“Observations”©
Donald
S. Conkey
Date: June 17, 2010 - # 1025b – Fatherhood – a journey well worth taking
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Sunday
is Father’s Day. With that said, now let us ask ‘just what is fatherhood?’ Is it a gift?
I think it is, a gift from mankind’s Creator, Jefferson’s ‘Supreme Judge of the World’ a choice
gift that provides purpose and meaning for life, with an abundance of joy and happiness, along with occasional bits of grief
and sorrow, to the man who comprehends and accepts the role of fatherhood and dedicates his life to the family he fathers.
True fatherhood begins with the marriage of one man and one woman
who both understand their divinely defined roles of man and woman, of husband and wife, of father and of
mother. On our kitchen wall is a framed proclamation that defines these roles. It’s title “The
Family, A Proclamation to the World.”
It was published in 1996 in response
to the growing challenges against the family and marriage worldwide. Its first paragraph states: “marriage between a
man and a woman is ordained of God and that the family is central to the Creator’s plan for the eternal destiny of His
children.”
It continues by declaring: “Husband and wife
have a solemn responsibility to love and care for each other and for their children. ‘Children are a heritage of the
Lord.’ (Psalms 127:3) Parents have a sacred duty to rear their children in love and righteousness, to provide for their
physical and spiritual needs, to teach them to love and serve one another, to observe the commandments of God and to be law-abiding
citizens wherever they live. Husband and wives – mothers and fathers – will be held responsible before God for
the discharge of these obligations.”
Continuing, it states: “.
. . By divine design, fathers are to preside over their families in love and righteousness and are responsible to provide
the necessities of life and protection for their families. Mothers are primarily responsible for the nurture of their children.
In these sacred responsibilities, fathers and mothers are obligated to help one another as equal partners. .
. .”
With five grandchildren being married in recent years I followed Moses
advice outlined in Exodus 18:20 to “teach them the ordinances and laws” of marriage, and “wherein they must
walk, and the work they must do” in their marriages. I created a special book for each couple that included the Proclamation,
a copy of the Ten Commandments, Gordon B. Hinckley’s Ten Virtues, and a poster outlining Vaughn J. Featherstone’s
fourteen points of Fatherhood. It included a family pedigree chart and an ancestral chart dating back to 1623. These family
charts will help these new families better understand how they connect to their ancestors and how they fit in with something
far greater then just themselves.
These books are my effort to help my grandchildren
build a solid foundation under their new marriages based on solid tested principles. These books also respond to the problems
being generated by our ever-growing secular society and helps instill a little sanity and common sense into a society where
the God defined role of fatherhood is being redefined in the foundational fabric of American society. Lyndon Johnson’s
Great Society instituted a declaration of war on the family and marriage forty plus years ago – and America’s
family has yet to recover. The cost of the Great Society’s war on marriage and the family has been devastating.
To the father who has bathed his child and changed their diapers, who has read to them and watched them begin school,
graduate, marry, and bring home a grandchild fatherhood is everlasting joy and happiness.
True fatherhood is hard work but is more rewarding than any other calling on earth. When a father reaches my age he
knows his children and has experienced all the surprises fatherhood brings, including grief and sorrow, as when a child breaks
his heart, or when he lays a child in a grave and his soul cries out “why me Lord.” At such moments nothing will
soothe a father’s bitter grief but faith. I have felt that grief.
But
fatherhood is also indescribable joy, joy that brings tears to a father’s eyes. And when such tears come a father realizes
his life was worth all the heartaches and sleepless nights that go with fathering.
Life’s greatest joys come from within the walls of one’s home where fathers and mothers are one, and where
the father accepts the responsibility of fatherhood and leads his family in righteousness - obedient to God’s commandments.
The home is where the real joys and contentment of life are found — in great abundance.