
We live in a society that has lost the sense of value that children bring to our lives. We have come to see children as a nuisance and as a financial liability. We abort them. We avoid having them. And when we have them, we let someone else raise them. What has happened?
The industrial age has taken the parent from the home. When our primary means of income was agriculture, children were seen as an asset and the family worked together to ensure that there was food on the table. There was a sense of unity of purpose. With the industrial age, Dad left the home and shortly thereafter Mom was in the workplace as well.
One could argue that life is so much better now. But is it? Even the poorest in our nation are rich in comparison to the vast majority of the rest of the world. Yet we are not satisfied. We heap up more things and buy bigger houses and have more toys. All of these things limit the way we live. We live for things rather than for God and for others. So we avoid conception through birth control and abort children when we conceive inconvenient pregnancies.
A quick study of scripture reveals the true heart of God toward children. Psalm 127:3 tells us "Children are a gift from the L
ord; they are a reward from him." Those living in the Hebrew culture of the Old Testament understood the blessing that children represented. A barren womb was considered a curse to the children of Israel.
Molech was a god that the nations surrounding Israel worshiped. It was believed that sacrificing your first born child would appease Molech and prosperity would be promised. Although we don't offer our children to a stone idol, our society has sacrificed her children for prosperity.
I remember speaking with a man who had 12 children (they have since gone on to have 14 children at last count). I asked him what motivated him to have so many children. He said "Tom, I am partnering with God to bring eternal beings into existence. These children will live with God for all eternity. I also have the opportunity to disciple these children from birth. What an opportunity to raise them to know and to love God". I was humbled!
Have we really come so far in our enlightened age? Or have we lost our way, and have shown this generation of children that life has little value and that children are anything but a blessing?