Posted on 04/23/2020 2:49:37 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
The fifth of the ten commandments says honor your father and your mother. We teach our young children that honor here means obey, and that is, indeed, Pauls application in Eph. 6:1-3. Obedience is one form of honor, the honor that young children owe to their parents. But when children have grown to adulthood and parents have grown old, the emphasis of Scripture shifts from obedience to financial support.1 Jesus tells the Pharisees that they have violated the fifth commandment when, using a religious pretext, they have failed to support their parents (Mark 7:9-13). And the Apostle Paul, dealing with the needs of widows in the church, tells children and grandchildren to meet those needs (1 Tim. 5:4). He employs some of the strongest language of the Bible against those who refuse this responsibility:
Providing for our elders is love, but it is also justice. When we were young, we were helpless. Then our parents provided for all our needs.2 When our parents become helpless, the roles must be reversed. We must provide everything for them, to the extent of their needs.
Those needs are more than financial. Older people often find themselves alone, without friends or family. They need companionship, mental stimulation, compassionate understanding, indeed love. So often the ideal place for them, when they can no longer live independently, is in the home of an adult child. Such home care enables the child more easily to meet the needs of his parent, and it gives the parent a real home, with loved ones and the support that only families can give.
In a fallen world, however, no situation is perfectly ideal. Home care for elderly relatives is often a difficult situation, both for the older person and for the younger family. So the younger adults often seek alternatives; but they often feel a sense of guilt about the prospect of sending their parents to live somewhere other than their family home.
Nursing homes, particularly, have developed bad reputations over recent decades. Studies have revealed deplorable care in many such institutions, as well as the tendency for younger relatives to abandon the nursing home residents. Many of those residents experience extreme loneliness and neglect. So Christians sometimes ask, is it ever legitimate to put an aged relative in a nursing home? Is such a decision ever in keeping with the fifth commandment?
There are several principles that bear on this issue:
1. It is not wrong in itself for parents to live apart from their children. Indeed, the original ordinance of marriage in Gen. 2:24 describes a man leaving his father and mother in order to hold fast to his wife. This principle does not rule out multi-generational living arrangements, but it does mean that marriage creates a new authority relationship that normally is expressed by the couple living apart from their parents. As long as a parent is able to live independently, such separation is desirable, though there are certainly advantages for parents and children living fairly close to one another.
2. Even when parents are ill or infirm, we should value their independence. If they can afford and obtain the care they need while living independently, and they prefer to do that, nobody ought to object. Children, of course, should monitor such situations closely, with a willingness to step in when needed.
3. There are some medical needs that preclude either independent living or living in a family home. These are becoming more common, as people live longer and medicine becomes more sophisticated. Sometimes these needs can best be met through a long-term nursing facility. We should be thankful to God that such institutions exist.
4. Of course, there are wide disparities in the quality and cost of nursing home care. One responsibility of children is to help their parents make wise decisions among alternatives.
5. Children should never abandon parents who have been institutionalized, but should visit often, providing prayer and emotional support.
6. When a nursing home patient has recovered to the point that such care is no longer needed or advantageous, the children should take responsibility to make other arrangements for their parents.
In short, nursing homes can play an important role in the life of Christian families. But children must take responsibility for determining how to use them in an overall context of love and care. Nursing homes should never be dumpsters for people nobody wants to have around. Rather, they should serve to supplement, when needed, a broad relationship of family care, motivated by love and honor.
1 The Hebrew and Greek words for honor, kabad and timao, respectively, have financial connotations. See Gen. 13:2, Prov. 13:18, Isa. 43:23, Mal. 1:6 (cf. 3:8), 1 Tim. 5:17.
2 All too often, of course, this is not the case, as parents abandon their children through divorce or desertion. What I say here, therefore, must be applied analogously to all guardians.
This is an area that I found is very difficult. My late 80's parents make frequent decisions that are against medical advice, place them in danger and put an unwanted burden on me when the results of their bad decisions bear fruit.
As long as they are deemed sane, they are free to make bad decisions.
Very frustrating period of time.
I was on a thread the other day where some FReeper went on to say that children should NEVER place their parents in a nursing home. No exceptions.
I try not to argue with stupid people, so I held my tongue.
New York and New Jersey, combined, account for more than half of U.S. COVID-19 deaths. Both of these states require nursing homes to admit patients who have tested positive for COVID-19.
In my opinion, this policy constitutes mass murder. (grundle)
Wordpress ^ | April 22, 2020 | Dan from Squirrel Hill
Posted on 4/22/2020, 2:19:03 PM by grundle
New York and New Jersey, combined, account for more than half of U.S. COVID-19 deaths. Both of these states require nursing homes to admit patients who have tested positive for COVID-19.
In my opinion, this policy constitutes mass murder.
http://freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/3837882/posts
My mother-in-law would change his mind in a week.
During those years, Vaughn De Leath's hit song Baby Your Mother was my theme song.
When I mow my moms lawn I will often pray thanking the Lord for the opportunity to honor her.
There is an interesting chart in the Wikipedia article on the Ten Commandments on how they are numbered by different groups. For Jews and for most Protestants, “Honor thy father and thy mother” is the fifth commandment. For Catholics and Lutherans, following St. Augustine, it is the fourth commandment. Apparently it is also the fourth commandment for Samaritans.
When a parent becomes a danger to themselves or others or is uncontrollable, there is a place for long term care.
I know a woman who was so sweet until the dementia set in.
She ended up threatening to kill her son-in-law who has been wonderful to her.
Because she was a danger to herself, didn’t know where she was most of the time, and had become violent, the decision was made to put her in a long term care facility.
That is not an isolated incident either. She’s not the only one I know of who went that route.
No, the fifth commandment says “thou shalt not kill”. What kind of backward, pagan hellhole where some people raised in? Jeez.
See post 8. The numbering is slightly different for various faith traditions.
I had a cousin that said that. Then her mother got alzheimers and was cared for at home until she started eating cat litter and all the contents in the litter box. She realized at that point she could not care for her.
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