Family Tensions and the Holidays

— Monday, November 21st, 2011 —

We tend to idealize holidays, but human depravity doesn’t go into hibernation between Thanksgiving and New Year’s. One thing that will hit most Christians, sooner or later, are tensions within extended families at holiday time.

Some of you will be visiting family members who are contemptuous of the Christian faith and downright hostile to the whole thing.

Others are empty nest couples who now have sons- or daughters-in-law to get adjusted to, maybe even grandchildren who are being reared, well, not exactly the way the grandparents would do it. Still others are young couples who are figuring out how to keep from offending family members who are watching the calendar, to see which side of the family gets more time on the ledger. And others are new parents, trying to figure out how to parent their child when it’s Mammonpalooza at Aunt Judie’s house this year.

And, of course, there’s just always the kind of thing that happens when sinful people come into contact with one another. Somebody asks “When is the baby due?” to an unpregnant woman or somebody blasts your favorite political figure or…well, you know.

Here are a few quick thoughts on what followers of Jesus ought to remember, especially if you’ve got a difficult extended family situation.

1.) Peace. Yes, Jesus tells us that his gospel brings a sword of division, and that sometimes this splits up families (Matt. 10:34-37). But there’s a difference between gospel division and carnal division (see 1 Cor. 1, e.g.). The Spirit brings peace (Gal. 5:22), and the sons of God are peacemakers (Matt. 5:9). Since that’s so, we ought to “strive for peace with everyone” (Heb. 12:14).

Often, the divisiveness that happens at extended family dinner tables is not because an unbelieving family member decides to persecute a Christian. It’s instead because a Christian decides to go ahead and sort the wheat from the weeds right now, rather than waiting for Judgment Day (Matt. 13:29-30). Yes, the gospel exposes sin, but the gospel does so strategically, in order to point to Christ. Antagonizing unbelievers at a family dinner table because they think or feel like unbelievers isn’t the way of Christ.

Some Christians think their belligerence is actually a sign of holiness. They leave the Christmas table saying, “See, if you’re not being opposed, then you’re not with Christ!” Sometimes, of course, divisions must come. But think of the qualifications Jesus gives for his church’s pastors. They must not be “quarrelsome” and they must be “well thought of by outsiders” (1 Tim. 3:3,7). That’s in the same list as not being a heretic or a drunk.

Your presence should be one of peace and tranquility. The gospel you believe ought to be what disrupts. There’s a big difference.

2.) Honor. The Scripture tells us to fear God, to obey the king, and to honor (notice this) everyone (1 Pet. 2:17). If your parents are high-priests in the Church of Satan, they are still your parents. If cousin Betty V. does Jello shots in her car, just to take the edge off the cocaine, well, she still bears the imprint of the God you adore.

You cannot do the will of God by opposing the will of God. That is, you can’t evangelize by dishonoring father and mother, or by disrespecting the image-bearers of God. Pray for God to show you the ways those in your life are worthy of honor, and teach your children to follow you in showing respect and gratitude.

3.) Humility. Part of the reason some Christians have such difficulty with unbelieving or nominally believing extended family members is right at this point. They see differences over Jesus as being of the same kind (just of a different degree) as our differences over, say, the war in Afghanistan or the future of Sarah Palin or the Saints’ winning streak this year.

Often the frustration comes not because of how much Christians love their family members as much as how much these Christians want to be right. Bill O’Reilly and Keith Olbermann and the perpetual outrage machine on TV may value the last word, but we can’t.

Jesus never, not once, seeks to prove he is right, and he was accused of being everything from a wino to a demoniac. He rejects Satan’s temptation to force a visible vindication, waiting instead for God to vindicate him at the empty tomb.

Often Christians veer toward Satanism at holiday time because we, deep down, pride ourselves on knowing the truth of the gospel. The rage you feel when Uncle Happy says why “many roads lead to God” might be more about the fact that you want to be right than that you want him to be resurrected.

Plus, we often forget just how it is that we came to be in Christ in the first place. This wasn’t some act of brilliance, like being accepted into Harvard or some exertion of the will, like learning to put a Rubik’s cube together in 20 seconds. “What do you have that you did not receive,” the Apostle Paul asks us, “And if you received it, then why do you boast as though you didn’t receive it?” (1 Cor. 4:6-7)

Satan wants to destroy you through his primal flaw, pride (1 Pet. 5:7-9; 1 Tim. 3:6). He doesn’t care if that pride comes through looking around the family table and figuring out how much more money you make than your second cousin-in-law or whether it comes by your looking around the table and saying, “Thank you Lord that I am not like these publicans.” The end result is the same (Prov. 29:23).

Unless you’re in an exceptionally sanctified family, you’re going to see failing marriages, parenting crises, and a thousand other shards of the curse. If your response is to puff up as you look at your own situation, there’s a Satanist at your family gathering, and you’re it.

4.) Maturity. The Scripture tells us that if we follow Jesus we’ll follow the path he took: that’s through temptation, to suffering, and ultimately to glory. Often we think these testings are big, monumental things, but they rarely are.

God will allow you to be tested. He’ll refine you, bring you to the fullness of maturity in Christ. He probably won’t do it by your fighting lions before the emperor or standing with a John 3:16 sign before a tank in the streets of Beijing. More likely, it will be through those seemingly little places of temptation—like whether you’ll love the belching brother-in-law at the other end of the table who wants to talk about how the Cubans killed JFK and how to make $100,000 a year selling herbal laxatives on the Internet.

Some of the tensions Christians face at holiday time have nothing to do with outside oppression as much as internal immaturity on the part of the Christians themselves.

I’ve had young men who tell me they feel treated like children when they go home to see their extended families. Their parents or parents-in-law are dictating to them where to go, when, and for how much time. Their parents or parent-in-law are hijacking the rearing of their children (”Oh, come on! He can watch Die Harder! Don’t be so strict!”). Some of these men just give in, and then seethe in frustration.

Sometimes that’s because the extended family is particularly obstinate. But sometimes the extended family treats the young man like a child because that’s how he acts the rest of the year. Don’t live financially and emotionally dependent on your parents or in-laws, passively dithering in your decisions about your family’s future, and then expect them to see you as the head of your house.

Be a man (if you are one). Make decisions (including decisions about where, and for how long, you’ll spend the holidays). Teach and discipline your children.Your extended family might not like it at first, but they’ll come to respect the fact that you’re leaving and cleaving, taking responsibility for that which has been entrusted to you.

5.) Perspective. Remember that you’ll give an account at the resurrection for every idle (that means seemingly tiny, insignificant, unmemorable) thought, word, and deed. At the Judgment Seat of the Lord Christ, you’ll be responsible for living out the gospel in every arena to which the Spirit has led you… including Aunt Flossie’s dining room table.

(Image Credit)

A version of this article originally ran on December 20, 2009.

20 Responses to “Family Tensions and the Holidays”

  1. Brian Thomas

    After reading your article, I am left feeling disillusioned.

    First, you do the very thing that you are accusing the holiday Christian visitor of doing and that is: you’re blazing into blogosphere pointing fingers at Christians by generalizing us to be seemingly self righteous. For example, you state that divisiveness is OFTEN caused, not by the unbelieving family, but by the Christian family. Have you done a statistical analysis on this fact? I do believe there is some truth in your statement; however, I often deal with many humble families that visit their extended families, and this is true for myself, that we leave feeling spiritually exhausted from being a pin cushion. This is not because of our pride or because we attack our family, it is the opposite.

    That said, this leads me to my second point, you leave no resolve. How would you suggest we converse with Uncle Happy who finds glory and pride in his fifty years of being in a drunken stupor? Maybe Uncle Happy finds pride in his new live-in girlfriend that he found at the bar and he likes to brag about his escapades with her? How are we to relate? Sure, we have tried changing the conversation to something more glorifying or at least less vile but Uncle Happy likes to go back to the source of his problems: himself. How would you suggest we chat with Aunt X when she constantly discusses her under age future son-in-law that is living with her and her daughter and how she feels it is safe that as an adult, she purchases condoms to teach them responsibility? Are we suppose to say, “Oh yippy!”. Then, we have to deal with snide questions and criticisms of our faith, our methods of life, etc because as you know, the Christian walk is extremely foreign these days. Of course we answer back humbly; unfortunately, you leave no resolve and this leaves me to my third point.

    Based off of your article, I am left feeling that I should not share the Gospel or my faith with my family. You argue that the sword is divisive but for carnal reasons and not gospel reasons. I don’t know about you but there are many times I’ve shared the gospel in all love and humility and it still divides. That is because the Gospel does divide the carnal. It is ill repute to the unregenerate. It is not my fault. Therefore, should I not share it to maintain the peace? In the same regards, you talk about honor and respect but my family does not feel the Gospel is honoring or respectful and many families are this way. However, if I don’t share it with them they may never hear it. So, is it better to share the Gospel or to look like the model Christian family that they would have me be? I’m sure you would respond (I’m guessing) that we should share the Gospel and our faith humbly but from the feel of your article, we’re left being on the defensive and are left in jeopardy of forgoing the Gospel at all.

  2. yankeegospelgirl

    “Jesus never, not once, seeks to prove he is right.”

    Mark, Chapter 2

    8.And immediately when Jesus perceived in his spirit that they so reasoned within themselves, he said unto them, Why reason ye these things in your hearts?

    9.Whether is it easier to say to the sick of the palsy, Thy sins be forgiven thee; or to say, Arise, and take up thy bed, and walk?

    10.But that ye may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins, (he saith to the sick of the palsy,)

    11. I say unto thee, Arise, and take up thy bed, and go thy way into thine house.

    12. And immediately he arose, took up the bed, and went forth before them all; insomuch that they were all amazed, and glorified God, saying, We never saw it on this fashion.

    13. And he went forth again by the sea side; and all the multitude resorted unto him, and he taught them.

    ***

    That was only one I thought of off the top of my head, and I am confident anyone could find similar passages. Jesus didn’t beat around the bush about who he was and the power he had.

  3. Beth Morgan

    Thank you Dr. Moore for writing articles like this one. This has humbled my heart and spirit today and I’m reminded who ultimately has power and control in my life.

  4. Laurie Wallin

    The truth always stings a little… but what joyous healing and perspective it brings! Way to speak the truth in love to all of us striving to be a little more like Him these holidays!

  5. Calvert Wallace

    Dr. Moore, thanks for the post. It is always good examine our own heart and motives as we approach time with family, particularly as we hope to redeem the time with them.

    Brian Thomas and yankeegospelgirl, you appear to have missed the point of Dr. Moore’s post. It might be a good time examine your own motives and humility.

    Happy Thanksgiving all. May your time with family be refreshing and fruitful.

  6. yankeegospelgirl

    I didn’t miss the point of the post. I was simply noting that Dr. Moore made a hasty claim that is not backed up by Scripture. As for the post as a whole, it seems like the same tired old false dichotomies—better to be kind than right, better to be loving than truthful, etc., etc. There seems to be this assumption that anybody who wants to get it right and tell the truth must be smug and self-satisfied about it. Some of us are passionate about the truth while still fully aware of our own sinfulness and shortcomings.

    Blake in reply

    @yankeegospelgirl,

    “Some of us are passionate about truth while still fully aware of our own sinfulness and shortcomings” -

    No one is fully aware of our own sinfulness. Neither is Dr. Moore. That is why I praise God that certain leaders continue to remind us to examine ourselves while we contend for the truth. We all should examine our motives, and fully expect our sin to be ever-present. If you did this, you wouldn’t see this exhortation as tired old false dichotomies.

  7. Wade C. Davis

    Thank you for this post Dr. Moore.

    I agree that we should all examine ourselves and not be so quick to condemn others and yet at the same time, I can’t say that its right to sell out the truth and throw it under the bus as a means of keeping peace. Please don’t get me wrong because I don’t think you are advocating this but it is to say that the life is a hard one and it is one that wears me down. Perhaps I don’t rest in Him enough and I fatigue because I try to do too much under my own power and volition.

    It is my hope for us all to come before Christ on bended knee, bowing head and an open heart and ask Christ to guide our direction during our time we have been granted to fight the good fight according to His will.

    God bless all of my Christian brothers and sisters. I love you all and please do not loose heart.

    May it all be for His glory,
    W.

  8. LD

    The final word: a real man would stand up and lead his family, and any company, in family worship during the Christmas holiday. No qualms, no complaints. Just like eating oatmeal, it’s the right thing to do…

Trackbacks

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