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GUEST ARTICLE
Homemaking
An Honorable Role
Where do you work?
The
question may be a simple one, but some women dread to answer
it. Why? They are among those who have chosen to be full-time
homemakers.
But
these individuals need not be embarrassed. God has blessed
motherhood and the raising of children from the very beginning
of time. A woman can fill no greater role than preparing
the next generation for life's responsibilities. The future
of any nation rests in the laps of its mothers.
Regrettably,
society in general has rejected the Bible as its moral
authority. As a result, homemaking and motherhood are undervalued.
Feminists would have us believe that women need to be "freed" from
some imaginary trap called motherhood. Television and the
mass media have done much to destroy Biblical family values
and make motherhood appear drab or even selfish.
Some
mothers choose to pursue glamorous careers. Others say
they must work to make ends meet. For whatever reason,
having a job is considered both necessary and normal. Day-care
centers have sprung up to provide for children of working
mothers. But increasing juvenile delinquency, violence,
crime, and disrespect for authority prove that something
is wrong. Humanity apparently has fallen victim to its
own philosophy regarding the home and family. Society's
very foundations appear to be crumbling.
Yet
there is hope. The Bible outlines a successful plan.
First, God designed marriage as a
pure and holy way to bring children into this world (Genesis
1:28). Today selfishness leads many couples to postpone
or avoid altogether the responsibility of having children
in order to follow their own material interests and pleasures.
But those things are only temporal. Children are eternal
souls, God's greatest gift to the home. "Lo,
children are an heritage of the LORD" (Psalm
127:3).
Second, God expects parents to raise
their children in a disciplined manner (Ephesians 6:1-4).
They need much more care and training than animals do.
Their development occurs over a period of approximately
twenty years. This places a serious responsibility on parents,
one that is practically impossible to fulfill when both
parents work full-time elsewhere.
Third, God expects family life to
be home life. If home is to be more than a "motel," someone
must look after the details of homemaking.
Naturally,
mothers are often best suited for this role because God
has endowed them with the tender qualities needed for the
job. God expects mothers to guide the house (1 Timothy
5:14), and He alone can enable mothers for the rigor of
homemaking.
Rod & Staff tract 21E273
http://anabaptists.org/tracts/homemaking.html
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