Turnaround at Home: Giving a Stronger Spiritual Legacy Than You Received
By Jack Hibbs, Lisa Hibbs and Kurt Bruner
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About this ebook
Jack Hibbs
Jack Hibbs is the senior and founding pastor of Calvary Chapel Chino Hills in Southern California. He is also the host of the nationally syndicated TV and radio program Real Life, and his daily media programs reach millions worldwide. Jack and his wife, Lisa, have two adult daughters and three grandchildren.
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Turnaround at Home - Jack Hibbs
One
Turnaround
I lay the sins of the parents upon their children; the entire family is affected—even children in the third and fourth generations of those who reject me. But I lavish unfailing love for a thousand generations on those who love me and obey my commands.
Deuteronomy 5:9b–10 (NLT)
When Dave proposed to Stephanie, only four hours had passed since they first met on the beautiful East Coast seaboard. Soon their whirlwind romance brought them across the country, landing them briefly in Las Vegas for their wedding. Stephanie was pregnant with their first child, and Dave had only recently been discharged from the military. Dave’s dog tag read Catholic while Stephanie’s confusing background blended a bit of exuberant Pentecostal with reserved Baptist. Neither, however, knew the first thing about raising a child or what a healthy, God-fearing household actually looked like.
When Dave was in the third grade, his parents divorced. Before that, they spent most of their days yelling and screaming at each other. Dave was so devastated by their breakup that, as a young man, he made a solemn vow: when he had children of his own, he would never put them through the same pain that he had experienced. Unfortunately, his parents provided him a poor example of how to avoid ruining his own future relationships. In fact, the best counsel he could remember receiving from his father was when he told Dave never to get any girls pregnant as he handed over a box of condoms.
Stephanie, on the other hand, grew up in the Bible Belt, where the fear of the Lord was ever present—but a strong, healthy understanding of God’s Word was not. Her father had been killed in prison when she was a young girl, which forced her, her mother, and her two siblings to move in with her grandmother and step-grandfather. It was there that her step-grandfather began to sexually abuse her between the ages of five and nine. Her grandmother, completely unaware of the abuse, constantly reinforced to Stephanie that she would go to hell if she ever had sex before getting married. On the other hand, her mother began taking her to clubs by the age of seventeen, encouraging her that it was important to sleep with a guy before she married him to make sure that everything would work out—no doubt a very mixed message for a young, impressionable girl.
After Stephanie married Dave, she made a vow the same way Dave had when his parents divorced: to end the cycle of abuse and pain she’d endured. She was determined to give her children something better than she had been given as a child. The problem? She had absolutely no clue what that would look like. And Dave was no help. He became an alcoholic, partying often with his friends and eventually cheating on Stephanie. Within a few short years, their marriage was in shambles and headed straight for divorce, dooming each of them to break their respective promises. And the ones who would pay the price? Their children. Indeed, the sin of the parents was now at work in their home.
As the Family Goes …
Look around you. Unfortunately, Dave and Stephanie’s tragic story isn’t an isolated one. God’s prized creation—the family—has been corrupted, attacked, ridiculed, and made nearly obsolete. It is crumbling away, and there seems to be no way to stop the assault. Human wisdom tries to intervene, but it seems to only drive us further and further away from God’s ultimate design. The church has tried to fix it, but its own members have become just as much victims of the onslaught as everyone else.
Family: ripped apart, redefined, and struggling to rediscover its significance. None of this is part of God’s plan. In the beginning, God created Adam and Eve—the first family—and they were the first things in all His great work to be called very good.
That’s exactly what God had intended the family to be: very good! Throughout the Bible, we see God using the institution of marriage and family to communicate His great love toward His people.
He told us from the beginning to be fruitful and multiply, to honor our fathers and our mothers, and to serve the Lord in our homes. Yet an ever-increasing number of children are growing up in homes that have veered from that plan. Homes are no longer very good,
and they bear the battle scars to prove it. Divorce, abusive words and deeds, legalism without love, and a pseudolove without boundaries seem to prevail instead.
But thankfully, there is hope. There is a way to set things in order, and it all starts with a turnaround in our own homes.
We’ve been given the power to change the nation—and the world—through the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ. But how does that happen? It happens when one individual, through the power of the Holy Spirit, stops the flow and direction in which he or she was heading. It might be a father who decides to row against the downstream pull of the river—or a mother who chooses to change the path and course that were passed down to her.
There is an old saying: As the family goes, so goes the nation.
This is so true! The family has been spiraling out of control for so many years now that it’s no wonder our nation is in the condition it’s in. But if we will intentionally encourage and train our families, as God intended us to do, we’ll see a tremendous change in our land, one household at a time.
Changing the direction of a home is possible. Lisa and I know because we’ve experienced it. The power of God’s Word will lead that change if we are willing to yield completely to Him. We can all thank God that He is a God of second chances. The fact that we can change, that we can have the opportunity to turn things around, is an amazing display of His grace. But we must be willing to move from what is wrong to what is right, to shift from what isn’t working to what will work. In a word, we need a change.
Shifting Directions
The ancient Greeks used the word metanoeo when it came to sailing a ship. The word means to change direction or to think differently.
It’s a full course correction. A complete turnaround from the direction in which you were heading. It’s from this ancient understanding that we get our English word repent, which means to change your mind. Jesus said, Repent and believe,
meaning, Stop unbelieving and believe.
It’s unfortunate that the concept and definition of the word repent have gotten a bad rap throughout the years, but it is actually a very positive word. To change our minds about how we were raised is our first step in turning around our own homes. We must reverse our course and head toward a new standard—God’s standard.
None of us were raised in perfect homes. We all carry baggage of a past we just can’t seem to shake or some sort of a legacy we didn’t ask for. All of this has the annoying side effect of influencing the everyday decisions we make that impact our future.
So consider this: What kind of home were you raised in? We will examine this more fully in chapters 4 through 7 because it does make a difference. Unless you make a concerted effort to change the way you think and feel about certain things, then how you were raised will have a direct impact on how you in turn raise your own children.
Most of us experienced a mixture of positive and negative aspects in our home life, but unfortunately the line between those two is not always clear.
Typically there are two ways that we handle our pasts.
1. Define It as the New Normal
Without a godly example of what parenting should or shouldn’t be, our pasts become the standard by which we live. We allow our pasts to define who we are, and this then sets the benchmark for what is considered normal. That would be great if normal was defined as a loving, God-honoring home. It’s not so great if your home was filled with dysfunction that you may still not even recognize.
Consider Mark. By the age of thirteen, he was drinking beer with his parents as they played cards. Thirteen! Mark became a full-blown alcoholic by the time he was eighteen. Why? Because his mother and father were alcoholics. Drinking was the norm in his household—and, in fact, his mother and father had inherited
this behavior from their parents, also alcoholics.
The sins of the parents will be passed down to the third and fourth generations, according to Deuteronomy 5. Abusers tend to beget abusers. Or, as they say, the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. But negative cycles can stop.
2. Despise It Completely
The second way of handling the past is the flip side of the first. Rather than embrace your past and continue in its shortcomings, you overreact and rebel, rejecting both the bad and the good. If you grew up in a home you despised, you may have a tendency to vow you’ll never make the same mistakes your parents made. So if your parents were strict, you may decide to become the most lenient parent, afraid to administer any form of discipline, and thus would end up trading one extreme for another.
Imagine
What does a healthy family look like? What defines that which is truly normal and should be embraced and passed on to the benefit of your children versus that which is harmful and should be abandoned and rejected? For that, we must turn to God’s Word.
Is it any wonder that Scripture calls God our Father in heaven over and over? Is it any surprise that the relationship of a husband and wife is compared to Christ and His bride, the church? Throughout Scripture, the home is shown to be a husband and wife modeling the loving authority of God for their children. For what purpose, you may ask? So that we would raise up children in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ.
John Lennon once sang a song where he asked us to imagine a different kind of world. Unfortunately, his theology was very wrong. He imagined a world without religion and without God, where everyone supposedly lived in harmony. But the kind of harmony he dreamed of can never be realized by rejecting God. It will come only when we each fulfill our part in reflecting God.
Let’s imagine instead a world where a model of true Christianity was being followed in the home. What might happen if a father turned himself around and became the dad and husband God intended him to be? What would that look like?
Imagine if a mother turned herself around … or a grandparent. What if we raised our children to actually live the Christian life according to what the Bible says? How might that impact not only the church, but the secular world as well? We would become messengers of hope to our churches, our culture, and our nation by living out what we believe. This is what revival looks like.
Let me clear something up: revival does not come by first changing the world. That is a misconception. There are many Christians today who believe that revival means changing the hearts of the lost toward God. But that’s inaccurate because revival comes, first and foremost, to the house of God—His people. We see it repeatedly throughout the Bible in examples such as Nehemiah, Josiah, and Hezekiah. First, these men personally renewed themselves in the Lord, and then they set out to influence their culture and their nation for what was right. It started with just one individual unabashedly willing to turn back to God, and soon an entire generation of God’s people did the same. Only after these leaders began to seek the ways of the Lord was there a profound cultural shift. It happened as well in America’s great awakenings. In each case, there was a ripple effect. A radical awakening, a change, repentance, that took place in God’s people, bringing about a dramatic shift to the culture at large. The result was a witness to the lost, which brought salvation to many.
Remember Mark? Raised by alcoholics, devoid of any spiritual training, he grew into an adult who didn’t know or care what God thought. The same was true for his parents, his siblings, even his grandparents. It wasn’t that they didn’t believe God existed; it’s that they had no idea there was anything better for their lives. They were stuck in the cycle of the sins of the fathers visiting their children. It’s all they knew.