Families, communities, and nations
are strengthened when fathers are active in the lives of their offspring.
Children and teens need the influence of their father in their lives in order
to develop properly. Boys, in particular, need their fathers to teach them how
to become men and how to treat women.
There are many statistics that show
the importance of fathers in the home. Matt Walsh shares some of them in his
article, “3 Things A Father Must Teach His Son So That His Son Doesn’t End Up Dead Or In Prison.” There is much power in the above title and much wisdom in his article. However,
I want to share the statistics that he quotes at the beginning of the article.
Over 60% of youth suicides are from
fatherless homes. Over 80% of youths in prison are from fatherless homes. Over
70% of high school dropouts are from fatherless homes. Over 70% of kids in drug
abuse treatment centers are from fatherless homes. The fatherless home epidemic
is a verified national emergency, and should be treated as such.
But the fatherless factor is just one
part of the equation. The other part is that nearly all of the kids who fall
into these statistics are boys. Pretty much every mass shooter in American
history, with very rare exception, has been male. 93% of the inmates in federal
prison are men. 90% of murders are committed by men. The vast majority of
rapists and child molesters are male. Men are three times more likely to kill
themselves.
The statistics quoted above are
quite daunting. In fact, they are terrifying. If I were a single mom, I would
be scared out of my wits for the futures of my sons. These statistics show that
each boy needs a real man in his life. Walsh has a solution to the problem in the
nation. “The solution brings us back to the beginning: fathers. Boys need to be
taught how to be boys, and they need fathers to do the teaching.”
Every boy needs a father who is a
part of his life. He needs more than a roof over his head, food to eat, and
clothes to wear. He needs a father who will teach him what a man does. Fathers
bring toughness to their children, just as mothers bring softness to them.
Children need both mother and father – or a valuable substitute. In an
emergency, this could be a loving step-parent, a grandparent, an aunt or uncle,
or even someone from the Church or school – but a biological parent is the best
for the child.
Walsh does not throw girls to the
side and says that they need guidance also. He explains that girls have lots of
role models. Most homes today have a mother in them. If not, there are lots of
women ready to “mother” another woman’s daughter. Society tends to build girls
up while at the same time undermining boys. Walsh reminds us of a “simple
truth: women want to make a home, and men want to go into the woods and hunt.
The only question is what exactly they will hunt, and how.” Boys need dads to
show them what to hunt and how to do it. Walsh explains how fathers can help
their sons.
1)
We need to teach them to take healthy risks. Boys will take risks…. This is why the generally cautious voice of the
mother needs to be balanced by a father who knows that a scraped knee and a
busted lip can do a young man a lot of good. A boy needs his dad to say: “Go
climb that tree.” “Go hit that ball.” “It’s just a scratch.” “It’s okay to
punch back.” …
These are the risks of early boyhood.
But as a boy grows, he needs his dad there to teach him how to take different
kinds of risks, fraught with a different kind of peril….
2)
We need to teach them to protect the weak. Boys are fascinated by violence.
There’s no use fighting it. The idea of a man using his physical strength to
defeat and conquer another man is innately appealing to most every boy….
A father must be there to say, “It’s
good to be strong. It’s good to fight for the right reason. But if you want to
be a cool, strong man like me, you should only use your strength to protect
people who are weaker than you – never to hurt them.” …
3)
We need to teach them to worship God. There are two things that every boy
needs to see his father do: show affection to his wife, and pray. There are few
images more powerful, more formational, for a young boy that the image of his
father kneeling with his hands clasped. From the boy’s perspective, his father
spends all day telling people what to do, running the show, doling out
discipline, and leading with firmness and purpose. But now here he is, on his
knees, humbling himself, submitting himself, reaching out to some greater
force; a force he even calls “Father.” …
I am grateful for sons who are
active in the lives of their children. They teach their sons how to take
healthy risks, while I am standing back saying, “Be careful.” They teach their
sons the appropriate way to treat their mothers, sisters, and other girls and
women. They teach their children about God by studying the scriptures and
kneeling in prayer with them.
I appreciate the way that my sons
collect all of the grandsons and wrestle with them on the floor or play a rough
game in the yard. My grandsons have five surrogate fathers as well as their
biological father. These surrogate fathers teach, correct, and love all the
boys as their own, and the entire family is stronger because there are fathers
engaging in the lives of boys and girls. Fathers can strengthen families,
communities, and nations by coming home and rearing their children as only
fathers can.
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