The Orthodox
Family
The basic task of Orthodox
Christianity is to teach people to live according to God's will so that,
through it, they will be brought to eternal blessedness. Some people vainly
wish to reduce Christianity to a mere narrowly-individualized sphere of
religious experiences. Christianity, however, is life; it is a new seal on all
the vital relationships of people. No impartial person would doubt or
contradict the fact of its influence on life. It is sufficient to point out
that even though life and the behavior of people on earth have not strayed far
from Christian ideals, nevertheless, their concepts and views were formulated
on the Christian type. The work of many of the best artists and scientists
bears a clearly Christian imprint upon them. Further, such consoling phenomena
as the disappearance of slavery, the appearance of a whole series of
institutions of charity and enlightenment, and much else, are undoubtedly
obligated to Christianity for their beginnings. But perhaps the transforming
and elevating influence of Christianity has been experienced most of all by the
first cell of the order of social life - the family.
The great responsibility
for an Orthodox Christian person is to choose a friend for life. God's word
says of the Christian marriage, "be two in one flesh," that is, in
marriage two people form one organism, one common life. An Orthodox Christian
wife think first of all about her husband, and then about herself. Likewise,
the husband first cares for his wife, then for himself. The Lord tempered such
a Christian marital union by His Divine word, "What God unites, let man
not separate." It is noteworthy that in such a Christian marriage, the
love of the partners has that very same selfless, self-denying character by
which purely Christian love is distinguished. With good reason, Apostle Paul
compares the marital union with the union of Christ and the Church, and he
says, "Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the Church and gave
Himself up for her." In Christian marriage, the unification of loving
personalities becomes so all-comprehensive and full, the mutual dedication of
the spouses so deep and absolute, that they resemble each other in everything,
and sometimes (in old age) they even come to resemble each other externally.
And their life passes in full accord, in full dedication to the will of Christ
the Savior and His Holy Church.
But it becomes so heavy in
our own days to see the precipitous, thoughtlessly careless and completely
un-Christian disposition of contemporary youth to this most serious question.
One must now repeatedly observe how marriages are concluded not through a
serious, deep, examined feeling of love, but through enamorousness, a feeling
which is not deep, and is very low in moral relationship. Often, the content of
such an enamoured state is, alas, in essence only animal passions, only an
"agitation of young blood" (and sometimes not young, but old and
dirty). Together with this, in the pre-wedding time of such marriages, one
constantly observes deceit and self-embellishing of both body and soul, a
hypocritical desire not to be, but to seem to be better and more beautiful.
Life, however, can be built only on truth; it cannot survive on falsehood. From
this, there ensues the disenchantment of spouses with each other and the
aberration of divorces.
Christian marriage is a
single life lived by two in unification. With the years, marital life only
strengthens, becomes deeper, more spiritual. Of course, passionate love,
connected with each person's natural sexual inclination and purely physical
attraction, also enters into Christian marital love. In a truly Christian
marriage, however, such passionate love enters into the attachment only
incidentally, and never has such a significance and strength as in non-Christian
marital unions. In the lives of saints, we see a multitude of examples in which
Christian spouses, through mutual agreement, renounced sexual life, either from
the very beginning of the marriage or even after forty years. It is noteworthy
that in such a marriage, when the ascetic-spouses live "as brother and
sister," their mutual love is distinguished by a special strength of
devotion, all-embracing fidelity and mutual respect. Thus does Christianity
consecrate, elevate and transform a marriage union.
In a Christian family, not
only the relationship of husband and wife is considered, but also that of
children and parents. Christianity again places its imprint on this inner
relationship.
In each good family there
must, without fail, be a single family life. "Our" must always take
precedence to the personal "my" in such a relationship. It is not in
vain that all members of the family bear one common surname, for they must live
a common, cordial life. The head of the family is the husband. The well-being
of the family is formed on him and on his toils. The family is his first duty.
Of those who do not look after their own family, Apostle Paul says bluntly and
quite clearly. "If anyone does not care for his own, and especially for
his own household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an
unbeliever" (1 Tm.5:8).
It often happens that, in
directing their children to one or another path, parents act so strongly
against the will of a child's inclinations and heart's desire that they are
generally unjust. Apostle Paul speaks against this, pointedly saying: "Parents,
do not anger your children so that they do not despair, but raise them in the
Lord's teaching and instruction" (Col. 3:21; Eph.6:4). To demand of
children what exceeds their strength only plunges them into despondency. There
is an even greater injustice: for a child, the father is the highest authority,
and woe if their authority betrays that feeling of trust, a feeling which is
far stronger in a child than in an adult. This is followed by a situation which
is simply inescapable for the child. It is even worse, however, when the
parents spoil their children too much, are too condescending toward them and
often leave them without supervision. The child can receive a great moral ruin
from this; as we have seen, God's word orders parents to raise and instruct
children in the Lord's law.
The matter of raising
children falls primarily on the mother. This is natural, since no one else is
so close to the soul and heart of the child as its mother. It is not without
reason that a child runs directly to its mother, crying, "Mama" when
it is hurt. There is a great task before the mother: to raise a son or daughter
as a believing Christian, good, responsive, work-loving, useful to the Church
and society, and to raise the child thus by word and example and love and
strictness. This is the sanctuary of her service to the Lord; her work is no
less important than the husband's work for the family. Shame and dishonor to
those mothers who shirk from the raising of their children and give them over
to be cared for by hired persons, forgetting that it is so easy to ruin or soil
the child's soul. Moreover, can anyone really replace a child's mother?
But children must
understand their responsibilities no less than the parents. Everyone knows the
fifth commandment of Gas law, about honoring the parents. Apostle Paul enjoins
children to "submit to your parents in the Lord, for justice requires
this." And, of course, this requirement is brought forth precisely by
justice. For, children are obligated in all things to their parents who take
care of them, loving, toiling, denying themselves in much, raising their
children by their own love, often helping them even when they have already
become adults and independent people.
How often, though, is the
fifth commandment violated among us! Even those children who are convinced that
they sincerely and deeply love their parents, often do not heed them, which
means that they do not honor them. Love is always united with obedience. And the
older children become, the more self-willed they become, alas, affronting their
parents, reproaching them to their face for their "backwardness" and
not considering their authority in anything. Is this respect for parents?
Thus, in its basic sense,
the fifth commandment speaks of honoring parents. Nevertheless, it also speaks
in consideration of all those who occupy similar positions for a Christian:
teachers, educators, etc; and especially, the representatives of lawful
authority who preserve the order of society. Apostle Paul directed us to pray: "for
rulers and all those in authority," and in many places in his
epistles, he taught to submit to the authorities. More important, of course,
for the Christian, is the honoring of Church authorities - the pastors of the
Church, especially the bishops, and also the pastor who is his spiritual father
and answers before God for his soul. Apostle Paul says, "Submit
yourselves (to your spiritual instructors,) for they watch over your
souls and must give account." And the Lord Himself said to His
apostles, and in their persons to the pastors of the Church, "Whoever
listens to you, listens to Me, but whoever does not listen to you, does not
listen to Me."
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