| The Berean Expositor
Volume 16 - Page 75 of 151 Index | Zoom | |
more adult believer. Not only is such obedience "right", but the apostle even goes back
to the fifth commandment with promise.
We are not to reason from this that an obedient child of parents who are members of
the body is assured a long life on the earth, but to gather from the quotation the marked
approval of the Lord upon the obedience of children to parents, even though "the
promise" now may be expressed in some other way than "long life upon the earth". On
the other hand it is morally certain that seeds are sown in childhood by disobedience that
materially influence their well-being in after years. As we have already indicated,
children and slaves are addressed differently from wives, and this may be the better seen
by noticing the recurring features:--
A | 6: 1-3. a | Ye children.
b | Be obedient.
c | To parents.
d | "Right." "Promise."
B | 6: 4.
e | And ye fathers.
f | Provoke not.
g | Your children.
h | Bring them up.
A | 6: 5-8. a | Ye slaves.
b | Be obedient.
c | To masters.
d | "As unto Christ." "Reward."
B | 6: 9.
e | And ye masters.
f | Threaten not.
g | Them.
h | Your Master is in heaven.
Promise and reward figure more prominently here. While "parents" are spoken of in
Eph. 6: 1, and "father and mother" separately mentioned in verse 2, "fathers" are
specially addressed in verse 4.
One of the results of modern civilization has been the transference of this
responsibility from the father to the mother. To thousands of young children the father is
someone who appears on the scene at week-ends, whose name is held up as a kind of
bogey as a last recourse, but who does not come into every-day living contact with the
growing child. The mother's duties connected with the material and physical well-being
of the child often prevent the exercise of those other elements of training that are so
necessary.
Mother-love is protective. Father-love is corrective as well. Mother-love shields the
child from the due results of its own wrong-doing, whereas father-love looks ahead and
sees the dire results in the future. As neither parent can be a substitute for the other, the
child needs both, but in "discipline and instruction" (en paideia kai nouthesia) the
father is the true agent. Heb. 12: 5-11 should be read in this connection. The apostle