In 'Effective Fatherhood, Part 1,' Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds 1 Thessalonians 2:1-12, drawing out principles for earthly fatherhood from Paul's description of his spiritual ministry. He argues that effective fatherhood is characterized by intense, sensitive, self-giving love, manifested in gentleness and selflessness, and by a behavior pattern of real, consistent, practical godliness. Martin challenges fathers, mothers, teenagers, and single individuals to cultivate these qualities, emphasizing that true fatherhood is impossible without the grace of God and rigorous self-discipline.
Primary Texts
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1 Thessalonians 2:1-12This passage is the foundational text for the entire sermon, as Martin extracts principles of fatherhood from Paul's description of his spiritual ministry.
Introduction: Paul's Ministry as a Model for Fatherhood0:02
Relevance of Effective Fatherhood for All Audiences4:33
Principle 1: The Fundamental Grace of Self-Giving Love8:32
Manifestations of Self-Giving Love: Gentleness, Selflessness, Arduous Labor10:52
The Cost and Radical Nature of Self-Giving Love in Fatherhood15:59
Self-Examination: Do You Manifest This Love?20:09
Application for Young Men and Women Regarding Love24:09
Principle 2: The Behavior Pattern of Consistent Godliness27:29
Why Consistent Godliness is Essential for Fatherly Influence30:30
The Cost of Godly Example and Its Impact on Children32:43
Personal Testimony and Call to Exemplary Fatherhood35:42
Application for Young Men and Women Regarding Godliness41:41
The Impossibility of Effective Fatherhood Without Grace and Discipline45:40
Final Challenge: A Father's Day Prayer Test48:26
Key Quotes
“He is setting forth, how he conducted himself, as a spiritual father among the Thessalonians. But in so doing, he underscores some of the most fundamental principles, with respect to effective, earthly fatherhood.”
“Whatever other graces are essential to effective fatherhood, standing as king and queen over every other grace is the grace of this kind of love. Whatever else you may have, by nature or by grace, wrought in you to make you competent as a father, if you do not abound in this grace, you cannot begin to fulfill your God-appointed role.”
“And the idea that if you father a child, you are committed for life to a relationship of deep intention sensitive, self-giving love that seeks not its own, I say that is utterly radical in the mindset of this generation.”
“And I say to every father in this place, this morning, the behavior pattern essential for effective fatherhood is the behavior pattern of consistent and genuine godliness before the Lord and before our children.”
“Becoming a father, or I should say, fathering a child is the act of a moment. Becoming an effective father to a child is the discipline of a lifetime.”
“Unconverted man, you cannot be the father you ought to be without grace. And what good will it do in the judgment to have your kids rise up and say, He provided for me, put clothes on my back, sent me to college, paid the bills, but then encouraged me to go to hell with Him because He never taught me by precept and example the way of Christ.”
“You've got to be as much a man of God to be a good father as any man has to be a man of God. You've got to be a man of God to be a good preacher. In fact, more so because a preacher can insulate himself from people more effectively than a father can from his children.”
“In the name of God, men, will this be a vanishing species? Godly fathers, that was the title I originally settled upon. The tragedy of a vanishing species. Godly fathers, oh may God give us a new breed of godly fathers.”
Applications
The unconverted
Unconverted men, realize that you cannot experience the kind of self-giving love essential for fatherhood without the Holy Spirit indwelling your heart and union with Christ; seek the Lord.
Unsaved fathers, seek the Lord, as you cannot be the father you ought to be without the grace of God.
Unconverted fathers, find your food distasteful and all recreation impossible until you get alone and cry out to God for mercy.
Parents & families
Young men aspiring to marriage and fatherhood, gain clear and solid instruction from this passage to mold you into the kind of man who can be an effective father.
Younger women and single women, look to passages like this for the qualities to seek in a future husband and father of your children.
Young ladies, when looking for a future husband, prioritize a man who manifests a heart beating with sensitive, self-giving love over superficial qualities like looks, physique, or wealth.
Young men seeking to become desirable marriage partners, cultivate sensitive, self-giving love by stepping across the grain of your native selfishness, taking an interest in children, and engaging in selfless acts.
Young men, understand that becoming an effective father is the discipline of a lifetime, and you will be then what you have been becoming now; cultivate godliness diligently.
Young ladies, when casting your eyes on a young man, look for real, practical, consistent godliness, and pray for holy blinders to superficial qualities, as true character is what matters for fatherhood.
Young people, pray for biblical goals and standards, and for God to sweep away the world's trash from your minds.
Young women, look for true, loving, sensitive, self-giving, godly young men.
Young men, above all else, exercise yourselves unto godliness so that you may be worthy of the love and trust of a wife and children.
All listeners
Realize that the subject of effective fatherhood has pressing and personal relevance for everyone, regardless of their current parental status.
Fathers, receive this word as immediate direction, reproof, and correction.
Mothers, be supportive and helpful to your husbands as they seek to fulfill their role as fathers.
Those whose job of fathering is done, pray for the fathers of the congregation with biblical perspectives and teach the younger men who lack biblical models.
Fathers, cultivate intense, sensitive, self-giving love above all other graces, as it is essential for fulfilling your God-appointed role and paying the price of providing, understanding, listening, and praying for your children.
Fathers, if you lack self-giving love, your discipline will be carnal; instead, be a firm but fair disciplinarian, willing to spend time studying Proverbs rather than sports.
Dads, press the question on your conscience: how much do you know of that self-giving love? Do your children know you to be tough but gentle, not sinfully pliable or stone-hearted?
Men, get away from your fun-seeking and self-centeredness; get alone and cry to God to mortify your selfishness and baptize your heart with deep, sensitive, self-giving love.
Fathers, be determined to live a life of consistent and genuine godliness before the Lord and your children, at any cost, so that your words have a grip on their consciences.
Fathers, exemplify personal purity; do not take second looks at immodestly dressed women, hide impure magazines, or ogle lecherous ads on television, as this destroys your credibility with your children.
Fathers, do not expect the household to bow down to you as the 'almighty provider' while your wife slogs it out; exemplify sensitivity, understanding, and selflessness.
Fathers, be consistent in your stewardship, devotional life, and honoring the Lord's Day; do not cheat on your tithe or prioritize material possessions over the needs of the church, as your children observe your hypocrisy.
Parents, set the standard of real, consistent, practical godliness before your children, rather than seeking superficial pride in their partners.
Fathers in a state of grace, embrace the disciplines necessary to make you a man of God, recognizing that effective fatherhood requires even greater reality and godliness than effective preaching.
Fathers, be willing to pay the price of godliness, even if it means sacrificing career ambitions or reputation, to be a man of God in your own home.
Fathers, honestly ask yourself if your wife could pray a prayer of thanksgiving for a husband and daddy who manifests intense, sensitive, self-giving love and consistent godliness, without lying.
Fathers, honestly ask yourself if your children could pray a prayer of thanksgiving for a daddy who has his goals straight, loves them enough to spend time, discipline fairly, listen to their problems, and exemplifies loving, walking with, and serving Jesus.
Believing fathers, confess that you have been too molded by the spirit of this age and caught up in the pursuit of things and reputation; pray for God to raise up true and effective fathers.
A full transcript is available on the
tab. 147 paragraphs, roughly 56 minutes.
Machine transcription
Introduction: Paul's Ministry as a Model for Fatherhood
Now will you follow, please, as I read from Paul's letter to the infant church of the Thessalonians, 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, and I shall read in your hearing the first twelve verses, 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12.
1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12.
1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. Now, if you were listening with any attention to the reading of this passage, you are already aware that it contains a biographical account of Paul's ministry among the Thessalonians. And in the course of describing his and his companions' labors among the Thessalonians, he uses analogies drawn from family relationships. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12.
1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12.
1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. 1 Thessalonians, chapter 2, verses 1 through 12. You will notice the very striking one in verse 7, we were gentle in the midst of you as when a nurse cherishes her own children.
And then again in verse 11, as you know how we dealt with each one of you as a father with his children. Now obviously the primary teaching of the passage has to do with Paul and his companions as models for the gospel ministry. If you were to ask me to point out one chapter which perhaps more than any other, with the exception possibly of Acts 20, sets forth a broad spectrum of principles pertaining to the work of the ministry, I would direct you to this second chapter of 1 Thessalonians. But you will also notice that in the course of this biographical, description of the labors of Paul and his companions, he uses analogies, likenesses, comparisons between what they were doing in the work of the ministry and what a father and mother do in the work of ordering an ordinary household. Now in the light of the fact that today is Father's Day, and a few weeks ago, the glorious role of women was expounded from 1 Timothy 2 and verse 15,
Relevance of Effective Fatherhood for All Audiences
I felt constraint, and I trust it was the constraint of pastoral concern, under the guidance of the Spirit, to speak to you this morning with respect to the subject of principles of effective fatherhood as embodied in the life and ministry of the Apostle Paul. He is setting forth, how he conducted himself, as a spiritual father among the Thessalonians. But in so doing, he underscores some of the most fundamental principles, with respect to effective, earthly fatherhood. And so bypassing the primary intention of the passage, I want to extract from it, some of those secondary lines of the principles, which constitute effective fatherhood. I want to extract from it, some of those secondary lines of the principles, which constitute effective fatherhood. fatherhood. Now, for some of you who are not fathers, and who never will be fathers, you may be mamas someday, but you can never be daddies, and some of you who, sitting here this morning, feel that fatherhood is as far from your mind as night from day, may I urge everyone, no matter who you may be, to realize that in taking up this subject, there are issues of very pressing and personal relevance for each one of you. For those of us who are fathers, the relevance will
be very evident. This word, I trust, will come as a word of immediate direction, reproof, and correction. For you who are mothers, I trust it will be a word of supportive instruction, that as you see from the scriptures what your husband is to be as a father, you will bend every effort to be supportive and helpful. Helpful as he seeks to fulfill that role. For you who are teenagers, I trust that what you hear this morning will exercise a powerful formative influence, that you young men who are yet to be married, but aspire to marriage and fatherhood, that you will gain from this passage some clear and solid instruction that will become an instrument in God's hands to mold you into the kind of man who alone can be the kind of father. And for you younger women who are not yet married, and you single women, as you think in terms of what qualities you will look for in the man who will be your husband and possibly father of your children, this is where you are to look, even to such a passage as this. And for those of you whose job
of fathering you think is done, and you're past the childbearing age, and even the formation of your children, they're grown and out of the home. This has much to say to you, for you have a tremendous responsibility, not only to have your prayers molded by biblical perspectives as you pray for the fathers of our congregation, but you have a solemn responsibility to teach the younger men. Many of them have had no biblical models, and you have that privilege and responsibility to instruct them. So there is none of us sitting here this morning who is exempt from the pressing, personal implications and application of these words found in 1 Thessalonians chapter 2. Now there are but three simple units of thought that I want to lay before you, two of them this morning, in the light of the oppressive weather, and my understanding that God has not so sanctified us that we can't feel it. I want to be briefer than usual this morning, and also because of the density of the material world that we live in. And I want to bring to you in this material, I will simply cover the first two heads this morning and God willing next Lord's day morning take up the third and final heading, so you get me one sermon divvied up into two parts.
Principle 1: The Fundamental Grace of Self-Giving Love
Now the first principle of effective fatherhood, that is clearly set forth in this passage, is what I am calling Qaq 5 the fundamental grace essential for effective fatherhood. The fundamental grace рабens, I am referring to is what the Bible documents, and I have written the Sermon on the miracle of faith, and. Is one of these two essential for effective fatherhood. Now this passage contains some amazing statements.
We might say almost startling statements in their contrasting ideas. Paul could say that as a wise, assertive, concerned spiritual father, he and his companions manifested the gentle, sensitive love of a nursing mother. Now isn't that a strange conjunction of ideas? A strong, assertive, firm father who has the gentle, sensitive tenderness of a nursing mother.
But that's exactly what he says in verse 7. We were gentle in the midst of you as well. When a nurse cherishes her own children. And the grace which lay beneath that gentleness was the grace of a genuine spirit-wrought love in Paul's heart for the Thessalonians because he tells us at the end of verse 8, you were become very dear to us, more literally rendered, you became beloved, lovd to us.
And the grace, the grace above all other graces which characterized Paul's fatherly influence with the Thessalonians was this grace of intense, sensitive, self-giving love. He expresses it in the words, you were become beloved to us. Now notice how that love was manifested. Gentleness was its bearing, verse 7.
Manifestations of Self-Giving Love: Gentleness, Selflessness, Arduous Labor
We were gentle in the midst of you as when a nurse cherishes her own children. Now here's the picture of a woman who so loves babies that she gives herself to being a wet nurse to other people's babies. She so loves little ones that she lets their life be sustained at her own breast. Now if she has that kind of a bond to children, what must the bond be when she holds the fruit of her own womb at her breast?
It's the epitome of all maternal tenderness. And Paul says in fulfilling our role of godly, assertive, spiritual fatherhood, there was this grace of intense, sensitive, self-giving love manifesting itself in a gentleness of bearing, and I could not help but think of the advertisement that I'm sad has fallen along the way, but some of you will remember it, the Tintin Roller Bearing Act. And they would always picture this man who had a square jaw like Popeye and lots of stubble on it, who had shoulders like a professional linebacker and gnarled hands and he looked sort of like a combination of a sailor, a dock worker, a construction worker, and a bouncer. And they would often picture him with all those characteristics and the stubble on his chin, but then he might be holding a little kitty cat and stroking its head. And the caption beneath would say this, so tough, but oh, so gentle.
Well, you see, that's exactly what we have in this passage. Paul can say as a father, we exhorted, we admonished, we encouraged, here was assertedness, here was no manhood, pambi, pambi, patsy, who sat around with folded hands and let the spiritual household go to pot. It was a man who had keen perception of what the situation was, who had a clear understanding of what was needed in that situation and moved in with holy toughness and assertedness to be the father he ought to be. Yet he says, his bearing was that of the gentleness of a nursing mother.
Now, what is it that makes a man assertive enough to be a good father to have the quality of gentleness? Why, it's this characteristic and grace of love. It is love that is patient and kind. It is love that bears all things, believes all things.
It is love that is not easily provoked, seeketh not her own. You simply read 1 Corinthians, and you see that in that description of love, in its actings and attitudes, gentleness is woven through the entire fabric of that description. Furthermore, it was not only gentle in its bearing, it was selfless in its disposition. Look at verse 8.
Even so, being affectionately desirous of you, we were well pleased to impart unto you not the gospel of God, but the gospel of God only. Technically speaking, that's all that was required of Paul as a gospel minister. To speak the gospel in all the integrity of its God-given content. He already referred to that up in verse 4.
We've been approved of God to be entrusted with the gospel, so we speak, not as pleasing men, but God who proves our hearts. But he said we went beyond the minimum requirement of simply giving you the content of God. There was this selflessness of disposition, Paul says, we were pleased to impart not just the gospel, but our very souls you had become so dear to us. You see, his heart was baptized with that love that is selfless in its very essence.
And then he goes on to say in verse 9 that arduous labor marked the performance of that love. You remember, brethren, our labor and travail, working night and day, that we might not burden any of you we preached unto you the gospel. What was the fundamental grace that characterized Paul's spiritual fatherhood of the Thessalonians? It was this grace of intense, sensitive, self-giving love manifested in a gentleness of bearing, selflessness of disposition, and an arduous labor in the outworking of its demands.
The Cost and Radical Nature of Self-Giving Love in Fatherhood
And I say to every father in this place, whatever other graces are essential to effective fatherhood, standing as king and queen over every other grace is the grace of this kind of love. Whatever else you may have, by nature or by grace, wrought in you to make you competent as a father, if you do not abound in this grace, you cannot begin to fulfill your God-appointed role. It is this grace of intense, sensitive, self-giving love which, above all else, is essential for effective fatherhood. Without this grace, you will not be willing to pay the price of fulfilling your many roles in relationship to your household. It takes this kind of love that will make you do what is necessary adequately to provide for the material needs of your household. It is this grace which, above all others, will make you say no to yourself and engage in those many, acts of self-denial essential to understanding your children, setting up strong bonds
of communication with your children, giving yourself to sensitive and perceptive listening to your children, giving yourself literally to hours of agonizing prayer until Christ is formed in your children, giving yourself, if necessary, to periods of prayer and fasting, when you meet snags in the development and nurture of your children, and you've come to a wall, an impasse, and you cannot seem to break through, and so you'll deny yourself even your necessary food, willing to impart not just bread on the table, but your very soul for your children.
Without this grace, you will never be the firm but fair disciplinarian that you ought to be. If you do not have beating in your breast the grace of intense, sensitive, self-giving love, if you discipline it all, it will be discipline triggered by a carnal irritation at your children. It will not be disciplined that is principled, that is selfless, that is sensitive to how much and what form of discipline is needed in any given situation that demands that you may be ignorant of who won the ball game, and spend more time on your face with the book of Proverbs than in your rocking chair with the sports page.
It will cost you, Father. It will cost you dearly. But if your heart is baptized with holy love, you will count it your joy to spend and be spent for the molding of your children. Now you see, in this age, that's radical.
We live in the age of no-commitment living relationships, no-strings-attached, one-week bed-downs, the day of do-your-own-thing-ism, a search-your-own-rights mania. That's the age in which you and I live. And the idea that if you father a child, you are committed for life to a relationship of deep intention sensitive, self-giving love that seeks not its own, I say that is utterly radical in the mindset of this generation.
Self-Examination: Do You Manifest This Love?
But it is absolutely essential for effective fatherhood. And I want to press the question on the conscience of you dads here this morning.
How much do you know of that love?
Can you say, as the apostle could, we were gentle as a nurse cherishing her children? Amidst all of the holy assertiveness and the principal toughness of a real father, do your children know you to be so tough, but oh so gentle, not sinfully pliable, melting into a little glob of unprincipled back-downs because they shed a few tears and learn how to manipulate you with their tear ducts? I've seen fathers like that. I could hardly look at them for the sheer shame that I was one of their sex.
Children manipulating with whines and tears. But I've also seen fathers I've been ashamed of them because I wondered if they were all stone and no heart.
Everything by the book, but no sensitivity to the peculiar cycles of the child's emotional development and reactions and the problems and pressures impinging upon that child. Everything was run like camp lejeune as though the children were a bunch of little marines.
Now, no, my friends, what is desperately needed above all else is this intense, sensitive, self-giving love that will make us gentle in our bearing, that will make us selfless in our disposition. How many fathers father children only to calculate all their relationship to those children and what the children can give back to them in the way of prestige and standing in the community. The feeding of their own ego. Fathers out driving their sons to be little pro ball players before they're twelve.
Why? So they can sit in the stands and feed their own unmortified egos. And practically cursing a child because he struck out in the ninth inning with men on bases. Beating the child down emotionally and psychologically.
Why? Totally, totally self-centered.
And then when the child gets older, driving him to get straight A's. Why? To feed the ego of that parent.
That's all. Not concerned about character molding. Just feeding unmortified ego. Total self-centeredness that is a stench in the nostrils of Almighty God.
One looks almost in vain to see that kind of arduous labor among fathers. So willing, believed so much of the development of the children to mama. When the word of God says Ephesians 6, 4, fathers nurture them. Not mothers.
Fathers nurture them. Oh, but I put in my eight or nine hours. So does your wife and many more. Well, when I come home from work, I'd like to relax a little.
So would your wife. But you have only so many years to mold and shape those precious children. Man, in the name of God, when are you going to get away from your fun-sucking, your self-centeredness?
Get alone and cry to God that He will mortify that cursed selfishness and baptize your heart with deep, sensitive, self-giving love.
Application for Young Men and Women Regarding Love
You young ladies, what are you looking for in your future husband? Don't look at his pretty face. Don't look at the size of his shoulders. Don't look at his ability to fill a purse with money.
Don't look at his shiny car. You know what you should look for? You look for a man who manifests a heart beating with this kinds of sensitive, self-giving love. And if he's only five foot four and weighs 190 pounds, a little dumpy, a little out of shape, a little bald, he can have a lot of drawbacks.
But I'll tell you one thing. Fifteen years down the road on a Father's Day, if when you gather for your meal, your kids can lead in prayer and say, Oh God, thank you for a daddy who has shown by his life that his heart is full of self-giving love. I tell you, you'll feel that the guy's six foot two built like a Madonna's and second cousin to Rockefeller.
That's right. That's the truth. That's the grace needed above all else. And you young men seeking to become desirable marriage partners, what grace is your cultivating?
Oh, you say, I pumped the iron to look good. That's all right. A little bit of that won't hurt you. Don't make it a god.
Well, you say, I'm working hard at my job to be a good provider. Good, good, fine. But what are you doing right now to step across the grain of your native selfishness? What are you doing right now to cultivate sensitive, self-giving love?
What are you doing right now to cultivate sensitive, self-giving love? What are you doing right now? What do you do right here at church? You break yourself away from that young lady who's caught your fancy and go find one of the little kids and the Lord knows we've got them all over the place.
They're coming out the, coming out the seams of their drapes.
Are you finding little kids and taking an interest in them? Coming down to their little world of innocuous little nothings until in their eyes you're somebody special because you come to them. You girls, you look for a fellow like that. Walking down an aisle and slipping a ring on his finger isn't going to change him from the self-centered, egotistical prig that he is into a selfless, outgoing, sensitive father.
You see how relevant all of this is? And I say to you men who are not Christians, and it may hurt some of you, say, I've been a good father! In terms of putting gravy on the table and bread, you may have been, but listen, no sinner experiences this kind of love as the principle of his life. In common grace, some may have it, but it's not.
Some may have it in one area here or there, but listen to the word of God, which says, the fruit of the Spirit is love. And this kind of love can only be known where the Holy Ghost indwells the human heart. And it is only for those who are in union with Christ. But now I must hasten on if I'm going to keep my arrangement and agreement with you to be more brief this morning and underscore in your hearing the second great principle of effective fatherhood.
Principle 2: The Behavior Pattern of Consistent Godliness
Number one is the fundamental grace essential for effective fatherhood. It is the grace of intense, sensitive, self-giving love. But now notice in the second place the behavior pattern essential for effective fatherhood. The behavior pattern essential for effective fatherhood.
The apostle moves on from the statement of his love and how it worked to these very striking words of chapter 2 and verse 10. You are witnesses and God also how holily and righteously and unblameably we behaved ourselves toward you that believed, as you know how we dealt with each one of you as a father. You see, the immediate setting of the exercise of fatherly love, the immediate setting of the exercise of fatherly love, the immediate setting of the exercise of fatherly love, the immediate setting of the exercise of fatherly love, the immediate setting of the exercise of fatherly love, provides this description of His behavior pattern without which that fatherly influence would be neutralized. Now, what is the essence of the pattern? It was a life marked by three things. Look at the language.
Holily, justly or righteously, and unblameably. And most of the commentators are agreed that what Paul is doing is pointing to three dimensions that He is referring to. of consistent godliness. Number one, it was a life marked by true devotion to God.
How wholly we behaved ourselves. It was marked as a life in strict adherence to the law of God. How righteously we behaved ourselves. And it was a life marked by a consistent testimony before the people of God how blamelessly we behaved ourselves toward you.
So the essence of the pattern of Paul's life in his spiritual parental influence was this. A pattern of real, consistent, practical godliness. And to underscore that it was no sham having dealt with the essence of the pattern, he underscores on the very threshold the genuineness of the pattern. Verse 10, You Thessalonians are witnesses and...
And God also. In other words, what you saw is what really is. We were not one thing in front of you and another thing in secret. If that were so, what you saw and what God saw would be two different things.
But he said, the thing to which you bore witness is the very thing to which God will bear witness. Namely, that we walked in singleness of devotion to God. We walked in strict conformity to the law of God. We walked in consistent testimony before the people of God.
Why Consistent Godliness is Essential for Fatherly Influence
Now, why was Paul so concerned to underscore that? Just as he's about to mention we were among you as a father. Well, you see, Paul understood that unless this behavior pattern marked his influence as a spiritual father, that influence would be greatly negated and neutralized. Paul knew that he would be violated by a fundamental biblical law of learning.
And you know what that biblical law is? It is enough for the pupil to be as his master. For the disciple to be as his teacher. Paul understood what in our day is called the concept of modeling.
That's the new in term. So if you want to make it known that you're in with Christian ed terminology, you talk about modeling. Well, it's as old as the Bible. Be ye followers of me even as I am.
I am of Christ. And the apostle knew that if he was to be the father he ought to be, he had to be that kind of a father by example, or he would violate a fundamental biblical law of learning. Furthermore, he knew that his instruction would have no grip on the consciences of those whom he would lead. If you want to have grip on the consciences of those whom you lead, you must so live as to commend your lifestyle as, as real to the consciences of men.
2 Corinthians 4.1 We've renounced the hidden things of darkness, not walking in craftiness nor handling the word of God deceitfully, commending ourselves to every man's conscience in the sight of God. And furthermore, he know that if he would demonstrate himself to be anything other than a hypocrite, then he had to be able to say my lifestyle was the embodiment of what I sought to make you as a spiritual father for the mark of a hypocrite according to Jesus in his indictment of the scribes and Pharisees is this. Scribes, Pharisees, hypocrites, you say, but you do not.
The Cost of Godly Example and Its Impact on Children
Now for all those reasons, Paul and his companions in the role of spiritual paternity sought to be exemplary in life. And I say to every father in this place, this morning, the behavior pattern essential for effective fatherhood is the behavior pattern of consistent and genuine godliness before the Lord and before our children.
If we would be effective fathers, we must. We must at any cost to ourselves, our reputation with the world, now follow me, our career ambitions, our financial security at any cost to anything in our lives. We must be determined that we'll have a grip on the consciences of our children. That when we speak, if everything in their unregenerate nature rises up and hates it, we'll still have a hook on their conscience because we're real.
Now they may hate it to the point that a young man in a sister church hated it. A godly father setting a godly example, administering a godly rule. He has a teenage son who takes the bit in his teeth and says, I am not going to submit to that rule. The father says, as long as you're under this roof, we go to church on the Lord's day.
You're under this roof, you come to church. I will not. Yes, you will. And his anger reached the point that one morning he pointed a gun at his own father's belly.
And it was, only the father's quick reflexes pushing the gun down that made the shot hit him in the knee and not the belly.
And that young man ended up in a penal institution.
But two months ago he went under the waters of baptism and now sits with his thought in the worship of Almighty God.
Why? You say, sovereign grace, yes. But grace that worked by means of a grip upon his conscience that he couldn't not shake. Why?
He saw in that father consistent godliness. That's why.
And all that the father said had a hook in his conscience because of what the father was.
Without this, our children have no model. They do not feel the weight of our instructions. They become cynical and sour upon our religion and feel that everyone's like dad is nothing but a hypocrite.
Personal Testimony and Call to Exemplary Fatherhood
And if my father was here, I were here, I would not say this. And I seldom make reference to my parents, but I want to pay a tribute to my own earthly father this morning. Where did I learn proper priorities? That money was never an end to be pursued in itself?
Where did I learn that?
Where did I learn to have a sensitive concern for the demands upon a mother of young children?
Where did I learn unquestioned laws of loyalty to one woman? The proper use of time? Where did I learn being absolutely circumspect in relations to the unconverted? To the extent that I've learned any of those lessons?
I'll tell you where I learned them by watching my father. Some of you know that we had the privilege of a visit from the my father had to come to New York for the 55th celebration of the 55th year since he graduated from the Salvation Army Training College and I told him if he came to Jersey I'd take him into the city so he wouldn't have to buck the traffic. So they left early Thursday morning from Lancaster, Pennsylvania to visit and minister to one of the children, the in-laws, and then to minister to an aging aunt in a retirement home down on the shore and then come and visit with us. Well, in the course of our talking together about their trip, my dad mentioned that he was up since four o'clock in the morning.
Seventy-four years old.
Up at four in the morning. I said, Dad, what in the world are we up at four in the morning for? He said, well, son, you know I teach the Sunday school class at the old folks' home and I knew that in visiting with you on Friday, going into the city Saturday morning, driving back to Lancaster Saturday night, I'd be tired and it'd be difficult to get up early Sunday morning enough to prepare my lesson and I needed the two or three hours before we left to prepare my Sunday school lesson for the folk in the old folks' home. A man that's been preaching and teaching for fifty-five years.
He could have thrown something together. How would the old folks know? Half of them senile? No, no.
A sense of honor, integrity, duty. Seventy-four years old pushing self out of bed. That's the example I have and I'm not ashamed to say I sat in my study this morning and wept like a baby and thanked God for it.
The question came home to me. If God spares my children and the children of the men of this congregation, will you have sons and daughters then to sit and weep in thankfulness to God for the example you set? Or will their memories be of a spineless, self-centered, indulgent old man that had all the power and all his religion on his mouth but didn't produce in the crutch?
You fathers, can you say to your kids the things we need to say as fathers and make it stick? Can you teach your sons and daughters personal purity and exemplify it? Or when you're driving down the street, does your son who doesn't miss a trick see your eyes take the second look at the immodestly dressed woman? Then when you try to teach him about purity, it all comes to naught because he knows that you have not made a covenant with your eye.
You talk to him about purity and he's found the girly magazines that you've stashed away in your own basement or out in your garage.
And he sits and watches you when you watch television and he sees that even in the midst of a sports program when a lecherous ad comes on the television, he notices that you make no effort to turn it off or to look away. He sees you sitting there ogling.
You wonder why you have no credibility when you speak to him about personal purity. Just keep that up, man, and you'll make a perfect hypocrite out of him, a perfect cynic.
You try to teach him to be sensitive, understanding, loving, selfless, and yet he sees you come home expecting the whole household to bow down before you, the almighty God called the provider, and simply because you've put in your eight hours to treat you like a king who's come home from a battle when he knows that your wife has slogged it out all during the day with the kids and the care of the household. Can you make it stick when you talk to him about stewardship when he knows that you cheat on your tithe, that your priorities are all mixed up, that you can always afford to put yourself in hock for a new car when you want to, but you'd never put yourself in hock for some need in the church of Jesus Christ. He knows that there's no consistency in your devotional life. He knows that you cheat on really honoring the Lord on his day. He sees you self-centered and unconcerned for others.
He hears the wicked gossip about the table. My dear Christian father, do you hear me this morning? If you're to be affected as a father, you must be able to say, I must be able to say with Paul, you, my children, are witnesses and God also how holily, righteously, and unblameably I behaved myself among you.
Application for Young Men and Women Regarding Godliness
I speak to you, young men, laboring to become the man that would be worthy of a wife and a family. Some of you, I've heard you say, I can't wait till I get married and have some kids. And that's a noble thought, but listen to me, young men.
Becoming a father, or I should say, fathering a child is the act of a moment. Becoming an effective father to a child is the discipline of a lifetime. You hear me? Fathering a child is the act of a moment.
Becoming an effective father to a child is the discipline of a lifetime. And you'll learn it now. Not then. You will be then what you have been becoming.
Now!
It's a frightening thing to read that the sins of the fathers are visited upon the children to the third and fourth generation. Some of you are going to live long enough to see the shoddy areas of your life thrown back into your face by your own children. There's nothing in the Bible that says if we do what we ought to do, there is a guarantee that our children will turn out right. There's nothing in the Bible that absolutely guarantees it.
But there is much in the Bible that guarantees that if you go on in shoddiness, the sins you tolerate will be thrown back in your face by your own children.
Young women, what are you looking for in a man? Good job, good looks, one who provokes a romantic fantasy about your Prince Charming who'll come not on his white charger,
but in his Toyota. You don't want to have to support anything bigger than that these days.
His Toyota Celica and takes you off into the sunset.
Young ladies, listen to me. When you start casting your eyes on a young man, you look for real, practical, consistent godliness.
And pray God to give you holy blinders as to the shape of his nose, the shape of his eyes, and the size of his waistline.
You pray God to give you grace to see true character. Because it's that character that will make him cut the mustard in the children you bear. And your handsome Adonis, who lives, who lives poorly, will soon become ugly and grotesque as the hunchback of Notre Dame in your eyes. And you'll live with it because you made your choice.
You've got what you wanted. And you parents, if God doesn't deliver you from silly pride, well, when I introduce my daughter-in-law and my son-in-law, I want to be proud of them. Listen, if all you can be proud about can be seen by a stranger at an introduction, that's slim pickings.
That's slim pickings, my dear man, dear woman.
You parents need to have this as the standard that you set before your children. Well, in closing, let me seek to draw all of this together. If the fundamental grace essential for effective fatherhood is sensitive, self-giving love, if the behavior pattern essential for effective fatherhood is real, consistent, practical godliness, do you see, do you see, do you see, do you see, do you see, do you see, do you see, my dear friends, do you see the impossibility of being a true, effective father without the grace of God? And some of you unsaved fathers, if there's no other motive that would set you to seeking the Lord, I hope this would.
The Impossibility of Effective Fatherhood Without Grace and Discipline
You cannot be the father you ought to be without the grace of God, man. You can't be. You can't, I'll show you. Go ahead and try it.
You try to live a selfless, sensitive life when you've got a heart that by nature is selfish and self-centered and insensitive. Jesus said, out of the abundance of the heart, Proverbs says, the mouth, Jesus said, out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaketh. Proverbs says, out of the heart are the issues of life. Jesus said, make the tree good and its fruit good.
Unconverted man, you cannot be the father you ought to be without grace. And what good will it do in the judgment to have your kids rise up and say, He provided for me, put clothes on my back, sent me to college, paid the bills, but then encouraged me to go to hell with Him because He never taught me by precept and example the way of Christ. You get comfort in the day of judgment with that man and you can have it. I don't want it.
Then I say to you men who are in a state of grace, you see the impossibility of being a true and effective father without the disciplines necessary to make you a man of God.
You've got to be as much a man of God to be a good father as any man has to be a man of God. You've got to be a man of God to be a good preacher. In fact, more so because a preacher can insulate himself from people more effectively than a father can from his children. There are more fake preachers than there are fake fathers.
The relationship of necessity is too intimate to get away with as much as a lot of preachers get away with. So in one sense, you've got to be more real as a man of God to be an effective father than to be an effective preacher.
There are a lot of preachers who preach well and live poorly and it's only because the people don't know how they live that they still preach effectively. And Jesus said there'll be many in the last day saying, Lord, Lord, didn't we do it? And he says, yeah, that's right.
Now I ask you, fathers, are you willing to pay that price?
Are you? What about your career? What about your reputation? You know, you're going to that 10th reunion in high school and all the hot shot guys are going to be there.
Well, I've done this in my company. Are you willing to go and be bottom man on the totem pole if that's the price you've got to pay to be a man of God in your own home?
Some of you, if you get determined
and tighten up your whole lifestyle,
you may. Are you prepared for that? Are you? You say, the price is too high.
All right, friend, you can go on with your false sense of values, but don't say you weren't warned.
Final Challenge: A Father's Day Prayer Test
As I close this morning, I want to ask you something very personal.
I want to ask you, and my heart has been searched by this question. In a few minutes, we're going to leave this place. God willing, we'll all be taken safely to our homes. Then we're going to gather about our Father's Day meal.
I want to ask you something, man. Father, listen to me. I want to ask you something. Could you ask your wife to lead in prayer to give thanks today with the confidence that she would bow and say, Holy Father, thank you for the husband and daddy you've given me.
Holy Father, thank you for a man who amidst all of his failures and faults manifests as the bottom line of his life. Intense, sensitive, self-giving love. Thank you, God, for such a husband and a father. Could your wife pray that way without lying?
Come on, man. Let that question screw itself into your conscience and don't, don't, don't run away from it. Can your wife pray that way within the next half hour? Come on, man.
Face the question.
Feel uncomfortable?
Oh, may God keep you uncomfortable. Uncomfortable, until you're determined to do something about it.
And if your children are old enough to pray,
could you say to the children now, kiddies, you lead in prayer today and give thanks to God for anything that's on your heart. Would your kids be able to say, Oh, God, thank you for a daddy that's got his goals straight. A daddy that loves us enough to spend time with us. Loves us enough to spank us fairly when we need it.
Loves us enough to hear us say, hear us in our silly little problems. Lord, thank you for a daddy that shows an example of what it is to love Jesus, to walk with Jesus, to serve Jesus. Oh, my father, if my wife and my kids can't pray that way, I'd rather die than go on simply being the biological cause of my children's existence.
I don't care if the whole world would have bowed at my feet for whatever reason.
If my wife and my kids cannot thank God for a father who manifests the grace of self-giving love and the life of consistent godliness, it would bring me no comfort.
You say, Pastor, you've really flipped your lid. You've gone freaky bananas crazy. In your old age, you're getting fanatical. My friend, you show me from this book where I've overstated the principles of effective fatherhood.
And if I've been true to the principles of this book, then some of you need to have a judgment day today.
You know what's going to happen? Some of you go out of here wounded and before the afternoon's out, you'll pull out all the arrows and heal yourself over. And you'll be exactly the same next Father's Day as you were today. And that's enough to make me want to quit the ministry and go home to heaven.
To pour out your soul, your tears,
and to have man so besotten with ambition and pride and laziness. That they'll sell the souls of their own children rather than get upset enough to do something. In the name of God, men, will this be a vanishing species? Godly fathers, that was the title I originally settled upon.
The tragedy of a vanishing species. Godly fathers, oh may God give us a new breed of godly fathers. Let us pray.
Our Father,
you know our hearts as we bow before you.
And oh, as we look out into society, our spirits are battered and pained. We see the influences brought to bear to erode any concepts of godly and effective fatherhood. We feel the pressure of those things upon our own hearts. And yet we know that where sin abounds, grace does much more abound.
Oh, may abounding grace come this morning. Deal with every unconverted father in this place. Lord, shame every such man with his incompetence because he's resisted the overtures of grace. Stood against the overtures of mercy.
Lord, may such fathers find their food distasteful and all recreation impossible today until they get alone and cry out to God. Oh, cry to you for mercy. Oh, God, have mercy upon us who name your name. We confess that we have been altogether too much molded by the spirit of this age.
Altogether too much caught up in the pursuit of things and reputation. Oh, God, come down with power and from this very congregation raise up true and effective fathers. Oh, lay a spirit of prayer upon those who cannot enter into this role. Give to our dear young people biblical goals and standards.
Sweep away all of the world's trash from their minds and grant that our girls may look for true, loving, sensitive, self-giving, godly young men. And that our young men, above all else, will exercise themselves unto godliness. And that our young men, that they may be worthy of the love and trust of a wife and of children. Lord, will you not come?
Oh, God, come. Come by your Holy Spirit. Answer our cry this morning and raise up amongst us true, effective fathers. Hear our cry.
Seal the word to our hearts and to your name be praise through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
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Passages Expounded
1 Thessalonians 2:1-12
This passage is the foundational text for the entire sermon, as Martin extracts principles of fatherhood from Paul's description of his spiritual ministry.
Texts Expounded
auto_stories
This passage is the primary text from which Martin extracts principles of effective fatherhood, using Paul's description of his ministry as an analogy.