One Saturday morning instead of running into your arms, your
young daughter runs onto the couch to watch her morning cartoon. You shrug your
shoulders and get her breakfast. The next week the same thing happens. You
begin to notice a decrease in the amount of times that she crawls onto your
lap, or nestles her head in your neck or turns to wave before heading into the
school building.
At first you are caught off guard. Then you wonder and
slowly begin to mourn the inevitable ending of a stage. Finally you get used to
the new norm and hope that the security you instilled in your young daughter
through physical affection and verbal affirmation was consistent enough to stay
in her memory banks as she journeys on the road into adolescence.
As parents, it’s instinctual to begin to push our young ones
away incrementally. At first it may be mom weaning baby from the breast. Next it may teaching kids how to put on their clothes by themselves. For some dads it may be when your kids want
to hang out with friends instead of go fishing or watch sports with you. Their
total dependence on us must end at some point. At the same time, we don’t want
to short circuit their natural need for parental covering. Sense of identity
and security begins at home in the formative years. Some people believe that
quality time is more sufficient than quantity time for young children. I don’t
believe this. I’ve surprisingly found that even my teens actual enjoyed
quantity time at least as much as quality time. The push into autonomy must
occur at various points based on an individual child’s God-given developmental
timetable. The push is necessary.
But then we see them adapting. And we realize that we miss
the morning snuggle. Our maternal bosom or our paternal arms looked forward to “the
embrace” before heading out the door to work. And we are tempted to pull these
precious God-breathed souls back into us…to smell their hair, to be comforted
that they are also comforted by our presence. The pull is normal.
Isn’t this similar to our Heavenly Father? He keeps his arms
wide open and draws us into his sheltering presence. (Psalm 91) He delights
when we come to him. He delights when we want to know more about him. (James
2:23) Relationship is powerfully precious. At the same time, our Heavenly
Father tells us to go—go out and represent him in all that we do and say,
especially to those people that have not yet recognized His reality. (Mark
16:15) At some point He wants us to let go of the childish stage of our faith
journey and step into mature partnership with him. (1 Cor. 13:11)
A godly parent will reflect our Heavenly Father. We’ll push
when it’s time for them to grow into another stage, yet desire to constantly
remind our children that we adore them, that we will be safe for them, that we
will always have open arms for them. The push is not to their detriment. It’s
not based on our convenience. The pull should neither serve our own needs nor
stifle their individuality. Rather both the push and the pull maintain the security of relationship
and the value of growing up.