This month’s visiting teaching message had the theme of “The
family is ordained of God.” It
seems like such an obvious principle, one that everyone should be able to
accept. And yet, I’ve realized
that there are people who have serious problems with the idea of family.
I took a few writing classes some years ago at ASU. Through a series of events I happened
to read the personal blog of one of my teachers and found that in a post she
mentioned her personal decision she had made that she would never get married
and never have children. (She never said this in class though.) Yet she had a boyfriend, and from things
she wrote, it was clear she had been with him for some years. It seemed odd to
me, and a bit of a shame that she wouldn’t want to take that relationship to
the next level. But I didn’t get
all judgey-pants over that. I took it simply as data.
Fast forward some years past graduation. This teacher sent
me an email asking if I would read and review her new book. I ended up deciding
I didn’t have time, but as I thought about her, I went to her blog to see what
she was posting about her life. I read about her writing process she went
through as she was putting together a memoir. She had an image of a spreadsheet
she had made to distill and organize the chronology of her life in her
memoir. From looking at that
spreadsheet and the kinds of events listed month-by-month, I realized that my
former teacher must have had a very
difficult childhood, and that the tempestuous family relationships had
continued into her adulthood.
That’s when I realized that for this woman, “family” was
probably a term loaded with negative associations instead of positive ones.
“Family” was something to escape from and put behind her and heal from if
possible. I sensed that for her,
her experiences may not have given her confidence that she could be a successful wife
or mother if she followed her main example (her mom). For her, she may have
felt it was all she could do to stop the cycle of pain by not marrying and not
having children.
Some people are able to make the cycle of abuse and trauma
end with them as they start and have their own families. But other people, for whatever reason,
don’t have the confidence for that.
Family is ordained
of God as a means of transmitting knowledge and values to the next generation,
particularly to introduce children to the gospel and start them on the path
leading to exaltation. But no family is perfect, and some are truly
dysfunctional. Some parents teach the right things, but their example subverts
the message. Some parents abdicate
responsibility. Some parents teach
well, but their children make bad choices that affect the rest of the
family. Some family members may
have weaknesses—emotional/mental/physical—that make it difficult to have a
stable family. There are infinite
permutations of interpersonal challenges that are possible.
I take a lot of hope from a statement in the Family
Proclamation that says, “Happiness in family life is most likely to be achieved
when founded upon the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ.” I take two things from that. First, it is a nod to the fact that
there can be successful families outside the gospel, but following the
principles of Christ’s gospel is the best way. Second, that language of “most likely to be achieved” tells
me that following the gospel of Christ greatly increases the statistical
probability of having a happy and successful family even with all the challenges faced.
It seems to me that holding up to world the principle that
the family is ordained of God is not about waving around a shiny ideal of
perfection (which doesn’t exist). It’s about declaring its great potential as a
nursery of formative experience and a laboratory for the refinement of
character and connection to others.
We want that laboratory to have the best equipment—father, mother, and
children. We want that nursery of
formative experience to include faith, prayer, repentance, forgiveness,
respect, love, compassion, work, and wholesome recreational activities.
It’s about opportunity, potential, and growth!
2 comments:
I have a book in my personal library called "Mothers and Fathers Defending Marriage & Family in the Halls of the U.N. For the Future of the Children" by Susan Roylance. Published in 2004. One of the most interesting and shocking things she learned in her service was that the most outspoken feminists, outspoken against traditional families, etc., were those very much like your professor, who had experienced dysfunctional family life, abuse, and neglect. They didn't want anything to do with a traditional family. It's a fascinating book because it shows that Satan has been attacking families for decades. The author began to be involved in 1977. Anyway, thanks for sharing your thoughts. I cried tears of gratitude when "The Family: A Proclamation to the World" was read in 1995.
Here's a blog post about it. http://plainandpreciousthing.blogspot.com/2012/03/family-proclamation-to-world.html
Aha! So it is a pattern that dysfunctional family life can lead to loss of confidence in the family as an institution.
Thanks for sharing that, and your blog post link, Rozy Lass!
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