18 Jun 2014

“It’s a good thing for kids to have daddies. They protect them.” Those words were spoken by my three-year-old grandson, Blake, to his father. In a world increasingly losing its mind about the importance of fathers, leave it to a toddler to cut to the chase.

Ken Canfield writes, “The current and conservative cost of fatherlessness is estimated at one hundred billion dollars annually. Though a significant sum, money cannot represent the staggering emotional and moral costs, as well as loss of potential, that plague a child disconnected from his or her dad. Currently in America, at least twenty-five million children under the age of eighteen don’t live with their natural father. Add the number of children who live with their fathers, but aren’t connected emotionally, psychologically or spiritually, and you have the dramatic majority of all children.” (The Journal of Discipleship and Family Ministry)

Bill Glass spoke many years ago at a businessmen’s luncheon in Burlington. A consensus All-American football player at Baylor University, Glass was a member of the 1964 Cleveland Browns who won the NFL World Championship two years prior to the first Super Bowl. After retiring from football, Glass traveled the world to preach the gospel and is perhaps best known for his prison ministry. He has met inmates in prisons all over the country and around the world, and the day I heard him at a luncheon, he said, “There may be a man in prison somewhere who doesn’t hate his father. I just have not met him yet.” He told a story of a greeting card company that offered free Mother’s Day cards to violent criminals incarcerated in a maximum-security prison in Florida. Thousands of the men accepted the offer and sent cards to their mothers. The greeting card company, buoyed by their success, made the same offer for Father’s Day. Glass said, “Not one inmate accepted the offer. Not one man sent his father a card for Father’s Day.” Are there negative consequences in a home where dad is not involved and engaged emotionally with his children? Oh, yes.

What about the positive effects of a father in the home, loving his children? Ken Canfield writes, “Infants who have time alone with their dad show richer social and exploratory behavior than do children not exposed to such experiences. They smile more frequently, in general, and they more frequently engage in playful behaviors with their dad. Children who sense closeness to their fathers are twice as likely to enter college or find stable employment after high school; they are seventy-five percent less likely to have a child in their teenage years, eighty percent less likely to spend time in jail and half as likely to experience depression.”

How important are dads? Let me ask you men something that I heard Todd Wilson say several years ago. “If you dropped dead this afternoon, God forbid, how long would it take for the place where you work to replace you? A day? A week? Maybe it would even take a month if you have a really specialized job. But how long would it take to replace you in the home as a dad? Forever. You are irreplaceable!” Todd went on to say, “Actually, someone would step in and take your place as a dad to your children: God. Have you ever thought about that, Dad? You are Plan A in your house. God is your backup. That’s how important your job is.” So, I say to all you daddies who are protecting your children, keep up the good work!

J. Mark Fox has pastored Antioch Community Church since 1987 and has taught at Elon University since 1990. Mark received an MDiv from Luther Rice Seminary and a BA and MA from UNC, where he met his wife, Cindy. They have been married for 38 years and have 7 children and 5 grandchildren (so far!). Mark is the author of Age Integrated Church, published in 2015, that tells the story of how God changed Antioch’s vision. He is also the author of A Faithful Man: Equipped to Lead as Prophet, Priest, Protector and Provider (2012), Real Life Moments: a Dad's Devotional (2008), and others. His weekly column for the Times-News in Burlington has won 5 Amy Awards. Mark loves to travel, run and spend time with his family.

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