Here
are some suggestions for how to go about either reestablishing relationships
with your parents or making them better.
First,
write two letters home. Do not write, “Dear Mom and Dad.” If you write that,
who answers the letter? Mom. Dads are illiterate when it comes to answering
letters. In many cases, the father thinks that any communication is between mom
and the kids. He doesn’t think he ever gets a letter, even if it is
addressed to both Mom and Dad. So, write a letter to your father and a separate
one to your mother. Make them very clearly separate. Put on the outside “Dad
Only,” “Mom Only.” (Yes, I am suggesting sending actual letters in the mail. It
will mean more than an email.)
When
you write to your father, include at least five things.[1] I
recommend covering one element per paragraph as follows:
1.
Tell your father how much you respect him. If you do not respect him, do
not write the letter until you do respect him. You must not be hypocritical.
But not respecting your father is not one of your options. How can you do it?
First, confess
this disrespect for your father to God. Your father is to be honored because he
is your father. God has commanded you to honor him. It is not optional. If you
do not honor him, then you have sinned. The same is true with your mother. Sin
is forgivable, and repentance is required.
Now
with freedom and sincerity, write to your father how much you respect him. If
he is not respectable, make sure you are not being dishonest. It would be a lie
if you said, “I respect you for divorcing Mom, for being a drunk, for…” No.
Don’t respect him for anything other than being your father. “I respect you as
my father.”
2.
Tell him how much you love him.
If you do not love him, that has to be corrected first. You
might object that you would have loved him if he had loved you first, but he
didn’t. I’m sure that is true, and he should have loved you first. As a father,
he should have loved you so that your natural response would have been a loving
one. But we cannot go back to childhood and start over. Even if we could, that
does not guarantee that your father would do it any different the second time.
We address the problem from where we are, not from where we should be.
One
of the reasons your father didn’t love you may be because he had never
been loved. You are turning that around.
If
you had to answer for your father, would he say that his father loved him? I
have asked many college students this over the years. The answer I usually get
is, “No, his dad didn’t love him. He’s told me all the fights they had.”
Next,
would he say that his wife loves him? No, mom doesn’t love him. Would he say
that his children love him? No, he doesn’t think his kids love him. Would he
say that God loves him? He doesn’t know God; he’s not a Christian.
Do
you meant to tell me that your father doesn’t think God loves him, his father
loved him, his wife loves him, or his children love him? And you wonder why he
drinks too much! He sees that everyone who should be close to him does not love
him.
“His
perception is wrong. We do love him, and God loves him.”
That’s
not what I asked. Does he think that you all love him? No.[2]
So
here we have a person who couldn’t love you first because he has never
been loved. He doesn’t know how to love.
I
used to ask this question when speaking to a crowd: “How many of you know that
your parents love you?” Ninety-five percent would raise their hand.
Then
I would ask, “How many of you think they expressed it to you adequately?” Only
half of those hands would stay up.
“Of
those who think it was expressed adequately, how many could have used more
love?” Everybody’s hands stayed up. Nobody gets enough love at home,
even when love is there.
You
are now an adult, and as a Christian you have unlimited access to love and
forgiveness—a love that your family does not have if they are not Christians.
If you are waiting for them to love you first, you’ve got it all backwards. You
are now the source of love for your family. You are the vehicle to love your
parents. Straighten out your unlove for them with God. As a Christian, confess
this lack of love to Him. Is it sin? Yes, it is sin. It is disobedience to the
command of God. We have been commanded to love our neighbors, love the
brothers, and love our enemies. Your father fits into one of those categories.
Confess this lack of love and forsake it. After you have confessed and have
been forgiven, choose to love your father.[3]
This love requires expression, so tell him in this paragraph.
3.
Tell your father how grateful you are to him. You may be grateful for a lot
of things. Enumerate them. Or you might have to go back to preschool days to
think of something. Think of it and thank him. Go back to some nostalgia; tell
him how much you appreciated sitting on his lap when you were three, or the
fishing trip you had that one time. If you are not grateful, then as with
respect and love, it is your problem, not his. The procedure is the same.
Confess your unthankfulness to God. When you are forgiven, express your
thankfulness to your father.
After
I had been teaching this for years, I wrote a letter to my mother. (My father
had already passed away.) Most of it was just news, but I put one last sentence
in of gratefulness and praise to her, and she called on the telephone to talk
to me about it. Nobody gets enough! Start expressing respect, love, and
thankfulness.
These
elements are necessary and required. The next two are suggestions for further
ways to convey respect.
4.
Ask your father for his autobiography. He probably won’t write one, but he
will be glad that you want to know about him. If you live near your parents,
you can ask your dad for this in person. One young woman told me she couldn’t
write home because her parents lived in the same town. I told her to just ask
him. So she asked her father for his autobiography, and this man who is
normally extremely quiet talked for four hours. She asked, and he was so glad
to be asked.
5.
Ask your father for advice, in general and on specific matters. This is
part of honor. Has he given you advice before, and you didn’t like it?
Unsolicited advice is generally much rougher than requested advice. It is
rougher on you because you didn’t want it, and it is given rougher
because you didn’t want it. But when you request advice, the person is usually much
more considerate, much more thoughtful, and the advice will be better.
Ask
for counsel, and be open to it. You might be really surprised at the advice you
get. There are very few parents who are not concerned about the direction their
children go and what they do. When you ask, you might find that they were just
waiting to be asked, and they will be considerate.
If
you are still single, this is especially true regarding anyone you are dating.
Ask your father what he thinks of this guy/girl. You may hear things you don’t
want to hear. When you do, you had better listen. Even if your father is not a
Christian, he’s been around a while. His answers may be sheer prejudice, but likely
they are not. He knows you, and he knows people, so pay attention. If he
dislikes the person you are going with, go slow. Even if this man or woman is
absolutely right for you and you both know it, it is not right until your
parents also know it. It is wise to go slow even if you are right and
they are wrong.
Some
parents will say it doesn’t make any difference to them what you do, and you
should just do what you want. Don’t believe them! They think that is the proper
thing to say because you are an adult. Ask them, “If you were going to
give me advice, what would you want me to do?” If they still don’t give you
advice, but you know your parents well enough to figure out what they think,
pay attention to that, even if they are not willing to tell you outright.
Your
father may not answer the letter you have written him, but he will almost
certainly read it more than once, and he will not throw it away. If you have
Christian siblings, tell them what you are doing and encourage them to do the
same thing.
Next,
write the same kind of letter to your mother, but with one change. The first
paragraph should express your love to her, and the second paragraph should
communicate your respect. Both sexes of the human race need love and respect
from both sexes. But of the two, women need love more than they need respect,
and men need respect more than they need love. Tell your mother how much you
love her; then tell her how much you respect her. The rest of the letter can
follow the same pattern as the letter to your father.
If you have previously been rebellious towards your parents,
there is one more element you should add at the beginning of your letters.
First, you must confess to God your rebellion to your father or mother, and now
also confess it to your earthly father in this letter, with no excuses or
accusations.
Of course, sometimes the people I speak with acknowledge
that they don’t love their father and that their mother hates him.
[3]
The confession must be done first—you cannot obey on top of accumulated
disobedience. Once you are clean, you can choose to obey this command, with
God’s help.
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