Treasury of Sermons -
Christian Family
Promises to Live By: To Fathers, A
Message of Love
By Rev Charles Seet
(Preached at Life BPC, 8am service, 20 July 2003)
Text: Ephesians
5:25-33; 6:4
I. The Present Neglect of Family Life
We certainly want to
thank God for all good fathers as well as good mothers. Unfortunately
these are increasingly difficult to find, especially in our day and age
when we are witnessing a general breakdown in family life.
This is partly because of the trend today for people to be too busy to
spend much time building meaningful relationships. The demands of work
and school have increased so much. And the result of this is that family
life is suffering a lot today. In many families father and mother both
have to work for economic reasons. In some cases this has resulted in
the neglect of their children, who grow up to be more familiar
with the child-care or student care environment than with the home.
In one Christian family that I know,
when father leaves the house for work, mother and children are still
asleep. Mother leaves for work shortly after that. The children are left
in the care of the maid. By the time father gets home at about 10 pm,
his family has gone to bed. They hardly eat their meals together because
of their conflicting schedules. And even when family members are
together at home, they would spend much time in front of the TV,
catching the news or their favourite TV show. There isn’t any meaningful
communication between them.
Family life was not always like this.
There was a time when family members had more time for each other. I
remember growing up in a home where my father would come home promptly
at 5.30 pm, and everyone was able to enjoy a meal together with lots of
interaction. I would go for walks with my father in the evenings. He
would bring us out to visit relatives and friends or just for an outing
on Saturdays. But life has changed a lot since that time.
II. The Effort Required To Maintain
Family Life
It is truly a challenge to have
good family life under our present circumstances. And we all have
to make an extra effort to spend quality time with our loved ones
at home. I too have to make an extra effort to spend quality time with
my family. I try to go back home during lunchtime everyday so that I can
spend some time with my wife and son. And as we eat lunch together and
send my son to school, we would have some conversation in the car. And
when we all sit down together for dinner one rule that we observe in my
family is that the TV must not be left on during meal times, so that we
can have better interaction as a family.
We also interact during our family
devotion time at night, before we all retire to bed. Sometimes it takes
some effort to get everyone ready for family devotion. We would sit with
our Bibles in the bedroom and start by taking turns to read a few verses
from it. The youngest always starts first, and each would read a
verse until we reach the end of the passage. Then I would ask a few
questions to help the children understand the meaning of the passage.
After that we would discuss the application of it to ourselves. Then we
pray for each other – again beginning with the youngest.
Sometimes we sing a short chorus to end the family devotion.
It is my hope and prayer that all
families in our church will put in the extra effort to cultivate
their family life, and particularly their time of family devotions. Of
course it requires someone to take the lead, and plan what to do for
each family devotion – This is the father’s role. He is
responsible for the spiritual leadership of the home. And I say
this to all fathers here this morning: If you haven’t been spending much
time with your family, please make a special effort to make time for
them, no matter how busy you are, for you bear a very important
reponsibility of the spiritual nurture of your own family. Please do not
neglect this responsibility as the consequences of doing this are very
painful.
A story is told about a young man who
stood at the bar of a court of justice to be sentenced for forgery. The
judge had known this man from the time he was a child, because this
man’s father had been a famous lawyer. ‘Do you remember your father?’
asked the judge sternly, ‘that father whom you have disgraced?’
The young man answered, ‘I remember him perfectly. When I went to him
for advice or companionship, he would look up from his work and say, ‘Go
away boy, I am busy. My father finished his work, and here I am.’
III. Love For Your Family
Now, I can keep going on and on telling all you fathers here to make
time for your family and to fulfill your God-given responsibility well.
However, all this will not avail anything unless you have one
thing that is needful – a love for your family. Hence, the main
message to fathers this morning is a message to love the members
of your family.
A. What Love For One’s Family is Not
Some fathers have a terribly mistaken
idea of how love for the family should be expressed - “If I
work hard and earn more money, I can buy more expensive gifts for my
wife and children and they will appreciate me.” But instead instead
of receiving the appreciation they expect, they find themselves
alienated from them, and their children saying, “It’s not the
gifts that I want, it is you!” Perhaps its better to give up
a job that pays well but requires a lot of time away from your
family, for a job that does not pay so well but allows you more time to
spend with your family. This is what one father in our church did, and
he has never regretted doing it.
And so let us understand that love
should not be confused with merely earning more than sufficiently to
provide everything that the family will ever need. We should also not
confuse love with mere sentimental feelings or warm emotions that the
world tends to portray as love. What then is love?
B. Love is Based on Commitment
Let us look at our passage in Ephesians
5:25 to find out – “Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also
loved the church, and gave Himself for it” Here we can see that the
love of a husband for his wife must be modelled on the love that our
Lord Jesus Christ had for the church. Jesus loved the church so much
that He gave Himself for the church.
This love was not based on any
attractiveness in the church. In fact the next two verses show us
that Jesus already loved the church even before it was
sanctified, cleansed and made presentable by His work in it. Such is the
love that all who are husbands here must have for their wife – a love
that is based on a firm commitment toward your wife. This love is
not based on how you feel about your wife. Feelings change all
the time. Disagreements, moods and strange habits have way of changing
your feelings. If the quality of any marriage and family life depended
upon good feelings, it would very soon end up in terrible jeopardy!
But if your marriage and family life
depends on a deep sense of loving commitment then it would
still remain strong and stedfast, despite any change of feelings.
Loving commitment enables us to be kind, patient and forgiving. It
enables a husband to forgive his wife for whatever hurtful things
she may have said to him ot done to him when she was unhappy. We think
of the example of the prophet Hosea, who continued to love his
unfaithful wife, Gomer, even after she had tragically left him and their
three children to live with her lover. When Gomer found herself abused
and reduced to a slave, Hosea’s love for her caused him to seek her, buy
her out of slavery and bring her back home to live with him again (Hosea
3:1-3).
And so our scripture text of Ephesians 5
teaches us the husband to have such loving commitment to his wife. And
this loving commitment is meant not only for his wife, but by extension,
to the rest of his family as well. We who are fathers must show the same
loving commitment to each child under our care. This will keep a father
from disowning his son or giving up on him, even when he becomes
rebellious and disobedient. Psalm 103:13 tells us “Like as a father
pitieth his children, so the LORD pitieth them that fear him.”
We think of the many times that Israel rebelled
against God, and roused His displeasure and chastising wrath against
them. And yet as their heavenly Father, God always remained patiently
and steadfastly committed to the covenant He made with them! The
afflictions they suffered were actually given by God out of His great
love for them. Proverbs 3:12 – “For whom the LORD loveth He
correcteth; even as a father the son in whom he delighteth.”
We think of the father of the prodigal son, who kept looking out
day after day longing for the son’s return until he finally saw him and
welcomed him home (Luke 15:20)!
Loving commitment also enables a father
to persevere patiently in bringing up his children in the nurture
and admonition of the Lord as Ephesians 6:4 says, “And, ye fathers,
provoke not your children to wrath: but bring them up in the
nurture and admonition of the Lord.” It is not easy to do this,
because it requires fathers to know their children well enough to
train them and even to discipline them with the righteous rod
when necessary. All that requires much energy and time.
But when you have the same kind of
loving commitment that Jesus had for the Church, it will become quite
natural for you to give your time and energy for them. It will motivate
you to be with them, help them, support them and make personal
sacrifices for them.
I think of a father in our church who
heard that his son studying overseas was feeling lonely and discouraged,
and he took time out of his very busy schedule to fly halfway round the
world just to spend time with him, counsel him and attend a church there
with him. I think of another father in our church who went hiking with
his son in the dense forests of Taman Negara during the school holidays,
to discover the glories of God’s creation together.
Please do not ever think that the time
you spend with them, in doing things together with them, going places
together, or just being together is wasted time. The
opportunity to do all these things with them is limited to the 18 or
so years until they leave the home and are on their own. Those years
will be gone in no time! Please make good use of the opportunity while
you still have it. Use it to build pleasant memories that will
last for a lifetime, memories that play an important part in
strengthening the bond of commitment in the family. And that
commitment forms the basis of love for your family. Let us go on
now to understand another aspect of love – how it is expressed.
C. Love Is Expressed in Meaningful
Communication
This aspect of love is also modelled on
the love that Jesus had for the church. V.26 tells us – “That He
might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word,…”
Here we see Jesus loving the church by using the Word to sanctify and
cleanse it. Without giving the Word to the Church, there can be no
sanctification and nourishment in the lives of believers. Verse 29
brings out the nourishing quality of the Word which Jesus
communicates to His Church – “For no man ever yet hated his own
flesh; but nourisheth and cherisheth it, even as the Lord the
church…” Each time we hear the Word being preached or taught to us,
Jesus is communicating His loveto us by nourhsing us! In the same way,
we who are fathers should love our families by the words we
speak. This means that we must communicate well with the family to edify
them, and build them up.
But to some fathers, communication with
the family is limited to saying to the wife, “I’ll be home for
dinner”, or “Please iron my shirt”, and saying to the child
“Have you finished your homework?” This may be some form of
communication (and some may even say that it is better than none), but
is it meaningful communication? Does it edify and build up the family?
Will it bring nourishment to their lives?
The only kind of communication which can
edify and nourish is sustained, meaningful communication. This takes
place when we share our knowledge and experiences, opinions, beliefs and
values with them.
Meaningful communication is a two-way
process of giving and receiving. We ask them questions to probe their
understanding and perception, and in turn we welcome questions from them
that will ellicit answers for their benefit. This is the kind of
communication that really builds up the relationship. It is the
level where mutual trust and confidence has been achieved, and
where those who communicate are confident that they can trust one
another without the fear of being judged or maligned. Let us learn to
communicate well with our family members, going past the usual clichés
and mere exchange of facts, and proceed on to the level where real
influence is imparted, and personal impact is made.
And let all your actions always
be consistent with whatever you say. Nothing can be more damaging to
communication than setting a bad example. In fact we communicate
much more by what we do than what we say. In order to teach them
to live lives that are morally upright, helpful to others and reverent
toward God, we must live such lives ourselves for them to see and be
good, reliable role models that they can follow. This will pave the way
for their spiritual nurture and admonition. It is the best way to
keep the commandment to fathers found in Ephesians 6:4, to “bring
them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.” It is the best
way that we who are fathers can build them up to know the Lord Jesus, to
love Him and obey Him as they should.
Now, I do not know of any fathers who
keep on saying the words, “I love you” to all their family
members. Most fathers hardly ever say that. Perhaps this expression of
love is rather foreign to most fathers’ lips. But when we communicate
with our family members meaningfully both by our words and our works,
and especially to build and nurture them up in the Lord, we are actually
saying, “I love you” to them very loudly and powerfully. If
knowing Jesus and His salvation is the best thing that has happened in
your life, then there is no better expression of love you can give to
your family than to build them up in the Lord. This brings us to the
final part of our message to fathers:
IV. Providing Good Spiritual
Leadership for Your Family
This is the ultimate way to love your family, and yet it is often
neglected by Christian fathers. Fathers, your family needs good quality
spiritual leadership, and you are the ones to provide it for them! If
you fail to do this, your children will by default be led by the trends,
values and influences of their friends and of the sinful world, and one
day you will have to answer to God for each of them. God takes
delight in fathers who take the helm of leadership in their families
well, and who do not abdicate their leadership responsibility. This can
be seen in the commendation that God gave to Abraham in Genesis 18:19 –
“For I know him, that he will command his children and his
household after him, and they shall keep the way of the LORD, to do
justice and judgment;…”
Whenever we who are fathers begin to
slacken in our role of spiritual leadership, let us remember
Abraham. He became a father only when he was 85 years old
when his first son, Ishmael was born. And 15 years later, when Abraham
was 100 years old he had his second son, Isaac. Imagine what it
must have been like for an old man over 100 years old to take care of a
teenager and a toddler at the same time! If Abraham was
able to exercise good spiritual leadership in his family, there is no
valid reason why we should not be able to do it, by God’s grace.
Abraham provided for his son’s needs
well – even to the extent of finding a suitable wife for Isaac
(Genesis 24). He evidently taught Isaac the fear of the Lord. In
those days there were no Sunday School classes or VBS that could cater
to Isaac’s spiritual nurture. Many fathers today unfortunately just
leave the spiritual nurture of their children entirely in the
hands of these ministries of the church. But Abraham wasn’t like that.
He taught Isaac all that he knew about God and His covenant with them.
That’s how Isaac later on knew enough to continue in the same
covenant relationship with God that his father had enjoyed. Imagine
what would have happened if Abraham had been too busy (like many
fathers are today) to spend time with Isaac – the line of redemption
would have come to an early end!
He would probably take the young boy
Isaac with him whenever he went out to tend to his flocks and talk
with him about God, and he would answer whatever questions
his inquisitive son would ask him. His son would also be there with him
when he worshipped God in the offering of animal sacrifices. Abraham
made sure that Isaac knew every little detail about the whole
procedure – how to bind the lamb, cut it and lay it on the altar with
the firewood, and then calling upon the Lord in prayer.
And Isaac later knew it so well that
when they went up to Mt Moriah he observed that his aged father had
forgotten the most important detail for the sacrifice – the lamb!
And Abraham replied that God would provide one for Himself, which was
actually fulfilled.
And when Isaac realized on the mount
that he was the sacrificial lamb, his response revealed the
spiritual leadership that father had exercised over him. Although he
was probably able to outrun his aged father easily, he obeyed his father
without putting up any struggle or resistance. As Abraham commanded him,
“Isaac my son, go up on to the altar and lie down there” Isaac
willingly yielded his life to his father to be used as a
sacrifice to God.
That event on mount Mount Moriah not
only revealed Abraham’s obedience to God. It also revealed
Abraham’s success as a father. Here was a father who, as God had
said, would “command his children and his household
after him, and they shall keep the way of the LORD, to do justice
and judgment”. It is evident that Abraham had successfully taught
Isaac how to obey the Lord, and Isaac knew that he must obey God,
even if it had to cost him his life.
May all our fathers here strive to do
the same in our respective families. How wonderful it would be if the
Lord can say of us, “For I know him, that he will command his
children and his household after him, and they shall keep the way of the
LORD, to do justice and judgment; that the LORD may bring upon Abraham
that which he hath spoken of him.” (Genesis 18:19)
You will notice that this verse ends
with a wonderful promise – “that the LORD may bring upon
Abraham that which He hath spoken of him.” God had promised to make
Abraham’s descendants a great and mighty nation, and all the families of
the earth would be blessed in him and his descendants. Now of course,
this promise of being a mighty nation belonged only to Abraham. None of
us can claim that promise. But there are other blessings that the Lord
may bring upon us and our families if we are faithful in our role of
spiritual leadership, like the ones described in Psalm 128:3 – “Thy
wife shall be as a fruitful vine by the sides of thine house: thy
children like olive plants round about thy table. Behold, that thus
shall the man be blessed that feareth the LORD.”
May we look forward to this promise being fulfilled as we take our
role of spiritual leadership of our families seriously. It is a good
promise for all fathers to live by, and the blessings are really
tremendous! Perhaps some fathers here may be wondering how they should
begin to do this. For a start, you should have a regular time of
family devotions at home. If you have not done this, please plan to
begin soon. |