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Our Father & The Fatherless

SunJun 20

Posted in Adoption, Justice, Missional, Personal, church | 4 Comments »

Previous Post – Missional Living & Idealism

Father’s Day.  Today is a day for which I have very mixed feelings.  On the one hand, I have been blessed to have a wonderful, loving and supporting father.  My brother, a new father himself, is clearly devoted to my nephew in every way.  Even my father-in-law is an exemplary Dad who has always supported his kids (and me) in every way (though as an Australian, he won’t be celebrating Father’s Day for several months yet).  In no way do I want to take away from the honour these men and others deserve.

However, I have to admit that this day leaves me unsettled.  Of course, part of that is selfish.  I so desperately want to be a father myself, yet face hurdle after hurdle in seeing that happen.  I see people in our community who manage to have children so easily, all too often unexpected and even unwanted.  Most of all I remember the loss of our first child during pregnancy, imagining what she or he might look like today.  I grieve that, because they did not survive to birth that we are often expected to act as though they never were- nameless, forgotten.  Never forgotten by Kim & I.

Beyond my own personal reasons, I also see how many people around me either do not have their fathers in their lives, whether through death, abandonment or estrangement.  For a church where the median age in the mid-20’s, the number of people whose fathers are no longer part of their lives is heart breaking.  And then there are those whose father are part of their lives, but are relationships defined by disappointment, abuse, rejection and disinterest.  For all of these, this day can be salt in an ever open wound.

Part of me- the cynical, wounded part- wants to reject this day altogether, but I cannot. For all the brokenness that I see related to fathers, I am also convinced that this very brokenness cuts so deep precisely because of the importance of fatherhood.  While not to be confused with some kind of statement on the gender identity of God, that He so significantly identifies as Father also reinforces the importance of fatherhood to our own identity and wholeness.

It is with this significance in mind that we must understand our call, as the Church, to be fathers to the fatherless.  This is not a poetic way of saying that we need to fund orphanages and combat divorce trends.  Both of these things are good, but when God calls us to be a father to the fatherless, He calls us to follow His example of genuine relationship and sacrificial love.  He calls us to an active love that blasts through the boundaries of cultural propriety and familial loyalties- not the detriment or neglect of our own families, but through the conviction that God is calling us to a devotion to Him and others that must rival all others.

Our world is filled with the fatherless- and in more than just the literal meaning.  This is call to extend the Father’s love to others is not some project or program that interested Christian might get involved with, but rather it is a defining characteristic of what it means to follow Jesus Christ.  And it is a commitment that should not be driven by guilt (though conviction for our failing to do so is surely important), but driven by the same thing that drove Christ to pay the highest price for us:

Love.

This entry was posted on Sunday, June 20th, 2010 at 10:41 am and is filed under Adoption, Justice, Missional, Personal, church. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Responses to “Our Father & The Fatherless”

  1. Missional Maturity: A Community Grows Up « A Living Alternative Our Missional Pilgrimage says:
    July 5, 2010 at 10:03 am

    [...] Previous Post – Our Father & The Fatherless [...]

  2. Kelly Raudenbush says:
    August 22, 2010 at 8:54 pm

    Would love to save this one to post on our site for Father’s Day 2011–let me know if you would be willing to have us post it. Thanks!
    Kelly

  3. Jamie says:
    August 22, 2010 at 9:54 pm

    Thanks Kelly. I’ll drop you an email.

  4. Kelly Raudenbush says:
    May 25, 2011 at 5:03 pm

    Jamie – I’m revisiting this post now as I am starting to think about the posts I’m going to be using for WAGI the week of Father’s Day – can you write a bio for me to use with this which includes where you are presently in your adoption journey? Email it to me when you can. I’ll need a picture of you to use with the bio as well. Thanks!

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  • @chrislenshyn @_b_d Of course, all of my arguments are empty considering I'm writing this from a retirement community in Florida. sigh... # 11 hours ago
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