Living in a fishbowl isn’t as fun as you might suppose. Sure, you get a lot of attention but, sometimes, it isn’t the kind you were hoping for. Sometimes, you wish that when you fail, every now and then, no one would see or care.
How do you deal with the pressure of achieving “perfect family” status all of the time? How do you make sure the inside of the cup matches its exterior? How do you judge when you are making it, and when you’re falling short? What do you do when your family doesn’t qualify for the cover of the next “Perfect Christian Family” magazine?
At some time or another, all of us have considered what it must be like to be really famous. I mean, famous to the point where you can’t leave your home without being recognized by the masses. It may seem glamorous to some, but the weight of such a lifestyle would soon become crushing. Face it, most of us can’t deal with the unwanted attention we receive now!
All of us struggle from time to time with keeping a proper perspective in the midst of curious onlookers. I can’t speak for your family, so I’ll share a few thoughts from inside my fishbowl. When you grow up in a family that publishes books and national publications, which are committed to upholding Godly standards for families, you can be assured that you will be watched. Every word uttered, or written, is critiqued by thousands.
My wedding to my wife was pretty high-profile, with our wedding story appearing the next week in the Arizona Republic, and later in the Wall Street Journal. Within weeks of being married, my wife and I were speaking at conferences together, telling the story of how God put us together in marriage. We didn’t ask for the media attention, it was just the path the Lord had chosen for us.
I remember when we had four children under the age of seven, I was speaking at a conference and we were eating lunch in a large cafeteria are with perhaps a hundred or more other people. My toddler had just finished eating and was starting to walk around our table. At a certain point he got bored and decided to head out for more adventurous territory. He took about two steps and I called to him to come back to me. He turned around, looked at me, thought for a moment and the took off running in the opposite direction. I bolted out of my seat, caught up with him, turned him around and knelt down so I could look him in the eyes. Just as I was about to speak to him, I heard a woman’s voice over my shoulder saying to her friend, “This is great! Now we can see how a REAL EXPERT handles a situation like this!”
For better or for worse, we are noticed. We are scrutinized and examined from every angle. Not to be presumptuous, but I would wager (just an expression, please don’t write) that your family is under inspection as well. Maybe it’s on a smaller scale, but, it exists just the same. How do you deal with it? We want to strive to reach the standard of perfection God has commanded, but we mustn’t live our lives based on the expectations of other people.
What Is The Standard?
The biggest struggle in this area is to maintain proper perspective. We must keep in mind what perfection is, how we discover it, and what to do if we fall short.
“As for God, His way is perfect; The word of the LORD is proven; He is a shield to all who trust in Him. God is my strength and power, And He makes my way perfect” (2 Sam. 22:31 & 33, NKJV). Not only is God Himself the standard of perfection, He is the only source of strength from which we can attain perfection. We constantly keep the face of God before us. We look not to the right or the left, but fully “unto Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith Heb. 12:2).”
How do people generally respond to the standard of perfection?
In my experience, there are a couple reactions.
- They despise any standard of holiness. I’ve noticed that people tend to reject any absolute which makes a demand on their life. The cost of discipleship requires that we give everything. As Dietrich Bonhoeffer stated in his foundational book, The Cost of Discipleship, “When Christ calls a man, He bids him to come and die.” We have received no other call than to give up our own life “for the sake of the call.”
We often rebel against such a yoke. Autonomous humans want to be their own God. They want to make their own rules. They don’t want any external imposition. Allow me to give a few examples.
When I attend Christian conferences, I like to sit in on as many of the other speakers as I can. Sometimes, my workshop schedules prohibit this, but I like to check out the ideas of others. One session I attended featured a woman speaker addressing other parents. After a few minutes, she made the statement, “I’d like us to look at the ‘Proverbs 31 woman.’” The lady in front of me leaned over to her friend and said, “I hate that ‘Proverbs 31 woman’!” I laughed out loud at such an impromptu statement, but her remark was actually quite telling.
I’ve heard dozens of people comment on how they hate magazine and book covers graced by “perfect” families. Every child smiling, every hair in place, and everyone in matching outfits (which are clean by the way). One lady told me, “Those images don’t reflect where I live. I have rowdy children and peanut butter on the walls.” Even if those pictures don’t reflect our personal experience, why do we rebel against them and despise them? Is it because we believe the cover family is being hypocritical? Or is it because we fear they may be genuine?
When we do seminars people often approach us with questions about their children. Mothers tell us how their children are failing, then they turn to us and say, “But, you wouldn’t know anything about this. Your children are PERFECT!” The people who make these statements don’t know us. They wouldn’t know if we were “perfect” or not. They just assume because we are on the platform telling people about reaching for a Godly standard, we must be super-human. We get really dirty looks from some attendees who say, “So, are you always this nice to each other?” There is an obvious disgust, not only of our family, but, of anyone who tries to call families up to a higher standard.
From their comments it is clear that it isn’t phoniness they dislike, as much as it is legitimacy. If they could prove we were hypocrites, they could excuse their irresponsibility, and failure, to reach the standard. They’d be happier to find out that we’d just had a big fight on the way to the seminar, than to learn that our public image matches our private life.
Now granted, our family is not perfect, just as your family is not perfect. We have our fair share of shortcomings, failures, sins and character flaws. However, we really do try to live out the life of Christ everyday in our home.
- They Idolize “Perfect” People. Then, there is the opposite extreme. There are groupies who hang on every word spoken by a Christian leader. I’m convinced if some leaders told people to hang from a tree like a monkey there are folks who would do it. The tough thing with these folks is they look to you, and your family, as the standard and ignore God. When the inevitable failure of the leader occurs, the faith of the groupie is shattered. They can’t function. They can’t pray. All they can think is, “If expert so-and-so couldn’t make it, how can I? “Not that I have already attained, or am already perfected; but I press on, that I may lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus has also laid hold of me. Brethren, I do not count myself to have apprehended; but one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forward to those things which are ahead, I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. Therefore let us, as many as are mature, have this mind; and if in anything you think otherwise, God will reveal even this to you” (Phil. 3:12-15, NKJV).
- They Say, “I’ll Never Be Perfect, So Why Try?” I have found this attitude to be prevalent among many popular Christian authors. The whole concept of laughing off moral failure is completely unscriptural. We can’t have a “Stick a geranium in your hat and be sinful,” mentality. I heard [a popular female author] on television say, “People are always saying, ‘You need to hear from God.’ I don’t know where they get this stuff. I haven’t heard from God in two years and it hasn’t stopped me! I just put my shoes on everyday, the same way I always have.”
This kind of flippant abandonment of holiness and Godly standards of living is eating away at Christian homes. Without treading on too much theological ground here, it is faulty logic to say we should abandon our pursuit of holiness as unattainable. (“Nobody’s perfect.”) Hundreds of thousands of people play golf, knowing they will never hit a “hole-in-one” on each attempt. “So why try?” Why not purposely hit the ball in the woods? Why not land it in the pond or sand trap? In every field of life, we strive to be the best we can be. We mustn’t fall short in our highest calling. We mustn’t sin to enable “grace” to abound. That is nothing more than cheap grace, not the costly grace that our Savior bled and died for.
“Not as though I have already attained, neither were already perfect; but I follow after, if I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus. Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things that are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded” (Phil. 3:12-15a).
How Should We Respond to the Standard?
As believers, we have an obligation to be faithful to that which we know. The more we discover about the personality and character of God, the more obedient we must be. Scripture tells us we must actively live out our faith. Our actions prove what we really believe.
Why Must We Strive For Perfection?
First, because God demands it. “You therefore must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.” (Matt. 5:48, ESV). See also Gen. 17:1, Deut. 18:13, 2 Cor. 13:11, 2 Tim. 3:17, Jas. 1:4.
Secondly, we have an obligation to walk uprightly, setting an example for the believers. (1 Tim 4:12) People need encouragement from others who are also striving for these heavenly goals. Like it or not, we represent Christ. That was the calling we received. We have a holy obligation to be faithful with whatever platform God has given us. We must never be like modern sports “heroes,” who say, “I’m not going to be everyone’s mother! I’m no role model.” You are an ambassador for Jesus Christ, whether good or bad. We must run to, and embrace, the chance to be an example for others. We mustn’t shrink back or hide in fear.
When We Don’t Measure Up
Recognizing our need to be “Salt & Light,” it’s tough to deal with the reality that we’re shining about as bright as a candle in the wind and tasting rather bland. However, we can’t abandon our post. Deserters will have no part of God’s Kingdom. It’s important to remember that (hopefully) we are all growing. Most of us have matured a lot in the last five years. We should see things more clearly and do things better than we used to.
That is the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives, conforming us to the image of Jesus. We are in a discipleship process. Being a full-time parent gives you the context where you can see your child’s needs. Spending LOTS of time with your child is the pressure cooker which boils carnality to the surface where it is visible and can be dealt with. Expect it. Plan on experiencing failure. The good news is, you don’t have to stay there. We don’t embrace a message of defeat but, rather, one of victory that says, “Sure, you’re a mess right now, but you’re growing.”
We can’t let our failures and foibles spoil what God wants to do through us. We need to keep short accounts with God. Keep the slate clean. If we do sin, “We have an advocate with the father; Jesus Christ the righteous.” (John 2:1) Confess your sin, repent and move on. There is too much work to do, and we should not allow our inadequacies or mistakes to keep us ineffective.
Just as we weren’t born adults, knowing all things, we have to grow spiritually as well as physically. I believe strongly in making spiritual landmarks as they did in the Old Testament. One of the purposes of these landmarks, besides marking private property, was to supply a long-lasting reminder of something important. It seems whenever God did something remarkable among His people, they built an altar, or made a monument. They didn’t want to forget. We should do the same thing in our families. No, we shouldn’t pile up hundreds of rocks in our backyard! (The neighbors are already worried enough about us!) But, we should make spiritual landmarks whenever God gives us a significant victory in our home. Write it down in a journal. Get up in a meeting or family gathering and testify of some specific instance of God’s goodness to your family. Make sure we don’t forget.
“But the path of the just is like the shining sun, that shines ever brighter unto the perfect day..” (Prov. 4:18, NKJV) (It’s a process, don’t give up!)
How Should We Relate to Other Imperfect People?
The tough thing about getting the victory over a major hang-up, is that we often lose compassion for those struggling with the very thing we just escaped. We found the answer, and we feel they should receive the same revelation we did. Maybe they will, but it might take some time. It took us a while. We agonized over it for months, maybe years.
We need to learn to give people space when they aren’t like us. Give them time. If they need to know something additional, God will show it to them in time. As Phil. 3:15 says, “And if in anything you think otherwise, God will reveal even this to you.”
We can’t be the Holy Spirit for everyone else. We can lead them to living water, but we can’t force them to drink. We can share what Christ has done in our lives, but they may not be ready for the change yet. That’s okay, as long as they are still actively seeking God they will find Him. (Jer. 29:13)
If we need to confront a brother or a sister regarding a shortcoming in his or her life, we should only do it if we are motivated by love. Don’t shoot the wounded. They are probably already feeling guilty about missing the mark, and they need encouragement to make the hurdle, not rejection or judgment. We are to speak the truth (as hard as that can be some times) but, we do it only in love. We need to see the sinfulness of their hearts, in light of the sinfulness of our own hearts. Only the grace of God enables us to walk uprightly. Without grace, none of us could live right.
Allow Inspection
Let’s take advantage of the evangelistic opportunities the Lord sends our way. Because our family is homeschooling, we stand out in many ways to others. People take notice of us and the way we live. We want them to see that what makes our families close, and why we really do love each other, is not because we homeschool, but because of Jesus Christ and how He has changed our lives.
Don’t hide behind closed doors hoping no one will see the real you. If there are character flaws in your family, they need to be dealt with. If you don’t allow those things to be exposed, your home will be like a scene from “Something Stinks in Here, Part 2.” Be willing to hear the good, and the bad, from those in your church or support group. That is what accountability and discipleship is all about.
Of what benefit is a support group where everyone is acting or pretending? Why not be real? Share each other’s hearts. If you’re not doing well, don’t lie. If your children are not in a good place, spiritually speaking, don’t hide the truth. Ask for prayer, and be willing to change if need be. If you have a rebellious teenager, don’t cover it up and make excuses. Face it honestly. Only then can you be a true help to them. If someone confronts you about the behavior of one of your children, thank them for caring enough to let you know. Stop living with the guilt of skeletons in the closet. Clean it out! Get rid of it, and start over.
A Brother Loves at All Times
We need covenant brothers and sisters who are willing to walk with us on this road of discipleship. I’m not sure where our family would be without Godly people who are willing to love us unconditionally. Sometimes that love motivates them to rebuke us for moral failure. Other times it moves them to embrace us in our tears or to pray for us when we face seasons of doubt.
If you have someone like this in your life, thank God and never take them for granted. If you don’t have these faithful friends, try being that for someone else. God will never allow your life to be 100% output without supplying friends to encourage and uplift you.
Remember the key is to walk together in integrity. “And we, with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit. (2 Cor. 3:18).” Throw away the masks! Allow the transformation to take place. Carnality is like a cancerous growth; the longer you ignore it the faster it kills you.
Allow yourself to be accessible even to the members of your own household. After all, our goal is family-based discipleship. If your husband, wife, parent, sibling or child sees a character flaw in your life, repent and change. If someone mentions a problem they have observed with one of your children, don’t be defensive or combative. Welcome inspection from your spiritual authorities, church family, small group, etc.
Set An Example For The Believers
The Apostle Paul told the church at least three times to be imitators of himself (see 1. Cor. 4:14; 11:1, Phil. 3:17). We see this pattern also in 1. Th. 1:6, 1 Tim 4:6, & Heb 6:12, as well as Heb. 11. It is not wrong for others to look to our behavior as a guideline for holy living. Are we not to be imitators of Christ? Therefore, in our conduct, speech and all other aspects of our life, we must uphold God’s Standard of perfection in absolute purity. We have received no other calling. This is truly the call which we heard from Christ, to give all we are, for all He is. Let us embrace it, and rest in it.
Our world is in need of love. It is also in need of leaders who aren’t afraid to stand up and be counted. We can truly represent Christ in this Post-Christian culture. As the Body, we need each other more now than we have at any other point in American history. The world needs us. Christ is calling, will we answer?
“Whoever conceals his transgressions will not prosper, but he who confesses and forsakes them will obtain mercy.” (Proverbs 28:13, ESV)
Israel Wayne is an author and conference speaker and co-founder of Family Renewal, LLC. He is author of the book, Raising Them Up: Parenting for Christians.
To Learn more about Israel Wayne and Family Renewal, LLC visit https://www.IsraelWayne.com and https://www.ChristianWorldview.net
Other Links of Interest
Israel & Brook’s blog
Israel’s blog
Family Renewal Facebook Page
Israel Wayne’s Facebook Author Page
Israel Wayne on Twitter
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Israel Wayne on MeWe
Israel Wayne on LinkedIn
Family Renewal YouTube Podcast
Israel Wayne’s Books:
Questions God Asks: Unlocking the Wisdom of Eternity
Questions Jesus Asks: Where Divinity Meets Humanity
Pitchin’ A Fit! Overcoming Angry & Stressed-Out Parenting
Education: Does God Have an Opinion? – A Biblical Apologetic for Christian Education & Homeschooling
Answers for Homeschooling: Top 25 Questions Critics Ask
Raising Them Up – Parenting for Christians
Foundations in Faith – Bible Doctrine Curriculum (7th-12th grade)