The Bible says that children are a
gift from the Lord and a good thing (Psalms 127:3-5). But like all good things,
they can take the place that only God Himself should have in our lives. Not
having any children, I am hesitant to speak about the dangers of making
children too important. But it does not require much observation to see people
trying to live their life through their children or smothering their children
with a controlling type of affection. Now I do not want to get on my high
horse. For all I know, if I had children I would fall into the same kind of
errors. But we need to see the pitfalls involved here. C. S. Lewis, in The Four
Loves, points out that when you make a normal human love into a god, it becomes
a devil. Anything other than God that we put in the center of our life is
destructive, because it is only God who is an adequate object for us to love
with all that we are (Deuteronomy 6:4,5; Matthew 22:36-40; Romans 1:18-25).
Children can be a particular problem in this respect because we raise them to
let them go. At least that is the ideal.
It is easy to try to control or to
live our life through another person. But this is dangerous for them and
dangerous for us. But it is particularly dangerous with children, because while
it may at least appear to work in the beginning, there is a natural tendency at
some point for them to rebel and, if they feel controlled, to jump in the
opposite of the direction you want them to go. Or, perhaps even worse, to
become what the parents want them to be rather than what God wants them to be.
Now I am not suggesting that parents should not raise their children in the
truth of God (Ephesians 6:4; Proverbs 22:6; 23:24). Much less do I want to
encourage our present culture’s opposition to children because they interfere
with our living our lives the way we want to. But trying to order our lives
around another human being or human beings cannot work. We must rather start
with God in the center, and the other parts of our life will fall into
perspective. Ultimately this means being willing to entrust one’s children to
God (Psalms 127:1,2; Proverbs 3:5,6; Hebrews 11:17-19). But I fear I am not the
one to tell anyone how to do that. Only to note that it needs to be done.
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