All the broken fathers who fell short of what we needed and all the faltering mothers who chose their own needs over ours,
they follow us, long after we’ve moved past them, into adulthood, into our own parenting, into our relationship with God. It is the first failing we own, our inability to heal our parents’ brokenness. Before we even form a sense of ourselves we know, somehow, we’ve failed because our existence isn’t enough to make them whole.
Our portal into this world, the first voices we hear, first eyes that drink us in, first hands that receive us, are also our introduction to its fragile nature, its bondage to sin, its fallen state. We gaze into the eyes of these sinners falling deeply in love.
As we grow in the shadow of their brokenness, we beam our love in their direction like healing rays, like spiritual laser treatments, as if sin was a form of TB and our love was the sun; willing them to be what somehow we know they can, projecting behind them a brilliant shadow, their perfect selves, even as we avoid the blows raining down on us from the darker reality of those on whom we rely for nurturance, provision, and instruction in this life.
We’re stubborn in our love, even if they break us, walk away, tear our hearts from our chests, or neglect us, leave us lying hungry and bleeding, still we love them and will them to love us with the perfect love we know by faith exists and is our birthright. Much of our adult lives is about seeking redemption for failing to love them into perfection, into wholeness, into their greater selves.
We brace against the howling in the wind, screaming about apples that don’t fall far from trees, about the sins of the fathers visited on the sons, about generational curses and spoiled inheritance. But there is a greater voice that whispers pure truth into the gale and we strain to receive it where we stand, “The word of the Lord came to me: “What do you mean by repeating this proverb concerning the land of Israel, ‘The fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children’s teeth are set on edge’? As I live, declares the Lord God, this proverb shall no more be used by you in Israel. Behold, all souls are mine; the soul of the father as well as the soul of the son is mine: the soul who sins shall die.” Ezekiel 18:1-4 (ESV)
For even the children of broken fathers and babies abandoned by wandering mothers find wholeness, hope, a home in Jesus Christ. “For my father and my mother have forsaken me, but the Lord will take me in.” Psalm 27:10 (ESV)
And it is within His love we find our perfect Father, and beneath His wings we know a mother’s unbroken soul and from within His great heart, we discover the power to heal ourselves and those we love, through forgiveness, mercy, and grace. And so, we receive the remedy for our own brokenness so that we can be the answer to the prayers of our own children, so our offspring will be freed from our failings and healed of the brokenness that would be our legacy if it weren’t for Jesus.
It’s in this way we stand, no fall to our knees beside our broken fathers and our fallen mothers and cry, “Mercy, Lord, have mercy on us all.” “Abba, Father,” we cry, “save us, from our wounds and from our power to wound our children.”
The burden of this fallen planet is evidenced in the scars children bear from broken fathers and mothers with twisted souls. In this we bleed and weep.
But the One who lived, a perfect Son, and fulfilled a perfect Father’s will, this Jesus, has secured for us a place where all wounded children find the answer to the perfect love they knew, by faith, existed all along.
It’s not a false hope, loved one. Your name is not Forever Wounded, Not Enough, Unloved, Rejected, Damaged, or Abandoned. No. Those are lies the darkness whispered as you wept alone at night. Your true name is Cherished Child of the Most High God, Redeemed from the Land of Lost Children, Made Whole in the Grace of the Living God, Restored in the Name of Jesus, Adopted into the Eternal Family, One Who is Enough for the Perfect God.
Your true name is written on the palms of His hands and it’s those hands that reach for you now to hold you, to heal you, to guide you into the freedom that awaits you in His great heart. Take His hand, loved one, and know your Father receives you just as you are.
All the Broken Fathers (and mothers) https://t.co/t4szK6B3i6 key to surviving our childhood and living free #amwriting #childabuse #healing
— Lori Roeleveld (@lorisroeleveld) May 30, 2016
The Conversation
Oh Lori, I cried all the way through this post. I was that broken child trying to heal my parents. I still shine the light of Jesus toward them. You so beautifully captured my life and many others who have endured the consequences of sin. Thank you for the reminder that our Heavenly Father binds the broken hearted and heals all wounds.
As I look back on my younger years I realize how hard I tried to be a better daughter so my parents might pay more attention to me. When I reached the age of 40 or so and it was high time for me to parent myself with God’s help, it dawned on me that they were only human just like me, and were doing the best that they knew how to do at the time. I still get upset when I start to think that it all could have been more cozy, but I strive to extend the love of Christ towards them now. I am very thankful that God has provided a spiritual family for me that makes up for the gaps I perceive in my biological family. And I am truly grateful that I have found that I have at last found a place that I can relax and feel taken care of in God’s arms.
So very powerful, Lori. So many families are so broken, so with minor defects others with major flaws. I think we all struggle with feeling if we’d love them better/different/more things would be better. This post is a tear-jerker. May God bless you, and your readers.
Thank you for once again sharing Truth infused with understanding, compassion, and hope.
May God bless Father’s Day at your house. Amen
Thank you for sharing this truth so eloquently.
Beautiful! Grace for me. I was a broken mom. Now, I am whole in Christ! Now I want to show His love to my children. Share that love that heals and mends the broken. Thank you!