Parenting
Fathering
Kim A Goodin
Fathering is not a
one-man job. We need all the help we can get from a wide array of
significant others. This great drama - and comedy - is never a
one-man show. The support we get often determines how we do as dads.
Your wife is your most obvious colleague on your fathering team. You
may not know how to handle each situation, but it sure helps when
you have a partner who cares for your children just as much as you
do. Being part of that team makes a huge difference. You share
struggles, you discuss options, you brainstorm courses of action,
and you gain confidence when there's someone there with the same
goals and purpose who supports your efforts.
Other dads are also an important resource for you as a father.
They're all around you - in your church, on your block, and at work.
They're walking treasures of experiences and insights. Some of them
have kids who are hard to handle, or kids who strayed from the path
they intended. Why learn by trial and error when help is so close?
Or, an older man might serve as a fathering mentor for you. He's
been through his children's teen years. He has dealt with the
discomfort that comes for a dad when he sees his daughter bloom into
a woman; he has learned how to juggle his career and family life; he
has overcome his fear of talking to his children about spiritual
matters.
These guys are out there - brothers, mentors, men like you who want
to live a life pleasing to God. They'll share insights, listen
during hard times, pray for you, and be available to help at any
time. Get involved in a supportive, challenging small group of dads,
and see how God can change your fathering.
And we must not forget - nor take for granted - God's place in our
fathering. He's the most important Member of the team - the heavenly
Father who loves your children even more than you do. God wants you
to succeed as a dad.
Our ultimate goal as Christians and as fathers should be to imitate
God the Father, as it says in Ephesians 5:1. He's the ultimate
Father, with the power to help us become the fathers our children
truly need. As we meditate on the attributes of God, we can gain a
better understanding of our own roles as fathers. We can no more
fully grasp God's fatherly qualities than we can understand
infinity, but we can begin to comprehend how He is present with us,
how he is consistent, forgiving, accepting, generous, faithful,
kind, patient, gentle, protective, and persevering.
We need to draw close to God, know Him personally, and use that
insight to imitate Him in our own fathering. Like me, you probably
fall far short. It isn't easy, but don't be discouraged. God doesn't
call you to something without equipping you to succeed. A continuous
effort to know Him better and be more like Him will have an impact
on our lives and our fathering.