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A Full Time Father Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Any father who fails to live his faith just as well save his breath. Children imitate what is, and not what ought to be. Children of bad fathers can still find good examples of faith to follow, but every father should want to be that ideal for his own children.
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A Berlin policeman was crossing the street when a robber raced
by him with an angry store manager in hot pursuit. To the surprise
of hundreds of on lookers the policeman didn't make a move. The
robber got away and the police department was flooded with calls
from indignant citizens. When the policeman was called before his
superiors he explained his actions, or rather his lack of action. When
the robber ran passed him he had only 3 minutes of duty remaining
that day. He knew he couldn't capture and arrest the man in that
short of time, and so he didn't even try. The officials were not
impressed with his logic, but they did respect his right to be a
clock-watcher. They gave him a 7 weeks suspension in jail where he
could watch it all he wished.
There are many jobs you can leave, but jobs, which involve you in
moral issues and services to human need, are almost always full time
jobs. Fighting crime does not consume all of your time if you are a
policeman, but you can never be indifferent to time and be a good
policeman. Fighting disease does not take all of a doctor's time, but if
he is a good doctor he will never be indifferent to disease. A teacher
cannot be always overcoming ignorance, but a good teacher is ever
concerned about ways of doing so. We could go on with other
professions, but the point we are making is that some jobs are not
mere appendages to life, but are a very way of life. Some jobs are
just ways of making a living, but others are ways of living in
themselves.
Fatherhood is one of these fulltime jobs that become a way of
life. It is not a way of making a living, but a living so as to make a
way. That is, a way for children to realize the full potential of all God
has made them to be. Adam Reiter wrote-
You got t' keep a-workin at th' job of bein' Dad.
You'll find its most th' stiffest task, y' prob'ly ever had.
You got t' play th' game yourself, an' not jest point th' way.
T' kids when they're a-learnin' how t' live er else they'll stray.
There ain't no lay-offs an' no strikes, an' you can't up an' quit.
Y' sign up for a lifetime job. Y's got to do yer bit.
Modern studies reveal that many, if not most, of the problems of
youth are due to part time fathers in the American home. The kind
of woman a girl becomes, and the kind of man a boy becomes depends
in large measure of their father image. Some go so far as to say that
the most important thing a mother can do for her children is to guide
them in loving and respecting their father. This is no easy task if the
father himself is not impressed with his responsibility as a father.
This does not mean that all the father's time is consumed with his
children. But it does mean that his whole way of life must involve the
interest of his children. Children are to the father what crime
prevention is to be policeman; health is to the doctor, and what
learning is to the teacher. A full time father is one whose children
become a part of his way of life.
Job was that kind of a father. He is not only a great example of
faithfulness in suffering, but he is an ideal full time father. Often the
two go together-fatherhood and suffering. It often takes the patience
of Job to tolerate children. None of us can complain, however, in
comparison to Job. He had 7 boys and 3 girls. Full time fatherhood
does not mean we need to be literally having children all the time.
Ten was an ideal number in Job's day, but in our day it would be
considered extremism.
Job was not only famous he was also very rich. These are two
other ways we would have difficulty in imitating him. Job had none of
the problems that come from lack of resources. He represents a
father of the upper class, and so he had different problems than most
of us do. Job had need of nothing and so we can sympathize with his
ten children. It is hard enough to buy father's anything today, and so
I can't imagine what frustration it was back then. Being wealthy as
they were, however, it may not have been a problem. The reason it is
a problem today is that it is hard to find anything that is both nice
and cheap at the time. An unknown poet said it this way:
On Father's Day we honor dad