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CHILDREN
OBEYING THEIR PARENTS.
Ephesians
6:1-3 “Children,
obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. ‘Honour your father and
mother’ - which is the first commandment with a promise – ‘that it may go
well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth.’”
There was once an old man whose eyes were rheumy, his hands trembled and his false teeth were loose. When he ate he clattered the plates, missed his mouth with the spoon as often as not, and dribbled a bit of his food on the tablecloth. He lived with his married son having nowhere else to live, and his son’s wife was a modern woman who believed that in-laws must know their place in a woman's house. “I can't have all this,” she said. “I have a right to happiness in my own home.”
So she and her husband took the old man gently but firmly by the arm and led him from the dining area to a corner of the kitchen. There they placed him on a chair with high sides and gave him food, what there was of it, in an earthenware bowl. From then on he always ate in the corner, blinking at the distant table with wistful eyes. One day his hand trembled more than usual, and the bowl fell and broke. "If you are a pig,” said the daughter-in-law, “you must eat out of a trough.” So under her direction they made him a little wooden trough, and he had his meals in that.
The man and his wife had a four-year-old son of whom they were very fond. One suppertime the man noticed his boy earnestly working away at some pieces of wood. He asked his son what he was doing. “I'm making a trough,” he said, smiling up for approval, “from which I can feed you and Mam when I get big.” The man and his wife looked at each other for a while and didn't say anything, and then they cried a little. They went to the corner and took the old man by the arm and led him back to the table. They sat him in a comfortable chair and gave him food on a plate, and from then on nobody ever scolded him when he clattered or spilled or broke things.
That
story, based on one of Grimm's fairy tales, is quoted by George Philip in his
book on the Ten Commandments, Freedom
through Obedience (Christian Focus, 1993). The parable is a not-very-subtle
way of saying: honour your parents, or else your children won't honour you.
That’s much the same point God makes in the Ten Commandments when he says,
"Honour your father and your mother,
so that you may live long in the land the Lord your God is giving you"
(Exodus 20:12). That is the commandment that the apostle is quoting here. What
does our text say?
1.
CHILDREN ARE TO OBEY THEIR PARENTS.
That’s it, in all its naked directness. Will the thought police come and arrest me for saying that publicly? Will I be locked up for being a tyrant and inciting child abuse? The sentence sounds so irrelevant and old-fashioned in our child-centred age, “Children are to obey their parents.” Many people would get angry with such a biblical phrase, but the Bible says it, and adds simply that such obedience is proper – “for this is right” (v.1). It may not be politically correct; it may not make a child happy; many modern educationalists will dismiss it as primitive authoritarianism, but the word of God says that children obeying parents is right. I plead the example of God the Son who became incarnate 2,000 years ago and we are told that he was obedient to his parents (Luke 2:51). They were imperfect, they were children of their own age, they were poor, their horizons were very limited and he was not at all like that, but still he was obedient to them all the time he lived under their roof – about thirty years. His apostle Paul says to us, “Children, obey your parents.”
You
ask, “but what if my parents ask me to do something I believe to be wrong?”
Then I say that there are limits to the demands that they can make on you. Over
the parents stands God himself, and there may come times when Christian children
have to choose the Lord rather than Dad and Mam. “Children obey your parents in
the Lord,” says Paul. If your parents teach you that there’s no God, or
that some other deity or an idol is a god, then grace has taught you better; you
don’t have any obligation to follow the instructions of your parents. Your
obedience is in the Lord. You might have to act without your parents.
Abraham’s life really took on colour and life and fulfilment when he left his
father’s house. Ruth became a very strategic woman when she left behind her
family and her country. King Hezekiah rejected the upbringing his godless father
Ahaz was giving to him and rather followed his ‘father’ David. John Calvin
preached these sentiments to his congregation in
Think
of Saul asking his son Jonathan to help him kill David; “‘Now
send and bring him to me, for he must die!’ ‘Why should he be put to death?
What has he done?’Jonathan asked his father. But Saul hurled his spear at him
to kill him. Then Jonathan knew that his father intended to kill David. Jonathan
got up from the table in fierce anger; on that second day of the month he did
not eat, because he was grieved at his father's shameful treatment of David.”
(I Sam. 20:31-34). Jonathan refused to help his father to sin. The Son of God
even told his disciples it might be necessary to forego burying one’s own
father in order to follow Jesus (Lk. 9:59&60). He said to them that if they
loved their parents more than they loved him they weren’t worthy of him (Matt.
10:37).
I’m
saying that if there’s a stark choice between God or one’s parents Christian
children must choose against their parents and for God. That is so sad for the
parents, and I hope you will disobey your parents with a broken heart, but the
obedience you give to Dad and Mam is always obedience to creatures, whereas the
obedience your give to God is to your Creator and Judge. Let’s say that your
parents oppose your being baptized, then you wait until you are 18, or until you
move out from under their roof. That won’t be an insufferable hardship. What
if they have chosen a man of another religion to become your husband? You may
choose rather to be killed in a horrible way – their punishment because you
have brought dishonour on the family, or you may choose to marry him, and we
will all pray for you that in the future he may be converted, and that your
faith doesn’t fail. Think of the dilemma of the Syrian Chief of Staff, Naaman,
cleansed of his leprosy, returning to
However,
you understand this, that defying your parents, saying no to them at one point,
no matter how serious that issue is, cannot imply total rejection of Dad and Mam.
Your lifestyle as a Christian will be very different from your parents, but it
mustn’t be because of your initiative that you grow apart from them. Paul was
asked about a Christian spouse being married to a non-Christian spouse and he
never suggested separation. He considered them staying together until God
separated them in death. You foster and encourage all natural ties with your
parents; you often call them, and care for them, and spend Christmas and the New
Year with them. You welcome them to your home and encourage your grandchildren
to love them. You seek to out-do your unconverted brothers and sister in the
obedient love you show to your parents. I say you encourage all natural ties,
but still you are aware of a spiritual rift that does exist while they’re not
bowing to God in repentance and faith. Children obey your parents in the Lord,
for this is right.
2.
HONOUR YOUR FATHER AND YOUR MOTHER.
“‘Honour
your father and mother’”(v.2). The word used for ‘honour’ is one
whose basic meaning is ‘heavy.’ In other words, your parents carry some
weight in your life. Media stars like David Beckham don’t; they are as light
as a feather; the beliefs and activities of
Let me say a word about mothers. The Bible continually promotes a view of motherhood that is beautiful and exalted. The very physical aspects of motherhood, today so often despised and joked about, are the object of awesome wonder in the Bible. Ecclesiastes 11:5 says, “As you do not know how the spirit comes to the bones in the womb of a woman with child, so you do not know the work of God who makes everything.” The mystery of the formation of a person within a mother’s womb stands as the mystery that deflates all human arrogance and pretence. The Bible speaks with wonder as it describes the intimate relationship that exists between a mother and her infant.
The
Bible also provides us with many examples of mothers who exercised decisive
influence in the lives of their children. Moses, the great leader of the people
of
Even
Jesus Christ appears in the Bible as the Son of the Virgin Mary, according to
the flesh. That the Son of God would have a mother is almost impossible to
imagine, but it was so. We meet her frequently on the pages of the Gospels,
often in the background, but there she is, somehow contributing to the events of
Jesus’ life. When the sword finally tore her son’s body, she felt it in her
own bones, because she saw it happen on
Motherhood provides a woman with the greatest challenge she’ll ever face. It will require all her wisdom; it will demand all her emotional qualities; it will put to work all her other skills and she’ll develop new ones. It is from their mothers that children acquire basic attitudes and points of view. It is mother who molds them and directs them. Ultimately a mother holds within her hands the very destiny of the world. Honour your mother as well as your father.
How
do we honour our parents? Certainly we have to take to heart the instruction
they give us; take it seriously as from people who’ve got greater experience
of life than ourselves. It means that we’ll show deference to them, and
that’s illustrated in various ways in Scripture. Rachel addressed her father
with the phrase, “my Lord”; Solomon bowed down before his mother when he
visited her although he was the king of
Part
of honouring your parents is to recognise the wisdom that comes with age. Mark
Twain famously described his own teenage years and his attitude towards his
father. He said, “When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I
could hardly stand to have him around, but when I got to be twenty-one I was
astonished at how much he had learned in seven years.” Mark Twain first
thought his parents were out of it, that they were way behind the times, that
they just didn’t get it, but once teenagers grow up and make it through that
stage there develops a new respect for the wisdom of parents.
The Bible takes this very seriously. If children ‘diss’ their parents, if they disrespect and dishonour them, the future is bleak. Listen to what the Bible bluntly says, "Cursed is the man who dishonours his father or his mother" (Deuteronomy 27:16). "If a man curses his father or mother, his lamp will be snuffed out in pitch darkness" (Proverbs 20:20). "The eye that mocks a father, that scorns obedience to a mother, will be pecked out by the ravens of the valley, will be eaten by the vultures" (Proverbs 30:17). Ravens and vultures feast on dead bodies, so this is the Bible's way of saying, Diss your parents, and you're dead meat! You're buzzard bait. This warning is the flip side of God's positive command to honour your father and mother and his promise that you may live long and flourish in the place God gives you. According to the Bible, honouring your parents is a life and death matter.
3.
EVERYONE HONOURS SOMEONE OR OTHER IN AUTHORITY.
As teenagers, many of our instincts are not good; many of our desires are destructive; many of our values are selfish and immoral. Our experience is limited; our vision is restricted. If you ignore your parents it’s not that you’re then free from authority, you’re simply submitting to other different authorities. If you defy Dad and Mam it’s not because you’ve discovered liberty and strength and independence in making your choices. It means you are more eager to please the in-group than Dad. You want to go with the flow – like a dead fish. You want to wear what the crowd wears; and get enthusiastic with their enthusiasms, and get the ‘look’ of kids your age, and ape them. They all rave about certain comedy programmes so you’ve got to watch them too. You want to use their language and listen to their music and do the kind of thing they do. You’ve not become more independent in defying your parents, and certainly you’re no more free.
You believe what the gang believes about drugs, and about living together, and about ‘real ale’ and about the good life, and humour, and purity, and modesty. When the pressure is on what’s going to be your response? Let me ask you girls this, when the fellow you’re dating wants you to go to bed with him then is it because he is concerned about your long-term happiness? Has he got your well-being in mind? I’m saying that it helps a lot if you have parents who give you considered counsels especially if they’ve had a happy, long marriage. You’re to honour them by giving their counsels some weight.
David Feddes of the Back to God Hour has pointed out that behind your crowd – the group you hang about with, and their tastes and excitements - there exists a whole bunch of manipulating adults. Those grown-ups know how to pull the strings, like a puppeteer. We’re saying that behind every fad in clothes, and shoes, and hairstyles, and singers, and so on there are marketing men and women who are targeting you. So when you think you are free from the control of your parents who love you and give to you, you have in fact come under the control of other men who don’t love you at all and just want to take from you.
Most of the so-called youth culture isn't run by youth at all. It’s dominated by adults whose only interest in you is exploiting you and using you to make money. For every group of kids seriously heeding an agony aunt writing in a teenage girly magazine, there’s a sleazy adult millionaire snickering all the way to the bank. For every film or TV show that shows a steamy sex scene and gives kids the feeling that this is what love is all about, there's a production studio and a corporate sponsor who are counting their money, even as teens get pregnant, catch diseases, and lose all respect for sex and love and marriage.
For every kid that smokes a cigarette because other kids think it's cool, there's an advertising executive and a tobacco company gloating over the millions they're making in the youth market. For every kid who takes drugs or booze from another kid, there's an adult drug dealer or an adult brewing company executive who’s getting richer and richer. For every kid buying the albums of messed up, immoral, suicidal rock singers, there’s a record company executive somewhere watching his bank account growing. Those are the people you’re now honouring when you stop honouring your parents.
These adults are in the game of making money off kids, and they know what buttons to push. They know that rebellion, anger, sex, violence, and peer pressure have an especially powerful pull for confused teenagers, and these adults skilfully push kids' buttons in order to make money for themselves. Meanwhile, parents who simply want to help kids get past these problems and obsessions and grow to maturity seem to be out of touch.
If you're a teenager, you need to know what's happening here. The question isn't whether you follow the lead of adults. You're going to be influenced by adults whether you realize it or not. The only question is which adults - the ones who put a financial value on your soul, or the ones who gave you birth and love and support and . . . chocolate . . . and want to help you become wise and strong and good? Honour your father and your mother, and then there’s some hope that you’ll be able to resist manipulators.
The direction of your life is determined by whose voice you listen to. Where you spend eternity - heaven or hell - is determined by whose voice you listen to. You may want to think for yourself, but none of us does our thinking in a vacuum. Our thoughts are shaped by the voices we listen to. If you reject your parents’ voices, you'll be shaped by the voices of others, many of whom don't love you or care what happens to you.
Ultimately,
your destiny is determined by whether you listen to the voice of Satan or the
voice of God – just as it was in
Why listen to the voices that want to rip you off and ruin you instead of the voices that want to give you life and happiness and fulfilment? “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy,” says Jesus. “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10). Jesus didn't come to grab your money and wreck your life, and neither do parents who love God and love you. They want you to have life, and have it to the full. That's why it makes sense for you to honour that Lord, and that's also why it makes sense for you to honour the parents God has given you.
4.
YOU CAN EVEN HONOUR THE WORST KIND OF CHILD ABUSING PARENTS.
There
are parents who seem to say continually to their children, “O you’re such a
failure! You never can do anything right! What a waste of space you are!
You’ll be good for nothing!” Anything the child does is sneered at so that
he stops trying, because he’s believed what his parents said about him when he
was young. He withdraws into himself; he lives behind an invisible wall; he
becomes crippled in his spirit.
There
are, however, worse kinds of abuse than that. My friend Steve worked on the
streets of a south
That’s such a tough question, and I would get into it by reminding you that God is our loving heavenly Father who doesn’t just slap down a rule and sit back waiting for us to obey it, but whose rules are there for our good, and that he gives us strength and grace to keep his word. Do we want to obey all his commandments? Not just the ones we find easy, but the really tough commandments? So you start there, by asking God to help you to love your enemies and forgive those who abuse you. Here is a Father in heaven whom you can trust totally. He is absolutely consistent in his love. He knows all about you, but he’ll love you for ever and ever and he is preparing you to go and live with him in his home. Now believing that God is a super Father who loves you with a never dying love may be extremely difficult for you to believe. I am thinking of those people who’ve never known what it is to receive genuine, pure affection, but what I’ve said is wonderfully true, and so you must start by saying to God, “I want our relationship to be good and holy and helpful. I want to learn to obey you, so please help me. Never stop helping me.” That’s where it starts and soon God will make some move in answering you, and changing you, and healing you.
I would guess it must be a terribly difficult thing to talk about abuse, even to God, but perhaps he is the easiest one to talk to as he is wonderfully forgiving and patient. I understand some children feel guilty for being abused imagining that they’ve encouraged this behaviour in their fathers. They feel themselves to be dirty, wicked children. I am saying to you to take it all to God your true Father, real guilt and imaginary guilt. Tell him about it.
Then cry to God that he’ll make you willing to forgive. It might seem utterly impossible, especially for those who’ve suffered the worse kind of abuse, but with God all things are possible (Mark 10:27). Bitterness may have sunk deep into your soul like an arrow, yet bring the situation before the Father of all mercies and talk to him about how impossible you are finding it to offer forgiveness to those who’ve destroyed your teenage years. Don’t be afraid of admitting to our Father that you can’t forgive your father. I know that unforgiveness is sin, but that’s defiant unforgiveness, that’s when we’ve set our hearts like flint and vowed that we’ll NEVER NEVER forgive those who’ve hurt us so badly. A child of God going to his Father for help with something she can’t do by herself won’t find an angry, threatening God with a big stick waiting for her. Here is the true Father of love whose heart is full of pity. He’ll help you forgive.
You know your parents; maybe your father was treated the same way himself in his childhood. He was neglected and beaten and abused and maybe his abusing you is the outlet of a tremendous build-up of anger. I don’t know why, but I do know that the heart of man is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked, and so go to our Father for help. Ask him to deal with the poison that’s been injected in your own heart and the poison in the hearts of your abusers. Pray for the salvation of your parents.
5.
THINGS GO WELL WITH THOSE WHO HONOUR THEIR PARENTS.
Of
all the ten commandments the one which is of foremost importance with a promise
attached to it is this one, the fifth commandment to honour your father and
mother. The promise is this, “. . .
‘that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth’”
(v.3). Does it mean that if I honour my parents I will live until I’m 90? Can
it mean that? Aren’t there people we know who honoured their parents and it
went well with them through their lives? They served the Lord diligently; they
loved their neighbours as themselves; they were a blessing to all the
I
also want to say this; don’t downplay this promise. It’s important. Don’t
make a long life the exception and a short life the rule! What is this Scripture
telling us in both Old Testament and New Testament? Anyone who honours his
parents will benefit from it, not only in heaven but here and now. Godliness is
profitable for all things, because it holds promise for life, both this year and
in eternity.
Here
is a child and he honours his father when he teaches him, “Don’t hang around
with thieves on a Saturday night when the pubs close to beat up men and take
their credit cards and mobile phones. It may cost you your life. If you want
long life avoid violent men; don’t join a gang. If a prostitute tries to
seduces you don’t stop and talk. Keep going, and avoid her like a plague
because her house will lead to death. Sexually transmitted diseases will shorten
your life. Millions of people are not going to see long life because they’ve
got AIDS. They didn’t listen to their fathers; they did not honour them in
their counsels. Again, if you live a lazy life and think that the world owes you
a living then idleness will destroy you. Those are the words of a father to his
children and if you honour your father’s teaching you will live a long life.
It’s fools who die through lack of understanding. The way of sin leads to
death, but righteousness will rescue a man from death. Your father tells you to
reject violent company, not to use drugs, not to play around with sex. That
wisdom which is found in the book of Proverbs guarantees long life; stupidity
ends in death.
If
we as a congregation observe this commandment and honour our parents we shall
survive, and grow, and prosper. Church growth is all about a congregation living
holy and obedient lives; then God will honour us. God promises to bless the
communities where duties to parents are taken seriously. We’ve been to homes
where there is whining and arguments and rows and disrespect, and we were glad
to leave that bedlam. We’ve also been in homes where there is an atmosphere of
love and harmony flowing from respect. What kind of home is more secure? It is
where there is humility towards those in authority, and honour, and mutual care
and respect. It is the same in a church. Where there is a campaign against the
minister to defy his teaching then that congregation won’t be blessed.
Division and decay will follow in the steps of dishonouring those whom God has
appointed to leadership.
23rd
October 2005