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Mark Holden

Worshipper, Husband, Father, Writer, Speaker

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Men's Issues

Manhood Authority

Manhood Authority

by mholden

It’s Friday!  Tom was making his way home, looking forward to the weekend ahead.  The pressure of the week behind him was fading as he made a mental list of his plans for the next couple of days.  He’s finally free.  As he turned a corner with his car, he turned a page in his mind to see sun, sand, water, fish…, but his thoughts are interrupted by a strange glow in his car.  No, not really a glow, it was more like a flash.  What is that pulsing orb of color?  He suddenly recognizes the blue, pulsating flash of a police officer’s lights directly behind him.  His stomach jumps to his throat as Tom glances down and notices his speedometer reading at 47.  “It’s only 35 here”, Tom thinks to himself as he makes his way to the curb.

“Good afternoon, Sir.  May I see your driver’s license?”, the officer asked politely.  And you know how the rest of that conversation goes.

Why is the officer so polite?  Why does he speak in such even tones, almost emotionless?  Why doesn’t he charged up to Tom’s car, pound his fist on the hood, stomp his feet, kick the gravel and bellow something like, “What is the world are you doing?  Are you some kind of jerk or something?  What in the world do you think you’re doing, driving 47 miles an hour on my street?”

An officer doesn’t do that, because he’s been trained.  He knows that the badge behind which he stands represents authority.  It’s authority that he has been given.  This is not a personal affront.  The badge is not his, the street is not his, the law is not his.  He is simply a representative a system that is much bigger than he is.  He’s there under authority, having been sworn to protect, defend, and uphold.   He doesn’t need to get angry.  He doesn’t need to stomp and snort.  His authority is expressed in the power of his pen, as he quietly, confidently, and firmly hands out a citation for speeding.

 

Tom finally makes it home.  He walks to the door of his home, having already bathed his mind with visions of serenity, the aromas of supper, the splendor of loving children rushing to his knees.  With his first step through the door, he feels the crushing, grinding sound of a Lego under his foot.  Two of his precious children fly past him, as one screams, “Daddy, tell him to give that back to me!”  The two continue their flight up the stairs as Tom slides past and into the kitchen, greets Linda, his wife.  He quickly makes his way to the den, where he flops into his chair, flips open his laptop and fires up Candy Crush.

Now, it’s not that Tom is lazy.  And it’s not that he doesn’t care about his wife, his children, or his home.  Tom has not been trained or equipped.  He does not know the “badge” that he has been given.  He is not aware of the authority that is his.  He doesn’t know how to issue citations or how to enforce them.  Instead of quietly “asking for their license”, he is baffled, backs away, or gets angry.

 

In The Prince and the Pauper, Mark Twain tells the story of Prince Edward, son of King Henry VIII, who discovers that he has an identical look-alike in Tom Canty, a pauper who lives with his abusive father in Offal Court off Pudding Lane in London. Out of boredom and curiosity, the Prince develops a plan by which he trades places with the pauper.  The Prince ends up locked out of his own kingdom, while the pauper is trapped in the strange and unfamiliar world of royalty. The confusion, distress, danger, and comedy that results are both entertaining and instructive. It’s a great story, but I’ll leave the reading to you.

The Prince’s decision does give us a good picture of what happens when lines of authority and responsibility are confused.  I am convinced that if you as a man can come to understand and grab hold of your God-given position, it will change you forever.  And along with changing you, it will change your wife.  It will change your work-place.  It will change your community.  It will change your church.  It will change our world.

Men, you have been given the right to oversee your home and family, to set direction, to determine beliefs, to decide what is taught and practiced.  You have authority over the food you eat, what kind of house you live in, where that house is located, what income you earn.  You get to decide what your children are taught and who teaches it.

Before I go further, please allow me to identify some ‘buzz’ words that push buttons in our culture.  Where words such as ‘authority’, ‘obedience’ and ‘discipline’ were created by our Father in heaven, the enemy of man has twisted and perverted these words to keep us away from experiencing love. In the world, ‘authority’ is viewed as evil. ‘Obedience’ is seen as harsh and oppressive. ‘Honor’ and ‘Respect’ are seen as forced allegiance to undeserving tyrants. Please, please hear me on this. In their appropriate and original context, these words and the principles behind them are life giving. For the individual who walks willingly under the authority of the law, there is life, peace, protection, freedom to excel. Self-administered obedience (self-discipline) brings freedom from chaos, stability, confidence, peace and hope. Honor and respect simply identify tools by which I demonstrate value in people around me.

Words are the very thing that formed the universe, which is why a lack of understanding of these words keeps a man from walking in his rightful role. It is the understanding of leadership through love that positions a man to lead and influence his home, and the marketplace.

Authority, like life itself, however, cannot spring from nothing.  Authority must be delegated from a higher source.  The individual or entity that stands on its own and claims to have authority has no basis.  The police officer who pulled Tom over for speeding gets his authority to do so from the civil authority that enacted the law that governs speed limits.  The law makers that passed the speeding law gained their authority to do so from the documents that constitute the state that they govern.  Those documents gain their authority from the Constitutional law under which our nation is established.  The Constitution gains its authority from the Founder who established all law.  Ultimately, all authority comes down from God himself.  There is no authority, except that which comes from him.

There was a man in the Bible who was described, by Jesus, as having the greatest faith he had ever seen!  He was a Roman centurion who said, “For I too am a man set under authority, with soldiers under me: and I say to one, ‘Go,’ and he goes; and to another, ‘Come,’ and he comes; and to my servant, ‘Do this,’ and he does it” Luke 7:8.  Because the centurion had such understanding of authority, Jesus “marveled at him, and turning to the crowd that followed him, said, “I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith.”  It’s amazing to consider that of all actions or statements that Jesus observed as he walked on earth, the one that receives his highest commendation is a man who understands authority.

Authority is a powerful tool.  You have been empowered to train your sons and daughters in the appropriate use of their own authority.  They have the privilege of making life choices for themselves.  Equip them to make good choices.  Many of life’s biggest decisions are made between the ages of 16 and 22; sexual choices, marriage choices, educational choices, vocational choices, indebtedness choices.

Teach your children to respect authority and to show honor.  From the earliest age, let them know that there is authoritative structure in the world and they must comply with that authority.  When your children are disobedient and resist your authority, take quick action, without emotion.  Just like the police officer that pulled Tom over for speeding, speak quietly, respectfully.  Explain the violation clearly, and “write a ticket”.  Yes, that means there should be a penalty for disobedience.

Your child needs to be prepared for reality.  Every sphere of life carries a penalty for disobedience.  Tom felt that penalty for speeding.  An employee loses his job for it.  An athlete is penalized for it.   In your family, your children need to be impacted by it.

I am a strong proponent of spanking young children.  When done appropriately, it doesn’t happen often.  Please understand and remember the context.  Spank under control and without emotion.  Spank for defiance and not for accidents.  Communicate clearly and take action quickly, to avoid frustration and actions that are taken in anger.  Discipline for heart compliance and not just for outward conformity.

I want to encourage you to start early, pray consistently, talk openly.  Step forward and take daily action to reap the long-term fruit of maturity, wisdom, and freedom in the lives of your children.

 

 

Filed Under: Leadership, Men's Issues, Parenting, Uncategorized, Youths

The Delegating Character of God

The Delegating Character of God

by mholden

The Lord God is above his creation.  He is wholly separate from it, although still actively involved in it.  The fancy theological term attached to this truth is transcendence.

“To transcend means “to exist above and independent from; to rise above, surpass, succeed.” By this definition, God is the only truly transcendent Being. The “LORD God Almighty” (in Hebrew, El Shaddai) created all things on the earth, beneath the earth and in the heavens above, yet He exists above and independent from them. All things are upheld by His mighty power (Hebrews 1:3), yet He is upheld by Himself alone. The whole universe exists in Him and for Him that He may receive glory, honor and praise.”   www.gotquestions.org   “What does it mean that God is transcendent?”

“Our Creator’s transcendence is affirmed throughout Scripture and is reflected in today’s passage. When we say God is transcendent, we mean that He is separate from His creation and not dependent on the created order in any way. The Almighty made the universe and He is therefore its sovereign ruler (Gen. 1:1). A biblical view of transcendence does not mean that God is unable to enter into His creation or communicate with it. He is also immanent, present within the universe that He has made (Ps. 139:7). Nevertheless, creation is not God  (pantheism), nor does God depend upon it. Creation, instead, depends upon our Creator for its continual existence (Eph. 4:4–6).”   RC Sproule  Denying God’s Transcendence  Ligonier Ministries Blog

In his transcendence, God has designed to delegate responsibility and authority to mankind for the oversight of the created order.Transcendence

Delegation was part of the first creative act of God

The very first thing that God said about man included the giving of authority and responsibility to him.

Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” Genesis 1:26

Filed Under: Church Issues, Government, Leadership, Men's Issues

The Source of All Authority

The Source of All Authority

by mholden

Secular humanism screams against authority.  The culture in which we live rejects the existence of any authority at all.  Everything coming from nothing, with no source or purpose for anything, leaves the entire system without direction, without foundation, without right or wrong, without justice, without authority.

Authority, like life itself, however, cannot spring from nothing.  Authority must be delegated from a higher source.  The individual or entity that stands on its own and claims to have authority has no basis.  The police officer who pulls you over for speeding gets his authority to do from the civil authority that enacted the law governing speed limits.  The law makers that passed the speeding law gained their authority to do so from the documents that constitute the state that they govern.  Those documents gain their authority from the Constitutional law under which our nation is established.  The Constitution gains its authority from the Founder who established all law.  Ultimately, all authority comes down from God himself.  The is no authority, except that which comes from him.

Even Jesus Christ, the Son of God, had authority only because it was given to him.  He said, “And [the Father] has given him authority to execute judgment, because he is the Son of Man.”   John 5:27

A Roman centurion understood Jesus’ authority by saying, “For I too am a man set under authority, with soldiers under me: and I say to one, ‘Go,’ and he goes; and to another, ‘Come,’ and he comes; and to my servant, ‘Do this,’ and he does it” Luke 7:8.  Because the centurion had such understanding of authority, Jesus “marveled at him, and turning to the crowd that followed him, said, “I tell you, not even in Israel have I found such faith.”  It’s amazing to consider that of all actions or statements that Jesus observed as he walked on earth, the one that receives his highest commendation is a man who understands authority.

All authority and power originate in the person of our God.

At the end of the days I, Nebuchadnezzar, lifted my eyes to heaven, and my reason returned to me, and I blessed the Most High, and praised and honored him who lives forever, for his dominion is an everlasting dominion, and his kingdom endures from generation to generation; all the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as nothing,
and he does according to his will among the host of heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth; and none can stay his hand
or say to him, “What have you done?”   Daniel 4:34, 35

The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in temples made by man, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all mankind life and breath and everything.… Acts 17:24, 25

For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory forever. Amen.   Romans 11:36

For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through him and for him.  Colossians 1:16

Filed Under: Government, Leadership, Men's Issues, Parenting

Who’s in Charge Here?

Who’s in Charge Here?

by mholden

You and I live in a culture that is in complete confusion about roles.  Who is responsible for what?  Who has authority and from where does the authority come?  How far does that authority reach?  How are authority and responsibility related?  And what about accountability, that must come into play somewhere as well? What recourse exists when someone or something is over-reaching their authority?  Where does the authority of the government begin, and where does it end?  What about the church, or family, what authority do they have and how can that authority be defined and defended?

We are about to embark on one of the most needful studies of our day.  The answers to these questions and more can be answered with the kind of confidence that will enable you to stand in boldly in your role, and also fulfill your ordained purpose on the earth.

 

Filed Under: Church Issues, Leadership, Men's Issues

My Father’s Business

My Father’s Business

by mholden

Tim sat with joyful tension on the edge of the seat behind that giant wheel.  His position on the seat was fashioned not for comfort, but rather by his outstretched leg straining for the pedal.  His hands were sweaty with excitement.  This was a day he had been looking forward to for years, he was about to drive his dad’s lawn mower.

By design, our Lord has built the desire into children to touch their father’s work.  Children learn best in the context of daily life.  Deuteronomy 6 describes a setting in which training, nurturing, and discipleship take place in the context of daily labor.  Jesus modeled that kind of training with his disciples.  Learning happens while life goes on.

Unfortunately the kind of work that today’s “civilized world” provides does not, in many cases, afford the opportunity for hands-on involvement for children.   Many of us, as dads, must drive away from our homes in the morning to work settings and locations that do not allow our children to participate.  Even in technology-based home businesses it can be difficult to include entrepreneurs in training, I mean, how many fingers can be on the keyboard at once?

Many cultures today, and even our own culture only a hundred years ago, not only allowed, but depended on young men and women assisting in family enterprise.  Young John or Sue would help putting in hay, or stocking shelves in the family mercantile, or carrying coal for the forge in the smith shop attached to the house.  Labor was a family affair.

Jesus came not to do his own work, but to do his Father’s work.  We should be equipping our children to do the same.

 

Filed Under: Men's Issues, Parenting

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