In My Father's House: Finding Your Heart's True Home
By Mary Kassian and Dale McCleskey
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About this ebook
Mary Kassian
Mary Kassian is an award winning author, internationally renowned speaker, and a distinguished professor at Southern Baptist Seminary. She has published several books, Bible studies and videos, including: In My Father's House: Finding Your Heart's True Home, Conversation Peace, Vertically Inclined, the Feminist Mistake, and Girls Gone Wise - in a World Gone Wild. You can visit her blog at GirlsGoneWise.com. Mary graduated from the faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine from the University of Alberta, Canada and has studied systematic theology at the doctoral level. She has taught courses at seminaries across North America She is a popular conference speaker and has ministered to women's groups internationally. Mary has appeared on numerous radio and television shows, including Focus on the Family, Family Life Today, and Marriage Uncensored. Mary was born and raised in Edmonton, Canada. She and her husband, Brent, have three sons: Clark, Matthew, and Jonathan. Mary has mastered the art of cheering after spending countless hours in rinks, arenas, and gyms: her husband is chaplain for a professional football team, her two older sons play ice hockey, and her youngest, volleyball. The Kassians enjoy biking, hiking, snorkeling (when they can find some warm water!), music, board games, mountains, campfires, and their family pets: Miss Kitty and black lab, General Beau.
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In My Father's House - Mary Kassian
PART 1
The Father
Relationship
For you did not receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you
received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out, "Abba,
Father." The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit that we
are children of God.
—ROMANS 8:15-16
You sum up the whole of New Testament teaching in a single phrase, if you speak of it as a revelation of the Fatherhood of the holy Creator. In the same way, you sum up the whole of New Testament religion if you describe it as the knowledge of God as one's holy Father. If you want to judge how well a person understands Christianity find out how much he makes of the thought of being God's child, and having God as his Father. If this is not the thought that prompts and controls his worship and prayers and his whole outlook on life, it means that he does not understand Christianity very well at all. For everything that Christ taught, everything that makes the New Testament new, and better than the Old, everything that is distinctively Christian as opposed to merely Jewish, is summed up in the knowledge of the Fatherhood of God. Father
is the Christian name for God.
—J. I. Packer, Knowing God
CHAPTER 1
THE FATHERHOOD OF GOD
My Papa was a very tactile kind of dad, wrestling and play-fighting with us when we were small and giving out generous hugs when we were bigger. When I needed to talk, I felt comfortable talking with him. Always, always there was an undercurrent of unconditional love. Even after I was married with a family of my own, the first thing I would do when I went to visit my parents would be to spend a few minutes sitting and talking with my dad in his big recliner, feeling then that all was right with the world.
Because of Dad, it has been an easy transition to grasp the concept of having a personal relationship with a heavenly Father. For me, Father means someone who cares about me, listens to me, protects me, and wants to spend time with me. It means someone who loves me unconditionally and provides an ever-present sense of security. I have been given a glimpse of these things on an intimate level already through my earthly father. How much more wonderful to experience these things to their full potential through getting to know my perfect heavenly Father!
—Kirsten
For although there may be so-called gods, whether in heaven or on earth (as indeed there are many gods
and many lords
) yet for us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist; and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we exist. (1 Cor. 8:5–6 RSV)
Jesus said to him, I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.
(John 14:6) Whoever denies the Son does not have the Father either; he who acknowledges the Son has the Father also. (1 John 2:23)
And truly our fellowship is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ. (1 John 1:3)
God has said of you, I will live in them and walk among them, and I will be their God and they shall be my people… . I will welcome you, and be a Father to you, and you will be my sons and daughters.
(2 Cor. 6:16, 18 TLB)
When I was a girl, my favorite day of the week was Sunday. On Sundays we would awaken to the aroma of my Papi's homemade concoction of chocolate porridge topped with meringue and toasted oats. After the bustle of church and entertaining guests for lunch, Papi would take us for a walk in the ravine.
We tossed stones in the brook, raced stick boats, caught frogs, and daredevil balanced across the narrow edge of the tall wooden train trestle. Back home we propped ourselves in front of the old black-and-white television to watch cartoons. Papi would rattle around in the kitchen and eventually appear, carrying newspaper cones piled high with fluffy white popcorn or purtzeln, blobs of doughnut-type pastry sprinkled with icing sugar.
The cartoons had barely ended before Papi and Mami whisked us six kids into the station wagon to go to evening church service. There, in the second-to-last pew on the left-hand side of the little pink neighborhood church, I would snuggle in Papi's lap, lean my head on his heart, and fall fast asleep.
For most of us, father is not an abstract notion. Like me, you probably have real memories and feelings and thoughts about your father to whom you have, however well or poorly, related. But do you think of God as Father?
Last week I was speaking with a friend who is attending a Christian liberal arts college. When I told her I was writing a study about relating to God as Father, she exclaimed, What an anachronistic concept!
(An anachronistic idea is one that is unenlightened and out-of-date.) No one thinks of God as Father anymore,
she continued, glancing out the window to check if I had ridden my dinosaur over. That's positively archaic!
But is the fatherhood of God an idea that is past its time? Ought we to discard the notion as anachronistic and archaic? Can we relate to God apart from relating to him as Father? The answer, if we take the Bible seriously, is no. If we want to follow the God of the Bible, we must relate to him as Father.
First Corinthians 8:6 tells us that there is only one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we live
(NIV). Think about this for a moment: There is one God, the Father. And, according to this verse, the Father is the one for whom we live. Many Christians can quote John 14:6 that Jesus is the only way, but we may miss the key phrase. Jesus didn't say, No one gets to go to heaven without me.
He said, No one comes to the Father.
According to Jesus, coming to the Father
is what Christianity is all about. It's the ultimate goal of salvation.
The importance of knowing God as Father is also taught by the apostle John. John lived to be the oldest and longest-surviving apostle of Jesus. He wrote his Gospel, epistles, and revelation after the other apostles were long dead. I believe God used John's longevity to teach him what was most important. John wrote that if we acknowledge Jesus we also have the Father in our lives (1 John 2:23). He also stressed that our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ
(1 John 1:3 NIV).
If you try to follow the ways of Jesus and the leading of the Holy Spirit, do you realize that when you do this you are ultimately walking in the way of the Father? This is because the Son and the Spirit do not do anything apart from the direction of the Father (John 8:25–26; 12:49; 14:10; 16:13–15).
I have seen many Christians minimize or neglect the importance of working on their relationship with the Father. This is a sad reflection of the times in which we live. Women are told that relating to God as Father is outdated, oppressive, and patriarchal. Men are told that emphasis on God's fatherhood is chauvinistic. As a result, many miss out, for they do not enter into the highest, richest, and most rewarding aspect of their whole relationship with God.
HOW DID WE GET IN THIS SITUATION?
My friend who seemed to think I rode in with Fred Flintstone reflected a common idea today. Many have given up on the value of fathers. Sadly, our culture has now experienced a couple of generations of poor, misguided, absentee, and often abusive parenting. The state of the home has probably never been poorer in Western civilization. As a result, several things have occurred.
Many children have grown up without a loving relationship with a father. As a result, they carry hurt and bitterness that spills over and poisons other areas of their lives, none more important than the spiritual. The statement that God is Father brings no assurance of love and protection. Rather the idea brings only revulsion.
Try as we might to run from the concept of father, however, God had it hardwired into our souls. When God created people, he made them in the form of a family with a father and a mother. He did so because he knows what we need. Children need to come to trust an earthly dad so they will have the ability to trust the heavenly Father.
Augustine said that our hearts are restless until they find rest in God. In our day we might make a specific elaboration of that truth. Our hearts search for a Father who can heal and protect us. We will never find that Father until we come home to the Father's house.
MORE THAN AN INTELLECTUAL ISSUE
Simply hearing or even superficially believing the truth about God makes little difference in the lives of those who carry a father wound. I have a friend who has spent long years caring for people who have grown up in alcoholic or destructive families. He insists that our early feelings form the foundation of everything we later learn.
If we had a wonderful experience with our earthly father, like Kirsten at the beginning of the chapter, we have a sound foundation on which to build. But when our emotional picture of father is warped, everything that we build on the foundation also becomes twisted. For many, possibly even a majority today, a distorted experience with their earthly father has marred the ultimate experience of both earthly and eternal life.
The need of those who have missed the nurture they deserved has driven me to write this study. I want to walk with you through much that the Bible says about God the Father. I wish that we could sit down together and share these truths heart-to-heart. My prayer is that, wherever you start in this process, you will complete it with a greater appreciation for and experience of the love of your perfect Father God.
The principles we will examine apply to men as well as women. I have boys. I see that they process things differently than women, but they have no less need of a father. The wound for a man who never experienced a father's love may cut differently than for a woman, but it cuts just as deep.
On the other hand, you may be blessed as I have been. You may have experienced the life-affirming and enhancing love of a great father. I believe the Scripture we will examine on these pages will speak to you also. You, too, can grow as we revel in the boundless love of Father God.
HOW DO YOU RELATE TO GOD?
Consider your relationship with God. Which member of the Trinity do you find yourself most drawn to, the Father, Jesus, or the Holy Spirit? To whom do you most often address your prayers? If you are a Christian, God is your heavenly Father. Consider the implications of this. Father means personhood. Father means relationship. Father means someone we can know and love. Ultimately, when you strip away all the other pictures and elements of God's nature, you come to the fact that he is Father.
We know that God is ultimately Spirit and that he encompasses both masculine and feminine in his character. However, when choosing the best, most accurate word to reveal the essence of his nature and his relationship to us, God chose the word Father. God is our good, loving, heavenly Father who wants us to know him on a personal basis.
God is our Father. He is not merely like a father, as he is, for example, like a door or rock (John 10:9; Ps. 18:2). Fatherhood is not just an analogy for understanding one aspect of God's character. It is far deeper than that. The term Father expresses the essence of who God is and how he relates to us.
God is Father, and he is our Father. He is our Father, and we are his children. This is one of the greatest, most profound truths of the Christian life. The fatherhood of God is the reality Jesus came to reveal and the relationship he came to restore.
Jesus prayed: O righteous Father! The world has not known You, but I have known You…and I have declared to them Your name, and will declare it, that the love with which You loved Me may be in them, and I in them
(John 17:25–26). This is eternal life, that they may know You
(John 17:3). According to these verses, Jesus introduces (declares) the Father to us so that we might know the Father, experience the love of the Father, and enter into relationship with the Father through his Son, Jesus.
In essence, knowing God the Father is what eternal life is all about.
Knowing God as our Father—as our almighty, loving Father—is the highest, richest, and most rewarding aspect of our whole relationship with him. Knowing God means knowing him as Father. If I do not know God as Father, I do not yet know the meaning of eternal life.
Why do so many people today have such difficulty with the fatherhood of God? Why have I heard so many men and women express fear, anger, or apathy toward the heavenly Father? In the pages ahead we will explore the real-life dimensions of this issue. I pray that the result will be a renewed appreciation for the Father who loves us and a desire to know him.
CHAPTER 2
GOD'S FATHER RELATIONSHIPS
One of the greatest joys of my life was holding my baby daughter right after she was born—to realize I had a daughter, to understand that I was a daddy. What makes it so special to be the daddy of a girl? Maybe it's the way she calls me Daddy! No one else in the world can call me that. It is also the incredible way she says it.
—Neal
There is only one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we for Him. (1 Cor. 8:6)
But now, O LORD,
You are our Father;
We are the clay, and You our potter;
And all we are the work of Your hand. (Isa. 64:8)
But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, to those who believe in His name: who were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. (John 1:12–13)
One Saturday night, as I was having coffee with some hockey moms, waiting for our sons' game to start, we began to discuss the story of Baby Sarah, a custody case that received much local press attention. Apparently, a young woman became pregnant in a relationship that ended shortly after the baby's conception. The father of the child, a young man in his early twenties, was unaware of the pregnancy.
The woman gave birth and gave the baby girl up for adoption. Shortly thereafter, the young man found out that he had fathered a child and began a court battle against the adoptive parents for custody. After a three-and-a-half-year battle, he appeared to have won. The courts ordered that the adoptive parents return Sarah to her biological father.
The TV footage of the event was heart wrenching. The little girl was sobbing Daddy
and clinging to her adoptive father, as he, with tears streaming down his face, was giving her to her now-married biological father, who was also crying at the prospect of finally being able to hold his daughter.
As we chatted about this case, most of the women expressed anguish at the thought of separating Sarah from the only mother and father she had ever known. But a few moms questioned how the adoptive parents could ever explain to the child that her biological father had fought long and hard to be allowed to raise her and that they did everything they could to keep the two apart.
This real-life situation is tragic. It begs the question: Who really is Sarah's father? Is it the man who participated in giving her life? Or is it the man who loved, cared for, nurtured, protected, and related to her on a daily basis?
I think we would agree that both he who gave life and he who began to raise this little girl can rightly be called father. We recognize that there are different types of fatherhood. God also is father in different ways. There are four different types of relationships in which the Bible teaches that God is Father.
FATHER OF CREATION
God is Father of all people by virtue of giving them life. Without the Creator Father there would be no life, no existence, and no family of mankind. Paul, when he preached from Mars Hill, quoted the poet Aratus, For we are also His offspring,
to indicate that humans are creatures of God (Acts 17:28). He argued that it is irrational for humans to worship idols they themselves have created. Instead, humans ought to worship the God who created (fathered) them. In Malachi 2:10 the prophet asks, Have we not all one Father? Has not one God created us?
FATHER OF ISRAEL
God's second fatherhood relationship is his relationship to his covenant nation, the Jews. The Jewish people, as a whole, were chosen to be children of God: I will be the God of all the families of Israel, and they shall be My people… . For I am a Father to Israel
(Jer. 31:1, 9). Over and over again the children of Israel were challenged to recognize and respond to this family relationship.
‘How gladly would I treat you like sons and give you a desirable land, the most beautiful inheritance of any nation.’ I thought you would call me ‘Father’ and not turn away from following me
(Jer. 3:19 NIV). If then I am the father, where is My honor?
(Mal. 1:6). God's father relationship with the nation of Israel foreshadowed the time when people from all nations would enter into an adoptive relationship with him.
FATHER OF JESUS
God the Father and God the Son have a unique relationship. Jesus, who exists eternally, is the Father's only begotten Son
(John 3:16); His firstborn
(Heb. 1:6). The two relate as Father and Son and yet are equal, both being fully God (Phil. 2:6; Heb. 1:8–9). Although the Jews identified themselves as sons of God, Jesus claimed to be the Son of God in an exclusive manner. He regularly addressed God as my Father,
assuming an intimacy that angered the Jews, for they understood this to mean that Jesus was claiming oneness with God (John 5:17–18).
In more than one hundred references to God as Father
in the Gospel of John, the overwhelming majority specifically refer to him as the Father of Jesus. The exclusiveness of their relationship is reinforced by the fact that Jesus never coupled himself with others, even his disciples, as being sons of God. He never referred to God as our
Father, including himself in the our.
Instead, he was careful to differentiate between his own sonship and the sonship of the disciples.
When speaking to Mary, he clearly indicated two distinct relationships: Go to My brethren and say to them, ‘I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God’
(John 20:17).
FATHER OF ADOPTED CHILDREN
The eternal Father-Son relationship between God the Father and Jesus is difficult to understand fully, but the Bible teaches clearly that it is the basis of our own relationship with God. Jesus redeemed us so that we might be adopted into God's family and relate to God as our own Father.
But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, that we might receive the adoption as sons. And because you are sons, God has sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying out, Abba, Father!
Therefore you are no longer a slave but a son, and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ. (Gal. 4:4–7)
Adoption, as understood in the Greco-Roman world, was a legal institution whereby one could adopt a child and give that child all the rights and privileges of a naturally born child. It meant a legal change of status from one family identity and inheritance to another.
In the opening verses of Ephesians, Paul explains that God chose us to be adopted into his family (Eph. 1:4–5). It was the Father's choice and the Father's delight to do so. Paul explains that it was according to his good pleasure.
Through Jesus' sacrifice, God legally changes our status so that he is our adoptive Father and we are his children. This is the redemptive relationship with God all believers share.
YOUR ADOPTED FATHER
When you came to Christ, God forgave your sin. But he did more than that. He adopted you. He took you into his house, gave you a new name, a new identity, and a new life. God became your Father, and you became his adopted child.
The cribs of most biological parents