THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"A Fathers Pity"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) |
Dear radio friends,
On this Sabbath Day, in which we give special remembrance to the
calling and blessing of fathers, I call your attention to the Word of God in
Psalm 103:13:
Like as a father pitieth
his children, so the Lord pitieth
them that fear him. This verse from
the holy Scriptures goes right to the heart of what it means to be a
father. It expresses it in one
word: pity. A father pities his children.
Psalm 103
is a beautiful Psalm.
It is outstanding among the 150.
In that Psalm the psalmist says that he will bless the Lord, he will
speak well of the Lord; and he calls us also to extol our God with him, and
with all that is within us. In order
that we might do this, the psalmist says, we must remember all of Jehovahs
benefits so richly showered upon us. He
speaks to us of the central benefit of the forgiveness of our sins. For instance, in verse 3: Who forgiveth all thine iniquities; who
healeth all thy diseases. He goes on
to explain to us that this forgiveness is rooted in Gods tender mercy, verse
8: The Lord is merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and plenteous in
mercy. He tells us further that the
forgiveness that God has given to us in His Son is a complete and thorough
forgiveness. It is no little
forgiveness, verse 11: For as the
heaven is high above the earth, so great is his mercy toward them that fear
him.
And then the psalmist tells us what causes him to adore his God
more than anything. He says that it is
His pity. Its my heavenly Fathers
pity. He pitied us as His children in
all of our woe of sin. He was moved
with compassion toward us in our hopeless misery. Jehovah, our perfect heavenly Father, pitied us. That is what undergirds His being a perfect
Father. And it is that fatherly pity of
God that a human, Christian father is to have if he is truly to be a Christian
father.
We read, Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him. What does it mean to pity? We would say, Pity who wants that
today? In our proud and self-absorbed
age, that is considered demeaning and condescending. Do we not hear the words, Dont pity me! The handicapped do not want your pity
but your respect. The
downtrodden do not want pity but understanding. Does it not mean, when you pity someone,
that you are looking down on him and degrading him?
Yet, we read that Jehovah pities us, His children. And Gods pity is one of His most beautiful
virtues. It tells us that He is a God
who is filled with tender compassion.
It tells us, first of all, that in our best estate, that is, when we are
standing on our two legs in all of our beaming pride, He looks at us and He
sees much to pity. He sees nothing of
good. He sees that we need His
compassion.
That ought to humble us.
That ought to check our pride.
And that ought to comfort us.
Our God is not a God of wood or stone, untouched, but He pities right
now. And in His pity He never ceases to
flow out towards us in His compassion.
Gods pity is His love in the form of tender, melting compassion for His
elect in Christ as He sees us in all of our weakness, suffering, misery, and
sin.
The word pity means to be soft, to hold in tender
affection. It implies that we who are
the object of Gods love are of ourselves only miserable sinners. Yet the Lord has taken note of us and for
His own Names sake has pitied us and given to us a full and free
salvation. It is Gods love in the form
of tender, melting compassion for His own elect as He sees them in their
weakness, suffering, and sin. That is a
beautiful thing.
That pity is an aspect of His eternal Fatherhood. For as a father pities his children, so the
Lord pities those that fear Him. As our
heavenly Father, He is the God who is moved with eternal pity for us and has
given to us His Son to save us.
Now, that truth of Jehovahs fatherly pity must be seen in a
Christian father. For the pattern of
all of our life is to be holy as God is holy, that is, to pattern our life
after God. For instance, in marriage we
must live as God lives with His bride, the church. Therefore, as fathers, we must seek to conform our earthly
parenting and fathering to His heavenly fathering and parenting. God says, I have shown My pity to you as My
son. I am your perfect example. As I have pitied, so you are to pity your
children. You must cultivate a
relationship with your children in which you seek to reflect the fatherly pity
of God.
Yes, that means for sure that as a father you are called to meet
their earthly needs. You are to fill
their bellies. You are to clothe their
backs. You are to put a roof over their
heads. And, yes, leave them an
inheritance. But what a horrible thing
if that is what fathering means to you if it is nothing more than that if
you do not prayerfully create a climate of spiritual warmth in your home, of
tenderness and pity and affection for your child. You must be as God, filled with tender pity and affection and
compassion in Christ for your child. Do
not say, Oh, that pity stuff is for wimps.
Oh, no. As a father you are to
reveal the pity of God. That means that
you must not allow coldness, distance, ill-will, resentment to be the
atmosphere of your home. If you allow
that to be the atmosphere of your home between you and your child, if you are
guilty of those things, if you are guilty of the abuse of your child, if you
are guilty of harboring resentments and ill-will and distance and coldness
toward them, you are being ungodly. You
are not as God!
You must cultivate a relationship with your children in which
you seek to reflect the fatherly pity of God.
This is the question with which we must confront ourselves as
Christian fathers today: Would you want
God to be the kind of parent to you that you are to your children? Fathers, you and I are confronted by that
question today in Gods Word. Would you
want your children to conceive of Gods heart as they conceive of your
heart? That is serious business. You say, I never thought about that when I
got married. I never thought about that
when I started to have children. You
mean to say to me, pastor, that all of my childs concepts of God are also to
be based upon what they see in me as a father? I answer you, Yes. That
is the teaching of Gods Word. That is
why we tremble. That is why we need to
be on our knees before God. That is why
we need the holy Scriptures. That is
why we need the faithful church of Jesus Christ to instruct us. And that is why we need one another in the
house of the Lord. We must work
together as men of God, that we might be fathers in Christ.
Would you want your children to conceive
of Gods heart as they conceive of your heart?
That is why you need, as a man of God, a husband, father, to
know more of your God more and more of Him.
What will our children think of their heavenly Father? Much of the answer is to be found in you,
especially in those formative, pre-school years. Oh, we are not perfect.
That is why repentance is so necessary in our lives before our
children. But, you see, if we resent
those children; if in our frustration we slap them across the face; if we do
not use wise, consistent, biblical discipline applied to the seat of their
pants; if instead we rant and we yell and we call them names and we have no
time for our kids if that is the way we go about things and brush it off as
insignificant and we go on in those patterns of life, then we are being
ungodly. What will that little boy,
that little girl, think when you teach them to fold their hands and pray, Our
Father who art in heaven? How will
they have the courage to look to heaven and believe that they are precious to
their heavenly Father? That means that
you must rear your child conscientiously, principally from the Word of
God. You must seek to be conformed to
the pattern of your heavenly Father.
Your life, then, as a father is to be exemplary. There is nothing that so confounds and
confuses a child as inconsistency. We
must not simply talk of Gods grace. We
must not simply sing lustily about Gods amazing grace to which we are a
debtor. We have to live it in front of
them. Our Lord spoke of this when He
spoke of the painful reality of hypocrisy. In
Matthew 23
He spoke of the Pharisees who said but did not do; of the
Pharisees who set out the duties for others until a man was so laden down that
he could not get up, but, the Lord said, they never lifted a finger to remove
the burden. They said what they were to
do but they never did it.
That means that we can be conversant with the holy Scriptures,
we can talk of honesty, respect for authority, and moral precepts, but if we
fail to embody them, then we do not see our own sins. And we are confounding our children. If you walk in dishonesty, if you lack respect for the civil
authority, for the church authority, you are lading your children with an
inconsistent example. And that is going
to create in them cynicism toward the gospel.
We cannot fool our children.
They know about the reality of our life. We can be guilty of the most glaring inconsistencies and try to gloss
it over with the clever use of words.
You say to your children in their squabbles with each other, You
shouldnt lose your temper like that.
Think before you speak. Honor
your mother. So you said that to your
little boy. Ten minutes later they see
you come home and over a slight provocation you blow up at your wife, you have
hard words, you lose your temper, and in innocency they come and say, Daddy,
isnt that a bad temper? And you
respond, You keep your place. Ive got
a righteous anger. You mind me, you
impertinent thing! That will provoke
your child to anger. That will foul up
your childs ability to discern righteous anger from pride. That will make them lawless. They will not respect authority that way.
It means that as a father you wish to cultivate a climate of
closeness and spiritual warmth in your home.
That is part of Gods pity. In
His pity God comes close to us in compassion.
Gods pity to us is not the pity of a millionaire who says, Well,
heres a donation to help out. But
dont bring those people to my doorstep.
In His pity, God made an atonement for our sins. He erased our debt. But He was not content with that. He was not content simply to have our birth
recorded in heaven, to adopt us in the blood of Christ, and to leave it in the
file drawer way off in heaven someplace.
No, He wants you, He wants you to be with Him, He wants you to enjoy His
fellowship.
The parable of the prodigal son remember about the father who
received his wayward son? How did the
father receive him? Did he receive his
wayward son in a merely cold and legal way as a lawyer behind closed doors
signing papers? No, he pitied him. He received him in the closeness of the
covenant bond. We read that when the
son was yet a long way off, his father was moved with compassion and ran and
fell upon his neck and kissed him. He
did not say, Well, glad you came to your senses, you rebel. You wasted your inheritance. I dont want to be shamed in front of the
neighbors, you had better come on in.
No, He took us from the hog pen, from hell itself, and He turned us to
Him in sorrow. When the son returned,
by Gods grace, in humble self-loathing, how did he find his father to be
distant? Aloof? No, the father was not content with anything
less than intimate closeness. He ran
out to his son, he embraced his son, he put a robe around his son, he put a
ring upon his finger, he invited him to a banquet.
So also, as fathers, we must show the covenant closeness and
spiritual warmth of Christ to our children.
Are you determined that your children will see this in you? Or do you say, They get on my nerves. I want to say this reverently. Do you not think that you and I get on Gods
nerves? How do we act in front of
God? Oh, He chastens us as a holy and
righteous Father. But He is filled with
pity. You say, But I cant understand
where those kids are at, especially those teenagers. Let me ask again, Dont you think that you and I need infinite
understanding, patience, and wisdom from God with us who are such complicated,
fickle creatures of sin? If thats the
way God is toward us, what are we to be?
No, it does not mean that you let your child run all over you. There must be one person who rules the
house, and that is the parent. But you
cannot exercise that rule without pity.
You have to see your own sins.
And if you understand your own sins, you will understand your
children. Then you will understand why
they do what they do. That is why it
hurts, right? As a believing father,
you see your own sin in your own children, do you not? Does that not give you some kind of
compassion and understanding and wisdom how to deal with them? That means that you are determined to be
close to them.
... if you understand your own sins,
you will understand your children.
Now they may not have the same tastes that you have. You may have thought that your little boy
was going to be a mechanic, a carpenter, a computer genius. He was going to be sharp as a tack in
business. And he grows up and shows no
interest for any of those things and you find him at a piano. He likes music. And you do not care about that.
Guess what? That means that you
have to get over to the piano and become interested in those things with
him. Or your little girl was going to
be prim and feminine. And instead of
that she likes dirt a lot of dirt in the back yard. She is not what you pictured.
Well then, you had better learn to go back in the back yard and play
with her in the sandbox if that is what she likes. Do not resent them because they are not what you want them
or expected their interest to be.
You never cuddle what you resent. How many times do we not as Gods children come to God? Constantly, and He never rejects us, does
He? Then, do not say to your child,
Get away. Stop bugging me.
As a father pities his children, so the Lord pities them that
fear Him. Im sure that as fathers,
when we hear the Word of God today, we feel great pangs of guilt and
inadequacy. We often think, as a father,
that it is unmanly to confess our faults in front of our wife or children. Sometimes, brethren, we have to do that, we
must do that. A believing child does
not expect you to be perfect. But he
has a right to expect you to be sincere.
We need to spend time on our knees repenting of our sins.
But we do not leave this Word of God despairing. No, we leave this Word of God
rejoicing. The more we consider what
God has done for us, what pity He has shown to us, the more we will be moved to
exercise that pity to our children. He
pities us. He has chosen us in Christ
not because we were better or more noble.
We were the least. We have no
right. But for His own names sake, He
willed to have compassion upon us. Oh,
what pity! He gave His Son to die upon
Calvarys cross. Look at it, the shame,
the agony, the darkness. Jesus bore
what our Father knew we could never bear.
He gave His Son to do that for us.
And throughout our life our heavenly Father keeps us and carries us and
protects, forgives us and draws us and pities us.
Now when our children see us living in the consciousness of such
pity, then they will be encouraged to look heavenward. Then they will fear Jehovah. They will not dread Jehovah, but they will
stand in awe of their heavenly Father, by the grace of God. Through the Scriptures they will listen to
Him and obey Him. Is that not what we
desire more than anything else? Is that
not what you desire for your children that they know their heavenly
Father? Why, we would die for that! Well, God does not call you to die for
it. God calls you to live and to show
your children a fathers pity.
Let us pray.
Heavenly Father, bless us as human fathers that we may turn to
Thee for wisdom and strength. Bless our
children. Supply to us all that we
need. Amen.