How Then Shall
We Live – The Family
By
DFeff@aol.com
New Hope Family Church
“The Bible records a 4,000-year Providence of
Restoration that includes
God’s
In
the above reading, Father Moon tells us that to avoid failure in the providence, we need to live in the moment, to be aware of
the importance of every single instant of our lives as human beings who were
created by God. He mentions several instances of providential families who came to grief by failing to live in the moment before God.
With
regard to
I’ll return to these examples later. For now I’d
like to turn to the more immediate question. Our theme in the
Most
of us here joined the Unification movement in large part because of the vision
it provided us about God’s ideal of the family. The Divine Principle provides a
unique insight into how each of can complete our relationship with God by
realizing the three Great Blessings God gave for fulfillment on the individual,
family and world levels.
On
the individual level one fulfills this ideal by
uniting his or her mind and body centering on God. On the family level, the
ideal is realized as man and woman unite to form a
family and multiply children. On the world level the
blessing is realized as humans realize a relationship of harmony with the
Creation.
That
ideal inspired many of us as we went through our 20s, sacrificing our
individual desires for the Unification movement and training ourselves to be
good husbands and wives, fathers and mothers, to realize God centered families.
As we finally reached adulthood and established actual families, however, we
discovered that it is not quite that simple. We all still struggle in our
relationship with God as individuals. We all have difficulties and challenges
with our spouses and children. Some of us divorce. Some of us lose our spouses
and even our children to death through accidents and disease. Many of us face
situations with our children not inheriting the faith tradition as we hoped
they would. What happened to the Ideal?
How
do we keep our hope and faith alive in the face of such challenges? How do we
live with God in the moment, as
One
thing that has helped me and
In
such a situation, what can a parent do? We know from the Principle that
children have free will and even God couldn’t force
But
you have to try. So we advised. We put her in a private school. We got the
police involved when she ran away. We faced the fact of her involvement with
drugs. We got her professional psychological counseling. We met with the boy’s
parents. We went to court when she got in trouble with the law. We even
accepted the totally unacceptable reality that she was
not going to make it unscathed in her teenage years, she would not get matched
to a nice boy of our own faith, and go to the Blessing. And,
we sat in church week after week listening to sermons by people with children
younger than ours about how ESSENTIAL it is that we train our children
properly, because the worst thing in the world that can happen to them is that
they “fall.” You can imagine how inspiring church services were for us in those
circumstances!
Knowing God’s Heart
There
was really only one consolation for us in those days. That was, that we came to
realize that God had gone through this too. He too had experienced a broken
heart as the result of his children rejecting the ideal he held for them. He
too had experienced the agony of his daughter getting involved with someone who
wasn’t intended for her. And
he too had no choice but to keep loving her no matter what. One day after
listening to a particularly painful sermon in church, I told
So
to those of you who are suffering with your children, or who
are struggling in your marriage, or who have lost a love one, I say, you too
are blessed. You may not be blessed in the way God
originally intended or the way you thought you would be. But
your suffering can bring you closer to God and to understanding His heart.
In
our Bible study group we’ve been reading the prophets
lately. One of them, Ezekiel, experienced the death of his wife and saw this as
God’s way of having him represent what God experienced when
The
prophets often express God’s agony because of
When the LORD began to speak through Hosea, the LORD said to him,
"Go, take to yourself an adulterous wife and
children of unfaithfulness, because the land is guilty of the vilest adultery
in departing from the LORD." So he married Gomer, daughter of Diblaim, and
she conceived and bore him a son. (Hosea 1:2-3)
You have heard that it was said, 'Love
your neighbor and hate your enemy.' But I tell you:
Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may
be sons of your Father in heaven. (Matt 5:43-45)
Notice
that
Forgiving the Enemy of Love
It’s easy to forgive your enemies when you don’t know them personally, such as when they are members of another nation. But it’s difficult to forgive an enemy who is intimate with you or who has harmed you
personally. The most difficult enemy to
forgive — and the most important one that we struggle to get to the point of
forgiving — is the one
Even
“There are many enemies in this world.
The worst one is the enemy of love. Don't you think
so? God has a teaching. It is to love your enemy. Why could God not love
But
in another speech Rev Moon said that God indeed must come to love even
What is the definition of the true God? Again, the same definition
applies to both people and God. God has an enemy who stole His love.
So
which is it: should we forgive the enemy of love or not forgive the enemy of
love? Remember when the young scholar asked
One
more thing about our elder daughter: Although she rejected the idea of being matched by us, she retained a fierce commitment to the
ideal of true love, as she understood it. She stayed with that young man for
seven years. And yes, we eventually came to love him.
We can actually say that we came to the point where the person who was the
enemy of love for us became the person we were ready to adopt as our
son-in-law. Shortly after that, our daughter realized he was not really the one
for her, and they broke up! She was well on her way to
becoming a responsible young adult even before that happened, but today
she really is a fine young woman, and a good daughter that we are proud of.
Today she’s engaged to a young man we felt very good
about from the moment we met him, and they plan to include the holy wine
blessing in their wedding ceremony. Sometimes she tells
So
like the Father in the story of the Prodigal son, we now have our daughter
back. But it wouldn’t have happened if we had cut her
off, or if we failed to find the strength to love her even when she was being
unlovable. I can testify now that it’s possible to
come closer to God through the very thing that seemed to shatter what I thought
was God’s ideal — that it is possible to learn to love the enemy of one’s love
at a very personal level within the family. And I can
testify that even the worst nightmares end.
The True Family’s Course
Some people wonder why there have been problems in
And so, it is only natural that
We
are entering a time when many of our second generation are approaching the age
of marriage. Some of them have already been blessed.
(Could I ask those young people in the congregation who have
been blessed to stand?) It’s all well and good
that we celebrate our blessings and encourage our children to inherit that
tradition. But we also have to acknowledge that so
far, that a disturbingly low number of our children of marriageable age have
even gone to the blessing, let alone establish successful families. We need a
way to embrace those of our children who have stumbled on the way, or who
simply do not want to go the Formula Course of the matching and blessing. The
question is: how do we do this without at the same
time lowering our standards to the point that we fail to uphold our own
principles?
The
same is true for those adults in our community whose marriages have failed. Is
there a place in our community for those whose marriages fail? I don’t know if many of you saw the article in the New York
Times the other by one of our members,
Renee Watabe
shared about her feelings as she faces the prospects of divorce. Recalling how
she felt at the time of her blessing she said:
There was an undeniable sense
of holiness about the whole endeavor. …Was I brainwashed? I sit here writing
this, 18 years and three children later, on the verge of divorce. Did he and I
finally fail after all we've been through? We
certainly haven't turned out to be the ideal picture-perfect family we set out
to be. Even so, I still find Reverend Moon's vision a beautiful one, this path
remarkable, this project admirable. It's just that my husband and I didn't know
how hard and gritty the path would be.
In
the next paragraph, Renee provides an important insight that I believe we can
all benefit from, even though hopefully our path will not end where hers has:
Finally I came to
understand what was missing. The religious call to love your enemy included
loving that enemy as you would love yourself, and I didn't love myself. In all
the sacrificing I'd done for marriage, children and world peace, I'd lost a
sense of who I was and what I wanted.
Do you remember that old Whitney Houston song, “The Greatest Love
of All?” I remember feeling that it was too self-centered: “Learning to love
yourself is the greatest love of all.” Today I think differently about it. To
the degree that we have unresolved feelings of poor self-esteem, we are really
hampered in being able to live for the sake of others effectively, and we are
almost completely crippled when it comes to the ideal of loving our enemy.
Conclusion
So in the final analysis, the question of how we should live in
the family comes down to a paradox. We can’t succeed in living for the sake of others
without spending at least some energy and time on ourselves. The same is true
when we think about how the family relates to the society. Just as we should
live for the sake of others within the family, so the family should live for
the sake of other families in society. But a family can’t contribute
effectively to society if it’s dysfunctional on the family level. If the
parents are always going to church meetings and not spending time meeting the
physical and emotional needs of the children, things are bound to fall apart.
It is a question of balance.
Going back to the examples Father talked about in our reading:
Noah got drunk, fell asleep naked and woke up cursing his own son’s lineage.
This is not the way we should live. I’ve often felt that instead of drinking
all that wine by himself, Noah should have had a big party with his wife, sons
and their wives. I picture them all dancing around the campfire together, Noah
and his wife getting tipsy, then sleepy, and finally dozing off while watching
the young couples dance. After that the younger couples, not sleepy at all,
would head of to be fruitful and multiply, big time, with God’s complete
blessing!
Abraham got tired and failed in his symbolic offering. After that
Isaac and Ishmael were disqualified from fulfilling the foundation to receive
the messiah in their generation. If he had succeeded, perhaps Hagar and Sarah
would have been able to reconcile with each other. Abraham should have spent
time helping them unite. Perhaps Ishmael would have been a good elder brother
to Isaac instead of having to be sent into exile to prevent another situation
as when Cain killed Abel. And perhaps today, there would be no such thing as a
Middle East crisis or Islamic militancy.
Moses struck the Rock in anger instead of bringing hope to his
people. Perhaps if he had invested some time during that 40 years in the
wilderness taking an anger management course and had learning to love himself,
he could have given his people hope. And then there would have been no condition
for the people to reject the messiah later on.
And if Mary and Joseph had put their child’s welfare first,
instead of focusing on their own emotional needs (Luke 2:48) and dragging him
back to Nazareth, perhaps they could have arranged for him to stay with the
temple elders to learn from them. He could have spent his youth winning the
respect and loyal friendship of the greatest teachers of day instead of being
in a position later of being opposed by the religious establishment.
So it all comes down to being secure and mature within ourselves,
and on that foundation being able to go beyond ourselves to live for the sake
of others. Eventually we even have to learn to forgive, love and unite with the
ones who have hurt us most deeply.
“An unhappy family,” says Reverend Moon, “cannot make up a happy
nation.” Tomorrow is the Fourth of July. This is something to think about as we
enjoy our picnics and fireworks with our families. And if we are not enjoying
some time with our family this weekend, maybe it’s time that we do so.