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MEETING
SOME MYTHS
A number of
ideas flourish which tend to defeat family ministry.
If you're
a good Christian your family life will be all right.
Being a Christian
does not exempt one from the difficulties and problems of family
life. A good Christian experience does not necessarily provide or
substitute for the education in family living that is so necessary.
Unless one does receive some education and training, negative habits,
actions and patterns of interacting change very little. In addition,
family life needs are ongoing, even among Christians. The importance
of fellowship and spiritual and emotional support from one's family
are felt even more keenly. One who is truly seeking to live the
Christian life will be open to and interested in learning as much
as possible about successful family living.
If we
could just return to the good old days the family would be better.
No doubt each
generation reminisces of a former time when it believes things were
much better. What people want to get back to may never have existed
in the first place. Faced with present realities, many of us romanticize
the past. Unhappiness may manifest itself differently now. In earlier
times outward signs of family difficulty may have been different,
but we have no evidence that families were generally any happier.
In any case, today's society is so different from the past that
such a retreat is impossible, even if it were widely desired. Families
living in a fallen world need help; they always have and they always
will. We can seldom change the world around us, but we can, with
God's help, change ourselves. We can adapt the best aspects of the
past to the present and, though it may take some effort, we may
experience satisfying family life today.
The more
we talk about family life needs, the more we have. If we downplay
these needs and get our minds on other things we should be accomplishing,
they will become less prominent.
It is true
that the more we verbalize something, the more fixed in our minds
it becomes and therefore, more real. However, the realities of family
life needs are present before we verbalize them and no amount of
repression or diversion will eliminate them.
The need
for love, affection, affirmation and a sense of personal worth are
real. So is the need for companionship, intimacy, decision-making
and conflict resolution. To be insensitive to these needs, to neglect
them, or worse yet, to deliberately ignore them, leads at best to
dull, monotonous, parallel living in the family and at worst to
frustration, despair, resentment and even violence. Commitment to
fulfilled family living must become a high priority. Maintaining
healthy family relationships requires time, effort, and at times,
personal sacrifice. No other ccomplishment in life is more significant
than the happiness and well-being of our families.
It is
not appropriate for the church to become involved in the intimate
family lives of its members.
This thought
seems to contest the legitimacy of family life ministry by the church.
Since we have already stated the reasons why such a work is vital,
let's think about why individuals might have reservations about
it.
Family
life is an intimate matter. Many feel that participation in family
life programs is a sign that they are having problems and therefore
are not all they should be as Christians. Others know their weaknesses
and feel that by becoming involved they will open their family life
and, in particular, their own participation in their family for
inspection. They fear their ignorance in understanding, their inadequacy
in skills and their failures will be revealed. As we might expect,
any such public revelations will be shunned, but even a private
disclosure of needs can be very threatening.
Those
who work in the field of family life eventually must deal with the
universal unwritten rule that married couples and families should
never talk to other couples and families about what is going on
in their family. This has been called the "intermarital taboo"
or the "interfamily taboo." At the core of this rather
general marital and family privatism is a restriction on disclosure,
particularly of those things which would cast a bad light on anyone
in the family.
Undoubtedly
the restrictions on sharing marital and family relationships which
have characterized our society in the past and continue to influence
the present have their roots in religious attitudes that have inculcated
our culture over centuries. These restrictions are not all bad.
Biblical passages such as Genesis 2:24 and Matthew 19:6 imply that
the husband and wife and family form a special nucleus, a cell with
certain privileges. One of these privileges is the right to privacy
or the right to have a union which is undisturbed by outsiders.
Ellen G. White expresses this idea well when she writes: "There
is a sacred circle around every family which should be preserved.
No other one has any right in that sacred circle." (The
Adventist Home, p. 177.)
Every
marriage and family has a specialness to it, a perimeter about it
which marks it off from all others and gives it security and identity.
It is unfortunate, however, when the sacred circle becomes a wall
entrapping the couple and/or family behind it. Excessive privatism
deprives the family of much-needed companionship and interaction
with othersinteraction which might help sustain and enhance
that family.
This
family cell, which in one way is a private entity, is also dependent
upon networks around it for life support. Illustrations from the
cells of the human body are evidence of this. The Bible itself supports
such interfamily and interpersonal ministry in such passages as
Acts 4:32; 2:46; Galatians 6:2 and James 5:10.
In family
ministry we must foster a sense of balance between openness and
privatism. A family's right to privacy must not be invaded. At the
same time, growth in individuals, in couples and family units can
only take place as family members become open to each other. Openness
to other individuals who are willing to be of help during premarital
guidance, marital and/or family counseling or marriage enrichment
is also important.
Leaders
in family ministry must show themselves worthy of the trust of those
with whom they work. They deal with delicate matters which require
sensitivity to feelings and a high degree of propriety. In the presence
of caring people, this intermarital/interfamily taboo may be relaxed
somewhat and relational growth in the family may be stimulated.
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