Tuesday, August 20, 2013

wait until your father gets home








Today is my older son Christopher’s  33rd birthday, which means for 33 years now I have been a father-in training.  So today he and I are taking a pair of Street Triples and go riding all day, the perfect father/son activity.  But as his mother, Theresa and I were talking last night, we were ignorant of how to raise kids.  When her water broke, we didn’t even have a phone, and had to drive a few miles to a pay phone, then back to get her, and off to Durango and the hospital.  We had no clue as to the endless supply of diapers we would need, and how our lives would change, seemingly revolving around him, and later his brother Andrew.  But we gladly, although sometimes reluctantly did what we thought was best, doing our best to raise them in the Lord, which at times went against advise of others, whose children were perfect, their parents being their only flaw.  And so right or wrong, we always loved them, encouraging them to be their own person, and watching as they grew despite our help sometimes.  But one thing we agreed on early, was never threaten our kids using the other parent, you never were to hear, or would hear, “wait until your father gets home.”  We didn’t want my arrival to spell impending doom, nor did I wish to be greeted or known as the bad guy.  And we wanted them to know God the same way.  So we never did, although sometimes in silence it was spoken out of respect.  We always wanted our kids to push the envelope, I am still wary of those kids who don’t, and often find them the ones in trouble, and their parents in denial.  Not sure who was raising who.  Others would feel free to comment behind my back, thinking gossip never got back to me, and as I watched them and their kids drifting apart, I found love would conquer many sins, and keep a family together.  When reputation was more important, I saw families splitting.  Like I said, after 33 years I am still learning, only the homework has changed.
No matter what, I have always loved my sons.  But as they get older, mature a little, and follow their dreams, now I have bragging rights to them.  I was there in the beginning, in the hard times.  And although always proud of them, now it is more than just because you are my son.  Which is still the number one reason.  And last summer when I got sick and had open heart surgery, both stepped up in ways any father would be proud of.  But on to the good times, and more pleasant memories.  And more times to ride...together.
In heaven we will never hear “wait until your father gets home,” heaven is God’s home, and he is patiently waiting for us to come home.  In His timing, not ours.  He has prepared a place, and a way, Jesus Christ for all to come to Him, which is our choice.  And as we get older, we see too many kids who have grown into adults drift away from God.  They had been forced to go to church, and to accept their parent’s rules, never allowed to know God on their own, and personally as they did.  God was always a set of thou shalt nots, not love.  And you find a bitterness there, as church memories are not always times of fun, but a time of “you have to go!”  Or else.  Not the way God looks at us, and not how He wants us raising our kids.  Love doesn’t demand its own way, nor is it harsh.  It disciplines, consoles, and is compassionate as needed, always encouraging.  It seeks the best, won’t settle for less, but knows in our failings that it is shown even more in forgiveness.  It teaches, and uses positive examples, also pointing out penalties for failure, and is always there when needed, with open arms.  The way we have tried to raise our sons, the way God has chosen to raise us.  Sometimes we forget we are children too, and He is the Father we have in heaven, raising us for our time in eternity.  So we need to follow Him, and set the example for our own families.  Sometimes of what to do, sadly sometimes of what not to do...perfect parents are never perfect-only God is.
As a parent you will have many report cards in life as to how you are doing.  I always go back to an old saying, “the true measure of success is how your kids define you to their friends.”  I like to call it love with respect.  It is tough enough being a kid today without either.  So step up Mom and Dad, you are building a legacy in and through your kids.  Who you say and show Jesus is will have a lasting effect on who they say He is. Start today, your Father is waiting until you get home.  Make sure your wife and kids are with you.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com