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The 10 Paradoxes of Fatherhood, There is a certain immediacy about motherhood that cannot
National Catholic Register ^ | 06.17.07 | Donald DeMarco

Posted on 06/16/2007 10:06:59 PM PDT by Coleus

There is a certain immediacy about motherhood that cannot be said of fatherhood. Nature goes a long way in helping a mother know what it means to be a mother. Ovulation, pregnancy, childbirth, lactation and breast feeding are natural and immediate experiences that teach a mother a great deal about the meaning of her motherhood.

Motherhood is eminent, but fatherhood is transcendent.

If nature does comparatively little to teach a man the meaning of fatherhood, his wife, his children and his culture must help to fill in the blanks.

Nonetheless, secular feminism, the high divorce rate and abortion most emphatically do not help a man to understand the meaning of his own fatherhood. In fact, agencies are busy at work trying to “deconstruct” fatherhood and “deculture” paternity.

Yet, fatherhood and good fathers are of inestimable importance to society. David Blankenhorn, in his book, Fatherless America: Confronting Our Most Urgent Problem, provides evidence that fatherlessness is the leading cause of the declining well-being of children and the engine that drives our most urgent social problems from crime to adolescent pregnancy to child sexual abuse to domestic violence against women.

The following 10 distinctions shed light on the critical yet subtle, nature of fatherhood. Whereas motherhood is unmistakable because of the power of nature, fatherhood requires no small degree of sophisticated understanding.

Fatherhood means being:

1. A leader without being a frontrunner.

Our prevailing notion of leader comes from the worlds of sports and from politics. In this sense, in accordance with the “leader board” in golf, the leader is the one who is ahead of the rest of the field. Or he is the one who is leading in the political polls by outpacing his rivals. But a father is not a leader in this way. He does not try to remove himself from his family. Nor does he regard the members of his family as rivals. On the contrary, he leads in a manner that fulfills each member. His leadership is inseparable from those he leads. What he leads and “fathers” into being is the good of those whom he loves. In other words, fatherhood requires that a father leads by being there, rather than being “ahead of the pack.”

2. A visionary without being arrogant.

Every home must have a hearth and a horizon. The father is a visionary in the sense that he has an eye on the future. He has a keen sense of the importance of time. But he has this without presumption or arrogance. He is providential in his fathering. He knows instinctively that his children will grow up and lead independent lives. He provides for them a future vision of themselves.

3. A servant without being servile.

The expression servus servorum Dei (servant of the servants of God) adopted by John Paul II, comes from Pope Gregory the Great. Paradoxically, this servant of the servants of God earned the appellation “Great.” He who humbles himself shall be exalted. The father serves all the members of his family without being in any sense inferior. One might say, in this respect, that a father is like a tennis player: When they serve, they both enjoy an advantage.

4. An authority without being authoritarian.

The father, like God, shares in the authorship of life. He is an authority and therefore someone to learn from and be guided by. But his authority does not restrict the liberty of others. In fact, fatherly authority is to cultivate and enhance liberty. St. Thomas Aquinas wisely pointed out that “the respect that one has for the rule flows naturally from the respect one has for the person who gave it” (Ex reverentia praecipientis procedere debet reverentia praecepti). A person best understands fatherhood by knowing someone who is a good father. One must begin with the real experience and not the inadequate abstraction.

5. A lover without being sentimental.

The love of a father is strong and unwavering. Love is not bound by a feeling, and hence prone to sentimentality. It is strengthened by principles that always focus on the good of others. Love means doing what is in the best interest of others. Sentimentality means always being nice because one is fearful of opposition.

6. A supporter without being subordinate.

A father is supportive. He holds people up, keeps them going when they are inclined to be discouraged. His encouraging role does not imply subordination, but reliability and trustworthiness from someone who is strong. He is not supportive in the Hollywood sense of being a “supporting actor.” His supportive role is played out as the leading man.

7. A disciplinarian without being punitive.

A good father knows the value of rules and the consequences of disregarding them. He wants his children to be strong in virtue. Therefore, he knows the importance of discipline, restraint and self-possession. He is not punitive, nor is he overbearing. He makes it clear to his children that there is no true freedom without discipline, that discipleship re--quires training. He is wary of punishment as such, since it can strike fear in the heart of a child.

8. Merciful without being spineless.

Mercy must be grounded in justice. Otherwise it is dissipation and weakness. In fact, it is unjust. A father, because he recognizes the uncompromisable importance of justice is anything but spineless. He is merciful, but his mercy perfects his justice. Mercy without justice, is mere capitulation to the desires of others. Justice without mercy is cold legalism.

9. Humble without being self-deprecating.

Humility is based on the honest recognition of who one is. It takes into account one’s limitations and weaknesses. The humble father, when he encounters difficulties, has enough humility to ask for help, even at times from his own children. Yet, he never gets down on himself. He knows that remaining self-deprecating at a time of crisis is utterly futile.

10. Courageous without being foolhardy.

Courage is not fearlessness, but the ability to rise above fear so that one can do what needs to be done in a time of danger or difficulty. A father does not fall apart when he begins to feel the pressure. Foolhardiness is not courage but an unfocused and unhelpful recklessness. Moreover, courage, as its etymology suggests, requires heart. The father, above all, is a man of heart. When we consider the meaning of fatherhood, we should do so with humility, gratitude, and love. But we should also do it with refined accuracy. Fatherhood may be a paradox. But the poles of the paradox can be brought into balance with a little bit of wisdom and effort. Or, as some wise person said, “A truly rich man is one whose children run into his arms when his hands are empty.”

“Think of the love that the Father has lavished on us by letting us be called God’s children and that is what we are” (1 John 3:1). “We are children of God by adoption. By the gift of the Holy Spirit we are able to cry ‘Abba, Father’” (Galations 4:6).


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: fatherhood; fathers; fathersday; godsplan; men; moralabsolutes
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To: Canticle_of_Deborah

There are some very good liars and actors in this world. The devil never misses a church service. There are people who thrive on deceit. I have never met a person that could not be fooled.


21 posted on 06/18/2007 4:12:51 AM PDT by seemoAR (Absolute power corrupts absolutely)
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To: seemoAR
"In my opinion, every child should have DNA testing at birth. That way, If the mother is an adulterer she will know who the child's father is and the legal husband will know what to do.

Do you see anything wrong with that?"


Only the assumption that every woman is an adulteress, and that collection of any person's DNA against their will should be against the law. Whatever happened to the constitutional protection against unreasonable search and seizure? Do unborn or newborn children not have constitutional protection? Personally, I don't trust any government licenced entity with my DNA and neither should you. They did a fine job protecting our veterans' private medical records, didn't they?

Blood paternity does not make any man a father. There is plenty of evidence to support that assertion. I will admit the same is true for women. Not every woman who can bear children is fit to be their mother. But, who is the best judge of that? Society? Government? The Church/Synagogue/Mosque/Temple?

State sponsored marriage is a legal contract that is binding on both parties. Divorce is available as an option for breach of contract. Christian marriage, on the other hand, is a covenant that binds for life. Best look real hard before you leap. Marry in haste, repent at leisure, my mother used to say. I believe her advice is still priceless.
22 posted on 06/18/2007 8:54:03 AM PDT by LibreOuMort (Give me liberty, or give me death! (Patrick Henry))
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To: LibreOuMort
Big brother has many other methods of obtaining your DNA. Lets forget about the innocent men that get the shaft. Please don’t question the mother, after all she is the most important and she would never commit adultery. I would be very leery of a woman that would refuse a DNA test. I would not mind one at all. As a matter of fact, I would welcome one if I had nothing to hide.

Have you ever wondered how the Armed Forces of the US obtain DNA samples from the service men? They are used if a soldier is killed in combat and the body can’t be identified.

23 posted on 06/18/2007 9:28:46 AM PDT by seemoAR (Absolute power corrupts absolutely)
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To: seemoAR
There are some very good liars and actors in this world. The devil never misses a church service. There are people who thrive on deceit. I have never met a person that could not be fooled.

That's very true. I can agree based on personal experience. I think many can be caught if we try to keep objective and honest with ourselves. The alternative is locking yourself up in the house and never interacting with another human being. I don't think that is what God wants. We are meant to live life and learn from our interactions and mistakes. Who knows, maybe something you say or do will trigger the deceitful person to change his or her ways?

24 posted on 06/18/2007 12:43:08 PM PDT by Canticle_of_Deborah (Catholic4Mitt)
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To: Canticle_of_Deborah

That is what the Bible says. Christians are to let the spouse depart and they(the Christian) will be free to marry again.


25 posted on 06/18/2007 1:01:13 PM PDT by seemoAR (Absolute power corrupts absolutely)
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To: Canticle_of_Deborah

I like that tagline. : )


26 posted on 06/20/2007 6:21:29 PM PDT by TAdams8591 ( Guilaini is a Democrat in Republican drag. Mitt Romney for president in 2008! : ))
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To: TAdams8591

I do too!

The ironic thing is I’m discovering more Catholics supporting Mitt than I thought. I assumed most were Mormon (and a few Mormons aren’t supporting him!)


27 posted on 06/20/2007 6:28:05 PM PDT by Canticle_of_Deborah (Catholic4Mitt)
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