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June
15, 2007
Fatherhood
- The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
by Mark Alexander
From The Patriot Post
"Fathers, do not exasperate your children;
instead, bring them up in the training and
instruction of the Lord." (Ephesians 6:4)
Father's Day has been observed for about 100
years, and its inspiration was Mother's Day, which
has been celebrated in one form or another since
the 16th century.
It has always seemed fitting to me that we honor
mothers, but odd that we honor fathers, for as any
devoted husband and father can attest, there is no
greater responsibility or reward than the blessing
of children, no greater privilege than the blessing
of fatherhood.
The good news is that there is a resurgence of
men who are honoring their wives and children as
responsible husbands and fathers. Unfortunately,
there are too many men who will never know that
reward because they have abdicated their
responsibility as fathers.
At the invitation of a national ministry to
families, I am writing a guidebook about arrested
emotional development (AED) -- a condition
afflicting adults whose emotional maturity was
arrested due to either acute or chronic abuse
during their childhood.
After researching this topic, one might
reasonably conclude that the most common and severe
wounds inflicted upon children are not necessarily
physical. Children internalize emotional abuse and
rejection -- particularly rejection by their family
of origin -- parental separation or divorce, or
dissociation from a chemically dependent or
emotionally disabled parent.
In other words, in defiance of adult logic,
children believe they are somehow responsible for
the harm that came to them, whether it was
circumstantial, accidental or intended. In the case
of divorce, children often believe they must have
caused parental dissolution, or were deserving of
it.
Divorce is the most common denominator
associated with arrested emotional development in
children -- and the emotional disabilities that
they carry into adulthood.
It is no small irony that divorced parents were,
in all likelihood, themselves the child-victims of
generational patterns of familial dissociation and
dissolution. In this respect, the sins of our
fathers are, indeed, visited upon generations that
follow.
Marriage is the foundation for the family, which
in turn, serves as the foundation for society. In
295 BC, Mencius wrote, "The root of the kingdom is
in the state. The root of the state is in the
family. The root of the family is in the person of
its head."
Broken marriages lead to broken families, which
lead to broken societies. The most successful
fathering is rooted in a healthy marriage. Thus, to
be good fathers, we must first be good
husbands.
Dr. Jim Lee, a pastor and director of Living
Free ministries, writes that the Christian
marriage paradigm is built on a foundation of five
principles: First, God is the creator of the
marriage relationship; second, heterosexuality
is God's pattern for marriage; third, monogamy is
God's design for marriage; fourth, God's plan for
marriage is for physical and spiritual unity; and
fifth, marriage was designed to be permanent.
When this paradigm is broken, the exemplarity
for children is broken, and the consequences are
staggering. Consequently, the greatest affront to
the Body of Christ is the most common injury to the
family of man -- marital infidelity and
divorce.
Divorce, which typically results in the absence
of fathers from their headship role within the
family, is the single most significant common
denominator among all categories of social and
cultural entropy.
"Maturity does not come with age, but with the
accepting of responsibility for one's actions,"
writes Dr. Edwin Cole, a fatherhood advocate. "The
lack of effective, functioning fathers is the root
cause of America's social, economic and spiritual
crises."
Currently, only one in three children -- and
only one in five inner-city children -- is in a
home with a mother and father. Nearly 25 million
children live absent or apart from their
biological fathers.
"Children who grow up with their fathers do far
better -- emotionally, educationally, physically,
every way we can measure -- than children who do
not," notes family researcher David Blankenhorn.
"This conclusion holds true even when differences
of race, class and income are taken into account.
The simple truth is that fathers are irreplaceable
in shaping the competence and character of their
children... [The absence of fathers] from
family life is surely the most socially
consequential family trend of our era."
Indeed it is.
Here are some sobering statistics: According to
the Center for Disease Control, Department of
Justice, Department of Health and Human Services
and the Bureau of the Census, the 30 percent of
children who live apart from their fathers will
account for 63 percent of teen suicides, 70 percent
of juveniles in state-operated institutions, 71
percent of high-school dropouts, 75 percent of
children in chemical-abuse centers, 80 percent of
rapists, 85 percent of youths in prison, 85 percent
of children who exhibit behavioral disorders, and
90 percent of homeless and runaway children. In
fact, children born to unwed mothers are ten times
more likely to live in poverty as children with
fathers in the home.
The causal link between fatherless children and
crime is "so strong that controlling for family
configuration erases the relationship between race
and crime and between low income and crime," notes
social researcher Barbara Dafoe Whitehead. More to
the point is the following comment from a counselor
at a juvenile-detention facility in California,
which has the nation's highest
juvenile-incarceration rate: "[If] you find
a gang member who comes from a complete nuclear
family, I'd like to meet him... I don't think that
kid exists."
Concerns about marital infidelity, and the
consequences for children, are not new. As Founding
Father John Adams wrote in his diary on 2 June
1778, "The foundation of national morality must be
laid in private families... How is it possible that
Children can have any just Sense of the sacred
Obligations of Morality or Religion if, from their
earliest Infancy, they learn their Mothers live in
habitual Infidelity to their fathers, and their
fathers in as constant Infidelity to their
Mothers?"
On this Father's Day, all of us who have been
blessed with children should pause not only to
count our blessings, but also to commit ourselves
to honoring those attendant obligations every day.
We should examine the job we are doing as husbands
first, then fathers. As my friend, Father Ted
Hesburgh, observed early in his pastorate, "The
most important thing a father can do for his
children is to love their mother." Consider then
the words of William Shakespeare: "It is a wise
father that knows his own child." And of Homer: "It
is a wise child that knows his own father."
(Note to all those fathers who have been
forcibly separated from their children: The call
for fathers to honor their obligations, starting
with our marriage, does not discount the fact that
there are many women who live in constant
infidelity to their husbands, women who subordinate
the needs of their marriage and family life to
their own desires -- social relationships and
activities, alcohol, media
immersion, etc. Predictably, the vast majority
of those women are, themselves, the victims of
marital dissolution, or dissociation from a
chemically dependent or emotionally disabled
father.)
The
Patriot Post
Copyright 2006 by Publius Press, Inc. and
reprinted with permission.
The
Patriot Post Archive
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