Tags
blessing, church, community, encouragement, engage, family, intergenerational, isolation, life, light, pleasure, purpose, relationship

This past week, I spent hours delighting in my children’s relationships with their grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. Whether it was their uncontained excitement about a sleepover with their aunt and uncle, the deeply contented smiles of grandparents engaging in conversation with our children, the similarly-aged cousins who have never met but act thick as thieves within minutes of time together, or the admiration of the older new favorite “cousin” (a girlfriend who my children are desperately hoping marries into the family – no pressure though!).
Living relatively far away from our family, I find watching my children with their grandparents and aunts and uncles in person to be a tremendous blessing. I get to see our children through fresh eyes, watch their behavior transform, and see healthy relationships being forged that are totally separate from their relationship with me. As our children age, I see how important these separate and special relationships are for all of us: for me as a parent, for the children as individuals growing into adults, and for the extended family members. I never lived close to my own grandparents and extended family, so perhaps others experience that blessing all the time. But as I come off some holiday time with family, I am acutely aware of the importance of these relationships beyond what I and their father can provide.
I am usually quite loathe to call churches “families” because families also bring lots of baggage. In fact, for some, church provides a safe haven their biological families did not. However, churches can do what families do when at their best. Part of why I am so committed to having my own children in church (even though it may appear obligatory as the community’s priest) is because we live so far from our biological families. I want the elders of our church to dote on my children the same ways in which their grandparents do – in part because I know those relationships are just as life giving for the seniors as they are for the children. I want the mid-age parents to be the cool aunts and uncles that my children can go to when they are tired of their own mom and dad – in part because those same parents may sometimes feel like parenting failures with their own children but can use the reminder that they are beloved and needed beyond their immediate family. And I want my children to feel a sense of kinship with the other children of church – the cousins they rarely see, but for whom they can serve as role models at church. The very intergenerational nature of church is a major reason why church is so important to our lives.
We live in a time when families are often dispersed, where work or service calls us from our extended families, or where, if we are blessed with immediate family nearby, we have neighbors who are not. That reality became painfully poignant during the pandemic, when our sense of isolation grew, families with children felt unbearable weight as they became teachers, parents, and a little of everything else, and elders missed gathering with their own biological families. As we emerge from this pandemic, if you have yet to come out of that internalized, isolated state, I invite you to engage (or reengage) with a church community. It certainly will not be perfect – no community or family is. But it will be a place of life and light, of encouragement and engagement, and of purpose and pleasure. You are welcome here!


