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GUEST ARTICLE
Ways Parents Provoke
In Ephesians 6:4,
Paul writes, "Fathers, do not provoke your children
to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction
of the Lord." In our series these last two weeks,
we've looked at both discipline (specifically, spanking)
and instruction (specifically, evangelism). Today, we will
look at the command to not provoke.
To "provoke
. . . to anger" suggests a repeated, ongoing pattern
of treatment that gradually builds up a deep-seated anger
and resentment that boils over in outward hostility.
Such treatment
is usually not intended to provoke anger. Here are eight
ways in which parents can provoke their children to anger:
Overprotection
1)
Well-meaning overprotection is a common cause of resentment
in children. Parents who smother their children, overly restrict
where they can go and what they can do, never trust them
to do things on their own, and continually question their
judgment build a barrier between themselves and their children
- usually under the delusion that they are building a closer
relationship. Children need careful guidance and certain
restrictions, but they are individual human beings in their
own right and must learn to make decisions on their own,
commensurate with their age and maturity. Their wills can
be guided but they cannot be controlled.
Favoritism
2)
Another common cause of provoking children to anger is favoritism.
Isaac favored Esau over Jacob and Rebekah preferred Jacob
over Esau. That dual and conflicting favoritism not only
caused great trouble for the immediate family but has continued
to have repercussions in the conflicts between the descendants
of Jacob and Esau until our present day! For parents to compare
their children with each other, especially in the children's
presence, can be devastating to the child who is less talented
or favored. He will tend to become discouraged, resentful,
withdrawn, and bitter.
Favoritism by parents
generally leads to favoritism among the children themselves,
who pick up the practice from their parents. They will
favor one brother or sister over the others and will often
favor one parent over the other.
Achievement
3)
A third way parents provoke their children is by pushing
achievement beyond reasonable bounds. A child can be so pressured
to achieve that he is virtually destroyed. He quickly learns
that nothing he does is sufficient to please his parents.
No sooner does he accomplish one goal than he is challenged
to accomplish something better. Fathers who fantasize their
own achievements through the athletic skills of their sons,
or mothers who fantasize a glamorous career through the lives
of their daughters prostitute their responsibility as parents.
I once visited
a young woman who was confined to a padded cell and was
in a state of catatonic shock. She was a Christian and
had been raised in a Christian family, but her mother had
ceaselessly pushed her to be the most popular, beautiful,
and successful girl in school. She became head cheerleader,
homecoming queen, and later a model. But the pressure to
excel became too great and she had a complete mental collapse.
After she was eventually released from the hospital, she
went back into the same artificial and demanding environment.
When again she found she could not cope, she committed
suicide. She had summed up her frustration when she told
me one day, "I don't care what it is I do, it never
satisfies my mother."
Discouragement
4)
A fourth way children are provoked is by discouragement.
A child who is never complimented or encouraged by his parents
is destined for trouble. If he is always told what is wrong
with him and never what is right, he will soon lose hope
and become convinced that he is incapable of doing anything
right. At that point he has no reason even to try. Parents
can always find something that a child genuinely does well,
and they should show appreciation for it. A child needs approval
and encouragement in things that are good every bit as much
as he needs correction in things that are not.
Unwanted
5)
A fifth way provocation occurs is by parents' failing to
sacrifice for their children and making them feel unwanted.
Children who are made to feel that they are an intrusion,
that they are always in the way and interfere with the plans
and happiness of the parents, cannot help becoming resentful.
To such children the parents themselves will eventually become
unwanted and an intrusion on the children's plans and happiness.
Growth
6)
A sixth form of provocation comes from failing to let children
grow up at a normal pace. Chiding them for always acting
childish, even when what they do is perfectly normal and
harmless, does not contribute to their maturity but rather
helps confirm them in their childishness.
Manipulation
7)
A seventh way of angering children is that of using love
as a tool of reward or punishment - granting it when a child
is good and withdrawing it when he is bad. Often the practice
is unconscious, but a child can sense if a parent cares for
him less when is he disobedient than when he behaves. That
is not how God loves and is not the way he intends human
parents to love. God disciplines His children just as much
out of love as He blesses them. "Those whom the Lord
loves He disciplines" (Heb. 12:6). Because it is so
easy to punish out of anger and resentment, parents should
take special care to let their children know they love them
when discipline is given.
Abuse
8)
An eighth way to provoke children is by physical and verbal
abuse. Battered children are a growing tragedy today. Even
Christian parents - fathers especially - sometimes overreact
and spank their children much harder than necessary. Proper
physical discipline is not a matter of exerting superior
authority and strength, but of correcting in love and reasonableness.
Children are also abused verbally. A parent can as easily
overpower a child with words as with physical force. Putting
him down with superior arguments or sarcasm can inflict serious
harm, and provokes him to anger and resentment. It is amazing
that we sometimes say things to our children that we would
not think of saying to anyone else - for fear of ruining
our reputation!
In closing, consider
the confession of one Christian father,
My family's all grown and the kids are
all gone. But if I had to do it all over again, this is
what I would do. I would love my wife more in front of
my children. I would laugh with my children more - at our
mistakes and our joys. I would listen more, even to the
littlest child. I would be more honest about my own weaknesses,
never pretending perfection. I would pray differently for
my family; instead of focusing on them, I'd focus on me.
I would do more things together with my children. I would
encourage them more and bestow more praise. I would pay
more attention to little things, like deeds and words of
thoughtfulness.
And then, finally, if I had to do it
all over again, I would share God more intimately with
my family;
every ordinary thing that happened in every ordinary
day I would use to direct them to God. --John MacArthur
Adapted from Ephesians in
The MacArthur New Testament Commentary, © 1986 by The Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago. All rights reserved.
• Grace
to You (Thursday, May 15, 2008)
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