Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Be Fruitful


Be Fruitful
By Mark Earley

A new book by Steve and Candice Watters, the creators of Focus on the Family’s Boundless webzine, broaches a subject that makes some blush. The title says it clearly enough: Start Your Family.

With the average marrying age increasing, and adults devoting more energy in their 20s and 30s to their careers, some couples are, as the Watters say, “pushing snooze on the biological clock.”

The result, they warn, is that “by the time the average couple tries to have kids... they are often surprised to find they are already moving past the peak of their fertile years.” In fact, a U.S. Census Bureau study found that the proportion of 40-something women who were childless and unlikely ever to have children doubled between 1976 and 2000.

Norms have shifted, and ever so subtly an American culture of married with children is disappearing. Barbara Dafoe Whitehead explains the trend in her report, “The State of Our Unions.” She writes, “Demographically, socially and culturally, the nation is shifting from a society of child-rearing families to a society of child-free adults. The percentage of households with children has declined from half of all households in 1960 to less than one-third today—the lowest percentage in the nation’s history,” she concludes.

The result is a coarsening of culture and a growing isolation for families with small children.
But the Bible tells us clearly that children are a blessing from the Lord. And God wasn’t kidding when he told us to be fruitful and multiply. Indeed, we were created to create, to be partners with God in one of the greatest miracles and creative acts we’ll ever participate in—the birth of a child.

But as having children and raising them to love and honor Christ becomes less and less the norm, the church needs to revisit both the blessings and opportunities children bring. I’m glad Steve and Candice have helped highlight some of these in Start Your Family.
Children give us a chance to see the world through fresh eyes. We rediscover the delight of a winter snowfall, spring blossoms, the wonder of a bulldozer and a ballerina.

But children also bring us happiness in a way our culture no longer understands. The ancient concept of happiness, which Aristotle termed eudaimonia, meant “an activity of the soul expressing virtue.” Having children is an opportunity for us to learn selflessness, to serve others, and sometimes to see our sinfulness on display in a way that makes us want to change.
Children are also an opportunity to advance the Kingdom of God and to make disciples. Psalm 127 compares sons to arrows in the hands of a warrior. A son or daughter with a heart for God reaches places, generations, and people that we never will.

So do what you can to help others see that children are a blessing from the Lord. Maybe you can give them a copy of the Watters’ marvelous book Start Your Family.

And if you are married and maybe pushing the snooze button, perhaps I can share this word with you: “Ladies and gentlemen, it’s time to start your families.”

3 comments:

D.Richmond said...

I'm glad you shared that article.

I agree wholeheartedly we have become a society that does not embrace motherhood anymore. As a stay at home mom, I have very few opportunities to bond with other women with children during the day because the women who do have children are all working and the children are all in daycare.

My husband is building his career, and many days even when he is home, he is elsewhere (if you know what I mean). It's not how it was when my mother was a stay at home mom.

qixxsilver said...

In response to D.Richmond;

Times have changed....for good, or most likely for bad. It is now not as it was when we were growing up. We had the luxury of the stay at home mom. Nowadays, the cost of living has gone up to the point where you either need to downgrade your lifestyle to subpar standards to obtain that stay at home Mom. But this means a substandard neighborhood most likely with substandard schools for your kids. It is almost catch 22. Sure, I would love to have my kids in the Southlake ISD. Live in a Southlake neighborhood, and do it all on one income. But that currently, is not reality. I did not say not achievable mind you. I think we all need to strive hard to find that perfect balance. Whatever it may be for each of us...

The Seaman's said...

I wanted kids in my 20's but there were no suitable partners to be found until I met John. Then, we couldn't conceive until recently. My mother had 4 kids, single mom, the only one working, and with a mortgage. We did not have expensive stuff and we were the only ones with the B&W t.v set in our whole neighborhood but what she did have to give was two things: God and love. I think that when you put all your trust in the Lord, He can give you all your needs, obviously not all your wants but yes, He can get you through it. it is stil possible. keeping up the Joneses is alot of work and at the end you wish you were keeping up with what matters. I do admire stay home moms. I wish my mom had been one but above all, she was there to rendered the love of God, discipline us in Love, and most importantly her time.