AV 24
Your Household
“A congregation leader must … manage his
own household well, having children who obey him with all proper respect; for
if a man can't manage his own household, how will he be able to care for God's
Messianic Community?” (1Tim 3:2, 4-5 CJB)
ALL ministries
begin at home, with the members of one’s own family. If we are not successful at revealing the
light and love of our Father to those who are part of our inner circle, what
makes us believe that we would be successful with folks who are mere
acquaintances, or do not even know us at all?
If we are not able to teach our children the fundamentals of Torah, why
would we even consider teaching those who are outside of our sphere?
For those of us who did not come into Torah until after our children were raised, and had already left home, this is
especially heartbreaking. As parents, I
believe we can all say that we have
made mistakes when it came to raising our children. Wrong decisions, wrong choices, and they all
had repercussions that many of us are still dealing with. These, brethren, are the wounds that have
great difficulty in healing, for it is those ones that we love the most that
also have the greatest ability to hurt us.
And if we had only known – and understood – the parenting instructions
written down for us throughout the pages of Torah, so much would have been
different.
What I want to focus on in our opening verse is ‘the children obey with
all proper respect’. First, please note
that there is no age limit as to how long children remain children. My husband and I have children that are in
their forties – but they are still our children. Being a parent is not a position that one retires
from; it is continuous, no matter the age.
The second thing I want to highlight is the ‘proper respect’. All of us are familiar with the instructions
from the Ten Words (Ten Commandments) that tell us to “Respect
your father and your mother, so that your days are prolonged upon the soil
which יהוה
your Elohim is giving you” (Ex 20:12), an admonition that the Apostle Paul
echoes in Eph 6:2-3. Something that was
pointed out to me recently is that nowhere
within the Scriptures of our Elohim does it say that we are to honor, respect
and esteem our children. We are to train them up in Torah, which is the way
they should go (Pro 22:6), and we are to discipline them when necessary (Pro
13:1, 24). We are never to provoke them,
making them angry and resentful, yet all the while still training and teaching
them in preparation for adulthood (Eph 6:4).
Respect toward a parent is never something that should have to be
earned; it is commanded. A parent should never be in the position where they must act a certain way, say
certain things (or not say some things that might need to be said) in order to
be accepted and respected by the child.
This is nothing but manipulation and control, and it is not according to Torah. Do we demand that our Abba Father act a
certain way before we might give Him
our respect? Of course not, He is our
Father, and we respect Him for who He is.
And so it should be with the respect given by children to their earthly
parents; however, it is up to the parents to teach their children how to do so.
Now we come to the third point: obedience. If we do not teach our children how to accept
and obey our instructions, all the while with respect, then how will they ever
learn to obey the One who formed them?
Obedience is the key to everything; when we obey, we reap the blessings,
and when we disobey, we will end up reaping a harvest from that too. It is in the home that children should learn
the importance of the parent/child relationship, carrying them over to their
relationship with their Elohim. If a
child has never been taught the necessity of obedience is this child then
headed to a life of criminal activity?
How would they know the necessity of obeying the laws of the land if
they are not first taught obedience in the home? How will they learn obedience to Elohim, and
His Torah, if it is not being lived, and
taught, in the home?
Please, folks, do not misunderstand me.
I know and recognize that there are those of you out there that have
come from extremely abusive homes; this is not
what I am addressing here. If you are currently in a home
situation that is abusive and dictatorial, or know of such a home environment
taking place, please, report it, and get out of it. Our children are the
future, and we need to protect them now, before it is too late.
As I close this, I would direct our attention again to the opening
verses. We have been examining the
qualifications of congregational leaders, and what we are to look for in every leader we acknowledge. The home life of a potential leader must be above reproach. I would venture to say that the wife should
be the queen of the home, and children should be polite and well mannered,
without showing any signs of fear or
repression. If a man –or woman – is
ministering Torah effectively within the confines of the home, the children
should be well balanced, obedient, and showing respect to others. It is that parent that is a potential candidate for
being a congregational leader.
“For
I have known him, so that he commands his children and his household after him,
to guard the way of יהוה,
to do righteousness and right-ruling, so that יהוה brings to Aḇraham what He
has spoken to him.”
(Gen 18:19)
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