only means of relating * have a harder time choosing a
husband * and divorce those men at a higher rate than other women.
Thomas Whiteman, Ph.D. with
Randy Petersen, The Fresh Start Single Parenting Workbook, Nashville: Thomas
Nelson Publishers, 1993, p.166. [122]
A man’s personal
relationship with God often mimics his relationship with his father.
The overall result of
father wound on the religious life of most men is that they tend to be
spiritually passive and inactive. They may come to church, but they are not really
there. They may hear a sermon intellectually, but its message may never
penetrate their hearts enough to make a difference in their lives. They may
serve as ushers and shake people’s hands before and after the service or as
elders who make financial and policy decisions for the church, but they often
cannot make themselves connect with what church is really about. They can’t
connect enough to be fully involved with heart, mind, and soul…
Lacking a feeling
connection in their relationship with God, most men feel inadequate to be the
spiritual leaders they know they should be, so they feel shamed. They tend to
withdraw from the church, leaving even less male leadership for the next
generation… If your church is like most churches, women either design or run a
high percentage of its programs.
The fact is, today’s church
is primarily a feminine church. By saying this, I do not mean to imply that I
am anti-feminine. However, I must ask, ‘Where are the men?’ Where are the men
who are spiritually alive? Who have a fire in their bellies – a passion to grow
towards God, a passion to grow as men, and a passion to grow toward other men?
Who are willing to take bold risks in their faith? Where are the men who will
take action in sharing the gospel of Christ? Who will live out their faith
through active involvement in the Christian church community?
The church desperately
needs the involvement of such men, yet they are difficult to find. For
generations, men have been wounded by the lack of male leadership and modeling
of spiritual truth by older men. Consequently, men are greatly shamed when they
realize that they should be spiritual leaders, teachers and models, yet have no
idea how to assume those roles. Many men would rather abandon the church
(either physically or emotionally) than deal with these feelings of shame and
inadequacy.
Dr. Earl R. Henslin, Man to
Man, Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1993, pp.79, 80-81. [369]
…..
Lord God, father of us all,
you have entrusted me with these little people, and it’s an awesome
responsibility.
I am stretched beyond my
limits: I’m supposed to be the provider of food and shelter and clothing and
answers for school homework; chauffeur, gardener/janitor, financier, and fixer
of everything.
I am supposed to model what
it means to live and to love; and to represent you as priest in my home.
They’re big
responsibilities.
Lord, I have found that
it’s easier for a father to have children than for children to have a father.
The emotional demands of
work, financial pressures, marriage, and lots of other things leave me with
little left over for the kids.
Help me to compose myself
before I reach home each day so that I am available for my family. Help me to
be a growing person, so that out of the reservoir of spiritual and emotional strength
I will have some energy to give to my wife and children. Help me to understand
myself, my past, my strengths and my limits, my masculine and my feminine
traits, my anger, my fears, my weaknesses.
What I say to my children
may not be heard by the world, but it will be heard by posterity. These kids
are like wax, and are being formed into something beautiful or terrible, and I
carry a big responsibility for the outcome. May they always know that there is
nothing or no-one more valuable to me than they are.
So, hear my confession of
ignorance and failure; cleanse me from all selfishness; and forgive my
ignorance. Help me to forgive my own father for his faults and failings: I am
not responsible for them, but for me. Help me to love my children’s mother. May
I be a good priest in my home.
And when the Great Day
comes and I will stand before you my king and my judge, I would like to hear
you say, ‘Well done, good and faithful father, Your children have delighted in
you, and you are blessed.’
Amen.
A Benediction
May God the Father, Jesus
our Friend, the Holy Spirit our counselor and teacher, empower you so that you
may empower others. May the demands and the pain of fathering be for you a
challenge rather than a burden. May your years with your children be the
happiest in your life. Amen.
****
CAPSULE: ABSENT FATHERS,
LOST CHILDREN
As I look back on more than
forty years of married life, I am astonished that the work of the ministry does
not destroy ministers’ marriages. The minister will have the best and biggest
room in his house for his study. The minister sees less of his family than any
member of his congregation does. He sees less of his children. He has to leave
it to his wife to bring them up. Seldom can he have an evening out with his
wife and, even when such an evening is arranged, something again and again
comes to stop it. Demands to speak and to lecture take him constantly away from
home and, when he does come home, he is so tired that he is the worst company
in the world, and falls asleep in his chair. As I come near to the end of my
days, the one thing that haunts me more than anything else is that I have been
so unsatisfactory a husband and a father. As the Song of Solomon has it: `They
made me keeper of the vineyards; but my own vineyard I have not kept’. When the
Pastoral Epistles are laying down the qualifications for the elder, the deacon
and the bishop one of the unvarying demands is that `he must know how to manage
his own household’ – and for a minister that is the hardest thing in the world.
William Barclay, Testament
of Faith, Oxford: Mowbrays, 1977, p.16-17. [235]
We had a lot of good times
together, but Mary [my wife] never got wrapped up in the corporate life. She
didn’t try to keep up with the Joneses. For both of us, the family was supreme.
As for the responsibilities of the corporate wife, she did what was necessary,
and she did it with a smile. But her values – and mine – were home and the
hearth… Your job takes up enough time without having to shortchange your
family. The four of us used to take a lot of motor trips, especially when the
kids were young. That’s when we really got close as a family. No matter what
else I did in those years, I know that two sevenths of my whole life –
weekends, and a lot of evenings – was devoted to Mary and the kids. Some people
think that the higher up you are in the corporation, the more you have to
neglect your family. Not at all! Actually, it’s the guys at the top who have
the freedom and the flexibility to spend enough time with their wives and kids.
Still, I’ve seen a lot of executives who neglect their families, and it always
makes me sad… You can’t let a corporation turn into a labour camp. Hard work is
essential. But there’s also a time for rest and relaxation, for going to see
your kid in the school play or at the swim meet. And if you don’t do those
things while the kids are young, there’s no way to make it up later on… Yes
I’ve had a wonderful and successful career. But next to my family, it really
hasn’t mattered at all.
Lee Iacocca, Iacocca: An
Autobiography, New York: Bantam Books, 1984, pp.304-305. [278]
A young man told me of a
conversation he had in hospital with his father just before he died. The
father, a perpetually busy man, had not spent much time with his children and
the son expressed his regret that they had not shared more together. The father
responded by reminding his son that he had worked long hours in order to put
food on the table to feed the family. The son remained silent, but in his heart
he was yearning to tell his father that he had never been as hungry for food as
he had been for his father’s presence.
Rabbi Neil Kursham, quoted
in Mitch Golant and Susan Golant, Finding Time For Fathering, New York:
Ballantine Books, 1992, p.60. [103]
When the office work and
the ‘information revolution’ begin to dominate, the father-son bond
disintegrates. If the father inhabits the house only for an hour or two in the
evenings, then women’s values, marvelous as they are, will be the only values
in the house. One could say that the father now loses his son five minutes
after birth…
The German psychologist
Alexander Mitscherlich writes about this father-son crisis in his book called
Society Without the Father. The gist of his idea is that if the son does not
actually see what his father does during the day and through all the seasons of
the year, a hole will appear in the son’s psyche, and the hole will fill with
demons who tell him that his father’s work is evil and that the father is evil…
Not receiving any blessing
from your father is an injury. Robert Moore said, ‘If you’re a young man and
you’re not being admired by an older man, you’re being hurt…’ Not seeing your
father when you are small, never being with him, having a remote father, an
absent father, a workaholic father, is an injury…
Between twenty and thirty
percent of American boys now live in a house with no father present, and the
demons there have full permission to rage…
When a father, absent
during the day, returns home at six, his children receive only his temperament,
not his teaching… The father returns home… usually irritable and remote… [and]
children do not receive the blessing of his teaching… A father’s remoteness may
severly damage the daughter’s ability to participate good-heartedly in later
relationships with men. Much of the rage that some women direct to the patriarchy
stems from a vast disappointment over this lack of teaching from their own
fathers.
Robert Bly, Iron John: A
Book About Men, New York: Vintage Books, 1992, pp.21,31,96,97. [300]
The men in my family are
hardworking, good men, but most of them are disconnected from their feelings.
That is the norm for upper midwestern farm families like ours. We value hard
work and consider it noble to bear, in stoic silence, whatever physical or
emotional pain comes our way. Our unspoken rule is ‘men do not feel’. The men
in our family know little about emotional expression. One rarely hears a hearty
laugh or feels a warm hug from strong arms, or offers a spontaneous ‘I love
you.’
It is tragic that sons
should suffer such loss and woundedness from fathers who truly love them, but
it happens. I know my father loved me. I know he cared. He worked hard,
sacrificed for his family, and was a good provider, but he did not know how to
help me feel loved. I also know that my father did not feel loved by his
father. He never received affirmation from his father, and I doubt that he ever
felt the warmth and comfort of a loving hug from his father. My father was
unable to give what he had never received himself. He didn’t have a clue about
how to reach out to me emotionally because no one had ever reached out to him…
Every boy yearns to be
sought out by his father. When a boy lacks this emotional connection, his
natural response is to try to do something that will cause his father to
demonstrate his love for him, something that will create an emotional bond
between them. Different boys try different behaviours. One boy will become an
overachiever. ‘Maybe if I do well enough in school or make the basketball
team’, the boy reasons, ‘Dad will think I’m special’. Another boy will cause
trouble at home or at school until he gains his father’s attention. Regardless
of the outward behaviour, the motivation is the same – to be emotionally
connected or close to the father…
There is no subsitute for
an intimate, emotional connection between father and son. This connection
cannot be made by a father who is physically or emotionally absent. It cannot
be made by a father who functions at home in the same way he functions in the
workplace. It takes time and emotional involvement for a father to establish
intimacy with his son.
Dr. Earl R. Henslin, Man to
Man, Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1993, pp.9-11,41-42. [389]
I was an overmothered son.
At its simplest, overmothering means that the amount of time the mother devotes
to the son is much greater – often hugely disproportionate – to the time the
father spends with the son… Here we see a pattern that has ensnared millions of
men in passivity during this century: The father is absent, abusive, or
unavailable, alienating the son and placing too heavy a burden on the mother…
Female traits can and should be encouraged in men. So many men are afraid to
show tenderness and fear and hurt and other emotions that women can express
more easily. Men need to be willing to nurture the female side of themselves,
and mothers can be helpful in this process. But when it comes to a man’s
masculine traits, which include his perception of fatherhood and of mature
manhood, these cannot be obtained through the mother, no matter how hard she
tries or how pure her motives are.
Verne Becker, The Real Man
Inside: How Men Can Recover Their Identity and Why Women Can’t Help, Grand
Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1992, pp.68-70. [159]
Q. How do I deal with the
fact that my father was distant and cold and unloving? I have a hard time
seeing God as my father and praying to him!
A. Your question about your
experience with your father and relating to God is not an uncommon struggle.
Often we create our image of God based upon our fathers. Many people struggle
to experience God’s love and grace because the concept is buried by the rubbish
of our relationships at home.
What can you do? Tell God
and another person how you see him at this time in your life. It helps to tell
him. After all, it won’t be any surprise to God. Each day read aloud the
Scriptures… I also suggest you read two books as a corrective process: The
Knowledge of the Holy by A.W. Tozer is a devotional presentation of the
attributes of God. J.I. Packer’s book Knowing God, expands our knowledge and
understanding of God’s attributes in yet another way. Dwell on these truths,
and the truths of Scripture. Write an unmailed letter to your earthly father,
stating the discoveries you have made about God, and declaring that no longer
will his experiences with you dictate your perception of God. If your father is
still living, pray that he would come to make the same discovery about God that
you have made.
H. Norman Wright, Questions
Women Ask in Private, California: Regal Books, 1993, pp.302-303. [230]
A man’s relationship with
his father has a tremendous bearing on his personal relationship with God. When
a bond exists between father and son, the son will find it easier to trust his
father’s spirituality and to model his father’s spiritual life. If a man’s
relationship with his earthly father has been marked by woundedness, he will
find it difficult to know how to expect anything different in his relationship
with God. In fact, a little boy’s first image of God the Father reflects the
image of his earthly father. A strong emotional connection between father and
son, makes it easier for the son to feel spiritually connected with God, but if
no emotional bridge exists, the son may feel as though God is distant and
disinterested.
Consider these common
examples of how a man’s relationship with God mirrors his relationship with his
father: * If a man’s father has been unpredictable or moody, made promises he
did not keep, or failed to support him when he needed it, a man does not know
what he can count on in his relationship with his Heavenly Father. * If a man’s
father has been critical, judgemental, difficult to please, or cruel, a man
will tend to view God as a harsh taskmaster who is just waiting for an excuse
to punish him. * If a man’s father has been shaming or demanded perfection, a
man will feel hopelessly inadequate before God, compelled to do as much as he
can ‘for God,’ yet feeling guilty for never doing enough. * If a man’s father
has been passive when action was appropriate, a man will have a hard time
trusting God to play an active role in his life. * If a man’s father had a
strong, macho personality, showed no compassion and denied or minimized pain, a
man will find it hard to believe that God is compassionate and cares deeply
about his pain, his struggles, or his fears.
Clearly, all of the
emotions that are wrapped up in a man’s relationship with his father are also
wrapped up in his relationship with God. When healing for those issues begins
to take place, a man will experience God differently and feel his presence more
deeply.
Dr. Earl R. Henslin, Man to
Man, Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1993, pp.88-90. [368]
The combination of activism
and preaching and lecturing and writing and travelling meant that I was away
from home a lot. I justified some of it on grounds that we couldn’t make it
without the extra income – which was true, we couldn’t – but it meant that I
missed a lot of my children’s growing up, and they had more than their share of
what is now called `single parenting’. And I am just very lucky, luckier than
most, that somehow (by grace, if I’m pressed for an explanation) we have
survived all that, and with whatever hard times we may have individually and
collectively gone through, Peter, Mark, Alison, Tom, Sydney and I are now at a
point where we not only love, but like, one another, sharing ordinary moments
in a way that makes them special moments. I have no recipe for how that
happened, but I do have some advice: listen to one another, and cherish the
family moments while you have them; they will be gone before you know it.
Robert McAfee Brown,
Creative Dislocation – the Movement of Grace, Nashville: Abingdon, 1980,
pp.61-62. [173]
In 1988 an Ann Landers
column described the anguish felt by a father who had let the precious years
with his own children pass away:
‘I remember talking to my
friend a number of years ago about our children. Mine were 5 and 7 then, just
the ages when their daddy means everything to them. I wished that I could have
spent more time with my kids, but I was too busy working. After all, I wanted
to give them all the things I never had when I was growing up.
I loved the idea of coming
home and having them sit on my lap and tell me about their day. Unfortunately,
most days I came home so late that I was only able to kiss them good night
after they had gone to sleep.
It is amazing how fast kids
grow. Before I knew it, they were 9 and 11. I missed seeing them in school
plays. Everyone said they were terrific, but the plays always seemed to go on
when I was travelling for business, or tied up in a special conference. The
kids never complained, but I could see the disappointment in their eyes.
I kept promising that I
would have more time ‘next year.’ But the higher up the corporate ladder I
climbed, the less time there seemed to be.
Suddenly they were no
longer 9 and 11. They were 14 and 16. Teen-agers. I didn’t see my daughter the
night she went out on her first date or my son’s championship basketball game.
Mom made excuses and I managed to telephone and talk to them before they left the
house. I could hear the disappointment in their voices, but I explained as best
I could.
Don’t ask me where those
years have gone. Those little kids are 19 and 21 now and in college. I can’t
believe it. My job is less demanding and I finally have time for them. But they
have their own interests and there is no time for me. To be perfectly honest,
I’m a little hurt.
It seems like yesterday
that they were 5 and 7. I’d give anything to live those years over. You can bet
your life I’d do it differently. But they are gone now, and so is my chance to
be a real dad.’
Gary Bauer, Our Journey
Home: What Parents Are Doing to Preserve Family Values, Dallas: Word
Publishers, 1992, pp. 138-139. [376]
A child arrived the other
day
He came to the world in the
usual way
But there were planes to
catch and bills to pay
He learned to walk while I
was away
And he was talkin’ fore we
knew it and as he grew
He said, ‘I’m gonna be like
you, Dad, You know I’m gonna be like you.’
‘When ya comin home Dad?’
‘I don’t know when
But we’ll get together
then, yeah,
We’re gonna have a good
time then…’
I’ve long since retired,
and my son moved away
I called him up just the
other day
Said, ‘I’d like to see you
if you don’t mind.’
He said, ‘I’d love to, Dad,
if I could find the time
But the new job’s a hassle
and the kid’s got the flu
But it’s been sure nice
talking to you.’
And as I hung up the phone
it occurred to me
He’d grown up just like me
My boy was just like me.
Harry Chapin, ‘Cat’s in the
Cradle’, quoted in Edwin Louis Cole, Maximized Manhood: A Guide to Family
Survival, Springdale, Pennsylvania: Whitaker House, 1982, pp.58-59. [164]
Rowland Croucher
1995
~~
~~
FATHERS' DAY SERMON
[Preached at Waverley
Christian Fellowship, Melbourne, Saturday 2nd and Sunday 3rd September, 2000].
Bible reading: Luke
15:11-32
Happy Father’s Day. Which
Dads have brought something to church which you received for Father’s Day –
something you’re wearing, a new Bible, a toy :-)???
For many of you Fathers’
Day is not easy. Some of you had bad relationships with your fathers. A few of
you may not have known your Dad – even if you lived with him. I didn’t know my
father, even though we lived in the same home for 20 years. For some of you
this is a good day, with warm memories. If this is a _statistically_ average
group, only 2-3 men out of a hundred, when teenagers, spent more quality time
with your fathers than with your mothers. We are a generation of under-fathered
sons.
And for those who had
abusive or violent fathers, God-as-father is a problematical concept. When I
was in New York a Presbyterian pastor told me they had to change the Lord’s
Prayer. Most of the fathers were cruel or absent, and the person who reminded
them most of a loving God was their grandmothers. So the prayer said: God in
heaven, who is loving like a grandmother…’
Being a Dad isn’t easy
these days. But being a Mum isn’t easy either. Being a kid isn’t easy – or a
teenager, or married, or single, or being middle-aged, or a senior… Life _is_
difficult!
We have had four children,
all now adult. They were great kids. I rarely had to tell any of them twice to
do or not do something. But two of them (the younger two) are ‘in the faith’. I
don’t know about the older two. [We'll talk more about that next Saturday at
the Parenting Seminar].
Are Dads necessary? Some in
the context of the current IVF debate don’t think so.
But the facts are in:
there’s a wall-full of books from researchers and the Men’s Movement about
‘Absent Fathers Lost Sons/Daughters’. Where fathers are emotionally disengaged
from their kids those children feel a deep emptiness within. And where Dads are
cruel or abusive, the damage in the victim’s lives is awful!
One of the offerings we at
John Mark Ministries make is a ‘whole of life review’ over one or two days. I
remember a model coming for a retreat: she was well-off financially, athletic,
with healthy kids, and everything you would think would be needed for a
satisfying life. But she was unhappy. ‘Why are you here?’ I asked her. ‘To rent
a Dad,’ she replied through her tears. Another woman – a pastor’s wife – felt
her Dad didn’t really love her. Following her retreat we decided to get them
together. I listened, I hope sensitively, to his story, while she sat in
another room. Then I brought them together, and ‘chaired a discussion’ between
the two of them. It was frank, and loving: very special. Suddenly he got up and
put his arms around his grown-up daughter… at that point I left the room so
that they could be together.
THE STORY
The story of the Prodigal
Son (or, as the real hero is the Dad, probably it should be called the Parable
of the Waiting Father, as Helmut Thielicke suggests; perhaps even better: The
Parable of the Two Sons) is the ‘greatest short story ever told’ (and re-told).
Every person on this planet
has to come to terms with four relationships – self, things, others, and God.
This story is about all four. A kid comes to his father, and says, in effect,
‘I wish you were dead, and this was the day after your funeral. Give me the
one-third of your property that’s coming to me anyway! Sell a piece of the
promised land that you’ve inherited from our forefathers. I want it. I can’t
find happiness relating to the people around here. Only money will make me
happy.’
Now that father sold the
land, which you weren’t supposed to do for a reason like this. In that part of
the world you could be ostracised or even stoned for that.
I don’t know what you think
about the father’s decision: was it wise? We had to face a similarly agonizing
decision with our seventeen-year-old son. He wanted to rent a place and live
with his mates: would we go guarantor for him? What would you do? We remembered
that we left home about that age to go away and study… so we said yes. It was a
growing experience for him. But recently, over 20 years later he said to us:
‘Why did you let me do that?’ Who said parenting was simple?. Anyway, this
father decided his son could learn some useful lessons out of this so he sold
off part of his farm or whatever, and gave him the money.
And later, I can imagine
the neighbour to whom he sold the land leaning on the stone fence dividing
their two properties: ‘I heard about that kid of yours. Partying every night in
the city’s redlight district. Everyone’s talking about it, old fella. You must
be feeling pretty ashamed of that no-hoper you’ve brought into the world’ And
the old man would walk away sadly and wonder where he’d gone wrong…
The boy learned some hard
lessons in the far country. When you’ve got some money don’t trust those who
call you ‘friend’. Jewish law prohibited contact with pigs, let alone being a
keeper of pigs. The husks he felt like eating were the fruit of the carob tree,
used for animal fodder – an awful taste, but sometimes eaten by the very poor
(something like the stories you hear of destitute people in our country eating
from cans of pet food). Carob is now an alternative to chocolate isn’t it? (I
think I tasted it once! :-)
But in the pigpen the young
man ‘came to himself’ (it’s the term in Greek for emerging from a coma). He put
a speech together, offering to become a ‘hired servant’. All over the
developing world today you can see these people along the sides of the road
waiting for someone to hire them and give them work. In Jesus’ day they earned
a denarius for a day’s work – just enough to feed a small family for one day.
It was a precarious existence (still is).
But the father was out
there looking for him. In an ancient middle eastern community the houses are in
the centre, the market place and other buildings around them, then a wall, then
the open fields. Every day the father would go out into the fields to look for
his boy, maybe to escort him past the jeering mob to the safety of his home.
The day he saw him, he ran towards him. (Old men in that culture did not run:
it was beneath their dignity.)
The boy had his speech
ready, but the father wasn’t listening. Before the boy could say anything the
father threw his arms around him, and kissed him. The father wasn’t so much
interested in _why_ he came back but _that_ he came back.
One of the key teachings of
Jesus was that acceptance precedes repentance. Acceptance in this case came
before confession. As the old saying has it: ‘Those who are seeking God have
already been found by him.’ One of the most beautiful aspects of the Christian
gospel is that God loves you before you change, as you change, or whether you
change or not. Do you believe that?
By the way, I’m glad the
boy met the father before he met his older brother, eh?
Dad called for the ring,
the robe – perhaps the one the boy once wore – the fatted calf and the shoes.
Shoes are for sons (servants or slaves often did not wear shoes).
THE CLUES TO THE STORY
are at the beginning of the
chapter – and the beginning of the parable. Jesus was hanging around with the
riff-raff, the winos and the druggies; and the self-righteous Pharisees and
religious people didn’t like it. There are two groups of people in the world:
those who are sinners and who know it, and those who are sinners and don’t know
it, or don’t want to know it. So Jesus told a story about certain man who had
_two_ sons. Actually, they were both lost: the main difference was that the
younger one externalized his alienation and figured geography would fix his
identity crisis. The elder one was also alienated, but internalized his rage
and stayed at home, and would have been a pretty miserable character to live
with. Whenever his father gave him a hug he’d stiffen up and be unresponsive.
We learn about the kid brother’s sins only from the elder brother: he describes
him as ‘your son’, not ‘my brother’.
These two brothers are like
us: sometimes we blame others, like the elder brother, but then sometimes we
take responsibility for our actions, as the younger brother did. These are the
two basic attitudes to life: blaming and repenting. When Dads blame they might
say ‘Oh, the kids these days…’ As I said, blaming is the opposite of repenting.
When you blame, you offload responsibility to others, or the situation, or the
kids’ friends, or their teachers, or school, or TV, or the church… Now our
society is on a downward spiral morally. Anything you can imagine is on the
Internet, for example. I’m reviewing a so-called ‘Christian’ website at the
moment that says sex with anyone, anytime, with multiple partners, is O.K. so
long as you’re not abusing anyone and they’re all consenting. Yes, there are
big pressures on our kids to wander from the straight and narrow path. But Dad,
you are nevertheless invited to accept responsibility for the outcomes of your
fathering…
Now I know it’s not kosher
to criticize the father in our story, but I’ve wondered sometimes why he hadn’t
thrown a party for the eldest son? Didn’t that boy have birthdays? And was his
preoccupation with building up the business to the detriment of the quality
time he should have spent with these boys?
When you take
responsibility for failing as a Dad there are some things you’ve got to
remember: [1] You can’t change the past, but you ask forgiveness for the past,
and move on; [2] you don’t have to carry destructive guilt about the past: that
will kill you; but you’d better know the difference between good guilt and bad
guilt; [3] you can do what you can to heal relationships in the present.
SO WHY ARE DADS IMPORTANT?
[Next Saturday at the
Parenting Seminar here we'll expand on all this]. For one thing they fill young
teenagers’ emotional tanks – both boys and girls. I remember reading the
splendid book by Ross Campbell, ‘How to Really Love Your Teenager’ (it’s still
in print). I read that between the two sets of children we had. It helped to
change a lot of my perceptions of the importance of fathering. And it made a
significant difference.
I remember my father once
taking us three boys for a walk through the National Park south of Sydney. I
looked at him and thought, as a ten-or-eleven-year-old, that he was about the
most handsome man I knew. But we only went for one of those walks. When I had a
ten-year-old son I took him to the same park to camp overnight. But we only did
that once! You’d think I’d have learned! Was it a Chinese sage who said ‘The
wise person learns from others’ mistakes before they make their own’? In Korea,
in 1978, I spent a lonely night praying in a chapel and with deep grief
confessing my failures as a father: particularly with our two eldest children.
That was 22 years ago, and the work is still being done to try to heal the
hurts in those relationships.
When I was in the
Philippines, in 1970 (conducting an evangelistic week in the area where
hostages are currently being held) I heard a story about a boy who left his
family farm to ‘get rich’ in Manila. It didn’t happen, of course, so he sent a
message to his folks that even though he’d let them down (they really needed
his help on the farm) and he’d understand if they didn’t want him back, he’d
like to come home. If they wanted him, put something white in the tree at the
front of their home. When his jeepney rounded the last corner there he saw the
whole tree covered in white – white underwear, sheets – anything they could
find or borrow that was white! Of course there was a party: the Filipinos know
how to throw a party!
Today, there might be a
party in heaven over prodigal sons and daughters and fathers and mothers coming
come – to be forgiven, and restored to the family. Well…?
CONCLUSION: Dads,
Grandfathers, Dads-to-be: would you like to stand and I’d like to pray for us.
Lord, bless these men: some
of them delight in their fathering; for others it’s hard, perhaps very hard,
and they’re wounded. Hear our confession of sin, of failure, of ignorance. Help
us – all of us – to forgive our own fathers for their faults and failings. But
Lord, we are not responsible for them, but for ourselves. Help these Dads to
love their children’s mother. May they be good priests in their homes, leading
their children to a living faith in the living God. And when the Great Day
comes and we stand before you, our king and our judge, may we hear you say,
‘Well done, good and faithful father. Your children have delighted in you and
you are eternally blessed.’ Amen.
~~
Children in private schools don't perform any better than those in public schools (NAPLAN, The Age, Oct. 13, 2013, p.3)
'It was the children of a healthy birth weight, who grew up in higher socio-economic circumstances in homes filled with books and had mothers who didn't work long hours who performed best in NAPLAN.'
~~
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