Father's Day...a day to honor fathers.
But most Father's Day sermons I've heard in the last decade have focused on the father's responsibility to his children, not the child's responsibility to his father.
Why?
I think we've forgotten the importance of the Fifth Commandment. Children (especially we adult children) are quick to demand sacrificial honor FROM fathers while giving stingy honor in return.
Sadly, our national disrespect for parents has damaged the moral fiber of our country. We aren't nearly as messed up by bad parenting as we are by our failure to obey God's command to honor parents.
Honor means emphasizing the best, forgiving the worst, and focusing on our sins, not the sins of our parents (Matthew 7:1-4).
God makes this clear:
“Honor your father and mother”—which is the first commandment with a promise— “so that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth." Ephesians 6:2-3
Today, let's quit putting conditions on God's commands and start obeying them.
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I
spent a lot of years neglecting the Fifth Commandment, and I lost much
in the process. That's why it's a reoccurring theme on Bible Love Notes.
See Respectfully Saying No to Authority
for one example from my life. If you need more encouragement to honor
your parents, check out my archive of 1-minute devotions on the subject HERE.
And if you're a married woman, please check out my 7-part series on blessing your marriage by honoring your mother-in-law.
Note:
This devotion does not address children who have been physically or
sexually abused by parents. They must seek godly Christian counsel in
handling their relationship with their parents.