by DOUG PHILLIPS

Each year the Russian population decreases by about one million. With a 0.8
child-per-family average, a higher rate of abortions than births, and a systemic
birth-control and anti-child philosophy, the Russian people are not only facing
the extinction of their family life, but the loss of their culture to other
groups with an aggressive pro-child philosophy. Russians, like Germans and other
European peoples, are finding that Muslims increasingly govern the economic
infrastructure of their nation. Why? Because Muslims can fill the jobs, then
send others to fill more jobs, and eventually dominate the marketplace. They
average more than
four children per family and their faith emphasizes the necessity of strong
family culture built on loyalty and shared beliefs -- thus ensuring the birth of
even more Muslims to further populate and influence the nation.
When it comes to viewing children as a blessing, most Muslims are closer to the
biblical paradigm than the typical professing Christian evangelical. This is not
a vindication of Islam, just an observation that Mohammedanism is aggressively
populating the world using a borrowed Christian doctrine, and proving that even
a broken clock is right twice a day. The fact that many of their beliefs are
Satanically inspired and completely foreign to the biblical notion of the family
is beyond the scope of this article. The point is, their religion and influence
is spreading exponentially, while nations that once claimed a Christian
worldview are dying in direct proportion to their philosophy of children.
Americans are not immune, and Christians tend to be the worst at concocting all
sorts of reasons to reject children. Far too many have bought hook, line, and
sinker into the contraceptive mentality. Even worse, they have rationalized
twisted notions of personal freedom, "household order," and
"self-fulfillment" as the basis for rejecting the second greatest gift
after salvation which God gives to man and woman: a child.
The decision to prevent children because "they are too expensive" (as
if God cannot provide for the living souls He places in your home); or that they
are "too much of a burden" (as if the inconvenience of training
children outweighs the blessing of nurturing souls which will live for all of
eternity), is fundamentally a function of the selfishness of our age. I have
actually heard Bible-believing parents make a "quality of life"
argument that one should not have a child unless one can assure the ability to
"send them to a good college."
Some have even argued that "it may be good stewardship of time and
resources" not to have children. If this is true, please show me any clear
pattern, precept, or principle in the Bible that links the notion of stewardship
with the act of cutting off the godly seed (no out-of-context prooftexting,
speculations, or bizarre analogies, please). Remarkably, those who make this
last argument are usually typical Americans who, from a standard-of-living
perspective, are fabulously wealthy compared to 99% of the people who ever
lived. The fact is, God says to the rich and the poor: "children are a
blessing" and "be fruitful and multiply." (A friend of mine has
correctly observed that the Bible calls debt a curse and children a blessing,
but in our culture we apply for curses and reject blessings. Something is wrong
with this picture.)
Given the overwhelming admonitions and evidence found in Scripture that parents
should trust God for children, the burden of proof for presenting a theological
argument for not having children is squarely placed on the proponents of
child-prevention -- not on those who see children as an inherent blessing.
In point of fact, the Bible knows nothing of the child-prevention philosophy. It
teaches precisely the opposite. In Scripture, we are taught that having children
(and lots of them -- "to be fruitful") is part of the prime directive
for every parent. The book of Malachi even declares, "for this cause did I
make the two one, that they would bring forth a Godly seed." The Bible
explains that our children are our true riches, more precious than gold and
silver; they are our inheritance, and a blessing from the Lord. The Bible is
replete with examples of "poor" and "rich"
men rewarded with many children, thus demonstrating that there is no correlation
in the Scriptures between economic status and the blessing of children. Children
help to define our God-ordained mission in life. God's commandment to families
was that they were to be fruitful and multiply, and, with that as a foundation,
would take godly dominion over the earth. Each of us are to pray for and prepare
our children to know Jesus Christ, and to be faithful covenant-keepers, thus
perpetuating the Church of Jesus Christ, and defeating the enemy with righteous
population.
PARENTHOOD as a LIFE MISSION
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The view I have just articulated is not popular today. It is rarely preached
from the pulpit. But once upon a time, it was an unquestioned assumption of
orthodox Christianity, as is evidenced from Christian writings ranging from the
Church Fathers to the Reformers. Each of us needs to be reminded of the rich
pro-child philosophy from past centuries, which is why we must read the right
books. This year, a number of the families of the Vision Forum have been reading
HOME-MAKING, a remarkable book written in the 19th century. With theological
precision, but also passion and poetry of expression, the author communicates
the joy and significance of children and parenthood. The book is my top
recommendation for this year. Following is an excerpt:
"God has so constituted us that in loving and caring for our own children
the richest and best things in our natures are drawn out. Many of the deepest
and most valuable lessons ever learned are read from the pages of unfolding
child-life. We best understand the feelings and affections of God toward us when
we bend over our own child and see in our human parenthood a faint image of the
divine Fatherhood. Then in the culture of character there is no influence more
potent than that which touches us when our children are laid in our arms. Their
helplessness appeals to every principle of nobleness in our hearts. Their
innocence exerts over us a purifying power. The thought of our responsibility
for them exalts every faculty of our souls. In the very care which they exact,
they bring blessing to us. When old age comes, very lonely is the home which has
neither son nor daughter to return with grateful ministries, to bring solace and
comfort to the declining years!
"It is a new marriage when the first-born enters the home. It draws the
wedded lives together in a closeness they have never known before. It touches
chords in their hearts that have lain silent until now. It calls out powers that
have never been exercised before. Hitherto unsuspected beauties of character
appear. The laughing heedless girl of a year ago is transformed into a
thoughtful woman. The careless, unsettled youth leaps into manly strength and
into fixedness of character when he looks into the face of his own child and
takes it in his bosom. New aims rise up before the young parents, new impulses
begin to stir in their hearts. Life takes on at once a new and deeper meaning.
The glimpse they have had into its solemn mystery sobers them. The laying in
their hands of a new and sacred burden, an immortal life, to be guided and
trained by them, brings to them a sense of responsibility that makes them
thoughtful. Self is no longer the centre. There is a new object to live for, an
object great enough to fill all their life and engross their highest powers. It
is only when the children come that life becomes real, that parents begin to
learn to live.
We talk about training our children, but they train us first, teaching us
many a sacred lesson, stirring up in us many a slumbering gift and possibility,
calling out many a hidden grace and disciplining our wayward powers into strong
and harmonious character.
"'Children are God's apostles, day by day
Sent forth to preach of love, of hope, of peace.'
"Our homes would be very cold and dreary without the children. Sometimes we
weary of their noise. They certainly bring us a great deal of care and
solicitude. They cost us no end of toil. When they are very young they break our
rest many a weary night with their colics and teethings, and when they grow
older they well-nigh break our hearts many a time with their waywardness. After
they come to us we may as well bid farewell to living for self and to personal
ease and independence if we mean to do faithful duty as parents. There are some
who therefore look upon the coming of children as a misfortune. They talk about
them lightly as 'responsibilities.' They regard them as in the way of their
pleasure.
They see no blessing in them. But it is cold selfishness that looks upon
children in this way. Instead of being hindrances to true and noble living, they
are helps. They bring benedictions from heaven when they come, and while they
stay they are perpetual benedictions.
"'Ah! what would the world be to us
If the children were no more?
We should dread the desert behind us
Worse than the dark before.
"'What the leaves are to the forest,
With light and air for food,
Ere their sweet and tender juices
Have been hardened into wood,--
"'That to the world are children;
Through them it feels the glow
Of a brighter and sunnier climate
Than reaches the trunks below.'
"When the children come what shall we do with them? What duties do we
owe to them? How may we discharge our responsibility? What is the parents' part
in making the home and the home-life? It is impossible to overstate the
importance of these questions.
"It is a great thing to take these young and tender lives, rich with so
many possibilities of beauty, of joy, of power, all of which may be wrecked, and
to become responsible for their shaping and training and for the upbuilding of
their character. This is what must be thought of in the making of a home. It
must be a home in which children will grow up for true and noble life, for God
and for heaven. Upon the parents the chief response rests. They are the builders
of the home. From them it receives its character, whether good or evil. It will
be just what they make it. If it be happy, they must be the authors of the
happiness; if it be unhappy, the blame must rest with them. Its tone, its
atmosphere, its spirit, its influence, it will take from them. They have the
making of the home in their own hands, and God holds them responsible for
it."
CLOSING COMMENTS
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Last two thoughts from me: First, for those that God has not blessed with
children: be at peace. God has a plan for you as well -- perhaps even rescuing a
child from abortion or abandonment through adoption. (My own bride was adopted
and for this I am eternally grateful.) The point, however, is that all of us
must have a child-loving, family-oriented vision -- this vision is not just for
present parents, but also for the single, the barren, and the aged. God places
the solitary in families. His plan for the elderly is not to be playing golf in
Florida, but to speak into the lives of grandchildren. Each of us is to live in
and around families, and to encourage families as foundational to the strength
of the local church, the community, and society. Each of us has a role to play
affirming the blessing of children to the body of Christ.
Second, if you are a parent, it is not enough to know that children are a
blessing. You must passionately feel it. You must crave your children, rejoice
in them, and long for their love as an all-consuming hope, second only to your
love of Christ and your spouse. Every time you look at them, you must say to
yourself "I am blessed. Thank you God." You must cry to Heaven:
"Thank you God for this undeserved reward." The thought of these
little ones must bless you as no earthly entertainment or comfort could ever
bless you.
But this is not enough. Each of us must act upon this passion. It is not enough
to be hearers, or even "feelers" of the Word. We must be doers. That
means action, interaction, engagement, and involvement. And this for a lifetime
with your progeny. After all, what shall it profit a man to gain the whole
world, but to lose the souls of his children thanks to his own neglect and
indifference.
"Dear Lord, bless us with a life-affirming, child-loving passion for our
children, and for those children yet to be born."
Blessings,
Doug Phillips
President, The Vision Forum, Inc.
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