Christ

"Single Parenting - Situation not Identity"

(By Thor Knutstad)

Single parents today, in unprecedented numbers, are in a very complex situation.  They are trying to raise their children within a complicated and competing system of authorities and influences.  Most (not all) were once, so they thought, defined as a "married parent."  But that is exactly where there is an "identity gap."  Single parenthood is your situation, not your identity.  When I lean on identity, my situation will always control me.  When I accept the stark reality of situational context, I can live in context and not in the false notion of identity context. Let me repeat myself here for emphasis and effect.  Single parenting is my SITUATION and NOT MY IDENTITY.  Let me explain.

I am the father of my sons.  I am not the father and the mother to my children.  I can't be, nor should I attempt to be both.  To try to be both is NOT God's design.  God does not expect double effort from me to compensate for what is missing or has been missed.  I cannot do the work of two people, though often it feels very much like this.  I have a ministry to my children.  It is my job to physically provide for and emotionally care for them.  I must provide verbal instruction and sometimes even physical discipline.  I must model a dependence on Christ, pray with and for them and do all these in the context of loving well. I must push them to excellence as they pursue God and this calling and as He pursues them.  I must forgive their sin(s), but I cannot allow their hurt, pain and brokenness to be their identity - I must teach them that is their situation - a consequence of brokenness, of sin and of living in a world full of evil that God is restoring and redeeming.

You see, this situation is NOT their excuse.  Single parents, do not lose sight of your child's responsibility to love, trust and obey God, despite their unpleasant circumstances.  A broken home does not excuse unbelief, rebellion, ingratitude, disobedience, disrespect, angry words or idolatry.  Let me repeat myself. Their situation is NEVER an excuse for bad behavior or disobedience.   Do not doom them because of what has happened.  They are not victims or byproducts of a broken relationship.  They are a part of God's design of learning to live in a broken world that is sometimes a product of a lot of sin, or a lot of being sinned against.  If you do not understand the situation of where you live every day, you will live in a confusing context of hating the messy reality.  Do good.  Love well.  Embrace your reality.  Don't walk in the fear that pushes back the power of loving your sinful child well.  Your God is transforming them too.  Admit that they are more like you than unlike you and that they are more like the other parent too than you sometimes want to admit.  Yes, I just said that.  Your child is MORE LIKE YOU than unlike you.  Humbling moment? Hmm...

Don't let single parenting pressures drive you to anger and self-absorption.  Instead, walk in a quiet confidence of humility that deals with their hearts as ever moving targets in a world full of sin and conflict.  Teach them to love God and their neighbor well.  Show confident respect toward their mom or dad and encourage your kids to do the same, even if that is not done for you in a reciprocal way.  As you model Christ-likeness in your situation, entrust them to God's care.  Let your kids see the aspects of reality in that former relationship sometimes - it is not your job to protect them from the other person's sin, the truth or consequences thereof.  Silence and appropriate withdrawal from that person (your ex) is sometimes quite appropriate, and even wise, and your kids will see it unfold.  Their eyes cannot be covered from the reality of the situation.  Sure, you want to pursue a positive relationship with that person as best as is able on your behalf, but sometimes it is this very lack of unity that causes war.  Needless to say, show humility, foster confidence, confront as often but as necessary, show mercy and control your body language and your tongue's words with that person.  Your responsibility to love your enemy doesn't escape even the most broken relationship.  Yet to walk in wisdom will not always mean being as innocent as doves and lambs; sometimes it will mean being as shrewd as a snake and as clever as a fox.  I'm only quoting our Lord, but we have to know the difference.  There is a season for everything.

I also encourage getting the help of family, other believers and your local church to help bear the burden of a single family.  The impact and assistance and the fellowship of others is paramount to you and your kids.  As previously stated, single parenting is not my identity any more than being married is or was.  It is my situation.  It is my context.  And as your journey unfolds in the pathways of time and moments, may the complex burden of single parenthood be a lighter burden to you.  If your family is still intact, praise God.  But this article is still for you.  Hear my counsel here.  Love well those under the yoke of situational single parenting.  Their task is heavy and their burden is not light.  Many did not choose to be here - someone else abandoned them or created this difficult context.  Sin's destruction always plays a part in getting people to places they would rather not be.  I once said to my friend Al about my situation, "You'd tremble if you were me."  His gentle and wise reply looking me straight in the eye was, "You're right."  True, but our sovereign God (read Acts 17) has designed a journey - a better one - one where suffering always leads to joy.  And this applies to you and your children as well.  God is leading them to greater joy.  Praise Him."

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Relationships: A Stumbling Block or a Stepping Stone to Abiding in Christ?

(By Diego Cuartas)

Recently out of my own personal struggles in relationships, God has brought me to a point of “crisis of belief”, as Henry Blackaby would call it. My point of crisis came as I realized a couple of days ago how reluctant I have been to admit some relational disappointments. I am so thankful for the loving perseverance of my wife and her godly counsel to me. My conversation with her took place on Sunday night. The next day as I was working out and deciding what to meditate on, God led me--as He has many other times--to read the first letter of John. I am so thankful God spoke to me. What became evident to me through my reading is that how I relate to others plays a big part in how well I “abide” in Christ. Put differently, how I relate to others impacts how I relate to God. My relationships can either become a stumbling block or a stepping stone to abiding in Christ.

In verses 5-10 of chapter 1, John indicates that fellowship with God is directly linked to me walking in the “light” instead of hiding or pursuing the promises that any “darkness” offers. John says that when we walk in the light we are positioned to have fellowship with God and also with one another. Darkness hinders fellowship with God and other people. The beautiful thing is that when I choose to walk in the light I can be a beneficiary of all that Christ offers to sinners like me. In Him I can receive forgiveness and a cleansing of the things that are not aligned with His purpose and design for me. The alternative for relating this way to God and others is to pretend or live life as if I was not a sinner, someone who has fallen short of God’s expectations and unable to help myself. This alternative, according to John, makes me (or anyone) a liar. Thank God there is hope for us--the first verses in chapter 2 show how Jesus can very efficiently advocate for us before God the Father. Jesus makes my abiding in Him a real possibility!

Furthermorein verses 7-11 of chapter 2, John offers a very relational perspective for us to consider. He teaches that the disposition of my heart toward others will result in a “stumbling block” in my life when instead of loving others I choose to hate them. Hate can be understood as an aversion or hostility toward another person. And hating, according to John will keep a person in bondage to darkness. Darkness, says John, not only blinds me to others but it keeps me walking in the dark. This darkness that hinders relationship hinders in turn my abiding in Christ. In chapter 3 verse 24, John emphasizes this truth in the following way: “Whoever keeps his commandments abides in God and God in him.” 

Relationships can be a stumbling block to our abiding in Christ if we do them in our sinful ways or if they keep us far from obeying God’s commandments. The messiness that is revealed in relationships can point us to our need of a Savior, our need of an advocate and our need of a Healer. Apart from the love and mercy of God we can’t love others well.

So how am I to treat other sinners, especially those who cause me pain and disappointment? The answer is simple and profound: the same way God has treated you! Take a moment to allow the following statements from John Piper (Good News of Great Joy: Daily Readings for Advent, page 36) to give you a renewed perspective:

How shall a holy and just God treat us sinners with so much kindness as to give us the greatest reality in the universe (his Son) to enjoy with the greatest joy possible? The answer is that God put our sins on his Son, and judged them there, so that he could put them out of his mind, and deal with us mercifully and remain just and holy at the same time. Hebrews 9:28 says, “Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many.” Christ bore our sins in his own body when he died. He took our judgment. He canceled our guilt. And that means the sins are gone. They do not remain in God’s mind as a basis for condemnation. In that sense, he “forgets” them. They are consumed in the death of Christ. Which means that God is now free, in his justice, to lavish us with the new covenant. He gives us Christ, the greatest Reality in the universe, for our enjoyment. And he writes his own will—his own heart—on our hearts so that we can love Christ and trust Christ and follow Christ from the inside out, with freedom and joy.

Obviously, we are to treat others mercifully as we have been treated mercifully. The basis for such mercy is what God has done in Christ. He alone can call our sins into judgment. We are not the judge of others’ sins; He alone is. It is amazing that both the authority for judgment and hope for redemption rest in God. As long as I hold others through the lenses of my judgment I will not be free to lavish love on them. And as long as I hope in their ability to change, I will miss trusting in what God alone can do in them.

For thought:

  • Which relationships presently help you abide in Christ? Which ones do not?
  • How are you relating to others? Is the way you relate keeping you in the dark or in the light?
  • Have you experienced the mercy of God? How is his mercy impacting the way you relate to others?
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