Deterioration defines many homes in American society. What is God's plan for Christian homes, and how can we prevent deterioration in our own homes?
Two second grade boys, according to a story, were discussing their families:
Roger: "I have a new dad."
Jeffrey: "What's his name?"
Roger: "Alfred Miller. I call him Alf."
Jeffrey: "Oh, yeah, I know him. I had him for a dad last year. He's a good one!"
Whether we consider the above account sad or funny reveals whether we are aware how serious the situation is in our land. In America today, over half of all marriages end in divorce. One of every four American children will spend some part of his growing-up years in a one-parent home. And this is not to imply that the other three will all be in good homes.
Seventy or eighty years ago, home breakups were a rarity. Many rural areas had no such cases. True, some homes had lost a father through death, but through divorce, very rarely. Fathers earned the income upon which the family depended. Mothers kept house, attending to the needs of the family, and felt ashamed if those needs were not met. Everyone in the household was expected to contribute what he could. Each one was needed and appreciated. As family members gathered at home in the evenings, they enjoyed pleasant times of sharing, in the absence of TV's competition. Yes, there were exceptions to this peaceful scene, where liquor, unfaithfulness, or laziness prevailed. Those homes were objects of community sympathy and were by no means the norm.
How the situation has changed! First the unchurched world practiced and accepted home breakups. Then church groups began wresting the Scriptures to make divorce and remarriage "acceptable." One writer observed that even among "Fundamentalists," leaders are divorcing, remarrying, and going right on preaching, teaching, and leading as if nothing has happened!
In addition to the home breakups, our day has brought other areas of deterioration. Someone has said, "The American people don't live in homes; they live in theaters." Why? The latest available figures show that 98 percent of the American homes have at least one TV set. Over half of these homes have more than one set. Children ages two to five are spending over twenty-eight hours a week watching these sets, while children six to eleven are similarly engaged over twenty-six hours per week.
What are they seeing? Worse than the unreal Alice in Wonderland type of TV diet is the world of mayhem, murder, violence, and so forth, to which the very young child is exposed. As the fruit of this, preteen children are committing murder to see how it feels to kill someone.
Parents are letting this happen, though God directed them to train up their children in the way they should go. God's plan for human offspring is that they need many years of parent dependency while maturing, rather than the few months or years that some of His other creatures need.
How is it with your home? Is it a citadel of virtue and love, or has it been affected even slightly by the loose concepts regarding marital fidelity and child training existing on the American scene? Here are some warning signs along the way before the extremes of home deterioration are reached:
The above seeds have been sown in the American homes of recent times. The harvest has been quite bountiful!
"Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap" (Galatians 6:7).
Here are the seeds we should be sowing:
If we follow God's direction and sow the good seed in our homes today, our homes will be saved; yes, our homes will be blessed. Who wants to experience the alternative? Read Titus 2:1–7.