Subtotal: $
Checkout-
Letter from the Texas-Mexico Border
-
Noah: A Wordless Story
-
Reclaiming a Literary Giant
-
Editors’ Picks Issue 3
-
Does ISIS Prove Nonviolence Wrong?
-
Blood and Ink
-
Dispatch from Ferguson
-
Soldier of the Lamb: What I Learned from Larry
-
Carol of the Seekers
-
Readers Respond: Winter 2015
-
Family and Friends Issue 3
-
Sending Messages into the Future
-
Seizing Moments of Awe
-
Daring to Sing
-
Setting the Table at Koinonia Farm
-
Discovering Reverence
-
Schooling Me, the Surgeon
-
Insights on Childhood
-
What’s the Point of a Christian Education?
-
Every Child Is a Thought of God
-
Kindergartners Are Human Beings
-
Charity Is No Substitute for Justice
-
Digging Deeper: Issue 3
-
Should Christians Abandon Public Schools?
-
Why I Homeschool
-
Why Dads Matter
Jesus’ Surprising Family Values
From Christians’ focus on the family, you might think Jesus saw it as the primary building block of his church. Let’s see what he actually taught.
By Charles E. Moore
November 7, 2022
Available languages: Español
Next Article:
Explore Other Articles:
This article was originally published in the Winter 2015 issue of Plough Quarterly.
Jesus loved little children. According to the Gospel writers, he would place them front and center as an example of how to receive the good news, and he was indignant when his friends spoke sternly to them. He taught his followers that unless we become like children, we cannot enter the kingdom of God.
But Jesus does not appear to have the same admiration for the family. Here his teaching often seems harsh, even alarming. Jesus told a would-be disciple who wanted to show basic decency to his deceased father, “Let the dead bury their own dead” (Luke 9:60). He commanded his disciples: Leave parents, siblings, spouse – even “hate” them – and follow me. When his own mother and brothers came to see him, Jesus’ reaction was terse: “Who are my mother and my brothers?” Looking at those seated around him he said, “Here are my mother and my brothers! Whoever does the will of God is my brother and sister and mother” (Mark 3:31–35).
Jesus himself founded no family – he took no wife, fathered no children, and even called some to be “eunuchs” (Matt. 19:11–12). Contrary to the tradition that salvation is guaranteed by ancestry or that one’s highest social obligation is to family, he reminded his listeners that the covenant that first drew God’s people together was based not on bloodlines but on faith and the miraculous power of God (John 8:31–59).
This is why Jesus dethroned the biological family. While he never denied the family’s worth as a creation of God, he made clear that its importance is not absolute; it is not the primary means by which God’s grace is transmitted to this broken world. Something else is.
Jesus calls his disciples to give their allegiance first and foremost to him. Those who forsake human security, including their families, will receive “a hundredfold now in this age – houses, brothers and sisters, mothers and children, and fields, with persecutions – and in the age to come eternal life” (Mark 10:29–31). In calling into question the primacy of the family, Jesus asks us to imagine a different social order, an all-encompassing community based not on natural ties but on discipleship. Jesus came to establish the new family of God, a family of disciples who follow him with the entirety of their lives (Matt. 10:34–37).
Rodney Clapp, in his book Families at the Crossroads (Intervarsity, 1993), notes how Jesus stretches the family beyond its natural state because his new social order transcends the old boundaries in which people love only their own. In Clapp’s words, “It is through a new family, born again of the Spirit, that God’s kingdom breaks into our world.”
Jesus exalts children because they – not the powerful and the successful – teach us how to become part of this new family. While the disciples argue over who will be the greatest in the kingdom, Jesus places a small child before them as an answer (Mark 9:34–37). Children are dependent and relatively powerless; they teach us to become small so that God’s kingdom may become great. When this happens, a new set of relationships is born of his Spirit under his cross. It is the church, God’s first family, a life of shared sacrifice and community in which family ties are loosed for God to weave together, from many different strands, a new fabric. Only when we become like children and recognize our utter dependence upon God, and only when we put our natural families second, can this kind of society – the church – exist.
In Jesus’ new family, things are turned upside down: the first are last, and the least are the greatest. Things aren’t “natural.” People are more valued than possessions, and love for our biological kindred gives way to serving everyone around us, even those most unlike us. Like children who pay little attention to race or social status, we enter a radically new way of relating to one another.
Paradoxically, within this new and greater family the natural family of parents and children is honored and can even be strengthened. When the first Christians spread the good news across the Mediterranean world, their witness contrasted sharply with the promiscuity and decadence of Roman society. Widows and orphans were cared for, and no one was in need, for entire congregations shared everything they had. Husbands learned self-discipline and self-sacrifice, and women were honored as co-equal heirs of salvation. The result was that the natural family was restored to what God originally intended.
Today there are countless problems undermining families, from divorce and poverty to pornography and drugs. But these problems are only symptoms of what ails us: the absence of community centered on God. The hyper-individualistic worldview that is the hallmark of our age is a threat to the family and to children far more insidious than underfunded schools or immoral lifestyles. This false creed tries to shove God out of the public realm and confine him to private spirituality. It promises that maximizing personal autonomy will bring happiness. Now that the infection runs so deep, it’s no wonder that many families are in trouble.
Jesus calls us to pursue not only the good of those nearest and dearest to us, but to seek first the kingdom of God and his justice. He adds: “And then all these things will be given to you as well” (Matt. 6:33). We must put Christ and his church first. Only then will our marriages and our families be able to withstand the forces that threaten them. And more importantly, only then will we be able to advance the gospel of the kingdom in this fragmented world.
Already a subscriber? Sign in
Try 3 months of unlimited access. Start your FREE TRIAL today. Cancel anytime.
TR
This writing challenged my thinking and the thoughts, I hope, will expand my heart.
Amy Meredith
This seems complicated to me, a child of missionaries who was sent to boarding school far and away from my own family. While those old wounds and questions have certainly be redeemed and covered by Him, I still ponder this, and wonder at it's meaning in terms of those of us, very young whose parents took this admonition very seriously. It is hard not to often think that we ARE the Issac, but for whom there was given no alternative. In my younger, angrier days, I would say to my own parents, "There will be hundreds of this tribe at the Throne, do you ever wonder if your own children will be there?" I had wonderful parents,I never questioned their love and was fortunate to be part of a family that integrated and loved the tribe with whom we worked. Not in a distant, on the hillside kind of way but as part and parcel of them. Maybe that made the difference. It's easier to sacrifice for those whom you love and I did and do still love our "tribe" We and they made the most of the limited time we had together. I was one of the fortunate ones who was less scathed than others. This perhaps works well when others within the community of Believers comes up underneath a child in total loving sacrifice. That was not/nor is always the case for many MK's or in many Mission Boarding schools. I confess to not having great clarity about this, even at 60 years of age.
Sid Plimmer
Oh my, but the world we need to act within. The arrogance to not perceive of God.
Nancy Schmidt
Years ago I had a thought! What if God would use the " Breakdown of the Family" and the old tribal feelings to urge us to understand all men as our brothers. What if we are unable to rightly consider the Others as family as long as our own kin take up our affections and our sight. We "Naturally" prefer those who look and speak and behave like our kin. Maybe mixing it all up is necessary for us to know what God wants us to know, and do what he wants us to do, lamentable as it seems to us. Just a thought. "He has made of one blood all those who dwell upon the earth"
Christopher Russell
If we are in any doubt, it is worth noting also what Christ said about divorce. But the difficulties in understanding or following Christ, including in relation to the family, always seem to arise when we feel ourselves obliged to work out the corollaries of what He said.
Fred Hall
Thanks, Charles for relaying Jesus' challenge to step out of our pious boxes of "Christian families" into the greater fellowship of the family of God. Your friend (of ETS a few years back), Fred Hall .