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Is It Right to Be Family-Centered?
One of the common objections raised against those of us who are into
the kinds of things discussed in this magazine is that we are not balanced.
Our emphasis on the family is said to be extreme. We take a valid point
(the family is crucial) and carry it too far (the family is everything).
Well, lets confess that we do make it easy for others to assume
that we are out of balance. After all, we promote home education, home business,
home church, home birth, family ministry, family health, family worship
not to mention courtship and betrothal, family-based welfare, and
who knows what all else. Truly, we rarely meet a hyphenated "family"
or "home" word that we dont like!
Having pled guilty to being family-centered, however, lets appeal
to anyone who is skeptical to take a more careful look. Though we surely
are family-centered, we deny being out of balance. First, we do not say
that the family is everything. As we will show below, we recognize that
the family is one among a set of crucial institutions through which God
is carrying out His purpose in the world. Second, we believe that being
family-centered is appropriate when properly understood and
that such an orientation is especially necessary in our day. Recent generations
have so marginalized the significance of the family that only a properly
family-centered approach can bring the home back to the place God intends
for it to have in our lives.
So what is the proper place of the family in our lives? What is the appropriate
sphere of its operation? How does it relate to the other crucial institutions
to which we referred? How can we be family-centered without being out of
balance?
To begin to answer these questions we need to recognize the place of
the family in Gods order. And to properly understand that place, we
have to see the family in its relationship to two other institutions, the
church and the state.
God has created three covenantal institutions, three groupings of people
through which He works out His plans for history: the family, the church,
and the state (i.e., civil government). These institutions share some common
characteristics though they differ significantly from one another. Each
has real authority given by God and leaders who are accountable to God.
Each experiences Gods blessings or curses based on their obedience
to His revealed will. Each has the God-given responsibility to carry out
sanctions upon its members, represented in three tools of punishment: the
rod for the family, excommunication for the church, and capital punishment
for the state. Each has a crucial role in giving shape to life in this world.
Christians are part of all three institutions and must understand how to
relate to each, and they should learn the proper relationship of each of
the institutions to the others.
The Family Is Foundational
We do believe that the family is the foundational institution, although
as we said, we do not believe the family is everything. But it is a lot!
What we mean, first, is that the family has the broadest jurisdiction,
by far, of the three. There is more of life that rightly falls under the
authority of the family than under that of the other two institutions combined.
In Gods order the family is responsible for birth, for the education
and raising of children, for physical provision, for health and welfare,
for business, for inheritance, for social relationships, for marriage, for
death and burial. From the beginning of life to its end, and for most of
what lies between, God has given the family control of most of what is vital
for life in this world. Truly the family is the most significant from the
standpoint of the scope of its functions and the reach of its authority.
Second, as a consequence of its extensive jurisdiction the family has
the greatest influence of the three institutions. It is the home
that shapes the persons who give shape to the church and the state. The
family is the training ground for churchmen and statesmen. Church and state
can only recruit their members and leaders from the homes that make up a
society. Men, as heads of homes, represent their families in the conduct
of the affairs of the church and the state (at least thats the plan).
Someone has said that "the home rules the nation," and it is true.
It is not that the family has authority over church and state (we do not
believe in a familism or tribalism that nullifies the authority of church
and state). But the family does shape the society from the grassroots up.
The sheer pervasiveness of the family and its day to day ability to mold
people makes it the most important shaper of society. God designed things
this way; thats why He has always chosen to work his grace and salvation
through families (Gen. 17:7; Deut. 7:9; Acts 16:31).
Third, the family is foundational because it is the source of funding
for the other two institutions. God has ordained that the church receive
its support from the tithes which families are commanded to bring into "the
storehouse" of the church (Mal. 3:10; Matt. 23:23). Similarly, families
are obligated to pay taxes to civil authorities so that the latter can carry
on their necessary functions (Rom. 13:6,7). Without the work and productivity
of hardworking families there would be no means of supply for the vital
work of the other covenantal institutions.
So the family has a truly foundational role to play in any society. It
has the greatest practical control over the shape of life in this world.
For this reason it is necessary to be family-centered. If so much of life
is under the dominion of the home, then that will necessarily be where we
devote most of our time and energy.
A major problem of our contemporary society is that so many functions
belonging to the family have been given over to other institutions: education
to schools, Christian nurture and discipleship to the church, welfare and
financial security to federal and state governments, health care to doctors
and hospitals. Families need to get back to Gods plan for the home
by reclaiming sovereignty over all these areas. If ever a generation needed
to hear the admonition to be family-centered it is ours, because that is
the way God meant it to be.
The Family Is Subordinate
God always arranges things so wisely! Having given so much influence
to families He tempers that influence by placing families under authority.
The family is subordinate to both the church and the state. The home may
rule the nation and the church in terms of influence, but the home is ruled
by these other authorities in terms of jurisdiction.
Though the church and state have smaller legitimate spheres of authority
than the family they do have real authority, and that includes authority
over individuals and families. God has given the church jurisdiction over
the proclamation of His Word and over the administration of Christs
ordinances (baptism and the Lords Supper). The church also has jurisdiction
over the lives of its members in matters of doctrine and morals. A man who
is the unquestioned authority in his own home is subject to the oversight
of the church through its elders and can be disciplined by means of admonition,
private or public rebuke, and even excommunication (being cast out of the
church and turned over to Satan; Matt. 18:17,18; 1 Cor. 5:5,13). A woman
can bring her husband before the church elders if he refuses to perform
his duty to provide for the family or if he misuses his authority by physically
abusing his wife and children. The church has real authority over its members.
Likewise God has given the state the task of administering justice and
punishing evildoers, and with that job He has given rulers the authority
to force people to stop doing wrong (Rom. 13:3,4). Dad may rule his home,
but if hes caught doing 70 in a 55 mph zone hell pay the fine
or go to jail. And if a man takes another mans life, in a godly nation
he will be executed. We find a picture of Gods intended plan for the
state in 1 Timothy 2:1,2 where Paul calls upon Christians to pray for those
in authority over them so that they can live quiet, godly lives. The job
of civil government is to deal with the bad people so the rest can live
life to the full for the glory of God. The state must have authority over
families so that families can live in peace and fulfill the myriad tasks
God has given them.
Families and their members are subject to the respective authorities
of church and state, but families have no authority over the latter. Jurisdiction
is a one way street. (We should also note that God has not given the church
or the state any authority over each other. They are parallel institutions,
each answerable to God. Rom. 13:4; Heb. 13:17) When we follow Gods
order we have vigorous and influential families operating under the real
but limited jurisdictions of the church and the state.
The Church Is the Defining Institution
in This Age
Some of you may be wondering by now if we are giving short shrift to
the church. After all, the church is the Body of Christ, the agency for
the advancement of the gospel in this age. Yes, actually we have not as
yet given full due to the church, but that does not change the truth of
what we have said so far. Up to this point we have been speaking of the
relative weight of the covenantal institutions in terms of practical and
jurisdictional control. And we stand by the conclusions we have reached
thus far.
But we need to say more. To fully understand Gods work in His world
we have to look beyond the sociology of primary institutions. Things are
not always what they seem in this age. For example, to look at the church
today one might conclude that it is a pretty ineffective power when viewed
alongside the awesome and growing power of the state. And that conclusion
would be right
and wrong.
The church in its institutional manifestation certainly is weak when
compared to the expanding and increasingly tyrannical state in many parts
of the world, including our own. But such a view is an exercise in comparing
apples and oranges. The church never should wield the kind of power that
civil government wields because the nature of their respective power differs.
God has given the state the use of force, raw physical force. The police
can lock you up and judges can sentence you to death.
However, the church has no such power. It has a greater power! It has
the power to bind and to loose, to welcome into the community of the redeemed
or to cast out into Satans domain. It has power projected into eternity!
(Matt. 16:19; 18:18). The church exercises its awesome power through the
proclamation of Gods Word in the energy of the Spirit of God. It is
a power that reaches and changes the heart, and by changing the heart can
change the world
and eternity. The worst the state can do is kill
you (Matt. 10:28). In the church God is exercising a force that exceeds
any other power on earth.
So while the church as an institution in this world has a comparatively
small jurisdiction in terms of day to day life, it is actually the defining
institution of history! Plus the church is the only one of the three covenantal
institutions that will outlast this world. Both family and state are merely
temporal institutions; they will end with the passing of this present world
(cf. Lk. 20:35; Rom. 7:2; Job 12:23). Further, a mans response to
the message of the gospel determines his relationship henceforth to his
family and to civil rulers. Jesus said, "He who loves father or mother
more than Me is not worth of Me" (Matt. 10:37) and "from now on
five members in one household will be divided, three against two, and two
against three" (Lk. 12:52). The loyalties that the church and its message
create are superior to any other loyalties, including those of family If
forced to choose, you had better choose Christ and His church over your
family!
Striking the Balance
So do we have to modify our family-centered vision in light of these
truths? Does the defining role of the church in our lives mean that we should
be church-centered rather than family-centered? That would seem logical
in light of what we have just seen.
To correctly answer our question we need to pause and ask another question.
What is the church exactly? Is it a building? Of course not. Is it a professional
staff of people operating religious activities? We know its not. The
church is the people who make it up, the baptized in Christ who gather around
the Lords Table, who submit to one another and to godly leadership
under the authority of Christ, who conform their lives to Gods Word.
The church is Gods people, and the local church is made up of
families! (Or partial families if the gospel has brought division in a home.)
You see, apart from the initial matter of choosing for or against Christ,
we ought not set church and family over against one another, as if we must
center our lives on one or the other. The fact is that the best way to
be church-centered is to be family-centered because the Christian
family is the first form of the church in the world. Pastor B. M. Palmer
stated it this way over 120 years ago (The Family in its Civil and Churchly
Aspects):
Each pious household is a separate fiber of those roots by which the
Church of the living God takes hold upon the earth, and preserves its existence
in a sinful world.
The church has no manifestation on the earth except through the people
who make it up, and those people are grouped into families. The church is
not the family, and the family is not the church, but there is such a symbiotic
relationship between the two that we can scarcely speak of one without the
other. Without strong families, the church cannot be strong. So by being
properly family-centered we are making our most effective effort to strengthen
the church of Christ. Our choice is not either the church or the family;
we must choose both the church and the family.
We are anxious to be understood clearly. Those of us who are family-centered
know that the gospel and the church define everything else in this age.
We know that we must choose Christ over family. We know that we must not
neglect the local church while making excuse that our family is more important.
We know that we owe the church our loyalty, our time, and our tithes. Anything
less is sub-Christian.
Happily, though, we dont need to neglect our families or our church.
They fit hand in glove; they are perfectly harmonious. The church shapes
families through the gospel, the teaching of the Word, and discipleship.
These families in turn give shape to the church. (The church of the New
Testament is harmonious with family-centered living, though the church in
the form it has taken today is not necessarily so. But then thats
why we promote church renewal as well as family renewal!)
So, getting back to the point at which we began, we deny the suggestion
that we are guilty of making the family everything to the neglect of other
Christian duties. Our intention is to strike the proper biblical balance,
though we are still learning to live up to our own ideals and undoubtedly
fail in many details.
We realize, however, that since we emphasize such a seemingly radical
agenda of home-this and family-that, we may seem to be imbalanced. Our appeal
would be simply that any who look skeptically on our family-centered agenda
do what we are trying to do: test everything by the Bible.
Our actions are rooted in our belief in the sufficiency of Scripture.
We believe that the Bible adequately addresses all areas of life and that
it contains the direction we need to shape our families. We practice (or
aim to) home education, betrothal, home business, family worship, etc. because
we see in the Bible precepts, principles, and patterns that lead us in those
directions, and we believe the Bible is the only safe guide in these matters.
We are actively suspicious of any family patterns that have arisen as the
Christian family has been influenced by the surrounding culture. We believe
that our agenda seems radical only because our society has deviated so far
from a biblical way of life. Our trying to live family-centered lives
(as we have defined and limited that concept) is an expression of our attempt
to live Bible-based lives.
The purpose of living out the Bibles prescription for living is
that we might "do all to the glory of God" (1 Cor. 10:31). Our
ultimate aim is not to create a cult of the family but "to know nothing
except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified" (1 Cor. 2:2). Fulfilling
the job description Jesus left us means obeying all that He commanded us,
included the Bibles teaching on the family (Matt. 28:20). Properly
defined, family-centered living is Christ-centered living.
Concluding Admonitions
Now, how about those of us who are already sold on family-centered living?
As we draw to a close on this subject lets make several important
applications as a summary of what we have seen.
1. Your family must be your primary focus in life. You are not
being imbalanced to be preoccupied with ordering your household. So much
of life falls under the jurisdiction of the family that you must spend huge
amounts of time and energy on family affairs. Add to this the fact that
most of us are trying to "bring home" so many responsibilities
that have been abandoned by the home, and we can see that we have a tremendous
job ahead of us. (For a discussion of how a father can "come home"
and still fulfill his God-given duty to be outward-oriented and take dominion
for Christ, see "Father Come Home
and Change the World"
in issue #20.)
2. You must be a committed member of a local church. Church is not
optional for the Christian. It is as important a commitment as the family,
though it takes far less time. You need to be under the authority of biblically-qualified
elders. You need to be supporting the church with your tithes. You need
to be modeling for your children the importance of fellowship and accountability
in the Christian life. If you neglect the church you confirm the suspicions
of those who say we are imbalanced. (Finding a biblical church is not easy,
and it is the reason we spend so much time addressing church issues in these
pages.)
3. You must submit to civil authority. The state, too, is a covenantal
institution created by God for our good, and our submission to those in
authority is part of our submission to Christ. Now the form our submission
takes in the context of evil laws, lawless judges, and even lawless laws
(in this constitutional republic) is another matter. But let us always be
committed to submitting to civil authority as an essential part of our worship
of God.
4. We must strengthen the family and the church as alternative institutions
to the state. The state in our day is consuming all jurisdictions and
taking over the work of family and church. The only way to combat that perilous
trend is to rebuild the family and the church. We do this by bringing back
to the family those responsibilities which have been abandoned and yielded
to the state: education, health care, welfare, etc. But we also must support
the church with our tithes so that it has the means to carry out its God-given
tasks and act as a buffer between family and state. A church that has use
of all the tithes of its families for gospel workers, shepherds, and for
ministry to the truly needy will be a strong church. The church can then
be the backup institution to the family God means it to be. (For example,
the church can help the widows in need rather than sending them to the Social
Security office.)
Do you get the impression that we have a major piece of work ahead of us?!
Do we ever! But what a privilege to be instructed by the Spirit in these
things so that we can lead our families, churches, and yes, our nation back
to the Lord and His ways. Lets keep studying the Word, discussing
these things together, praying for wisdom as to which step to take next
and then lets take that step, confident that the path we are
on is the path of Gods choosing. May the Lord keep us on the right
path when it comes to family, church, and state so that we can be Christ-centered
in all that we do.
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