Fathers Be Fathers
By Steve Garbe
LIFE MATTERS
The Newsletter of the Respect Life Office of the Diocese of Rockford
Patricia Pitkus Bainbridge, Director • Rev. David A. Peck, Spiritual
Director
555 Colman Center Drive • Rockford, Illinois • 61108 • 815.877.LIFE
www.rockforddiocese.org/respectlife
June 2006 Volume v no.9
What's a dad to think? How does
he know what his role in the family is? How does he exercise his role? Our
society and our culture give us many differing visions of a father's role.
Sorting through those visions and finding the one that matches God's plan for
the family is the major challenge for us dads these days.
We live in a time when there
are many attacks on fathers and on the role of the father in the family. The
sitcoms on television with a few exceptions generally portray Dad as hopelessly
befuddled or easily fooled and manipulated. The days of "Father Knows Best" and
"Leave It To Beaver" are long gone, at least in TV Land. Now we have Ray Romano
instead of Jim Anderson and Jim Belushi instead of Ward Cleaver. So where do we
get our role models?
How do dads learn to be
fathers?
Ideally, we learned how to be dads from our own fathers. But many of us had
fathers who didn't completely live up to the standards of Jim Anderson or Ward
Cleaver. My own father worked long hours, five and half days a week. I always
thought that he wasn't around much, that he was too busy earning the money to
support my mom and the six of us children. Looking back on it now, though, I
have come to realize that he was always there for my high school football games,
the home games, at least. He was even there for the non-varsity games that were
played after school on weekdays. I learned from this that a dad takes delight in
the activities of his children and I have tried to be there for my kids too.
Dads should be the final
authority in discipline matters. Of course, moms discipline, but dads shouldn't
abdicate to mom, nor should they overrule her. When I was about six years old we
lived in Chicago. One day, some of he older boys in the neighborhood were going
to the corner drug store to get a candy bar and I wanted to go also. I asked my
mom if I could go but she said "no." It was close to dinnertime. No problem. I
went outside and met my dad as he walked home from work. I asked him if I could
go and he said "OK." Life was good. Now I was just like the bigger boys going to
the corner store. When I got back from the store Dad was waiting for me to
explain why I hadn't told him the whole truth. Turns out if he had known that
Mom had already said no he would never have said yes. I learned from this that
Dad and Mom were a team and they weren't very happy when you tried to divide
them. I also learned that Dad would back up Mom's discipline and add some of his
own if I tried to outsmart her.
Role Models
But what's the ideal role model for a dad? There are many roles that a dad must
fulfill. He must support his family. He should be a leader and not leave
everything to his wife. He is also a teacher. I learned about hard work and
doing your best from my dad. He also taught me about the importance of going to
Sunday Mass. A dad is a protector and a defender. When I was sick in school Dad
was the one who came to bring me home. There are other roles that he didn't
carry out so well and I have only lately realized the importance of some of
them. And I have not always done so well myself.
When our son was in eighth or
ninth grade he was on a traveling soccer team. They had a weekend tournament in
St. Louis. The team did better than I expected and had to stay an extra day for
another game. I should have been home that last day for work but I didn't want
to leave my son in St. Louis to tag along with one of the other families. I
wrongly solved the problem by calling in sick for work. About a year later, my
son used that incident in an essay about integrity. He thought that I had
demonstrated integrity by not leaving him alone in St. Louis. He didn't realize
that true integrity meant that we should have missed the last day of that
tournament. Oh the things our children learn when we think they aren't watching.
I resolved not to give that lesson ever again.
Protector and defender of the
family
I think I have done some things right. I have always seen one of my primary
roles as that of protector and defender of my family. I tell our children that
God made me responsible for them. And that someday I am going to have to answer
to Him for the way I carried out that responsibility. When our oldest daughter
was sixteen she had a group of six or eight girls that always hung out together.
Somebody got the idea to have a slumber party to celebrate the birthday of one
of the other girls. No big deal. Girls had slumber parties all the time.
The catch was that the girls
wanted to rent a room at a Holiday Inn that had an indoor pool. They were going
to spend the night there splashing in the pool whenever they wanted, with no
adults present. Well, I told our daughter to tell her friends that she would not
be able to go. I told her that I trusted the girls and knew that they would
behave themselves. But I also told her that I had no way of knowing who might be
in the room next to theirs. And if I couldn't be there to protect her then she
couldn't go. The girls tried to negotiate with me a little and suggested that
the older sister of the birthday girl could stay with them. Since the older
sister was only nineteen that didn't ease my mind any, so I still said no. The
plans for the slumber party at the Holiday Inn got cancelled. What really
surprised me was one of the other moms later told me how glad she was that I had
said no. She didn't want her daughter to go either, but she didn't know how to
say no. See, mothers need the fathers of their children to back them up. And
they would prefer that sometimes the father would even take the lead.
The Good Shepherd
So now where do I
look for the ideal role model? For the fourth Sunday of Easter we heard St.
John's Gospel about the Good Shepherd. He is my role model now. The Good
Shepherd lays down his life for his sheep (John 10:11). A father lays down his
life for his family. The Good Shepherd knows His sheep and His sheep know Him
(John 10:14). A father knows his children. He knows what they need and when they
need to be protected. Sometimes he says "no" because that is the best way to
protect them. I said to my children that God gave me the responsibility for
protecting my family. Along with that responsibility, He gave me the authority
to protect my family. The modern portrayal of fatherhood tries to convince us
that we don't have any authority. Society wants fathers to abdicate their
responsibilities. It wants to divide fathers from the mothers of their children.
That is why divorce is so prevalent in our society. That is why there are so
many single mothers, each one trying to be both mother and father to her
children.
In so many cases, fathers have
abandoned their children because they have forgotten how to be fathers or they
never knew how. Don't accept the depiction of fatherhood in the sitcoms. Don't
let the secular world fool you into thinking that you don't have the authority
to protect and lead your family. Don't think that God is going to let you out of
the responsibility of being a father. In the aviation business we have a saying,
"Captains be captains." That means that the captain of the aircraft has the
authori ty and the final responsibility for the safe operation of the flight and
the safety of all his passengers. That authority is given to the captain by
Federal Aviation Regulations. The saying means that the captain must use the
authority given to him to fulfill his responsibility. If he doesn't fulfill his
responsibility he will have to answer to a review board and perhaps even a
court.
A father's authority comes from
a source much higher than the captain's and so does his responsibility. If he
doesn't fulfill his responsibility to protect his family he will have to answer
to the highest court of all. Fathers be fathers!
LIFE MATTERS is published monthly by the
Respect Life Office of the Diocese of Rockford. It is sent to all priests,
seminarians, religious sisters prayer team members, and parish respect life
coordinators. Individual subscriptions may be obtained for a donation of $15.00
per year. This publication may be copied so long as it is done in full. It may
be quoted so long as proper citation is provided with the quotation. 2006
Respect Life Office-Diocese of Rockford
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