4 Key Words To A Happy Home!
The home should be the happiest spot we can ever know on
earth. In it we have the very closest and dearest relationships, and it
can be the constant source of strength and inspiration. But to create
and preserve the happiness of the home requires certain qualities and
attitudes which may be designated by four key words.
The first and most important of these is LOVE:
Ideally it is an unselfish love that brings a man and woman
together to form a home, and ideally, it is love which increases that
happiness of the home with children. The love which binds a family
together is partly an impulse of nature, but in the Christian home, it
is far more unselfish than a mere natural impulse. In Ephesians
5:25-31, the Apostle Paul says, "husbands, love your wives, even as
Christ also loved the church and gave himself up for it; that he might
sanctify it, having cleansed it by the washing of water with the word,
that he might present the church to himself a glorious church, not
having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, but it should be holy and
without blemish. Even so ought husbands to love their own wives as
their own bodies. He that loveth his own wife loveth himself: for no
man ever hated his own flesh, but nourisheth it and cherished it, even
as Christ also the church . . . For this cause shall a man leave his
father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife; and the two shall
become one flesh". This kind of love would lead a man to sacrifice his
own pleasures, even his life, to assure the happiness and welfare of
his wife. And who can doubt that the same unselfish love which a man
should have for his wife, the wife should also have for her husband,
and the parents should have for their children.
Unfortunately, however, love can wither and die. To keep it
alive and warm requires close association, attention and care. When
parents both work and have little time for their children, they become
in a measure strangers to them. By nature, children love their parents
and long for their parent's love in return. Two teenagers, whose
parents after work and the evening meal usually sat glued to the
television till bed time, have testified that they felt so frustrated
and bitter that they even wanted to put a bomb under the TV; yet they
could not tell their parents how they felt. Warm personal love which
expresses itself in affectionate association, care, and attention
prevents such estrangement's and bitterness, and is the single greatest
source of happiness in the home. No amount of money, fast cars, gifts,
and gadgets can substitute for it.
The second key word to happiness is FAITH:
Faith, in all its aspects trust, confidence, reliance brings
happiness. If a home is to be happy parents must conduct themselves in
such a way that they can have implicit faith in each other and inspire
such faith also in their children. The basis of such mutual trust,
however, is a faith in God and in all the attributes we associate with
Him truth, integrity, fairness, compassion, mercy. If parents by their
lives show their loyalty to God and his nature, they instinctively win
the confidence of their children, and children likewise hold the
confidence of their parents. They believe in one another.
The third key word to happiness is SELF-DISCIPLINE:
Self-discipline is acquired only gradually and sometimes
painfully through external discipline. A generation ago we entered the
age of permissiveness, when children were allowed to make their own
decisions, do their own thing. Today psychiatrists are almost
universally agreed that instead of making children happier, this
permissiveness has been a tragedy for both children and parents. It has
led to drinking, drug abuse, crime, broken homes, and an alarming
increase in teen-age suicides. Until children reach enough maturity in
judgement and character to administer self-discipline, they must be
guided by their parents. In Ephesians 6:1-3, the Apostle Paul says,
"Children obey your parents in the Lord: for this is right. Honor thy
father and thy mother (which is the first commandment with promise)
that it may be well with thee, and that thou mayest live long on the
earth". Obedience implies definite restrictions. Parents must emphasize
with children that some things are right and some things are wrong, and
must see that their children observe the limitations. But when
instruction fails and discipline seems necessary, it must never be done
through frustration or anger, but always with love. The apostle says in
Ephesians 6:4, that -fathers are not to provoke their children to
wrath, but nurture them in the chastening and admonition of the Lord.
If this is done right, children actually love and respect their parents
more, for they realize their parents love them enough to worry over and
correct them. As the writer of Hebrews says in Chapter 12:9, our
fathers chastised us, and instead of being estranged we "gave them
reverence". Thus, chastening one in the right way may for the moment
seem "grievous", yet the writer says it "yields peaceable fruit to them
that have been exercised" by it (Chapter 12, verse 11).
The fourth, key word to happiness is RESPONSIBILITY:
Responsibility grows naturally out of the first three. If a
home is filled with love, with mutual confidence and trust, and has had
the guidance and correction necessary to develop self-discipline, the
natural result is a recognition of responsibility. Each member of the
family feels a responsibility to the others, a responsibility to merit
confidence and truth, a responsibility to keep one's promises, to carry
out duties and assignments. As this sense of responsibility becomes a
habit, it carries over to those outside the family, to employers,
associates, and friends.
When the members of a family have little or no confidence in
each other, when they can seldom depend on their doing what they are
supposed to do, you have the making of inevitable unhappiness and
tragedy. But when the members of a family have full confidence in each
other, and when through self-discipline they have formed the habit of
responsibility, you have the sure foundation, not only of a happy
family, but of successful lives.
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