[1] In recent months I have had several conversations with
colleagues in various aspects of church work about their
experiences balancing family life and vocational obligations.
Two particular scenarios stand out sharply. In one instance a
friend and I discussed exhortations (or was it reprimands?) we had
received from childless persons about not allowing our children to
run our professional lives. In another instance a pastor told
me that when, anticipating the birth of his first child, he asked
the congregation's council to raise his salary to meet the newly
revised synodical guidelines, he was turned down and told that in
an area where almost all families required two incomes, it was not
an unreasonable expectation that his wife would work. At the
least, their decision to have her stay home with the child was
their business; it was not the congregation's responsibility to
underwrite this lifestyle choice.
[2] Although a former first lady made the African aphorism, "It
takes a village to raise a child," a popular catchword in American
political discourse, American society shows itself schizophrenic on
this issue, as on so many others where the personal and the public
overlap. Proposals for health care reform usually begin with
universal coverage for children. Concerns at the way the
public education system seems to be failing its students have
fueled various policy proposals, from the implementation of state
standards and tests to the provision of increased state-subsidized
financial support to help the next generation of citizens afford
the astronomical costs of a college education.
Simultaneously, the fact that such obvious basics of child welfare
have been so dangerously neglected betrays a certain indifference,
if not hostility, to children and the adults who bring them into
the world and then expect the citizenry at large to help shoulder
the cost of their actions. Not long ago James Surowiecki in
one of his "The Financial Page" articles in The New Yorker
discussed the kind of economic activity child rearing
represented. He pointed out that parents, while doing work
that may indeed be personally rewarding for them, nonetheless, by
becoming parents, take upon themselves a task critical for society
as a whole. Communities benefit from their efforts, without having
to share the hands-on daily grind of parenthood, and thus are
rightly obliged to underwrite and support those who are so
engaged. We baby-boomers and -busters are relying on upcoming
generations capable of productive economic activity and
social responsibility if our own life's work is not to fall to ruin
and if we are to have our turn at collecting the benefits seniors
in this country regard as a societal obligation to them. The
short-term advantage of getting a parent to favor personal
professional achievement over the relational work of family life
may well prove illusory in the long run.
[3] As we think about how to value family life and child care in
our own lives of discipleship, Luther's theology offers some
helpful ideas. One cannot overestimate the radical change
wrought in the society of his time by Luther's understanding of
vocation. The late medieval church regarded the celibate life
under vows of poverty, chastity and obedience to be a higher
spiritual way to live out one's faith. And indeed, in a time
when marriages were arranged according to social advantage, where
the opportunities for women were sharply curtailed by their
relegation to the domestic sphere, and when pregnancy and
childbirth were often deadly, life in the monastery, as a number of
feminist historians have argued, was likely more often experienced
in terms of its possibilities (self-governance, social recognition,
safety and education) than defined by its deprivations. Good
arguments can be made for the view that on the whole the
Reformation represented a net loss for women: they lost the arena
for the formation of spiritual identity in their own right with the
closure of the convents. The stripping away of saints' days
from the liturgical calendar removed most of the female figures
celebrated by the church as exemplary witnesses to the faith.
And the abolition of religious activities connected with such
practices as funeral rites and processions deprived women of public
roles in the life of the church. Once the Protestant
Reformation moved beyond its initial radical stage to become a new
form of religious establishment, it did not compensate these losses
for women.
[4] In contrast to the monastic ideal, Luther hallowed domestic
life and celebrated the way it anchors women and men in the
world. The purpose of Christian freedom created by the Gospel
was to enable the believer to live in God by faith and for the
neighbor by love. It is a constant process of breaking the
bondage of self-absorption, the state of being incurvatus in se, so
as to turn one outward to the world beyond one's own
interests. The course of one's life is now charted by the
needs of one's neighbors, and there are no neighbors nearer nor
more constant in their need for our self-emptying than our
children. In his earliest writings on marriage Luther gave
the institution a grudging endorsement as the best defense against
lust. Marriage covered the evil inherent in the sexual
congress of a couple and made possible the non-imputation of the
sin of lust. However, later writings show Luther's growing
appreciation of the positive good achieved in the married state,
the joys of companionship and the excellent arena for evangelical
discipleship which it provided. The greatest good of marriage was
the creation of family; married couples bearing and raising
children were the foundation of both the church and the civil
community and thus essential to both the left- and righthand
kingdoms.
But the greatest good in
married life, that which makes all suffering and labor worth while,
is that God grants offspring and commands that they be brought up
to worship and serve him. In all the world this is the
noblest and most precious work, because to God there can be nothing
dearer than the salvation of souls. Now since we are all duty
bound to suffer death, if need be, that we might bring a single
soul to God, you can see how rich the estate of marriage is in good
works. God has entrusted to its bosom souls begotten of its
own body, on whom it can lavish all manner of Christian
works. Most certainly father and mother are apostles,
bishops, and priests to their children, for it is they who make
them acquainted with the gospel. In short, there is no
greater or nobler authority on earth than that of parents over
their children, for this authority is both spiritual and
temporal. (LW 45:46)
[5] From Luther's perspective celibacy was not a superior means
of spiritual formation but a deforming of the human being. It
could be received as a divine charism, but to require or impose it
as a superior way of life was both cruel and blasphemous.
[6] Luther takes every opportunity to milk a biblical text for
support of his campaign against enforced celibacy. For
example, in his Genesis Commentary Luther portrays the patriarchs
and matriarchs as exemplary role models for the German burghers of
his own day. The men, as heads of households, have much to
teach about bearing the burdens of rule over others. The
women are paragons of modesty, hospitality and obedience (or if
not, as in the case of the allegedly gadabout Dinah, their fate
reinforces Luther's moral lessons in domestic discipline). The life
of Sarah is a reproach to papist presumption.
. . . Sarah cooks, makes
butter and cheese, feeds the cattle, etc. I agree that these
are tasks of servants and maids. Yet they are presented by
the Holy Spirit as an example.
But if the papists despise these
works and choose for themselves other extravagant, difficult, and
arduous performances of good works, let them take delight in their
folly, and let them regard the duties of the household as
filth. But let us maintain that if faith is joined to those
menial works, they are regarded as more precious than all gold and
as more excellent than any celibacy without faith.
Surely the Holy Spirit depicts the
saintly mistress Sarah with these colors to make it clear that even
though she is married, she surpasses virgins in chastity.
Therefore it is a great sin for the papists to inveigh against the
marriages of the patriarchs, which are most honorable workshops not
only of chastity but of all other virtues. These facts should
be carefully noted in order to shatter the opinions of the
fanatics. (LW 3:211)
[7] Luther makes one keenly aware that for the purposes of
salvation the commonplace human activities of marriage,
child-bearing, and family life prove to be essential. It is
in these vocations that the patriarchs and matriarchs receive and
preserve the promise of God. The mothers especially, tried by
the burden of barrenness and obliged at times to overrule their
husbands in matters pertaining to the welfare of their sons, embody
cherished Lutheran doctrines: the dialectic of law and
gospel, the simul iustus et peccator, the theology of the
cross. They also enact the eternal struggle between the true
and the false church. These women in their domestic modesty
prove to be simultaneously movers and shakers of God's redemptive
plan for humankind.
[8] The couples of Genesis are in many ways exceptional cases,
women and men faced with unique, often dire circumstances that
justify extraordinary actions on behalf of the Word, actions that
are clearly not normative for discipleship in general. At the
same time they manifest God's power to bring forth saints from the
common clay of family life and household management and thus remind
parents how high their calling is coram deo.
Now you tell me, when a
father goes ahead and washes diapers or performs some other mean
task for his child, and someone ridicules him as an effeminate fool
- though that father is acting in the spirit just described and in
Christian faith - my dear fellow you tell me, which of the two is
most keenly ridiculing the other? God, with all his angels
and creatures, is smiling - not because that father is washing
diapers, but because he is doing so in Christian faith. Those
who sneer at him and see only the task but not the faith are
ridiculing God with all his creatures, as the biggest fool on
earth. Indeed, they are only ridiculing themselves; with all
their cleverness they are nothing but devil's fools. (LW
45:40-41)
[9] In Luther's eyes, all mothers and fathers bear
responsibility for the preservation of God's promise because their
labors make it possible for children to become the mature, ardent
confessors of the evangelical faith and the responsible citizens
God desires. If the next generation is to be able to proclaim
the grace of God in Christ, they must first experience it through
their parents' care.
[10] Luther identifies four crucial duties that fall upon
parents as "bishop and apostle" to their children: to provide the
sacrament of baptism for infants, to form children in the true
faith as they grow, to attend to their education for a worthy
vocation, and to provide them with a suitable spouse in a timely
fashion, that is, before lust drives them to take matters into
their own hands and risk significant sin. A ferocious
defender of infant baptism over against the Anabaptist critics of
his day, Luther hails the practice as showing forth the utter
graciousness of the gospel. While he plays with the idea that
infants may indeed have faith (think the baby who becomes John the
Baptizer leaping in his mother's womb when the pregnant Mary comes
to visit her), Luther does not finally care much one way or the
other, since what makes any baptism a sacrament is not the faith of
the recipient, whatever her age, but the promise of God attached to
the sign. Even an infant carries within her the deadly
inability to trust, fear, or love God, and it is the measure of
God's mercy that God takes action on her behalf, bestowing upon the
unknowing child what she could never secure on her own.
Infant baptism also witnesses to the church's deep trust in God to
bring to fruition the good work God has initiated in the
sacrament.
[11] What follows is simply living out the consequences of
having been baptized, or as Luther puts it in the Large Catechism,
to learn to "use Baptism aright." Here parents play a crucial
role in catechizing their children. Although catechesis is
necessary for all ages, the young are particularly susceptible to
influence, for good or ill. Scholars have noted the irony of
the fierce regimentation by which the Lutheran young were to
acquire knowledge of Christian freedom. One has only to read
Luther's preface to the Small Catechism to realize that though one
was not justified before God by one's works, one was expected
nonetheless to work very hard at one's formation in the faith and
the moral life.
If any refuse to receive
your instructions, tell them that they deny Christ and are no
Christians. They should not be admitted to the sacrament, be
accepted as sponsors in Baptism, or be allowed to participate in
any Christian privileges. On the contrary, they should be
turned over to the pope and his officials, and even to the devil
himself. In addition, parents and employers should refuse to
furnish them with food and drink and should notify them that the
prince is disposed to banish such rude people from his land.
Although we cannot and should not
compel anyone to believe, we should nevertheless insist that the
people learn to know how to distinguish between right and wrong
according to the standards of those among whom they live and make
their living. For anyone who desires to reside in a city is
bound to know and observe the laws under whose protection he lives,
no matter whether he is a believer or, at heart, a scoundrel or
knave. (Book of Concord, Tappert edition, p.
339)
[12] To use baptism aright is a matter of keeping oneself
connected with the various means of grace - worship, prayer,
proclamation, sacraments - so that one is constantly exposed to the
power of the Spirit where God has promised to make that power
savingly present. Thus, it is impossible to use baptism
aright, to receive its benefits, apart from the church. When
Luther encourages the troubled conscience to take heart from the
assurance that "I am baptized," he is not so much reminding us of a
specific event in time past but of the lifelong condition of
repentance and renewal which it has inaugurated.
[13] Luther shared the common perception of his time that human
development proceeded in seven-year cycles, each culminating in a
crisis that tested and advanced maturation. The most
problematic of these came with the awakening of the sex drive at
approximately age fourteen. Thereafter children became
aggressive and defied authority. The adults charged with
their care had no control over the biological onset of sexual
maturity, although they often tried to delay the psychological
confrontation with this new phase of personhood, hoping thereby to
prolong the child's relative tractability to good influences.
Responses of denial, avoidance and repression were no more
successful in Luther's day than in our own. Luther recognized
their futility in the face of the natural, necessary, and God-given
force of sexual desire and condemned them as failures of
discipleship. This unwillingness to take seriously the
neighbor's real need sets snares for the consciences of
adolescents, comparable in Luther's judgment to those set by
required monastic vows of celibacy. A safe passage through
puberty and into full adulthood depended on parental honesty in the
midst of the crisis and on proper discipline and teaching in the
more receptive years of childhood. Since it is impossible and
unhealthy to suppress the body's needs (as much so with sexual
urges as with the processes of elimination), the proper response
was to proceed with the arrangement of a suitable marriage.
Luther strenuously disapproved of secret marriages, that is, the
freely exchanged promises between two parties of legally
marriageable age, without public witnesses or parental
consent. He recognized the parents' right to dissolve any
union contracted without their knowledge and consent, but he also
insisted that such interference be for substantive reasons.
He did not concede to parents the authority to prevent a child's
marriage arbitrarily. He condemned any attempt to force a
child to marry against his or her will or to embrace a life of
celibacy. Such actions placed a child at high risk rather
than protecting him or her from temptation and sin. Luther
presents Abraham as a model parent in this regard when he seeks to
find his son a bride. Although the biblical text says nothing
about an exchange between the father and Isaac concerning the
latter's marriage, in the Genesis Commentary Luther uses their
situation to commend the candor and respect shown by both
parties. He exhorts parents and children of his own day to
follow their example in matrimonial matters.
[14] Education is the fourth category of parental responsibility
discussed by Luther. Before the Reformation the church had
been the chief provider of education through its monastic and
cathedral schools. The abandonment of monastic life by many
and the forcible closure of monasteries by Protestant civil
authorities had a devastating effect on schooling. In
addition, the already strong disdain for formal education amongst
the common people was heightened by radicals who rejected it as
unnecessary for the ministry and even offensive to the Holy Spirit
which blows where it wills. The wider society became
increasingly utilitarian in its estimation of the value of
education; one either trained for one of the professions (law,
medicine, theology) or one limited one's studies to matters
pertinent to the world of commerce and trade. In contrast,
Luther championed a liberal arts program including biblical
languages, history, singing, music and mathematics, that was
universal and compulsory.
So you say, "But who can
thus spare his children and train them all to be young
gentlemen? There is work for them to do at home," etc. . .
. My idea is to have the boys attend such a school for one or
two hours during the day, and spend the remainder of the time
working at home, learning a trade or doing whatever is expected of
them. In this way, study and work will go hand-in-hand while
the boys are young and able to do both. . . . In like manner,
a girl can surely find time enough to attend school for an hour a
day, and still take care of her duties at home. ("To the
Councilmen of all Cities in Germany that They Establish and
Maintain Christian Schools" in Martin Luther's Basic Theological
Writings, ed. Timothy F. Lull, Fortress Press, 1989, p.
727)
[15] Students who showed greater promise should continue in
school longer and perhaps even pursue a life of study. Luther
is critical of parents who worry only about their own economic
interests when making decisions concerning their offspring's
education. If they keep promising youngsters out of school to
work, they sin against their children as well as against the wider
community and the prince by robbing them of human resources that
could be of great value to church and society. And worst of
all they wrong God, who requires a properly educated pool of talent
to govern creation and to proclaim the Gospel. In such
instances Luther appeals to the governing authorities to act in
loco parentis, insuring that such children receive the
opportunities their talents warrant. Indeed, the majority of
parents, even those who mean well by their children, have neither
the experience nor the resources to make adequate provision for
their education. Luther appeals to civil authorities to
assist and, if need be, overrule parents in fulfilling this part of
their vocation; clearly Luther knew that it takes a village to
raise a child.
[16] This semester I have been teaching the "Luther and
Lutheranism" course at PLTS. The reading list includes works
of Bonhoeffer and Tillich. Recently in a discussion of the
latter's concept of ultimate concern, the students were asked to
identify options that seem dear to the hearts of contemporary
society. The question, they were reminded, is not whether you
have faith, for everyone does; rather, the question is what god do
you invest your faith in. One of the participants suggested
that for some people their children are their ultimate concern and
that their devotion to their offspring becomes a form of idolatry -
a possibility ripe for troubling the parental conscience. It
made me mindful of a passage form Bonhoeffer's The Cost of
Discipleship, which we read earlier in the semester.
Whendiscussing the hidden righteousness propounded in the Sermon on
the Mount, he writes:
No, they [the scribes] would
say, genuine obedience and humility are only to be found in the
ordinary, the commonplace, and the hidden. Had Jesus urged
his disciples to return to their own kith and kin, back to duty and
calling, back to the obedience of the law as the scribes expounded
it, they would then have known that he was devout, humble and
obedient. He would then have given his disciples an inspiring
incentive to deeper devotion and stricter obedience. He would
have taught what the scribes knew already, what they would gladly
have heard him emphasize in his preaching, namely that true
devotion and righteousness consist not merely in outward behaviour,
but in the disposition of the heart, and conversely not only in the
disposition of the heart, but also in concrete action. * * * The
disciples are told that they can possess the 'extraordinary' only
so long as they are reflective: they must beware how they use it,
and never fulfil it simply for its own sake, or for the sake of
ostentation. The better righteousness of the disciples must
have a motive which lies beyond itself. Of course it has to
be visible, but they must take care that it does not become visible
simply for the sake of becoming visible. * * * We have to take heed
that we do not take heed of our own righteousness. Otherwise
the 'extraordinary' which we achieve will not be that which comes
from following Christ, but that which springs from our own will and
desire. (The Cost of Discipleship, New York: Touchstone,
1995: pp. 156, 157, 158)
[17] "Ugh!" I wrote in the margin, "how would I know the
difference!?" Although theologically I see the point of this
exhortation, pastorally I find myself thinking that this is
precisely the kind of self-scrutiny likely to lead to paralyzing
scrupulosity (incurvatus in se again) that Luther's understanding
of the Gospel was meant to counteract. Can one love the
neighbor, including one's children, and care for them at the
expense of one's love for God? Yet I would argue that the way
to God is not separable from the path of discipleship that sinks us
into our neighbor's need and future. Perhaps it is a blessing
that the vocation of parenthood is so constant in its demands that
it leaves one little time to brood over possible boundary
violations. There can never be too much grace for the work of
parents, and given what Luther calls the stout promises of the
Gospel, there will never be too little either.