Wednesday, November 4, 2015

How to love & honor your parents when you don't like 'em

I'm sure that there are those who are going to bristle with anger when I say you have to give honor to your parents. Someone might say, "Honor my parents? After what my father did to me? After all I had to go through with my mother? Are you kidding? Give me a break!"

Without a doubt, there are some parents who have been insensitive and unloving in their actions, and have hurt their children deeply. We all know that some mothers and fathers don't appear to deserve honor. I have the misfortune sometimes to have to look young people in the eye and tell them, "Okay, look! Some kids just have lousy parents."

One mother in Oil City, Pennsylvania called the police to report her baby missing. She said she was in the grocery store and turned from her shopping cart and baby for just a second or two to find her child missing. A long, community-wide search began and lasted for weeks, only to find out that the mother had strangled her baby, when it wouldn't stop crying, and placed it in a dumpster in the ally. 

A boy in a nearby town is having extreme difficulty honoring his parents because all he ever sees is them screaming and hitting each other. Home is not a safe place for him. 

Another girl was thrown out of her house at the age of eleven to make room for another baby her mother was going to have but didn't know who the father was. 

Another boy had to leave home because he couldn't stand to see his mother have a different man in over night…every night. He was forced to steal to eat. He landed in jail and hates his mother. 

Countless ladies have lived with the terrifying memories of daddy coming into their room at night uninvited. Then, somewhere around thirty years of age, they come to grips with their resentment, only to realize that they had to forgive their father to be able to go on with life. 

Most of us grew up with parents who loved us and did their best to provide and build values into our lives. We have no trouble honoring them. Others cannot bring themselves to honor their parents because of their own guilt. They have come to the place in their lives where they have rebelled against everything their parents stand for because they feel that they cannot "measure up" to their parents expectations. They repeatedly blame their parents when, deep down in their heart, they know that they are at fault. They cannot admit it. So they live with a terrible sense of personal guilt and shame. They run from God. They despise the church. They try to destroy themselves and their own bodies. Some commit suicide. But many remain miserable until that day when they can admit to themselves that they were wrong and submit their life to the higher authorities in their life…starting with Mom and Dad. I do not believe a person can be right with God and dishonor their parents. The question is not "Do you have parents who are worth honoring?" The question is "Will you be an honorable person?" 

For those who do not have honorable parents, or did not have honorable parents growing up, I want to show you how the trials you are suffering or have suffered at the hands of dishonorable parents can be used to bring positive gain and joy into your life. 

I. THREE REASONS EACH OF US HAS FOR HONORING OUR PARENTS

  1. Rejecting our parents is robbing from ourselves
  1. All of us are very much like our parents and very much a part of them
    1. We pick up many of their emotional characteristics and habits, and our physical bodies are forever marked by them. 
    2. We can never escape our parents.
  1. When God tells us to honor our parents, it's with good reason. 
    1. When we lower their value and cut them down, we're dishonoring ourselves. 
    2. Some children hear mom or dad constantly cut their grandparents down.
    • It causes incredible confusion in a child's mind when he's been taught to dislike characteristics in his grandparents that he sees every day in his own mom and dad. 
    • Like a marksman firing a scattergun at close range, a child who blasts out at a grandfather knows he will hit his father as well.
  1. People who have a bad relationship with their parents are usually people who have low self- esteem.
  • Some people try all their life to get away from the hurtful memory of their father or mother by dishonoring them, only to end up staring at them each morning in the mirror. 
  • Parents! Making a decision not to honor our parents keeps us from loving our children as we should. 
  • See! There is an ugly chain that is created in a home full of bitterness.

A parent teaches their child to disrespect their grandparents; the child thus learns to disrespect his or her own parents; then they, in turn, teach their own children the same pattern for living all over again.

  1. It robs us of a pattern for living.
  1. For any child, their first look at masculinity comes from observing his father, and their first look at femininity from observing their mother. 
  2. What happens when a child cuts himself off from his parents? 
  3. Pushed to an extreme, it can, and often does, edge a person toward homosexuality. 
  1. Dishonoring our parents effects us physically
  1. In God's first commandment with a promise, "Honor thy father and thy mother," you can't get away from the physical side effects that come from agreeing with or tossing aside God's Word. Either your life will be lengthened or you run the risk of shortening your life. 
  2. One reason why dishonoring your parents shortens your life is this: 
    1. Inside the brain, where the decision you make to harbor negative feelings toward your parents, there is a series of physical events you would be better off without. 
    2. Without getting into all the medical terminology, in short, negative feelings trigger a series of chemical reactions that are detrimental to your health. 
    3. Any doctor will tell you that stress is a silent killer: some children live their whole life, many times long after mom and dad are deceased, with the stress of bitter resentment against their parents.

3. A woman is 40 years of age and is watching a re-run of "Little House On the Prairie." She gets steaming mad at how manipulative and scheming Mrs. Olson is toward her family. For the rest of the night, she thinks about her own domineering mother and the feelings of her own anger toward her mother and her own lack of self-worth come back. She gets a terrible headache. IT'S AFFECTING HER PHYSICALLY AND SHORTENING HER LIFE because stress in a silent killer.

  1. YOU CANNOT HONOR GOD WITHOUT HONORING YOUR PARENTS.
  1. God commanded us to honor our parents 
  2. Don't you think God knew some people would have lousy parents? 
  3. You can't be a good Christian and not honor your parents.

    See, if you can't honor your parents, you love yourself more than you love God. We're not supposed to love anything more than we love God.

  4. If you cannot obey God in honoring your parents, then you cannot obey Him in any other area of your life.
  1. You will have an authority problem for the rest of your life. 
  2. Honoring your parents is FOUNDATIONAL in your life. 
  3. You will have problems with teachers, employers, law enforcement, and even marriage. 
    1. In marriage (or any other relationship) you have to submit "yourselves one to another" (Ephesians 5:21).
    2. You must learn to give up your right to control your own life…first, and foremost, to God, then others. 
    3. That's a bitter pill to swallow for many but essential for happiness.

  1. HONOR YOUR PARENTS LIKE THIS:
  1. First, evaluate your current attitude and actions toward your parents.
  1. In the Scriptures, the word "dishonor" is used of something or someone who has little worth, weight, or value. 
  2. One word picture used to describe it is like what we often face, driving after a storm: a mist or vapor…fog. 
  3. In one instance in Scripture it is used to describe the steam that rises from a boiling pot of water. 
  4. Another words: it has a presence, but we don't let it affect us much. We act as if it is not even there. We try to ignore it. 
  5. Do I just brush my father and mother aside? Or do I count them as weighty and valuable? If you count them as weighty and valuable you will… 
    1. You will listen to what they say, not just look like you're listening. 
    2. You will give them the common courtesies you extent to your other friends when you are trying to impress them. 
    3. You will spend time with them and not be embarrassed when they are around. 
    4. On a scale of 1 to 10, 1 being very little value, and 10 being much value, what is your present view of your parents?

--- If your value of your parents is low on your list of priorities, make a decision today to move up their value…your feelings for them may move up as well!

  1. Take time to look back and find the things to be thankful for.      Borrowed: Dewitt


--
Dr. Jon Groves, Evangelist
THE GROVES FAMILY MINISTRIES
www.thegrovesfamily.org
blog: evangelistjongroves.blogspot.com
817.948.8523
Touching Hearts - Increasing Hope

Family Life on the subject of HONOR

Every Father's Day I attend church with my parents. During these services, the pastor always asks if anyone would like to stand and pay tribute to his or her father. One by one, people share their memories, and each year without fail, a frail little woman, looking weary from a hard life, stands. 

Everyone patiently watches as she rises slowly and confesses in a tired trembling voice, "My daddy was a drinking man. He wasn't there much, but when he wasn't drinking, he was a good man … I loved my daddy." The tears well up in her eyes as she makes her way back down to the pew. 

She never says much; there isn't much to say. But she faithfully and sincerely obeys the fifth commandment … even if her father didn't deserve it. 

Setting aside the natural tendency

Like this woman, you may have been abandoned or abused. Maybe you were verbally assaulted and forced to fearfully run and hide. Or perhaps there is a history of bitterness and grudges between you and a parent. In any case, when you hear the phrase "honor your parents," your stomach turns just thinking about paying tribute to someone who has treated you with such contempt. 

It's not easy to honor someone who has hurt you so deeply. The natural tendency is to repay evil for evil and seek retribution. 

But the apostle Peter tells us Christians to live "not returning evil for evil or insult for insult, but giving a blessing instead; for you were called for the very purpose that you might inherit a blessing" (1 Peter 3:9). The Bible challenges us regularly in this area: Love your enemies, pray for those who persecute you, turn the other cheek, and so on. In Matthew 5:44-47, Jesus asked if you only love the people that love you, then where is your reward? How are you any different than the heathens? 

Love for a hurtful parent doesn't come from our own abilities. It comes from the supernatural love of Jesus who died for us even while we were undeserving sinners (Romans 5:8). Through the power of the Holy Spirit we can choose to love those who we feel don't deserve it. 

You may feel that by honoring your parent, you are excusing his behavior. But remember that no evil will escape God's eyes or go unpunished. Romans 12:19 says, "Never take your own revenge, beloved, but leave room for the wrath of God, for it is written, 'Vengeance is mine, I will repay,' says the Lord." 

You need to honor your parents not because you think they deserve it, but because God asked you to. By doing so, you honor God by keeping His commandments. 

Start praying now for supernatural strength to practice at least one of these 10 suggestions:

1. Forgive their transgressions. When people commit a transgression, they essentially owe you a debt. In most cases, it's a debt they cannot pay. Forgiveness means that you choose to wipe away the debt they owe. 

In Matthew 18, Jesus told the story of a slave who owed his king a great deal of money. The slave begged for more time, and the king had compassion and forgave his debts. Later, the slave confronted a friend who owed him a little money. The friend begged for more time, but the slave had him thrown into prison. When the king discovered what happened, he had the slave tortured until he repaid all that he owed. Jesus said, "My heavenly Father will also do the same to you, if each of you does not forgive his brother from your heart." 

2. Extend mercy. Do you consider yourself to be a good person? If you said yes, then let me ask you a few of questions: Have you ever told a lie? Have you ever stolen something, even something seemingly insignificant? Have you ever lusted? If the answer to any of these is yes, you have broken the Ten Commandments. Were it not for God's mercy to send His Son to die for your sins, you would be destined for eternity in hell. Aren't you glad for mercy? The next time your parent says a hurtful word or offends you in some way, remember that God chose to have mercy on you. Instead of seething with anger, look at your parent with compassion, putting aside any bitterness that tries to form in your heart. 

3. Share the gospel. If you had the cure for cancer, wouldn't you share it? Christians have the cure for a disease far more dangerous than cancer, the kind that destroys the soul. And the answer is Jesus Christ. Have you shared the gospel with your unbelieving parents? 

I've heard evangelists say that the hardest people to witness to are family members. It's intimidating. But Jesus said we are blessed when men persecute us for His sake (Matthew 5:11-12). Your parents may never have another chance to hear of salvation. Make it a priority to honor them by telling them about the cure they need.

4. Appreciate the good things. Everyone on this earth has redeeming qualities. Try to think of as many as you can for your mother or father. 

What positive physical attributes did this parent pass to you? What about personality traits? Instead of dwelling on bad memories or scars, consider how God has used this parent to make you the person you are today. 

5. Do something as an act of kindness. Send flowers for no special reason, or call the parent on the phone just to catch up. Use a special skill that you have to meet a need, such as, paint the bathroom, fix the car, or mow the lawn. 

6. Choose to speak kindly of them. Our words are powerful. James 3:5 says, "The tongue is a small part of the body, and yet it boasts of great things. See how great a forest is set aflame by such a small fire!" Words have the ability to bring death or life. Choose to use words about your parent that will bring life. 

Remember the woman at the beginning of this article? She didn't have much to say about her dad, but what she did say was kind. She could have gone on for hours about the ways he ruined her life, but instead she chose to stop blaming and honor her father, whether he deserved it or not. 

7. Consider writing a tribute. A tribute is essentially an essay written to honor a parent. For more information about writing a tribute, read the article "The Best Gift You Can Give Your Parents." You can also see examples of tributes at the end of that article. If you don't have many good things to say, then make it short. The message doesn't have to be very long, but it can be a powerful time of honor and connection. 

8. Teach your children to honor and extend mercy to their grandparents. Just as you should honor your parents, your children should honor their grandparents. Instruct them to speak kindly of your parents, learn from their mistakes, and extend mercy. Remember that your children will one day be raising your grandchildren and exposing your mistakes. Teach them the same mercy that you would want extended to you.

9. Pray for the parent who mistreated you. Jesus said to pray for those who mistreat you (Luke 6:28). How long has it been since you and your children prayed for your father or mother? Make it a priority this week to pray that God would change their hearts, that He would grant them the gift of salvation, and for healing and restoration in your relationships. As you pray, lift those burdens to the Lord and trust in His will. James 5:16 says, "The effective prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much." 

10. Keep your parents connected with your family. When relationships are strained, it's easy to become isolated. Unfortunately, isolation prevents healing and often creates even more awkwardness. Don't leave your parents out of your life, even if they are antagonistic toward you. Continue to send cards and pictures. Allow them to talk to the children on the phone, or if they are unfit to speak to children, keep communicating in other ways. 

Copyright © 2006 by FamilyLife. All rights reserved.



--
Dr. Jon Groves, Evangelist
THE GROVES FAMILY MINISTRIES
www.thegrovesfamily.org
blog: evangelistjongroves.blogspot.com
817.948.8523
Touching Hearts - Increasing Hope