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A Tale of Two Families

by Philip Yancey

| 83 Comments

In the process of writing a memoir, I have been reflecting on the families of two sisters.  The first, Joyce, ruled with the iron hand of legalism.  Her five kids obeyed a lengthy set of strict rules—“Because I say so, that’s why!”  Now grown, they tell me they acquiesced mainly out of fear of punishment.

Joyce’s family devotions often centered on the Old Testament: Honor your parents, Fear the Lord, Stop grumbling.  The word grace rarely came up.  When her children got married, Joyce told them, “If your marriage fails, don’t bother coming back here.  You made a vow to God, so keep it.”

All of Joyce’s children have struggled with self-image problems.  They admit it has taken many years for them to think of God as loving, and even now that concept seems more intellectual than experiential.  Joyce and her husband have softened into grandparents, but affection still does not come easily to anyone in the family.

Yet here is a striking fact: defying an overwhelming national trend, all five of those children remain married to their original partners.  They’ve chosen jobs in the helping professions.  All but one are raising their own children in the faith.  At some level, strictness and legalism in this family produced results.

In contrast to Joyce, her sister Annette determined to break out of the rigidity of their own upbringing.  She vowed not to punish her children, rather to love them, comfort them, and calmly explain when they did something wrong.  Her family devotions skipped right past the Old Testament and focused on Jesus’ astonishing parables of grace and forgiveness.

Annette especially loved the story of the Prodigal Son.  “We are those parents,” she would tell her children.  “No matter what you do, no matter what happens, we’ll be here waiting to welcome you back.”

Unfortunately, Annette and her husband would have many opportunities to role-play the parents of the prodigal.  One daughter contracted AIDS through sexual promiscuity.  Another is on her fourth marriage.  A son alternates between prison and a drug rehab center.

Annette has kept her promise, though, always welcoming her children home.  She looks after the grandchildren, posts bail, covers mortgage payments—whatever it takes to live out her commitment of long-suffering love.  I marvel at her spirit of grace and acceptance.  “What do you expect?” she shrugs.  “They’re my children.  You don’t stop loving your own children.”

 

I grew up in a home and church more like Joyce’s.  After a period of rejection and rebellion, I discovered a God of love and forgiveness.  (More accurately, God found me).  I ended up as a Christian writer, piping the tune of grace.  My brother, raised in the same environment, tossed faith aside.  He now attends what he calls an “atheist church”—a Sunday gathering of humanists who spend much time talking about and opposing a God they don’t believe in—and stocks his bookshelf with works by noted atheists such as Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins.

“No one can comprehend what goes on under the sun,” concluded the Teacher of Ecclesiastes.  “Despite all their efforts to search it out, no one can discover its meaning.  Even if the wise claim they know, they cannot really comprehend it.”

A friend of mine, a wise counselor, says that human behavior can be explained by three things: nature (or heredity), nurture (including family upbringing), and free will.  Which, he quickly admits, explains very little, for those ingredients combine in different ways in all of us.  Loving, supportive families sometimes produce wounded and rebellious children; harsh or dysfunctional families sometimes produce the opposite.  In between lies mystery—and God’s grace.

(I welcome hearing your stories of how family did, or didn’t, provide a nurturing balance in cultivating the life of faith.)

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Discussion

  1. Nan Hudson Avatar
    Nan Hudson

    Wow, I am sitting here today struggling with my own dysfunctional adult children who were raised like Annette’s. I was raised more like Joyce’s family and did not want that for mine. But sure feel like I missed something as they struggle with addictions, lost relationships, lost jobs and always blame something other than their own choices. I am in Al-Anon learning to let go of them and live my life as God directs and allow them to be on their own journeys. It is puzzling and I still am trying to see my part in all of this. Something was amiss in building character and principled living in my case…Did I make it too easy? Did I not let them suffer consequences of early choices soon enough? I know God is still in this but the sadness I feel is sometimes overwhelming.

  2. Debra Dichiera Avatar
    Debra Dichiera

    Interesting to read these reflections right after finishing “Hillbilly Elegy.”

  3. Tobie Avatar

    Philip, I have witnessed the phenomenon that you describe above at different times and in different settings of my life. I believe there is indeed a level of mystery to it, but I also believe that gracious people oftentimes undergo greater suffering for the simple reason that they know better how to deal with it. I can hardly imagine what would have happened to Annette’s children if they had Joyce as a mother. So perhaps God allocates his broken children to parents who have a profound grasp of his love and grace. It is not the healthy who are in need of a physician, as Jesus taught us.

  4. Lisa Simmons Avatar
    Lisa Simmons

    As I heard James Dobson say when my kids were little “As a parent, you can’t take all the credit and you can’t take all the blame.” I had an aunt who was like Joyce…also had 5 kids. My Aunt Jerolyn, my mom’s oldest sister, was a rule follower and a rule enforcer. Church was mandatory for her kids. Her husband was in the army and when he was home, he did not attend church. He was a gruff, typical Army guy…also a rule follower…his rules.

    My mom was the baby or her family…. got pregnant with me at age 18. Married my dad because she thought she HAD to. (and stayed married 26 years until she died at age 43) She suffered emotionally a lot both in the marriage and from her church. Even though her parents were there for her (something sort of unheard of in 1959), I believe she felt unworthy to attend church. Many Sundays, I remember standing on the side of the road waiting for my grandparents to pick my sister and me up for church. They just lived 2 houses down from us. When my aunt moved in right next door, the Sunday glares at us playing in the yard as she drove up with her 5 perfectly coiffed children from church, was scary.

    My mom returned to church, rededicating her life to Christ when I was in 8th grade. I gave my life to Christ at the same time. Even though it was still the same little church that she had grown up in and “fallen from grace” in, she dove in…singing in the choir, teaching Sunday school, going to WMU.

    I won’t go into all that happened later, but 4 of my Aunt’s 5 children have been married and divorced at least once, with much drama associated with each. My sisters and I didn’t have the perfectly styled Christian testimonies either, (more DRAMA) but we’ve all been married over 30 years to our husbands. Both of my sisters have incredible ministries to the homeless and underserved. Not bragging, just saying that a lot of what children turn out to be has little to do with the household in which they grew up. Or at least it affects people differently, no matter what kind of parents they had. Like my Mawmaw used to say, “Ya cain’t never tell about some people.”

  5. Pamela Latcham Avatar
    Pamela Latcham

    my parents had both served in ww2 and seen theresults of religious intolerance so were keen that we made up our owm mind regarding faith.I would say that they were nominal christians.They nurtured our individuality and right to choose in life while at the same time being strict.My mother was determined to teach us to be our own person while listening to differing rules They were good parents.I became a chrisian through a Billy Graham meeting and they always respected my choice. My Dad became a christian at the end of his life I was never sure about Mum.I had 4 children and although we were legalistic fundamentalists at the beggining my own memories of my childhood made me think and rethink which was painfull for me and the relationship with my husband. I always said that we didnt bring our children up to be christians that is the work of grace through the Holy Spirit but we taught them about Jesus and forgivness and loving humanity and gave them space. They are all serving God in church and are used of God and I still encourage them to think for themselves ect…I love your books and your message

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83 thoughts on “A Tale of Two Families”

  1. Wow, I am sitting here today struggling with my own dysfunctional adult children who were raised like Annette’s. I was raised more like Joyce’s family and did not want that for mine. But sure feel like I missed something as they struggle with addictions, lost relationships, lost jobs and always blame something other than their own choices. I am in Al-Anon learning to let go of them and live my life as God directs and allow them to be on their own journeys. It is puzzling and I still am trying to see my part in all of this. Something was amiss in building character and principled living in my case…Did I make it too easy? Did I not let them suffer consequences of early choices soon enough? I know God is still in this but the sadness I feel is sometimes overwhelming.

    Reply
  2. Philip, I have witnessed the phenomenon that you describe above at different times and in different settings of my life. I believe there is indeed a level of mystery to it, but I also believe that gracious people oftentimes undergo greater suffering for the simple reason that they know better how to deal with it. I can hardly imagine what would have happened to Annette’s children if they had Joyce as a mother. So perhaps God allocates his broken children to parents who have a profound grasp of his love and grace. It is not the healthy who are in need of a physician, as Jesus taught us.

    Reply
  3. As I heard James Dobson say when my kids were little “As a parent, you can’t take all the credit and you can’t take all the blame.” I had an aunt who was like Joyce…also had 5 kids. My Aunt Jerolyn, my mom’s oldest sister, was a rule follower and a rule enforcer. Church was mandatory for her kids. Her husband was in the army and when he was home, he did not attend church. He was a gruff, typical Army guy…also a rule follower…his rules.

    My mom was the baby or her family…. got pregnant with me at age 18. Married my dad because she thought she HAD to. (and stayed married 26 years until she died at age 43) She suffered emotionally a lot both in the marriage and from her church. Even though her parents were there for her (something sort of unheard of in 1959), I believe she felt unworthy to attend church. Many Sundays, I remember standing on the side of the road waiting for my grandparents to pick my sister and me up for church. They just lived 2 houses down from us. When my aunt moved in right next door, the Sunday glares at us playing in the yard as she drove up with her 5 perfectly coiffed children from church, was scary.

    My mom returned to church, rededicating her life to Christ when I was in 8th grade. I gave my life to Christ at the same time. Even though it was still the same little church that she had grown up in and “fallen from grace” in, she dove in…singing in the choir, teaching Sunday school, going to WMU.

    I won’t go into all that happened later, but 4 of my Aunt’s 5 children have been married and divorced at least once, with much drama associated with each. My sisters and I didn’t have the perfectly styled Christian testimonies either, (more DRAMA) but we’ve all been married over 30 years to our husbands. Both of my sisters have incredible ministries to the homeless and underserved. Not bragging, just saying that a lot of what children turn out to be has little to do with the household in which they grew up. Or at least it affects people differently, no matter what kind of parents they had. Like my Mawmaw used to say, “Ya cain’t never tell about some people.”

    Reply
  4. my parents had both served in ww2 and seen theresults of religious intolerance so were keen that we made up our owm mind regarding faith.I would say that they were nominal christians.They nurtured our individuality and right to choose in life while at the same time being strict.My mother was determined to teach us to be our own person while listening to differing rules They were good parents.I became a chrisian through a Billy Graham meeting and they always respected my choice. My Dad became a christian at the end of his life I was never sure about Mum.I had 4 children and although we were legalistic fundamentalists at the beggining my own memories of my childhood made me think and rethink which was painfull for me and the relationship with my husband. I always said that we didnt bring our children up to be christians that is the work of grace through the Holy Spirit but we taught them about Jesus and forgivness and loving humanity and gave them space. They are all serving God in church and are used of God and I still encourage them to think for themselves ect…I love your books and your message

    Reply

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