Honor
Your Father and Mother
(Editorial - September 2005)
We
must honor our father and our mother. We must do so when
we are young and they are inexperienced. We must do so when we are middle-aged
and our parents are old and sometimes cantankerous. We must do so when
they behave right and when they behave poorly. The command is not qualified
by anything other than the fact that they are our parents and we are their
children.
Just
ask Canaan
Noah was drunk and naked but that did not justify the disrespect shown
by one of his family. Shem and Japheth had the good grace to cover him
up, but the line of Canaan suffered a continual curse because Noah was
dishonored.
Isaac must have been greatly disturbed
by his father’s actions. Here was his aged Dad stacking wood on
his back with no animal around for the sacrifice. When they arrived at
the altar, the situation became all too clear – Isaac was to be
the sacrifice. But because he honored his father and submitted, he became
the great type of the Messiah and the son of promise.
Eli was old, overweight and ineffective.
His sons were no Isaacs and despised his admonition. As a result they
lost the priesthood for themselves and for their descendants forever.
In Ezekiel’s day, when few parents
would be worthy of respect because of the rampant idolatry in Israel,
it was still a great iniquity that “Father and mother are treated
with contempt in you” (Ezk. 22:7 NRSV as all references unless
noted).
A young candidate was being interviewed
for baptism . He despised his father and refused to have any relationship
with him. From the son’s point of view, he was justified in his
attitude; but we’re not dealing with human standards, we’re
dealing with divine wisdom and divine commands. He must honor the relationship,
stop the despising, and disagree, when necessary, in a respectful manner.
Further, there might come a time when he would have to shoulder the temporal
care of his father simply because of God’s command to do so.
The
Lord’s penetrating words
When the Lord Jesus wanted to expose the hypocrisy of the Pharisees, this
was the very command he cited. Using the cunning deception of giving honor
to God, they had devised a way to despise the command of God to their
own benefit. The funds which should have been available to assist their
aged parents were pledged to God so all that could be used was the interest
income. They thus protected the capital from being expended on their care
of their parents, but the interest income would still continue long after
their parents had died.
The Lord’s words are bitingly
incisive:
And why do you break the commandment
of God for the sake of your tradition? For God said, ‘Honor your
father and your mother,’ and, ‘whoever speaks evil of father
or mother must surely die.’ But you say that whoever tells father
or mother, ‘Whatever support you might have had from me is given
to God’ then that person need not honor the father or the mother.
So, for the sake of your tradition you make void the word of God. You
hypocrites! Isaiah prophesied rightly about you… ‘In vain
they worship me, teaching human precepts as doctrines.’(Matt.
15:3-7).
Now there can be little doubt the
Pharisees said with their mouths that they honored their parents, but
their actions proved otherwise. Do we look with scorn at the Pharisees
or do we take the point to heart? Do we find ways to justify despising
our parents because they annoy us, or are too demanding, or are worldly?
Do we honor God with our lips, while our heart is far from Him?
Paul’s
powerful reference
When citing this fifth of the ten commandments to the Ephesians, Paul
reminds us that “this is the first commandment with a promise:
‘so that it may be well with you and you may live long on the earth.’”
In a day like ours when respect for others is on the wane and fathers
are often portrayed as inept and out-dated, we might well ask why this
command should be the first with a promise. It was preceded in the ten
commandments by great words dealing with idolatry and monotheism. Furthermore
blessing in the land was also dependent on right worship, just dealings
and general obedience to God (Deut. 4:25-26; 25:15; 32:45-47).
What’s so basic about honoring
parents that makes it a foundation principle to the blessings of God?
With little children, it’s fairly
easy to see the point. They have little concept of God and His commands,
while the guiding forces in their lives are their parents. Many times,
the parents directives may seem arbitrary to the child, just as God’s
commands may seem arbitrary to us. Thus in being required to obey his
parents, the child is being prepared to obey God.
Further, this is not a relationship
that is of the child’s choice; it is imposed upon him by the very
nature of things. But he must learn to honor the ones who have given him
life and health and things needful to his existence. He is thus being
prepared to render honor and reverence to God as he learns the meaning
of accepting authority in his life.
As the Lord Jesus made abundantly
clear, however, the command applies when we have reached adulthood or
have matured into middle age. Our candidate for baptism, whose actions
revealed he dishonored his father, was still under command to give filial
respect to his parents - father and mother alike. Until the situation
could be straightened out and he was prepared to obey the command, we
had to suspend the interview and postpone the baptism. We were faced with
an absolute dictate by the Lord God of heaven and earth, one that was
reinforced by His Son, our Lord Jesus Christ.
This
parent doesn’t deserve respect
When we looked at the situation of our candidate, we had no trouble entering
into his thinking, we’d all been teenagers ourselves. We knew he
did not think his father deserved to be honored, respected and certainly
not obeyed. But the command is not a qualified one. It is straight-forward
and unambiguous. Our candidate must obey it.
Yet how could he act in a respectful
manner if he did not in his heart respect the person?
Were there school teachers in his
life whom he must respect while not agreeing with their behavior or their
ideas? Yes, of course there were. In all of our lives, there are officers
of the law, officials of the land, supervisors at work, superiors in every
sphere of life whom we treat in a respectful manner although not always
agreeing with their approach.
The fact of the matter is that the
more spiritually mature we are, the more we are aware of our own faults
and weaknesses. We have trouble respecting ourselves, let alone teaching
our children to honor and respect us (we say this as the father of four,
grandfather of 13 and great grandfather of six and two 1/2s).
But the believer needs to remember
that it is God’s will our children act toward us with deference
and respect. We are to teach them obedience to that command as well as
to any other. By insisting on proper respect toward their parents, we
are developing in them attributes that will greatly help them to submit
to the authority of God throughout their lives.
We may feel we do not deserve their
respect. Hopefully such is not the case, but it is quite beside the point.
The command is to honor one’s parents, not just honor when child
and parent agree such honor is deserved. In thus insisting on a respectful
attitude from our children, we are helping them ultimately to respect
God and hopefully have a successful walk toward the kingdom of God.
Don Styles
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