Godly Womanhood

Jun. 29, 2007

When having babies isn't exactly a blessing

 

Friday May 12, 2006

When having babies isn’t exactly a blessing

by rabbi shmuley boteach

A funny thing happened to me the other day when my wife and I had, thank God, another baby (a boy). Many of my friends didn’t seem all that happy for me.

Sure, they went through the motions of smiles and congratulations. But it was evident that many thought me insane. Why would a young man and his wife ruin their lives with eight children? Who could afford the day school bills? Didn’t we want to live a little and not just be burdened with kids?

It got downright surreal when a European film company pressed me — while my wife was in labor — to finish shooting a segment that had an urgent deadline. I told them they were insane. And the next day I was mildly criticized by a Jewish organization for having to cancel a lecture because the timing clashed with the baby’s brit.

I don’t mind that the world doesn’t really love babies, just that it pretends to. It’s time we got honest about our priorities.

Most people get a new car every two or three years, but one or two babies through the life of their marriage is plenty. You can get drunk on an airplane, laugh hysterically with your mates, and still not really anger people. But if you dare bring a crying baby on board you will be given malicious looks as if the little thing was a package that ticks.

The contempt shown to parents of large families is the last acceptable prejudice in our society. As such a parent I find myself apologizing wherever I go, as if I had committed a crime. The frequent and loaded stares from scornful onlookers seem to imply that the famine in Africa was caused by my selfish insistence on overpopulating the earth.

Long ago my wife and I discovered that few hotels were prepared to accommodate so many children, even if we took three or four rooms, which is why we bought an RV for travel.

How strange to live in a world where loving children casts one in infamy. Having a large family implies a backwardness and primitivism deemed unbecoming in the West. Large families, it is thought, exist only among religious weirdos or Third World hovels. Rich countries, by contrast, prefer to increase their standard of living rather than the number of the living.

Looking at Western birthrates for 2001, the United States averaged only 14.2 births for every 1,000 Americans. One can go for days in a wealthy city like Manhattan without encountering a single pregnant woman.

Riches and children have become inversely proportional — the more of the former, the less of the latter. The high birthrates of poor African nations like Uganda (47.52 births per 1,000) or Niger (50.68 births per 1,000) are deemed to be prime causes and indicators of their penury. Contraception has become a synonym for civilization.

A Christian mother of six once wrote to me: “I find it troubling to worry about getting pregnant again because I don’t want to face the criticism of friends and family. Why do people not see children as a blessing?”

It’s a fair question, which deserves a fair response.

Why is it that even many synagogues today are not children-friendly? Why are people impressed that Jay Leno owns 20 motorcycles, but disgusted that some religious families choose to have 10 children?

Let’s not finesse the response. We all know why. A world that has lost its innocence has trouble appreciating beings that are innocent. A world that has become selfish has soured to the idea of leading a life of selflessness. A world that has become grossly materialistic is turned off from the idea of more dependents who consume resources.

I work hard to support my family, but I give up no pleasures in doing so, because my children are my foremost pleasure.

By just looking at my children I become more innocent. By loving them I become more noble. By spending my money on them rather than on myself I find transcendence. And by being a father, my spirit soars.

I am often asked by women how to tell whether the men they are dating are marriage material. I say, “See if he enjoys children. A man who loves children is playful. He will spend his life joking with his wife because he loves to see her laugh, and will flirt with her because he loves to see her smile.”

Once husbands and wives worked hard to ensure they could afford the blessings of a large family. Today the higher your earning bracket, the fewer children you have. Many turn money from a blessing to a curse.

Before he died, the Lubavitcher rebbe launched a campaign asking parents to have one more child than they had originally planned. It is a campaign that a dwindling Jewish community should revive as it continues to disappear.


Rabbi Shmuley Boteach is the host of TLC’s family dynamics TV show, “Shalom in the Home,” and author of the upcoming “Ten Conversations You Need to Have With Your Children. “ Information: www.shmuley.com.

 

 

This article was written for http://www.jewishsf.com/index.php  It is sad but true. As Christians we ought to re-think where our prioities are. Mine are not on how fat my pocket book is or on trying to keep up with the Jones' but on my family and building a godly foundation for my children to live by so that they may give glorify God's name. I would be perfectly happy to live in a duplex with 10 children if that is where God gave me to live. I am building treasures for heaven, not earth. 

 

As of now anyway, I only have one child, and if that is the only child I get I am fine with that too. So long as my husband and I stay focused on the Lord and teach our child what it means to be godly.

 

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Comments

Jun. 30, 2007 - Loved this article!

Thank you for posting this!
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Jul. 2, 2007 - Untitled Comment

Posted by Mommaofmany
I enjoyed that article very much! Thank you for posting it. My Honey and I also have eight children, aged 11 and under, so we truly know what he spoke of with the looks and the comments. We usually get good comments, though, and use the openings to speak of the grace and goodness of Christ.

Have a great Monday!

Momma
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About Me

I am a helpmeet. From a biblical standpoint that means that I am a wife. I am my husband's "helper." That is what I was created for. I cook for him. I clean for him. I raise his children for him. I am a keeper of my home and I am to submit to him and serve him in any way I can. In this modern day and age some people may not understand where I am comming from. Genesis 2:18,21-22 " And the Lord God said, It is not good that man should be alone; I will make him an helpmeet for him...And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam...and he took one of his ribs...And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man" So if God said it, then its good enough for me. I will be my husband's help meet! Godly Womanhood is dedicated to the promotion and instruction of the word of God. Here there will be scriptures, word studies and a journal of where I am with my struggles with sin and what it takes to be a godly woman.

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