When my first child was about to be born, I freaked out. It was the ninth month. I was 33. I was in the bathroom and thought, I don't know how to father her. What am I going to do?
I grew up without a father and without a mother. My sister, God bless her, raised me. The thing is, I knew a lot about caring for people, following Christ, and knew enough about what it takes to be a father and husband that I felt OK; but this was one of those moments when I looked deep inside myself, and I freaked out.
I can't do this, I thought. I am going to mess her up. If you know me, you might be wondering why I am saying she. My first child is my son, Samuel. Well, the doctors had told my wife early in the pregnancy that the ultrasound showed our little it was a she. It was not until a ninth-month ultrasound that the tech turned to my wife and said, Yeah, about your little girl. Look at this…on the screen…see THAT? You've got a boy.
[Pause for mad dash by nesting mom to convert everything—clothes, baby shower and baby room—from girl theme to boy theme.]
After my shock subsided, I returned to my feelings about not being a good dad. I'm sure guys who have their fathers in their lives will say they also had jitters before their first child was born. Well, this is not for you. This is for people such as myself, who had no dad, do not have a dad or have a dad they think is not a good dad. Fatherless fathers have the usual paternal anxieties; plus, they wonder how the heck they're going to pull this off.
I am now a father and have been married to my beautiful wife, Kafi, for 17 years. Together, we have four children—a son, Samuel, and daughters Micah, Gabrielle and Isabella—and are called to be stewards of the spiritual, social and material resources Christ gave them through birth into my family and at this time and place in history.
Here are some Bible verses that have guided me—and still guide me—in my understanding and practice of fatherhood.
1. Psalm 1—Love God's Word, and all of your wildest dreams will come true.
2. I will restore the years the locusts have eaten. This is in the
3. Seek the peace of the city, for if it prospers you will prosper. Our children are growing up in neighborhoods, communities and cities. We want good places for our children to live. Where you live may or may not be a good place. This verse (
4. You may not feel your are a son, or may not feel as if anyone wants you as a son. Nevertheless, you are a son. Throughout Proverbs, especially the early chapters, there are statements such as, My son, if you accept my words… When I was a teen following Christ without an earthly father, I actually felt as if I had a father. I had my heavenly father, and I could get information from Him in Proverbs. When I would read, My son, if you… I would think, OK. I accepted it. Years later, I realized it was not only true, but that what was happening was the Holy Spirit was tutoring me. I know fatherless guys who are hungry to learn, to follow the rules of society and to develop themselves—but they don't know how. They say, No one will tell me what to do. If you tell me what to do—if you tell me once!—I'll do it; but no one will tell me what to do. This is one way to find out what to do. Read Proverbs and do what they say. Proverbs
5. Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so Jesus must be lifted up… The reference to Moses is this: In
6. Do you see a man skilled in his work? He will stand before kings. He will not stand before obscure men. I was about 10 years old when I read this. I looked up from the Bible and thought, This is the United States. We don't have a king. We have a president. Then, in my next thought, just as if I knew I would have lunch or dinner today and sleep tonight, I said to myself, One day I'm going to work at the White House. About 24 years later, that's what happened. It was May of 2001. I was part of a group of nine Hispanic Christian leaders from across the country who met Bush in the West Wing to discuss the [then-emerging] Faith-based Initiative. Teach your child to be skilled at his work and to be ready to do that work anywhere—near or far, in low circumstances and in high circumstances.
7. Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters. One of the best things our sons and daughters can see is their father doing good work. This verse is helpful when the work in front of you is work you don't like, if you are not being paid for the work or if you work with crazy people. It's not about them. It's about the Lord. Do that work well. Your kids will notice and pick up on it.
Back when I thought my first child was a girl, before that ninth-month ultrasound revealed my son Samuel, it was a song that launched me into my anxiety about fatherhood. It was Alanis Morrisette's, Princes Familiar with this line: Poppa love your princess so that she will find loving princes familiar. This is what I understood from that line: The type of man I am—good or bad—is the type of man my daughter will gravitate toward.
That scared the heck out of me. I questioned myself. Then I re-dedicated myself to following Christ. Later, when I learned that my daughter-to-be was actually my son-to-be, I carried the lesson of fatherly influence into my father-son relationship.
So, to all fatherless fathers: You get a chance to re-write the ending. You get a chance to break the curse. You get a chance to be the father you imagine, the father you can't imagine but can feel in your gut. Follow Christ, and you'll get there in this life.